TRUE is your answer to your question..
Emerson evokes the existence of God to prove our divinity. The second paragraph of the essay introduces the idea. He states that we each get our "plot of land" and must till it if we are to grow anything to feed ourselves. This is to say that you can't be anyone else, you only get to live and grow as you, and that is an intentional deed by God, and thus you are the result of a divine act, and divine in yourself. Therefore we should trust this divinity and let our own hearts guide us, rather than the pressures and expectations of others. We must be divine.
It's an incredible essay and definitely worth a close reading.
In the Canterbury Tales, the best option to characterize the Pardon-seller is devious.
He
is using other people and tricking them by saying that if they buy
these pardons, all of their sins will be forgiven, He feels no remorse,
and is definitely not naive or charitable - he knows what he's doing and
he's doing it for quite a price.