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Famous Like Me > Writer > T > Henry David Thoreau

Profile of Henry David Thoreau on Famous Like Me

 
Name: Henry David Thoreau  
   
Also Know As:
   
Date of Birth: 12th July 1817
   
Place of Birth: Concord, Massachusetts, USA
   
Profession: Writer
 
 
From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia
Henry David Thoreau

Henry David Thoreau (July 12, 1817 – May 6, 1862; born David Henry Thoreau) was an American author, naturalist, pacifist, tax resister and philosopher who is famous for Walden (available at wikisource) on simple living amongst nature and Civil Disobedience (available at wikisource) on resistance to civil government. He was a lifelong abolitionist, delivering lectures that attacked the Fugitive Slave Law while praising the writings of Wendell Phillips and defending the radical John Brown. Among his lasting contributions were his writings on natural history and philosophy, where he anticipated the methods and findings of ecology and environmental history, two sources of modern day environmentalism.

Life and work

He was born in Concord, Massachusetts, and graduated from Harvard in 1837. There are legends stating Thoreau did not want to pay the five dollar fee required from Harvard College to receive a college diploma or a “sheet of paper;” therefore, he never received it. In fact, the degree had no academic merit: Harvard College offered a master of arts degree to anyone of its graduates “who proved their physical worth by being alive three years after graduating, and their saving, earning, or inheriting quality or condition by having Five Dollars to give the college.” (Thoreau's Diploma)

Thoreau was a philosopher of nature and its relation to the human condition. In his early years, he accepted the ideas of Transcendentalism, an eclectic philosophy that included among its advocates Ralph Waldo Emerson, Margaret Fuller, and Bronson Alcott.

After college, Thoreau taught school, wrote essays and poems for The Dial, and briefly attempted freelance writing in New York City. The death of his brother in 1842 was a profound emotional shock and may have influenced his decision to live with his parents and never to marry.

Henry David Thoreau, photograph published circa 1879.

Thoreau embarked on a two-year experiment in simple living on July 4, 1845 when he moved to a second-growth forest around the shores of beautiful Walden Pond, as a guest of his friend Ralph Waldo Emerson, a fifteen minute walk from his family in Concord, Massachusetts. On a trip into town, he ran into the local tax collector who asked him to pay six years of delinquent poll taxes (1846). Thoreau refused, purportedly for his opposition to the Mexican-American War, (1846-1848), for which he spent a night in jail. His later essay on this experience, Civil Disobedience, influenced Leo Tolstoy, Mohandas Gandhi, and Martin Luther King, Jr.. Thoreau left Walden Pond on September 6, 1847.

Published in 1854, Walden, or Life in the Woods, recounts the two years and two months Thoreau spent at Walden Pond. The book compresses that time into a single calendar year, using the passage of four seasons to symbolize human development. Part memoir and part spiritual quest, this American classic emerged from a nine year process of composition and revision, the lengthy period in part because his previous work, A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers, had been so poorly received.

At various times, Thoreau earned a living by lecturing or working at his family's pencil factory. According to Henry Petroski, Thoreau discovered how to make a good pencil out of inferior graphite by using clay as the binder; this invention improved upon graphite found in New Hampshire in 1821 by Charles Dunbar. Later Thoreau converted the factory to producing plumbago, used to ink typesetting machines. Frequent contact with minute particles of lead may have weakened his lungs.

After 1850 he became a land surveyor, "travelling a good deal in Concord," and writing natural history observations about the 26 mile² (67 km²) township in his Journal, a two million word document that he kept for 24 years. He also traveled to Canada, Cape Cod, and Maine, landscapes that inspired his "excursion" books, A Yankee in Canada, Cape Cod, and The Maine Woods, in which travel intineraries frame his thoughts about geography, history, and philosophy.

Hailed as an early American environmentalist, Thoreau wrote essays on autumnal foliage, the succession of forest trees, and the disperal of seeds, collected in Excursions. Scientists regard these works as anticipating ecology, the study of interactions between species, places, and seasons. He was an early advocate of recreational hiking and canoeing, of conserving natural resources on private land, and of preserving wilderness as public land. Thoreau was also one of the first American supporters of Charles Darwin's theory of evolution. Although he was not a vegetarian, he ate relatively little meat and advocated vegetarianism as a means of self-improvement.

