Ralph Waldo Emerson eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 403 pages of information about Ralph Waldo Emerson.

Ralph Waldo Emerson eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 403 pages of information about Ralph Waldo Emerson.

I cannot be wrong, it seems to me, in supposing those two lines to be an incorrect version of these two from a poem of my own called “The Steamboat:” 

  “The beating of her restless heart
    Still sounding through the storm.”

It is never safe to quote poetry from memory, at least while the writer lives, for he is ready to “cavil on the ninth part of a hair” where his verses are concerned.  But extreme accuracy was not one of Emerson’s special gifts, and vanity whispers to the misrepresented versifier that

    ’tis better to be quoted wrong
  Than to be quoted not at all.

This Essay of Emerson’s is irradiated by a single precept that is worthy to stand by the side of that which Juvenal says came from heaven.  How could the man in whose thought such a meteoric expression suddenly announced itself fail to recognize it as divine?  It is not strange that he repeats it on the page next the one where we first see it.  Not having any golden letters to print it in, I will underscore it for italics, and doubly underscore it in the second extract for small capitals:—­

    “Now that is the wisdom of a man, in every instance of his labor,
    to hitch his wagon to a star, and see his chore done by the gods
    themselves.”—­

“‘It was a great instruction,’ said a saint in Cromwell’s war, ’that the best courages are but beams of the Almighty.’  HITCH YOUR WAGON TO A STAR.  Let us not fag in paltry works which serve our pot and bag alone.  Let us not lie and steal.  No god will help.  We shall find all their teams going the other way,—­Charles’s Wain, Great Bear, Orion, Leo, Hercules:  every god will leave us.  Work rather for those interests which the divinities honor and promote,—­justice, love, freedom, knowledge, utility.”—­

Charles’s Wain and the Great Bear, he should have been reminded, are the same constellation; the Dipper is what our people often call it, and the country folk all know “the pinters,” which guide their eyes to the North Star.

I find in the Essay on “Art” many of the thoughts with which we are familiar in Emerson’s poem, “The Problem.”  It will be enough to cite these passages:—­

“We feel in seeing a noble building which rhymes well, as we do in hearing a perfect song, that it is spiritually organic; that it had a necessity in nature for being; was one of the possible forms in the Divine mind, and is now only discovered and executed by the artist, not arbitrarily composed by him.  And so every genuine work of art has as much reason for being as the earth and the sun.—­
—­“The Iliad of Homer, the songs of David, the odes of Pindar, the tragedies of Aeschylus, the Doric temples, the Gothic cathedrals, the plays of Shakspeare, all and each were made not for sport, but in grave earnest, in tears and smiles of suffering and loving men.—­

    —­“The Gothic cathedrals were built when the builder and the priest
    and the people were overpowered by their faith.  Love and fear laid
    every stone.—­

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Ralph Waldo Emerson from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.