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Henry Whitman's Influence On Transcendentalism

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“We will walk on our own feet; we will work with our own hands; we will speak our own minds” This message encompasses the whole ideology of transcendentalism. The transcendentalist were a group of individuals attempting to pave their own path in the world. Without them the progression of women’s rights, anti-slavery laws and various religious movements would slow tremendously.
The American history of transcendentalism is often attributed to the struggles of a single man. In early 1831, Boston pastor, Ralph Waldo Emerson, who had his faith tested when his wife passed. With the industrial revolution in full swing it had seemed that individuals did not matter. Emerson had believed that “the human mind is the most important force in the …show more content…

When Emerson died on April 27, 1882 his convictions and standards continued mainly in the work of his peer Walt Whitman and the numerous men and women he influenced over the course of his life.
Another significant thinker for the transcendentalist movement was Henry David Thoreau. As Thoreau was born during the very beginning of the transcendentalist movement he was greatly influenced by the thinkers of its time. Thoreau ended up as an apprentice to Emerson and took on many similar ideals during his lifetime. After a couple of years of working with Emerson, Thoreau began working on his own project. It is not perfectly clear what Thoreau’s purpose was during the experiment. It is merely stated that he wished to “transact some private business with the fewest obstacles.” However, it is thought Thoreau’s journey to Walden Pond was to practice a form of self reliance. At the start he cut down trees himself and built his own one room home to live in. There he caught and grew his own food. In this new temporary home Thoreau also wrote the book “A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers”. The experiment led up to the book “Walden” which resulted in reasonable success during Thoreau’s life. While writing “Walden” Thoreau was sent to jail for not paying his poll tax. This night in jail led to Thoreau deciding he would not support any type of government that allowed

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