THE PHILOSOPHY PAGES


THE COMPLETE WORKS OF
RALPH WALDO EMERSON

Vol. I, Pt. I, Nature.


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VIII

Introduction
Nature
Commodity
Beauty
Language
Discipline
Idealism
Spirit
Prospects


Vol. I, Pt. II, Addresses & Lectures.

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The American Scholar
Divinity School Address
Literary Ethics
The Method of Nature
Man the Reformer
Introductory Lecture on the Times
The Conservative
The Transcendentalist
The Young American


Vol. II, Essays I.

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History
Self-Reliance
Compensation
Spiritual Laws
Love
Friendship
Prudence
Heroism
The Over-Soul
Circles
Intellect
Art


Vol. III, Essays II.

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The Poet
Experience
Character
Manners
Gifts
Nature
Politics
Nominalist and Realist
New England Reformers


Vol. IV, Representative Men.

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Uses of Great Men
Plato, or the Philosopher
Swedenbourg, or the Mystic
Montaigne, or the Skeptic
Shakespeare, or the Poet
Napoleon, or the Man of the World
Goethe, or the Writer


Vol. V, English Traits.

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First Visit to England
Voyage to England
Land
Race
Ability
Manners
Truth
Character
Cockayne
Wealth
Aristocracy
Universities
Religion
Literature
The Times
Stonehenge
Personal
Result
Speech at Manchester


Vol. VI, Conduct of Life.

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Fate
Power
Wealth
Culture
Behaviour
Worship
Considerations by the Way
Beauty
Illusions


Vol. VII, Society and Solitude.

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Society and Solitude
Civilisation
Art
Eloquence
Domestic Life
Farming
Works and Days
Books
Clubs
Courage
Success
Old Age


Vol. VIII, Letters and Social Aims.

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Poetry and Imagination
Social Aims
Eloquence
Resources
The Comic
Quotation and Originality
Progress of Culture
Persian Poetry
Inspiration
Greatness
Immortality


Vol. IX, Poems.

The poems are detailed on a seperate page, indexed by title, here.


Vol. X, Lectures & Biographical Sketches.

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Demonology
Aristocracy
Perpetual Forces
Character
Education
The Superlative
The Sovereignty of Ethics
The Preacher
The Man of Letters
The Scholar
Plutarch
Life and Letters in New England
Ezra Ripley, D.D.
Chardon Street Convention
Mary Moody Emerson
Samuel Hoar
Thoreau
Carlyle
George L. Stearns


Vol. XI, Miscellanies.

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XXX

The Lord's Supper
Historical Discourse at Concord
Letter to President Van Buren
Emancipation in the British West Indies
War
Fugitive Slave Law: Address at Concord
Fugitive Slave Law: New York Lecture
The Assault upon Mr. Sumner
Speech on Affairs in Kansas
John Brown: Speech at Boston
John Brown: Speech at Salem
Theodore Parker
American Civilisation
The Emancipation Proclamation
Abraham Lincoln
Harvard Commemoration Speech
Dedication of the Soldier's Monument
Editors' Address
Address to Kossuth
Woman
Consecration-Sleepy Hollow Cemetery
Robert Burns
Shakespeare
Humboldt
Walter Scott
Speech at Chinese Embassy
Remarks at Free Religious Association
Speech at 2nd Free Religious Assocation
Address Concord Free Public Library
The Fortune of the Republic


Vol. XII, Pt. I, Natural History of Intellect.

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Natural History of Intellect
The Celebration of Intellect
Country Life
Concord Walks
Boston
Michael Angelo
Milton
Art and Criticism


Vol. XII, Pt. II, Papers From the Dial.

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Thoughts on Modern Literature
Walter Savage Landor
Prayers
Agriculture in Massachuessets
Europe and European Books
Past and Present
A Letter
The Tragic




XVIII. SPEECH AT SECOND ANNUAL MEETING OF FREE RELIGIOUS ASSOCIATION

At Tremont Temple, Friday May 28, 1869.

THOU metest him by centuries,
And lo! he passes like the breeze;
Thou seek'st in globe and galaxy,
He hides in pure transparency;
Thou ask'st in fountains and in fires,
He is the essence that inquires.

       

FRIENDS: I wish I could deserve anything of the kind expression of my friend, the President, and the kind good will which the audience signifies, but it is not in my power to-day to meet the natural demands of the occasion, and, quite against my design and my will, I shall have to request the attention of the audience to a few written remarks, instead of the more extensive statement which I had hoped to offer them.

