Ralph Waldo Emerson, whose original profession and calling was as a
Unitarian minister, left the ministry to pursue a career in writing and
public speaking. Emerson went on to become one of America's best-known
and best-loved 19th century figures. Along with Thoreau, Hawthorne,
Fuller, the Peabody sisters, the Alcott family, Jonas, Very, the
Ripleys, and the Channings, Emerson helped shape a circle of poets,
reformers, artists, and thinkers who helped to define a new identity for
American art. In this biography, written by American physician, poet,
and humorist Oliver Wendell Holmes, Emerson's life is traced from his
family genealogy through his childhood, his years in school, his
ordination and early writings, to his years as a preeminent thinker,
lecturer, poet, and writer. The book, originally published in 1885, even
offers a look at the "future of his reputation" from the late 19th
century point of view.