Extemporaneous musings, occasionally poetic, about life in its richly varied dimensions, especially as relates to history, theology, law, literature, science, by one who is an attorney, ordained minister, historian, writer, and African American.
Saturday, July 20, 2013
"BUT I SHALL LIVE"-- EMERSON EXCERPT
“Like Ahab standing on the deck in the storm, Emerson takes on the universe: 'Who is he that shall control me? Why may not I act and speak and write and think with entire freedom? What am I to the universe, or, the universe, what is it to me? Who hath forged the chains of wrong and of right, of Opinion and of Custom? And must I wear them?' Accompanying his sense of detachment was a remarkable surge of power, a wonderful feeling of strength and liberation. 'I am solitary in the vast society of beings,' he wrote. 'I see the world, human, brute, and inanimate nature,--I am in the midst of them, but not of them; I hear the song of the storm... I see cities and nations and witness passions... but I partake it not … I disclaim them all.'
“The outburst is not so much isolation as defiance, a redefining of what is center, and what is periphery. It reminds one of Thoreau's hawk, which was not lonely but made everything lonely beneath it. It is a feeling of absolute and unquestioned self-validation, an extraordinary self-assertion, a wild romantic cogito that answers Hume not by logic but by felt experience. No matter what else existed, Emerson knew he existed: 'I say to the universe, Mighty One! Thou art not my mother. Return to chaos if thou wilt. I shall still exist. I live. If I owe my being, it is to a destiny greater than thine. Star by star, world by world, system by system shall be crushed,--but I shall live!”
EMERSON: THE MIND ON FIRE, A BIOGRAPHY, by Robert D. Richardson, Jr., (U. of California Press, Berkeley: 1995) P. 51