Ralph Waldo Emerson: Intellect

"Our spontaneous action is always the best. You cannot, with your best 
deliberation and heed, come so close to any question as your spontaneous glance 
shall bring you, whilst you rise from your bed, or walk abroad in the morning 
after meditating the matter before sleep on the previous night. Our thinking is 
a pious reception. Our truth of thought is therefore vitiated as much by too 
violent direction given by our will, as by too great negligence. We do not 
determine what we will think. We only open our senses, clear away, as we can, 
all obstruction from the fact, and suffer the intellect to see. We have little 
control over our thoughts. We are the prisoners of ideas. They catch us up for 
moments into their heaven, and so fully engage us, that we take no thought for 
the morrow, gaze like children, without an effort to make them our own. By and 
by we fall out of that rapture, bethink us where we have been, what we have 
seen, and repeat, as truly as we can, what we have beheld. 
 As far as we can recall these ecstasies, we carry away in the ineffaceable 
memory the result, and all men and all the ages confirm it. It is called Truth. 
But the moment we cease to report, and attempt to correct and contrive, it is 
not truth."



http://m.youtube.com/watch?v=4_36Y4mG_CI
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 



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