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Born in Boston, Massachusetts, and educated at Harvard, Emerson became a Unitarian minister 1829. In 1832 he resigned and travelled to Europe, meeting the British writers Thomas Carlyle, Samuel Coleridge, and William Wordsworth. On his return to Massachusetts in 1833 he settled in Concord. He worked alongside Margaret Fuller, William Channing, and Henry Thoreau to develop transcendentalism, particularly its theological aspects, as a protest against dogmatic rationalism in religion. In 1840 he helped to launch the literary magazine The Dial, which he also edited for a time. He made a second visit to England 1847 and incorporated his impressions in English Traits 1856. His poetry, much of which was published in The Dial, includes The Rhodora, Threnody, and Brahma. His later works include Representative Men 1850 and The Conduct of Life 1870.
The Star of May recalls the declaration of independence on 14 May 1811. The colours were inspired by the French tricolour. Effective date: c. 1990.
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