Thoreau, Henry David
The Oxford Companion to American Literature
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1995
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© The Oxford Companion to American Literature 1995, originally published by Oxford University Press 1995. (Hide copyright information)
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Thoreau, Henry David (1817–62), born in Concord of a family whose French, Scottish, Quaker, and Puritan stock helps to account for his temper of mind. Just as his heritage was mixed, so his philosophy of life combined diverse strains, and he called himself “a mystic, a transcendentalist, and a natural philosopher to boot.” At heart, he was predominantly individualistic, and his great interest was “to observe what transpires, not in the street, but in the mind and heart of me!” Although his reading carried him far afield, he could truthfully say “I have travelled a good deal in Concord.” In addition to his natural education in the woods near Concord, and the ordinary preparatory schooling, he graduated from Harvard (1837), where he was primarily influenced by E.T. Channing's teaching of composition, and the knowledge of Greek and the metaphysical poets that he derived from Jones Very. His temporary residence in the home of Orestes Brownson, from whom he learned German, was also influential. Above all he fell under the sway of Emerson, and it has been frequently said that he was the answer to Emerson's plea for an “American Scholar.”
After graduation he taught school in his native town, for a time in collaboration with his brother John, following the principles of Bronson Alcott. With his brother he also made a trip on the Concord and Merrimack rivers (1839), of which he wrote during his residence at Walden in
A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers (1849). After closing his school, he lived with Emerson (1841–43), serving him as a general handyman, although their relation was also one of master and disciple. At this time he became an intimate of the members of the
Transcendental Club and a contributor to
The Dial and other magazines. During 1843 he was a tutor in the Staten Island home of William Emerson, where he made the acquaintance of Horace Greeley, Lucretia Mott, and the elder Henry James.
After his return to Concord, Thoreau built himself a hut at nearby Walden Pond, where he lived from July 4, 1845, to September 6, 1847, a period of which he wrote in his most famous book,
Walden (1854). While other Transcendentalists sought a retreat at Brook Farm, Thoreau, ever an individualist, having no use for cooperative plans, found his solution at Walden. He wanted to get back to the naked simplicity of life, where he might “subdue and cultivate a few cubic feet of flesh,” chew the cud of his thoughts, and get to the very core of the universe, by living deep and sucking out all the “marrow of life.” His desire was “so to love wisdom as to live according to its dictates, a life of simplicity, independence, magnanimity, and trust …to solve some of the problems of life, not only theoretically, but practically.” He wanted neither to be interfered with nor to interfere with others, and he declared, “I would not have anyone adopt my mode of living, each should find out his own way, not his neighbor's or his parents'.”
His residence at the Pond was interrupted by a day's imprisonment for refusal to pay a poll tax to a government that supported the Mexican War, a war he considered merely a land‐grabbing scheme of the Southern slaveholders. This action was in accord with his belief in passive resistance, a means of protest he explained in his essay “
Civil Disobedience” (1849). It was a means of accentuating his belief, expressed in
Walden, that each man should save himself and all would be saved. He not only believed with Jefferson that that government is best which governs least, but he also contended that “they are the lovers of law and order who observe the law when the government breaks it.” His belief in the individual and in a moral law superior to statutes and constitutions was also expressed in “
Life Without Principle” (1863).
After his return to Concord, he lived for a year in Emerson's home while the essayist was abroad, and during this period formed his close friendship with the younger W.E. Channing, who in writing the first biography of Thoreau aptly called him “the poet‐naturalist.” His observations of nature were distinguished not merely by his scientific knowledge, which was occasionally erroneous, but by his all‐inclusive love of life, expressed now in an earthy manner with a Yankee twang, now with a sweet, pure English, having, as Lowell said, “an antique purity like wine grown colorless with age.” Though he enjoyed the scientific view of nature, he was also a
Transcendentalist, defining his attitude when he said he wanted more the wideness of heaven than the limit of the microscope. His statement that he liked “better the surliness with which the wood chopper speaks of his woods, handling them as indifferently as his axe, than the mealy‐mouthed enthusiasm of the lover of nature” shows him as an observer who wanted his answers concerning nature not only in facts but in terms of faith.
He made several brief trips (1849–53), which supplied the material for his posthumously pub‐lished books
Excursions (1863),
The Maine Woods (1864),
Cape Cod (1865), and
A Yankee in Canada (1866). Meanwhile he continued his outwardly parochial life in Concord, where he wrote his journals, containing some two million words, the basis of all his books. During these years he became increasingly involved in the antislavery movement and delivered such speeches as
Slavery in Massachusetts (1854). He was profoundly stirred by his meeting with John Brown at Emerson's home (1857) and praised Brown's actions at Harpers Ferry, for here was a man who was carrying out the principles that he himself championed. He eulogized him in three lectures,
A Plea for Captain John Brown (1859),
The Last Days of John Brown (1860), and
After the Death of John Brown (1860).
