Emerson was not the poet he had in mind in “The Poet.” In 1840, Alexis de Tocqueville had prophesied an American poetry free of “legendary lays,” “old traditions,” “supernatural beings,” masks, and personifications. Americans led “petty” and “insipid” lives, “crowded with paltry interests”: their lives were “anti-poetic.” The only subject possible for an American poet was humankind; luckily, as Tocqueville wrote, “the poet needs no more.” Emerson, who spent most of his life cultivating the aura of an elder, called for “a brood of Titans” who would “run up the mountains of the West with the errand of genius and love.”
Wednesday, September 02, 2015
In case you wondered …
… How Ralph Waldo Emerson Changed American Poetry - The New Yorker. (Hat tip, Rus Bowden.)
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Well, perhaps, but I think Walt Whitman deserves the honor of being named as the one in the 19th century who most changed American poetry.
ReplyDeleteI agree — though did derive some of his ideas from Emerson.
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