Today’s post is a repost of a book review on Ralph Waldo Emerson’s Nature, from late July 2023 when Words and Pictures had about 25 subscribers. Fast forward to 7 months later in early March 2024 when I posted this a 2nd time and there were over 200 posts here and well over 600 subscribers.
And today, on March 5, 2025, I have posted 391 posts on Words and Pictures, and there are almost 10 times more subscribers than last March.
I am so grateful for every one of you!
Still almost 2 years after I started Words and Pictures here on Substack, there are certain posts in the Archives that appear to be fresher and more vital now than they were when they were first posted and this is one of those posts.
Indulge me please and read on…
Reflections on Emerson’s Nature
Every now and then I sit down with my battered copy of Emerson’s Nature, that once belonged to my mother. Throughout my life, Emerson’s work has drawn me in because both of my parents instilled the importance of nature in me when I was a child. I am so grateful they did.
Ralph Waldo Emerson’s Nature is a series of eight essays that touch upon a variety of thoughts on nature in writings on Nature, Commodity, Beauty, Language, Discipline, Idealism, Spirit and Prospects.
Emerson’s essays were initially published anonymously and were influenced by his early form of Transcendentalism. He composed the essays in Nature after leaving the Unitarian ministry. Emerson’s Nature has influenced Emerson’s friend Henry David Thoreau, John Muir, John Burroughs and many others since its first publication. What Emerson entreats in Nature is that man must foray into nature in order to understand the “perpetual presence of the sublime.”
I am forever caught up in the “perpetual presence of the sublime,” that Emerson speaks of, for nature never ceases to amaze me and in that, my heart is like that of a child, as Emerson alludes: “The lover of nature is he whose inward and outward senses are still truly adjusted to each other, who has retained the spirit of infancy even into the era of manhood.”
Emerson speaks to my soul when he says, “In the wilderness, I find something more dear and connate than in streets or villages,” for I see the wilderness as the most blessed of places where beauty is forever changing moment by moment. Nature is such that it is constantly changing with its own forces at work constantly, the wind, the skies, the oceans, the forest, the fields. All ever changing. All ever beautiful even in its decay.
I cannot deny Emerson’s insistence that “nature is medicinal,” for surely there is no better balm in my opinion that a walk in the sun taking in the beauty of nature around you. In that awe that nature creates all around us, there is succor. As Emerson says, “Nature is made to conspire with spirit to emancipate us.” There is no place within the confines of society that I feel as free as when I am surrounded by nature.
In Nature, Emerson sets a standard that encourages us to look to the littlest things in nature for the miraculous in life. Emerson called upon his readers to connect the very existence of nature with the divine. The connection is ever prevalent and of the utmost necessity in a world where we are connected to technology more than nature.
In the essay Language, Emerson notes, “Every natural fact is a symbol of some spiritual fact.” Beyond the confines of traditional religion Emerson called on his readers to connect with nature in its most expansive and compelling aspects. His writings on Nature are still today some of the most important and influential writings in the non-fiction genre. At times lofty in his descriptions of nature and its spiritual connections to man and at times droll in his views of the current day dilemmas, I am reminded at every turn of the page reading each of the eight essays, why Emerson’s Nature is as eternal as its subject matter.
Works Cited
Emerson, Ralph Waldo. Nature.
Stay tuned for new posts coming soon including some beautiful new nature photos from last Spring and a new poem about voice.
I hope you will like, share and restack this nature essay based on Emerson’s Nature, and perhaps refer a friend.
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Pamela I love this essay and often use this quote when teaching: We all have language and consider this: The “word” as Emerson said, “if traced to its root, is found to be borrowed from some material appearance. Right means straight,” “wrong” means twisted. “spirit” primarily means wind … the whole of nature is a metaphor of the human mind,” he explains in Nature, Chapter IV, “Language.”
Pamela, I love this post, and I am a fan of Emerson. I need to re-read his work and am inspired to order it at my local library.
Your photos of various aspects of nature are beautiful and complement your words. So lovely.