Wednesday, May 20, 2009

What are some quotes from "Self-Reliance" using personification?

Emerson adds color to his essay by sprinkling personification throughout it, giving abstract concepts and non-human entities human characteristics. One example would be "lungs of inspiration," as if inspiration breathed like a human. In another instance, Emerson describes thoughts as having a "certain alienated majesty," as if they were a human being with a distinct personality. The concepts of malice and vanity are personified by Emerson as wearing "the coat" of philanthropy, as if they were people who needed clothing. This functions to show how bad human qualities hide themselves, as humans might hide their physical flaws, under "coats." When Emerson gives a dollar to what he thinks is a bad charity, he personifies the dollar bill as "wicked." He talks about the "eyes" of nations, as if nations were people, and personifies art by saying a picture "awaits my verdict; it is not to command me," treating the picture as if it as human being Emerson is in dialogue with and must master. All of this enlivens an essay that otherwise might get lost in abstraction.

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