The Lyceum

A gathering place for engaging Emersonian content to educate & entertain.

FRIENDS, NATURE, EMERSON HOUSE LoLC FRIENDS, NATURE, EMERSON HOUSE LoLC

Christopher Cranch: Transcendentalist, Artist, and Follower of Emerson

Reprinted from The Public Domain Review, this essay explores the friendship of Transcendentalist illustrator Christopher Cranch and Ralph Waldo Emerson. Cranch’s collection of humorous sketches inspired by phrases from Emerson’s Nature—including his famed “transparent eyeball” drawing—is considered one of his greatest achievements.

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NATURE, TRAVELS, WRITINGS LoLC NATURE, TRAVELS, WRITINGS LoLC

Emerson’s Mountain Interval

A reflection on Emerson’s trip to the White Mountains in the summer of 1832 as he considered leaving the ministry after the death of his first wife, Ellen. Taking wisdom from his surroundings, it was there that Emerson made the decision to resign. Mountains continued to occupy a place in his imagination, itineraries, and poetry for the rest of his life.

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LECTURES, EVENTS, NATURE LoLC LECTURES, EVENTS, NATURE LoLC

The American Scholar: Emerson’s Call to Awaken American Thought

An examination of the themes and context of Emerson’s momentous 1837 speech, "An Oration, Delivered before the Phi Beta Kappa Society at Cambridge,” later retitled “The American Scholar.” At the time, Emerson was just embarking on his remarkable 40-year career as an essayist, poet and speaker. His mind was racing with new ideas designed to increase individual expression and promote the importance of nature to thought and literature, and the Transcendental Club was founded soon thereafter.

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NEWS, BOOKS, FAMILY LoLC NEWS, BOOKS, FAMILY LoLC

Three Roads Back

The late Robert D. Richardson Jr.’s final book, Three Roads Back (Princeton University Press, 2023) explores how Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry David Thoreau, and William James each coped with the grief of losing loved ones. Emerson lost his first wife, Ellen, to tuberculosis after less than two years of marriage, and his first child, Waldo, died of scarlet fever at the age of five.

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WRITINGS, NATURE, EVENTS LoLC WRITINGS, NATURE, EVENTS LoLC

Mr. Emerson’s Journals

Selections from Ralph Waldo Emerson’s journals, which he kept throughout his life and which served as the basis for many of his essays, lectures, and poems. The journals were a platform for Emerson to evaluate and make decisions; to react to news, good or bad; and to form a record of the people he met and the places he visited.

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CONCORD, NATURE, EMERSON HOUSE LoLC CONCORD, NATURE, EMERSON HOUSE LoLC

On the Grapevine

Exploring the history of the ‘Concord grape,” developed by Concord resident—and Emerson neighbor—Ephraim Wales Bull in the 1840s. Henry David Thoreau first planted a scion of the original stock in the Emersons’ garden in the 1850s and a ‘Concord’ grapevine has grown there ever since.

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CONCORD, FAMILY, FRIENDS LoLC CONCORD, FAMILY, FRIENDS LoLC

Emerson’s Impact on Concord

Ralph Waldo Emerson had a lifelong association with the town of Concord, descending from one of its founders and periodically living with relatives there before making it his permanent home in 1835. Emerson was actively engaged in the town’s intellectual and civic life and both he and Lidian were involved in social reform movements. Nicknamed the “Sage of Concord,” one of Emerson’s greatest impacts on the town was drawing many of the leading writers, educators and reformers of the 19th century to his Concord home.

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EMERSON HOUSE, EVENTS, FAMILY LoLC EMERSON HOUSE, EVENTS, FAMILY LoLC

Fire at the Emerson House

On July 24, 1872—150 years ago today—a fire started in the attic of the Emerson House and spread quickly. Neighbors rushed over to help, rescuing most of the family’s possessions and managing to save the house, although it was badly damaged. After the fire, friends raised funds to reconstruct the Emersons’ home, which still stands today with the structure intact and most of the original furnishings within.

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