I think we have disputed long enough. I think we might now relinquish our theological controversies to communities more idle and ignorant than we. I am glad that a more realistic church is coming to be the tendency of society, and that we are likely one day to forget our obstinate polemics in the ambition to excel each other in good works. I have no wish to proselyte any reluctant mind, nor, I think, have I any curiosity or impulse to intrude on those whose ways of thinking differ from mine. But as my friend, your presiding officer, has asked me to take at least some small part in this day’s conversation, I am ready to give, as often before, the first simple foundation of my belief, that the Author of Nature has not left himself without a witness in any sane mind: that the moral sentiment speaks to every man the law after which the Universe was made; that we find paritN, identity of design, through Nature, and benefit to be the uniform aim: that there is a force always at work to make the best better and the worst good.1 We have had not long since presented us by Max Müller a valuable paragraph from St. Augustine, not at all extraordinary in itself, but only as coming from that eminent Father in the Church, and at that age, in which St. Augustine writes: " That which is now called the Christian religion existed among the ancients, and never did not exist from the planting of the human race until Christ came in the flesh, at which time the true religion which;already existed began to be called Christianity." I believe that not only Christianity is as old as the Creation, -not only every sentiment and precept of Christianity can be paralleled in other religious writings, -but more, that a man of religious susceptibility, and one at the same time conversant with many men, - say a much? travelled man, - can find the same idea in numberless conversations. The religious find religion wherever they associate. When I find in people narrow religion, I find also in them narrow reading. Nothing really is so self-publishing, so divulgatory, as thought. It cannot be confined or hid. It is easily carried; it takes no room; the knowledge of Europe looks out into Persia and India, and to the very Kaffirs. Every pro-verb, every fine text, every pregnant jest, travels across the line; and you will find it at Cape Town, or among the Tartars. We are all believers in natural religion; we all agree that the health and integrity of man is self-respect, selfsubsistency, a regard to natural conscience. All education is to accustom him to trust himself, discriminate between his higher and lower thoughts, exert the timid faculties until they are robust, and thus train him to self-help, until he ceases to be an underling, a tool, and becomes a benefactor. I think wise men wish their religion to be all of this kind, teaching the agent to go alone, not to hang on the world as a pensioner, a permitted person, but an adult, self-searching soul, brave to assist or resist a world: only humble and docile before the source of the wisdom he has discovered within him.

As it is, every believer holds a different creed; that is, all the churches are churches of one member. All our sects have refined the point of difference between them. The point of difference that still remains between churches, or between classes, is in the addition to the moral code, that is, to natural religion, of somewhat positive and historical. I think that to be, as Mr. Abbot has stated it in his form, the one difference remaining. I object, of course, to the claim of miraculous dispensation, - certainly not to the doctrine of Christianity.' This claim impairs, to my mind, the soundness of him who makes it, and indisposes us to his communion. This comes the wrong way; it comes from without, not within. This positive, historical, authoritative scheme is not consistent with our experience or our expectations. It is something not in Nature: it is contrary to that law of Nature which all wise men recognize; namely, never to require a larger cause than is necessary to the effect. George Fox, the Quaker, said that, though he read of Christ and God, he knew them only from the like spirit in his own soul. We want all the aids to' our moral training. We cannot spare the vision nor the virtue of the saints; but let it be by pure sympathy, not with any personal or official claim. If you are childish, and exhibit your saint as a worker of wonders, a thaumaturgist, I am repelled. That claim takes his teachings out of logic and out of nature, and permits official and arbitrary senses to be grafted on the teachings. It is the praise of our New Testament that its teachings go to the honor and benefit of humanity, - that no better lesson has been taught or incarnated. Let it stand, beautiful and wholesome, with whatever is most like it in the teaching and practice of men; but do not attempt to elevate it out of humanity, by saving, ‘ This was not a man,' for then you confound it with the fables of every popular religion, and my distrust of the story makes me distrust the doctrine as soon as it differs from my own belief.

Whoever thinks a story gains by the prodigious, by adding something out of nature, robs it more than he adds. It is no longer an example, a model; no longer a heart-stirring hero, but an exhibition, a wonder, an anomaly, removed out of the range of influence with thoughtful men. I submit that in sound frame of mind, we read or remember the religious sayings and oracles of other men, whether Jew or Indian, or Greek or Persian, only for friendship, only for joy in the social identity which they open to    
us, and that these words would have no weight    
with us if we had not the same conviction al-    
ready. I find something stingy in the unwilling    
and disparaging admission of these foreign opinions - opinions from all parts of the world - by our churchmen, as if only to enhance by their dimness the superior light of Christianity. Meantime, observe, you cannot bring me too good a word, too dazzling a hope, too penetrating an insight from the Jews. I hail every one with delight, as showing the riches of my brother, my fellow soul, who could thus think and thus greatly feel. Zealots eagerly fasten their eyes on the differences between their creed and yours, but the charm of the study is in finding the agreements, the identities, in all the religions of men.'
I am glad to hear each sect complain that they do not now hold the opinions they are charged with. The earth moves, and the mind opens. I am glad to believe society contains a class of humble souls who enjoy the luxury of a religion that does not degrade; who think it the highest worship to expect of Heaven the most and the best; who do not wonder that there was a Christ, but that there were not a thousand; who have conceived an infinite hope for mankind; who believe that the history of Jesus is the history of every man, written large.'


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