Notes

[Notes from the Centenary Edition of Emerson's Complete Works, edited by his
son, Edward Waldo Emerson.]

* Jacob Behmen, or Boehme, a Silesian of humble birth in the sixteenth
century, a mystic whose writings later attracted much attention. Mr. Emerson
was early interested in his works and often mentions them.

*(2) William Gilbert (1540-1603), the greatest man of science of Queen
Elizabeth's reign, especially noted for his discovery that the earth is a
great magnet.

*(3) That is, the ideal, instead of the outward shows of things.

*(4) federal errors: a Latinism for mistakes sanctioned by custom.

*(5) flagrant: a Latinism suggesting that, in the general dimness, the
outlines of the human world may be found in its blazing beacon lights.

*(6) The constant security of Mr Emerson's belief in Evolution in its
highest sense appears hear as elsewhere in his prose and verse, and also his
belief in the genius of mankind, which is another word for Universal Mind.

*(7) The less usual use of "secular," in its strict classical sense, to mean
"that live through the ages."

*(8) Omar the Caliph was Mahomet's cousin and second successor.

*(9) From the Timaeus.

*(10) From the Theaetetus.

*(11) From the Gorgias.

*(12) Compare the Republic, Book VII.

*(13) From the Phaedrus.

*(14) See the Republic, Book VI.

*(15) What Mr. Emerson says here of Plato, and also earlier, "He cannot
forgive in himself a partiality, but is resolved that the two poles of
thought shall appear in his statement," cannot but recall his own method of
presenting in turn different facets of the gem of truth. Churchman and
Agnostic can easily find good weapons for argument in his works. Dr. Holmes
says of this passage, "Some will smile at hearing him say this of another."
It illustrates the felicity of the Doctor's remark that Emerson holds up the
mirror to his characters at just such an angle that we see his own face as
well as that of his hero.

*(16) ...his soliform eye and his boniform soul: Dr. Holmes says, "These two
quaint adjectives are from the mint of Cudworth."

*(17) From Plato's Meno, where, as also in the Phaedrus, the doctrines of
Reminiscence is brought forward, and here is reconciled with that of the
Universal Mind.

*(18) John Selden (1584-1654), jurist, antiquarian, orientalist, author. His
Table-Talk was published in 1681.

*(19) Marcello Malpighi of Bologna (1628-1694) is considered a founder of
microscopic anatomy.

*(20) Leucippus: in the 5th century B.C. Leucippus held an atomic theory
later expounded by Lucretius in his poem De Rerum Natura.

*(21) Swammerdam... Boerhaave: Swammerdam, a brilliant Dutch naturalist of
the 17th century, was especially noted for his minute studies of the viscera
and system of injection of vessels. Leuwenhoek, his countryman and
contemporary, made notable discoveries with regard to capillary circulation
and the blood corpuscles of man and animals... Winslow was a Dane, but
worked in Paris, and wrote on purely descriptive anatomy. Eustachius of
Salerno was a brilliant investigator of human structure, especially of the
ear and viscera, though less reputed that the great Flemish anatomist
Andreas Vesalius, who was persecuted for daring to teach the real facts of
human anatomy in face of the mistaken authority of Galen. Heister was also
an anatomist. Herman Boerhaave (1688-1738), born in Holland and educated at
the University of Leyden... He studied philosophy and medicine and became a
distinguished practitioner and writer mainly on medical subjects.

*(22) Leibnitz: the maxim of the broad and high-minded Leibnitz (1646-1715),
"Everything is for the best in the best of possible worlds," would have
recommended him.

*(23) The "flowing of nature" is the old doctrine of Heracleitus. The answer
of Amasis, King of Egypt, is related in "The Banquet" in Plutarch's Morals.

*(24) In the Timaeus it is told that Solon heard from Egyptian priests this
account of the great Athenians of the first State, which was destroyed by an
earthquake thousands of years earlier.

*(25) Casella: Dante's friend, the beautiful singer, whom meeting, in
Purgatory, he besought to sing. Casella began "Amor che nella mente mi
ragiona," and all the souls flocked to hear.

*(26) One of the examples of Laconic speech given by Plutarch in the Life of
Lycurgus.

*(27) I knew a philosopher... "Mankind is a damned rascal": this was the
remark of Emerson's neighbor, a laborer.

*(28) The Proteus: Mr. Emerson recognized Nature's secret of Identity
through all fugitive forms in the fable of the sea-god Proteus, who, when
caught sleeping by a mortal, took shapes of beasts, of serpents, of fire, to
disconcert his captor, yet, if held fast in spite of all, must answer his
questions.

*(29) San Carlo: the valued friend here alluded to, Mr. Charles K. Newcomb,
was of a sensitive and beautiful character, a mystic, but with the Hamlet
temperament to such an extent that he was paralyzed for all action by the
tenderness of his conscience and the power with which all sides of a
question presented themselves to him in turn. He was a member of the Brooks
Farm Community, a welcome but rare visitor at Mr. Emerson's house, and when
he came he brought his writings, which interested his host greatly. I think
they never came to publication, except a few papers in the Dial. His sense
of duty sent him to the war for the Union in the ranks. He remained a
bachelor all his life and in his last years lived much abroad.

*(30) The dates of Lydgate and Caxton show a mistake as to Emerson's use of
them. Caxton, following Chaucer, when he introduced the printing press to
England, printed his poems and those of Lydgate, who was younger than
Chaucer.

*(31) While writing this, Mr. Emerson was surrounded by persons paralyzed
for active life in the common world by the doubts of conscience or entangled
in over-fine-spun webs of their intellect.

*(32) This line is probably a translation from some Arabic or Persian
source, from the connection in which it appears in Emerson's notebook.

*(33) Xenien: from the Greek, was used by Goethe and Schiller to denote
epigrams.

 

 

Ralph Waldo Emerson

Philosophy & Classics

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