Mary Moody Emerson has long been a New England legend, the "eccentric Calvinist aunt" of Ralph Waldo Emerson, wearing a death-shroud as her daily garment. This exciting new study, based on the first reading of all her known letters and diaries, reveals a complex human voice and powerful forerunner of American Transcendentalism. From the years of her famous nephew's infancy, in both private and published writings, she celebrated independence, solitude in nature, and inward communion with God. Mary Moody Emerson inherited both resources and constraints from her family, a lineage of Massachusetts ministers who had earlier practiced spiritual awakening and political resistance against England. Cole discovers a previously unexamined Emerson tradition of fervent piety in the ancestors' own writing and Mary's preservation of their memory. She also examines the position of a woman in this patriarchal family. Barred from the pulpit and university by her sex, she also refused marriage to become a reader, writer, and religious seeker. Cole's biography explores this reading and writing as both a woman's vocation and a gift to Ralph Waldo Emerson. Helping to raise her nephews after their father's death, Mary Moody Emerson urged Waldo the college student to seek solitude in nature and become a divine poet. Cole's pioneering study, tracing crucial lines of influence from Mary Emerson's heretofore unknown texts to her nephew's major works, establishes a fresh and vital source for a central American literary tradition. "Cole's sophisticated scholarship culminates in an extraordinary landmark biography describing a remarkable woman in New England intellectual cultural history."-- The Quest "In this magisterial work of feminist archaeology, Phyllis Cole...recovers Mary's life in the contexts of late New England Calvinism, the Emerson family, women's opportunities in the early republic, and Mary's own crusty personality.... [Mary Moody Emerson] is fortunate indeed to have found in Phyllis Cole a thoughtful, erudite, and compassionate biographer.... The scholarly community is much in her debt for this splendid book, which illuminates Mary's life and much more."-- Journal of English and Germanic Philology "Cole's informed, carefully crafted writing makes for pleasurable reading. She does a service in telling the story of this important but obscure figure in American life and thought....Recommended for all academic collections."-- Choice "A multi- lensed and sourced, pulsing, living recreation of the Emerson family and its first genius, Mary Moody Emerson. More than an intertwined major contribution to literature, history, biography, and philosophy, this book is an original and first-time- ever detailing of how genius born into a female body in a certain time and place nevertheless transcends constriction through brilliant words, being, and action. Wondrous."--Tillie Olsen "This is a grand, wide-ranging book about a great woman, Mary Moody Emerson, who was a founder of Transcendentalism, the earliest and best teacher of R.W. Emerson, and a spirited and original genius in her own right. Phyllis Cole's deeply researched book gives us both Mary Emerson's background and her life. This book adds a whole new context, a new methodology, and above all a wonderful new figure to American literature."--Robert D. Richardson, Jr. author of Henry Thoreau: A Life of the Mind and Emerson: The Mind on Fire Phyllis Cole is at Pennsylvania State University.