This made her learn what she could not in a school: responsibility. Later on, when Margaret Fuller met the well-known transcendentalist writer Ralph Waldo Emerson, who inspired her to teach in Boston for a year. Moreover, this meeting began her career as a writer because, a few years later, she assisted in the founding of the Dial. She worked alongside great minds of the Hedge Club, like Emerson, Theodore Parker, and George Ripley. Four years after the publication of the Dial, she released her first book, Summer on the Lakes, which earned her an invitation from Horace Greeley to become a literary critic at the New York Tribune. Besides her first book, she wrote a number of critical articles, and fought for social
This made her learn what she could not in a school: responsibility. Later on, when Margaret Fuller met the well-known transcendentalist writer Ralph Waldo Emerson, who inspired her to teach in Boston for a year. Moreover, this meeting began her career as a writer because, a few years later, she assisted in the founding of the Dial. She worked alongside great minds of the Hedge Club, like Emerson, Theodore Parker, and George Ripley. Four years after the publication of the Dial, she released her first book, Summer on the Lakes, which earned her an invitation from Horace Greeley to become a literary critic at the New York Tribune. Besides her first book, she wrote a number of critical articles, and fought for social