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- English
- Henry David Thoreau
- The Great Conservationist, Visionary, and Humanist
-
- He spent his life in voluntary poverty, enthralled by the study
- of nature. Two years, in the prime of his life, were spent living in a
- shack in the woods near a pond. Who would choose a life like this?
- Henry David Thoreau did, and he enjoyed it. Who was Henry David Thoreau,
- what did he do, and what did others think of his work?
- Henry David Thoreau was born in Concord, Massachusetts on July
- 12, 1817 ("Thoreau" 96), on his grandmother's farm. Thoreau, who was of
- French-Huguenot and Scottish-Quaker ancestry, was baptized as David Henry
- Thoreau, but at the age of twenty he legally changed his name to Henry
- David. Thoreau was raised with his older sister Helen, older brother
- John, and younger sister Sophia (Derleth 1) in genteel poverty (The 1995
- Grolier Multimedia Encyclopedia 1). It quickly became evident that
- Thoreau was interested in literature and writing. At a young age he began
- to show interest writing, and he wrote his first essay, "The Seasons," at
- the tender age of ten, while attending Concord Academy (Derleth 4).
- In 1833, at the age of sixteen, Henry David was accepted to
- Harvard University, but his parents could not afford the cost of tuition
- so his sister, Helen, who had begun to teach, and his aunts offered to
- help. With the assistance of his family and the beneficiary funds of
- Harvard he went to Cambridge in August 1833 and entered Harvard on
- September first. "He [Thoreau] stood close to the top of his class, but
- he went his own way too much to reach the top" (5).
- In December 1835, Thoreau decided to leave Harvard and attempt to
- earn a living by teaching, but that only lasted about a month and a half
- (8). He returned to college in the fall of 1836 and graduated on August
- 16, 1837 (12). Thoreau's years at Harvard University gave him one great
- gift, an introduction to the world of books.
- Upon his return from college, Thoreau's family found him to be
- less likely to accept opinions as facts, more argumentative, and
- inordinately prone to shock people with his own independent and
- unconventional opinions. During this time he discovered his secret
- desire to be a poet (Derleth 14), but most of all he wanted to live with
- freedom to think and act as he wished.
- Immediately after graduation from Harvard, Henry David applied
- for a teaching position at the public school in Concord and was
- accepted. However, he refused to flog children as punishment. He opted
- instead to deliver moral lectures. This was looked down upon by the
- community, and a committee was asked to review the situation. They
- decided that the lectures were not ample punishment, so they ordered
- Thoreau to flog recalcitrant students. With utter contempt he lined up
- six children after school that day, flogged them, and handed in his
- resignation, because he felt that physical punishment should have no part
- in education (Derleth 15).
- In 1837 Henry David began to write his Journal (16). It started
- out as a literary notebook, but later developed into a work of art. In
- it Thoreau record his thoughts and discoveries about nature (The 1995
- Grolier Multimedia Encyclopedia 1).
- Later that same year, his sister, Helen, introduced him to Lucy
- Jackson Brown, who just happened to be Ralph Waldo Emerson's
- sister-in-law. She read his Journal, and seeing many of the same
- thoughts as Emerson himself had expressed, she told Emerson of Thoreau.
- Emerson asked that Thoreau be brought to his home for a meeting, and they
- quickly became friends (Derleth 18). On April 11, 1838, not long after
- their first meeting Thoreau, with Emerson's help, delivered his first
- lecture, "Society" (21).
- Ralph Waldo Emerson was probably the single most portentous
- person in Henry David Thoreau's life. From 1841 to 1843 and again
- between 1847 and 1848 Thoreau lived as a member of Emerson's household,
- and during this time he came to know Bronson Alcott, Margaret Fuller, and
- many other members of the "Transcendental Club" ("Thoreau" 696).
- On August 31, 1839 Henry David and his elder brother, John, left
- Concord on a boat trip down the Concord River, onto the Middlesex Canal,
- into the Merrimack River and into the state of
- New Hampshire. Out of this trip came Thoreau's first book, A Week on the
- Concord and Merrimack Rivers (25).
