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See also other letters in the collection from Emerson.
Emerson begins, "I have a suspicion that you have not a due respect for the privileges of your youth." Dryly observing that Dorr has been too busy on outdoor rambles, Emerson details the progress of the Alumni Hall at Harvard, asserting that the class of 1821 must do its part. He urges Dorr to follow the examples of Kent, Upham, and Reed, and to attend the "quinquennial Club meeting on Commencement Day." Emerson established the foundation for transcendentalism, a philosophy derived in part from European Romanticism, becoming one of its most well-known spokespersons with the publication of _Nature_ (1836) and "The American Scholar." Actively writing essays, lectures, and poems during the period known as the American renaissance (1835-65), Emerson also helped launch _The Dial_ (1840) a magazine for expressing transcendental philosophies and ideas.
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