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here interrupted the speaker.
It came from Kate Field.
Mr. Emerson had a brief connection with the Radical Club; and this may be a suitable place in which to give my personal impressions of the Prophet of New England.
In remembering Mr. Emerson, we should analyze his works sufficiently to be able to distinguish the things in which he really was a leader and a teacher from other traits peculiar to himself, and interesting as elements of his historic character, but not as features of the ideal which we are to follow.
Mr. Emerson objected strongly to newspaper reports of the sittings of the Radical Club.
The reports sent to the New York Tribune by Mrs. Louise Chandler Moulton were eagerly sought and read in very distant parts of the country.
I rejoiced in this.
It seemed to me that the uses of the club were thus greatly multiplied and extended.
It became an agency in the great church universal.
Mr. Emerson's principal objection to the reports was that they interfered with the freedom of the occasion.
When this objection failed to prevail, he withdrew from the club almost entirely, and was never more heard among its speakers.
I remember hearing Mr. Emerson, in his discourse on Henry Thoreau, relate that the latter had once determined to manufacture the best lead pencil that could possibly be made.
Having
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