The GCGBPtransmigration of souls is no fable. I would it were, but men and women are only half human.GC With these words, Ralph Waldo Emerson confronts a dilemma that illuminates the formation of American individualism: to evolve and become fully human requires a heightened engagement with history. Americans, Emerson argues, must realize historyGCOs chronology in themselvesGCobecause their own minds and bodies are its evolving record. Whereas scholarship has tended to minimize the mystical underpinnings of EmersonGs notion of the self, his depictions of Gthe metempsychosis of natureG reveal deep roots in mystical traditions from Hinduism and Buddhism to Platonism and Christian esotericism. In essay after essay, Emerson uses metempsychosis as an open-ended template to understand human development.In Leaves of Grass, Walt Whitman transforms EmersonGs conception of metempsychotic selfhood into an expressly poetic event. His vision of transmigration viscerally celebrates the poetGs ability to assume and live in other bodies; his American poet seeks to incorporate the entire nation into his own person so that he can speak for every man and woman.