Among Ralph Waldo Emerson’s primary perceptions about living were these:
• There’s no other world; this one is it.
• All important truths must finally be self-evident.
• The purpose of life is individual development, self-expression and fulfillment.
• Nothing great is ever accomplished without enthusiasm, and your work should be in praise of what you love.
• The days are gods.
“On a day no different than the one now breaking, Shakespeare sat down to begin Hamlet,” explained Emerson’s biographer Robert D. Richardson Jr. “Each of us has all the time there is; each accepts those invitations he can discern. By the same token, each evening brings a reckoning of infinite regret for the paths refused, openings not seen, and actions not taken.”
“There is nothing in this list that Emerson had not learned firsthand. These are not abstractions but practical rules for everyday life. The public consequences of such convictions for Emerson were a politics of social liberalism, abolitionism, women’s suffrage, American Indian rights, opposition to the Mexican War and civil disobedience when government was wrong. The personal consequence of such perceptions was an almost intolerable awareness that every morning began with infinite promise.”
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