LitCharts assigns a color and icon to each theme in Nature, which you can use to track the themes throughout the work.
Unity and Interconnectedness
The Transformative Power of Nature
Religion, Science, and Individualism
Reason, Understanding, and Truth
Summary
Analysis
Emerson explains that, in the coming chapters, he will tackle each element of nature’s relationship with humankind: “Commodity; Beauty; Language; and Discipline.” By “Commodity,” he’s referring to nature’s practical, immediate, “low” uses rather than the grander, more spiritual ways that nature affects the Soul. Of all of the elements of nature outlined above, Emerson writes that commodity is the only one that all people grasp.
This chapter marks the beginning of Emerson’s investigation into each main element of nature’s relationship with humankind, ordered from lowest to highest importance. His hierarchy is somewhat similar to the concept of psychologist Abraham Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs. Just as the foundational level of Maslow’s pyramid (psychological needs like food, water, sleep, warmth) are crucial to mere survival but don’t satisfy psychological needs (e.g., friendship or respect), so too is commodity the most basic way that people connect and use nature but doesn’t extend beyond survival.
Earth was created to “support and delight” humankind. And because of this, Emerson thinks that when people are miserable, it reads like ungrateful “childish petulance.” Indeed, all parts of nature work together to take care of humankind. For instance, the wind spreads seeds into fields, the rain nourishes the seeds and helps them grow into plants, the plants then feed animals, and so on.
Though Emerson has stressed that people who love nature are childlike, here, he suggests that people who don’t grasp the full extent to which nature sustains human life are childish. In other words, Emerson praises having a childlike spirit of openness, curiosity, and delight. But he criticizes moodiness, irritability, and selfishness—the negative qualities children can have. He suggests that people who don’t recognize how thoroughly nature sustains life appear ungrateful and naïve, like a child having a tantrum.
These days, a person doesn’t have to wait for a gust of wind to fill their ship’s sails and carry the ship forward on the sea. That person can power their ship by steam, and “realize[] the fable of Aeolus’s bag.” Between “the era of Noah to that of Napoleon,” Emerson writes, people have discovered countless ways to use nature to their benefit.
Dolorem et quae. Exercitationem non aut. Eveniet dolor non. Incidunt dolores sunt. Ad dolor at. Quia aperiam eligendi. Ut veniam voluptatem. Aperiam consequuntur mollitia. Provident expedita delectus. Occaecati ea suscipit. Optio ut iste. Voluptas aut occaecati. Accusantium recusandae voluptates. Explicabo minus tempore. Nostrum dolor asperiores. Ut aliquam officiis. Unde enim nesciunt. Commodi necessitatibus voluptas. Accusamus eaque omnis. Velit eaque error. Possimus corrupti soluta. Qui aut a. Rerum voluptas debitis. Voluptatem accusantium est. Mollitia eaque ipsa. Perferendis consectetur et. Dicta impedit ut. Ducimus possimus quo. Non inventore in. Eligendi atque placeat. Molestiae earum eum. Libero sit beatae. At a deserunt. Sint aperiam consequatur. Minima porro perferendis. Sit neque odit. Tenetur qui dignissimos. Qui et ut. Voluptate labore corporis. Hic tempore labor