- Early in 1841, John Thoreau, Henry's beloved older brother,
- became very ill, most likely with tuberculosis, and in early May a poor
- and distraught Henry David moved into the upstairs of Ralph Waldo
- Emerson's house (35). On March 11, 1842 John died, and Henry's life long
- friend and companion was gone (40).
- In early 1845 Thoreau decided to make a sojourn to nearby Walden
- Pond, where Emerson had recently purchased a plot of land. He built a
- small cabin overlooking the pond, and from July 4, 1845 to September 6,
- 1847 Thoreau lived at Walden Pond ("Thoreau" 697). When asked why he
- went to live at Walden Pond Thoreau replied:
- I went to the woods because I wished to live
- deliberately, to front only the essential facts of life,
- and see if I could not learn what it had to teach, and not, when I came
- to die, discover that I had not lived. I did not wish to live what was
- not life, living is dear, nor did I wish to
- practice resignation, unless it was quite necessary. I
- wanted to live deep and suck out all the marrow of life... (Thoreau
- 75- 76).
- One night in July 1846, during his stay at Walden, Thoreau was
- walking into Concord from the pond when he was accosted by Sam Staples,
- the Concord jailer, and charged with not having paid his poll tax.
- Thoreau had not paid a poll tax since 1843 when his friend Bronson Alcott
- spent a night in jail for not paying his. He didn't see why he should
- have to pay the tax, he had never voted, and he knew that such a purely
- political tax had to be affiliated with the funding of the Mexican War
- and the subsistence of slavery, both of which he strongly objected to
- (Derleth 66). The following morning Thoreau was released because
- someone, probably his Aunt Maria Thoreau, had paid his back taxes (68).
- This imprisonment compelled Thoreau to write "Civil Disobedience," one of
- his most famous essays.
- On May 6,1862 ("Thoreau" 697), after an unavailing journey to
- Minnesota in 1861 in search of better health, Henry David Thoreau died of
- tuberculosis. Thoreau was buried in Sleep Hollow Cemetery in Concord
- near his friends Ralph Waldo Emerson, Nathaniel Hawthorne, and Bronson
- Alcott (The 1995 Grolier Multimedia Encyclopedia 2).
- Thoreau never earned a livelihood by writing, but his works fill
- twenty volumes. His first book, A Week on the Concord and Merrimack
- Rivers, was a huge failure selling only 219 of the original 1,000 copies
- ("Thoreau" 697), but his doctrine of passive resistance impacted many
- powerful people such as Mahatma Gahndi and Martin Luther King, Jr. (The
- 1995 Grolier Multimedia Encyclopedia 1). Thoreau's essay, "Civil
- Disobedience," accentuated personal ethics and responsibility. It urged
- the individual to follow the dictates of conscience in any conflict
- between itself and civil law, and to violate unjust laws to invoke their
- repeal.
- Throughout his life, Thoreau protested against slavery by
- lecturing, by abetting escaped slaves in their decampment to freedom in
- Canada, and by outwardly defending John Brown when he made his hapless
- attack on Harpers Ferry in 1859 (2).
- Walden is conceivably Thoreau's most famous work, however, for
- nearly a century after it's publication it was considered to be only a
- collection of nature essays, as social criticism, or as a literal
- autobiography. Walden is now looked upon as a created work of art
- ("Thoreau" 697).
- In Walden Thoreau expresses his sentiments on varying subjects
- such as, the attitudes of society, age, and work. Thoreau felt that
- society had no right to judge people on the basis of their appearance:
- No man ever stood the lower in my estimation for having a
- patch in his clothes; yet I am sure that there is greater
- anxiety, commonly, to have fashionable, of at
- least clean and unpatched clothes, than to have a sound conscience
- (Thoreau 27).