During his last years, Thoreau made further trips to Cape Cod and Maine, and to New York City, where he met Whitman, but he was a victim of tuberculosis, which gradually weakened him and finally caused his death. He worked indefatigably, in spite of this handicap, on a long, unpublished ethnological study of the Indians and continued to make scientific observations and to carry on his own way of life both privately and as a lyceum lecturer. An invalid, he made an attempt to recapture health by journeying to the Great Lakes and the Mississippi (1861), but returned home, knowing that he was shortly to die, to engage in a last attempt to edit his journals for publication. He published two books and a few articles and speeches during his lifetime, but it was not until after his death that selections from his journals were edited by his friend
Harrison G.O. Blake as
Early Spring in Massachusetts (1881),
Summer (1884),
Winter (1888), and
Autumn (1892). The complete
Journal was issued (14 vols.) in 1906 and the text of a lost journal (1840–41) was edited by Perry Miller as
Consciousness in Concord (1958). Other miscellaneous work was published in his collected
Writings (20 vols., 1906), and Emerson's edition of the
Letters (1865) was enlarged (1894) and further amplified and edited as
Correspondence (1958). His
Poems of Nature appeared in 1895 and Carl Bode edited the
Collected Poems in 1943. A scholarly edition of his
Writings, which will supersede that of 1906, began publication in 1971. In 1993 appeared
Faith in a Seed: “The Dispersion of Seeds” and Other Late Natural History Writings, edited by Bradley Dean, proto‐chapters from the journals, not shaped by Thoreau for publication, but pioneering notes on processes of plant succession and dispersal in the Concord environs.
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1839/2003.(travelling the route of John and Henry Thoreau)
Magazine article from: The New Yorker; 12/15/2003; ; 700+ words
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Winter tracings and transcendental leaps: Henry Thoreau's skating.
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How I began my lifelong walk with Henry Thoreau.(The Home Forum)
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Henry S. Salt, Life of Henry David Thoreau.(Book review)
Magazine article from: Nineteenth-Century Prose; 3/22/1995; ; 700+ words
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The Writings of Henry D. Thoreau. Journal. Volume 5: 1852-1853.(Critical Essay)(Review) (book reviews)
Magazine article from: ANQ; 1/1/2000; ; 700+ words
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Profile: Henry David Thoreau
Transcript from: NPR Morning Edition; 8/5/2002; ; 700+ words
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The Writings of Henry D. Thoreau: Journal, Volume 4, 1851-1852.(The Thoreau Log: A Documentary Life of Henry David Thoreau 1817-1862)(Book review)
Magazine article from: Nineteenth-Century Prose; 9/22/1993; ; 700+ words
; The Writings of Henry D. Thoreau: Journal, Volume 4, 1851-1852, ed...1992), 787 pp., $39.50 cloth. The Thoreau Log: A Documentary Life of Henry David Thoreau 1817-1862, ed. Raymond R. Borst (G...
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Thoreau, Henry David
Encyclopedia entry from: International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences
Thoreau, Henry David 1817 – 1862 Writer, naturalist...and anti-slavery activist, Henry David Thoreau was born in Concord, Massachusetts...Cambridge University Press. Thoreau, Henry David. 2004a. The Higher Law: Thoreau...
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Henry David Thoreau
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Henry David Thoreau , 1817-62, American author and...1973); E. H. Wagenknecht, Henry David Thoreau (1981); R. Lebeaux, Thoreau...the Mind (1986); R. Schneider, Henry David Thoreau (1987); L. Buell, The Environmental...
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Civil Disobedience (1846, by Henry David Thoreau)
Dictionary entry from: Dictionary of American History
CIVIL DISOBEDIENCE (1846, by Henry David Thoreau) From 4 July 1845 to 6 September 1847, the writer Henry David Thoreau lived in solitude on Walden Pond in Massachusetts...
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Walden
Dictionary entry from: Dictionary of American History
WALDEN WALDEN. Henry David Thoreau (1817 – 1862) published Walden in 1854. It is based...facts of life." BIBLIOGRAPHY Harding, Walter Roy. The Days of Henry Thoreau. New York: Knopf, 1965. McGregor, Robert Kuhn. A Wider...
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Literature: An American Renaissance
Book article from: American Eras
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