
232 American Literature
22 Report of the Board of Directors of the Massachusetts State Prison, 1815;
quoted in Gideon Haynes, An Historical Sketch of the Massachusetts State
Prison (Boston: Lee and Shepard, 1869), 215.
23 TheodoreParker,inanessaypublishedinthesamevolumeoftheDial as
Emerson’s ‘‘Man the Reformer,’’ made a fuller version of the same argu-
ment. Parker distinguished between primitive societies where ‘‘crimes
are few [and] the result of violent passions’’ and an exploitative industrial
society where crimes ‘‘are numerous;—the result of want, indolence, or
neglected education; they are in great measure crimes against property’’
(‘‘Thoughts on Labor,’’ Dial 4 [April 1840]: 512). The idea that crimes
are produced by social and economic conditions, rather than corruptions
of the soul, strikes against the logic of spiritual correction and calls for
sweeping reforms beyond the sphere of penal law. The social causes of
crime, however, were not ignored by the reformers who conceived the
penitentiary; in fact, their sense that there was a redeemable soul in every
convict was based, in some accounts, on the premise that criminals are
made by pernicious social and environmental influences, and that prison
discipline should undo these effects.
24 Andrews Norton, ‘‘The New School in Literature and Religion,’’ Boston
Daily Advertiser, 27 August 1838; and A Discourse on the Latest Form
of Infidelity (Cambridge, Mass.: John Owen, 1839); quoted in Robert D.
Richardson Jr., Emerson: The Mind on Fire (Berkeley and Los Angeles:
Univ. of California Press, 1995), 299.
25 Richardson, Emerson, 300.
26 Barbara Packer, Emerson’s Fall (New York: Continuum, 1982), 133.
27 Ibid., 135. Charles Lane had put it this way: ‘‘[A]s soon as warm sponta-
neous thoughts are chilled into orthodoxy, the fluid stream, which would
facilitate our progress, is frozen into an unyielding barrier’’ (‘‘Social Ten-
dencies,’’ Dial 14 [October 1843]: 192).
28 Ralph Waldo Emerson, ‘‘Self-Reliance,’’ Selected Essays, ed. Larzer Ziff
(New York: Penguin, 1982), 196. Further references are to this edition
and will be cited parenthetically as ‘‘SR.’’
29 On the composition of these lines and their inclusion in ‘‘Self-Reliance,’’
see Richardson, Emerson, 299–300.
30 Ralph Waldo Emerson, ‘‘Circles,’’ in Selected Essays, ed. Larzer Ziff (New
York: Penguin, 1982), 236.
31 A few months before the publication of ‘‘Self-Reliance,’’ Emerson had
seriously considered joining George Ripley’s experimental commune at
Brook Farm. After a long deliberation, he declined the invitation, writ-
ing to Ripley on 15 December 1840: ‘‘[A]ll I shall solidly do, I must do
alone’’ (SL, 244, 245). Emerson reckoned with his solitude as a natu-
ral and necessary destiny: ‘‘He could join no association that was not
based on the recognition that each person is the center of his or her
own world’’ (Richardson, Emerson, 343). The controversy following the