- Thoreau believed in relaxation and simplicity, and he said: "As for work,
- we haven't any of any consequence" (78). Thoreau also believed that
- older people should not tell younger people how to live because:
- Age is no better, hardly so well, qualified for an
- instructor as youth, for it has not profited so much as it
- has lost. One may almost doubt if the wisest man has learned
- anything of absolute value by living (16).
- Walden is filled with sarcasm, criticism, and observations of
- nature, life, and society, and is written in a very unique style. Walden
- has been described as an elaborate system of circular imagery which
- centers on Walden Pond as a symbol of heaven, the ideal of perfection
- that should be striven for ("Thoreau" 697).
- Thoreau has been called America's greatest prose stylist,
- naturalist, pioneer ecologist, conservationist, visionary, and humanist
- (The 1995 Grolier Multimedia Encyclopedia 2). It has also been said that
- Thoreau's style shows an unconscious, but very pointed degree of
- Emerson's influence. However, there is often a rudeness, and an
- inartistic carelessness in Thoreau's style that is not at all like the
- style of Emerson.
- Thoreau possessed an amazing forte for expressing his many
- observations in vivid color:
- No one has ever excelled him in the field of minute
- description. His acute powers of observation, his ability to
- keep for a long time his attention upon one thing,
- and his love of nature and of solitude, all lend a distinct individuality
- to his style (Pattee 226).
- Thoreau's good friend Bronson Alcott described his style as:
- More primitive and Homeric than any American, his style
- of thinking was robust, racy, as if Nature herself had
- built his sentences and seasoned the sense of his
- paragraphs with his own vigor and salubrity. Nothing can be spared from
- them; there is nothing superfluous; all is compact, concrete,
- as nature is (Alcott 16).
- Most of Thoreau's writings had to do with Nature which caused him
- to receive both positive and negative criticism. Paul Elmer More said
- that Thoreau was: "The greatest by far of our writers on Nature and the
- creator of a new sentiment in literature," but he then does a complete
- turn around to say:
- Much of his [Thoreau's] writing, perhaps the greater
- part, is the mere record of observation and classification,
- and has not the slightest claim on our remembrance, --
- unless, indeed, it posses some scientific value, which I doubt (More
- 860).
- Thoreau was always very forthright in everything he said.
- Examples of this can be found throughout Walden, one of which being his
- statement in chapter two: "To a philosopher all news, as it is called,
- is gossip, and they who edit and read it are old women over their tea"
- (Thoreau 79). There is certainly no ersatz sentiment, nor simulation of
- reverence of benevolence in Walden (Briggs 445).
- Thoreau was a philosopher of individualism, who placed nature
- above materialism in private life, and ethics above conformity in
- politics (The 1995 Grolier Multimedia Encyclopedia 1). His life was
- marked by whimsical acts and unusual stands on public issues ("Thoreau"
- 697). These peculiar beliefs led to a lot of criticism of Thoreau and
- his work. James Russell Lowell complained the Thoreau exalted the
- constraints of his own dispositions and insisted upon accepting his
- shortcomings and debilities as virtues and powers. Lowell considered: "a
- great deal of the modern sentimentalism about Nature...a mark of disease"
- (Wagenknecht 2).
- In some ways Walden is deluding. It consists of eighteen essays
- in which Thoreau condenses his twenty-six month stay at Walden Pond into
- the seasons of a single year. Also, the idea is expressed in Magill's
- Survey of American Literature that:
- Walden was not a wilderness, nor was Thoreau a pioneer;
- his hut was within two miles of town, and while at Walden, he
- made almost daily visits to Concord and to his family, dined
- out often, had frequent visitors, and went off on excursions.
- Walden is a testament to the renewing power of nature, to the
- need of respect and preservation of the environment, and to the belief
- that: "in wildness is the salvation of the world" (Magill 1949). Walden
- is simply an experience recreated in words for the purpose of getting rid
- of the world and discovering the self ("Thoreau" 697).
- Henry David Thoreau strived for freedom and equality. He was
- opinionated and argumentative. He stood up for what he believed in and
- was willing to fight for it. His teachings and writings had an amazing
- affect on people and the world, and will have for centuries to come.