Religious Self-Reliance

The Pluralist 7 (1):27-53 (2012)
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Abstract

Robert Frost read "The Gift Outright" to the Phi Beta Kappa Society at William & Mary College almost one hundred years after Emerson delivered his famous lecture "The American Scholar" before the Society's Harvard chapter. In his talk, Emerson proclaims, "Our day of dependence, our long apprenticeship to the learning of other lands, draws to a close" (Essays and Poems 53). It is no accident that Frost's poem brings to mind Emerson.1 The possession of the American imagination by other lands and its "withholding from our land of living" declare the same distractions. The distance between ourselves and our own possibilities represents for Emerson the misdirection backwards toward Europe, and not forward to the land ..

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Randy L. Friedman
State University of New York at Binghamton

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References found in this work

The Metaphysics of John Dewey.Richard M. Gale - 2002 - Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 38 (4):477 - 519.
Traditions of Pragmatism and the Myth of the Emersonian Democrat.Randy L. Friedman - 2007 - Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 43 (1):154-184.

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