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Ralph Waldo Emerson from Nature

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Ralph Waldo Emerson from Nature ACOS 1a; 2a; 3c; 8 AHSGE R.II.1; R.III.3; R.IV.2 Background: Born in Boston in 1803 Family was cultured but poor Father died ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Ralph Waldo Emerson from Nature


1
Ralph Waldo Emersonfrom Nature
  • ACOS 1a 2a 3c 8
  • AHSGE R.II.1 R.III.3 R.IV.2

2
Background
  • Born in Boston in 1803
  • Family was cultured but poor
  • Father died of tuberculosis when he was eight
  • Mary Moody Emerson, aunt, became father figure
  • Entered Harvard at fourteen to become a Unitarian
    minister
  • Married Mary Tucker in 1829. She died 17 months
    later
  • Resigned from ministry in 1832 to tour Europe
  • Remarried and settled in Concord, Mass. In 1833
  • Toured US as a lecturer
  • Expressed the advantage of a young land
  • Exhilarated by natures beauty and grandeur
  • Appealed to intellectuals and the general public
  • Son died of scarlet fever in 1842 (emotionally
    damaged)
  • Suffered from memory loss as he aged
  • Greatly influenced Walt Whitman

3
Literary Focus
  • Imagery
  • the use of language to evoke a picture of
    concrete sensation of a person, thing, place or
    experience
  • imagery uses words that appeals to the senses

4
Vocabulary
  • Admonishing
  • Integrate
  • Perennial
  • Blith
  • Occult
  • Sublime
  • Envoys
  • Manifold
  • Indubitably
  • Maugre
  • Cordial
  • Slough
  • Decorum
  • Connate
  • Tricked
  • Chamber

5
From Nature
  • To what senses does Emerson appeal in the first
    paragraph? How does he feel when he looks at the
    stars?
  • According to Emerson, why do people take stars
    for granted?
  • What can the poets eye do when he/she looks at
    nature?
  • How does Emerson define the lover of nature?
  • What does Emerson think and feel when he stands
    in the woods?
  • What is the greatest delight the fields and woods
    give us?
  • What does Emerson say about how our own moods can
    affect the way we look at nature?

6
Imagery
  • What are the images in the following lines
  • Crossing a bare common, in snow puddles, at
    twilight, under a clouded sky, without having in
    my thoughts any occurrence of special good
    fortune, I have enjoyed a perfect exhilaration.
  • What affect does this description have on the
    reader?
  • What image is present in paragraph 4? What affect
    does it have?
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