Thoreau family graves at Sleepy Hollow Cemetery

Thoreau was not without his critics. Scottish author Robert Louis Stevenson was one example, who judged Thoreau's endorsement of natural simplicity over the tangles of modern society to be a mark of effeminacy: "...Thoreau's content and ecstasy in living was, we may say, like a plant that he had watered and tended with womanish solicitude; for there is apt to be something unmanly, something almost dastardly, in a life that does not move with dash and freedom, and that fears the bracing contact of the world. In one word, Thoreau was a skulker. He did not wish virtue to go out of him among his fellow-men, but slunk into a corner to hoard it for himself. He left all for the sake of certain virtuous self-indulgences." English novelist George Eliot, however, writing in the Westminster Review, characterized such critics as uninspired and narrow-minded: "People—very wise in their own eyes—who would have every man's life ordered according to a particular pattern, and who are intolerant of every existence the utility of which is not palpable to them, may pooh-pooh Mr. Thoreau and this episode in his history, as unpractical and dreamy."

Thoreau died of tuberculosis in 1862, in the town of his birth, Concord, and was buried at Sleepy Hollow Cemetery. His friends, Ellery Channing and Harrison Blake, edited some poems, essays, and Journal entries for postumous publication in the 1890s. Thoreau's two-million-word Journal, often mined but largely unpublished at his death, appeared in 1906 and helped to build his modern reputation. Today he is regarded as a foremost American writer, both for the modern clarity of his prose style and the prescience of his views on nature and politics. His popularity is evidenced in part by the international Thoreau Society, which is the oldest and largest society devoted to an American author.

Quotes

  • Every creature is better alive than dead, men and moose and pine trees, and he who understands it aright will rather preserve its life than destroy it.
  • I heartily accept the motto, "That government is best which governs least"; and I should like to see it acted up to more rapidly and systematically. Carried out, it finally amounts to this, which also I believe? "That government is best which governs not at all"; and when men are prepared for it, that will be the kind of government which they will have.
  • Love must be as much a light, as it is a flame.
  • Why should we be in such desperate haste to succeed and in such desperate enterprises? If a man does not keep pace with his companions, perhaps it is because he hears a different drummer. Let him step to the music which he hears, however measured or far away.
  • The mass of men lead lives of quiet desperation.
  • A man is rich in proportion to the number of things he can afford to let alone.
  • Any fool can make a rule, and every fool will mind it.
  • As you simplify your life, the laws of the universe will be simpler; solitude will not be solitude, poverty will not be poverty, nor weakness weakness.
  • 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.
  • The surliness with which the woodchopper speaks of his woods, handling them as indifferently as his axe, is better than the mealy-mouthed enthusiasm of the lover of nature.
  • Do not be too moral. You may cheat yourself out of much life. Aim above morality. Be not simply good; be good for something.

Bibliography

  • A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers (1849)
  • Civil Disobedience (1849)
  • Slavery in Massachusetts (1854)
  • Walden (1854)
  • A Plea for Captain John Brown (1860)
  • Excursions (1863)
  • Life Without Principle
  • The Maine Woods (1864)
  • Cape Cod (1865)
  • Early Spring in Massachusetts (1881)
  • Summer (1884)
  • Winter (1888)
  • Autumn (1892)
  • Miscellanies (1894)
  • Journal of Henry David Thoreau (1906)

Online texts

  • Autumnal Tints - courtesy of Wikisource.
  • Cape Cod - Thoreau Reader
  • On the Duty of Civil Disobedience
  • Civil Disobedience - courtesy of Wikisource.
  • The Highland Light - courtesy of Wikisource.
  • The Landlord - courtesy of Wikisource.
  • Life Without Principle - courtesy of Wikisource.
  • The Maine Woods - Thoreau Reader
  • Night and Moonlight - courtesy of Wikisource.
  • A Plea for Captain John Brown
  • Slavery in Massachusetts - Thoreau Reader
  • Walden
  • Walden - Thoreau Reader
  • Walking - courtesy of Wikisource.
  • Walking
  • A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers
  • Wild Apples: The History of the Apple Tree
  • Works by Henry David Thoreau at Project Gutenberg

This content from Wikipedia is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article Henry David Thoreau