A new postage stamp is just part of the celebration of Henry David Thoreau's 200th Birthday. |
Shame on me. I let the bicentennial of Henry David
Thoreau’s birth slip by on Tuesday. Mea
Culpa. A reluctant and eccentric
pencil maker with interesting
friends, the Slacker of Walden Pond continues
to have enormous cultural
influence. A marginal literary figure in his lifetime, his work is credited with laying the intellectual foundations of what became the ecological movement and inspiring generations of dreamers, beatniks, and hippies.
A single essay, On Civil Disobedience, influenced Leo Tolstoy, Mohandas Gandhi, and Martin Luther King and has perhaps never been more relevant as we enter
a new age of Resistance to encroaching
tyranny.
Of course the occasion is being celebrated widely and enthusiastically. The Thoreau Society is sponsoring Thoreau Bicentennial Gathering: Celebrating the Life, Works, and Legacy of Henry David Thoreau, a jam packed week of lectures, seminars, nature walks, readings, and performances in and around Concord, Massachusetts. Across the country libraries, civic institutions, and colleges are sponsoring programs as well. There will undoubtedly be a slew of sermons preached this month at Unitarian Universalist congregations based on our claims to this wayward son.
The United States Postal Service has issued a new Forever First Class commemorative stamp, a vast improvement over its infamous and controversial 1967 sesquicentennial issue on which a lopsided sketch of Thoreau’s visage seemed like either he or the viewer were on acid.
Act of civil disobedience and arrests in protest to Republican Health care proposals is a direct honor to the legacy of Henry David Thoreau. |
But perhaps the greatest tributes this week occurred on Capitol Hill in Washington where scores have been arrested for committing acts of civil disobedience in protest to Republican schemes to gut health care for millions to provide tax breaks for the ultra wealthy. That includes the Rev. William Barber of the North Carolina NAACP and Moral Mondays fame and several other ministers and religious leaders yesterday.
Thoreau
was an intellectually curious,
somewhat socially inept, son of a local pencil maker of French descent
and a mother of established New England stock. He was born in Concord on July 12, 1817.
He was reared in the historic Concord Unitarian Church served by Rev. Ezra Ripley until 1841. When the beloved
and liberal Ripley died that
year and the pulpit was assumed by a
new minister who he considered insufficiently in touch with the divine and over concerned with doctrine, Thoreau resigned his membership and never returned, except for funerals and rites of family and friends. He remained,
however within the broader intellectual
life that encompassed many
Unitarian ministers and lay people
and which was the hatching ground
for the Transcendentalist movement.
He was educated at Harvard, but did not settle
into one of the expected respectable careers of law, medicine, ministry or business. Instead he became
a school teacher and tutor—the occupation of a gentleman
without other prospects. After a brief
stint as a public school teacher
in Concord, which he resigned
because he would not administer
required corporal punishment, he and
his beloved older brother John began their own Concord Academy in 1838. The school shocked folks by taking
students out of the classroom for frequent walks through the meadows and woods to explore nature and visits
to local shops and businesses like
the blacksmith where middle class students were shown how things were actually made. The school ended when John died in his
brother’s arms of tetanus in
1842.
During these
years Thoreau fell in with Ralph Waldo Emerson’s circle when the Sage of Concord returned to his ancestral home after his unsuccessful turn at a Boston pulpit. He became one of the first members of the group that
regularly congregated at the
philosopher’s home. Emerson enticed
his friends to join him in Concord, and many did. Others frequently made the short trip from
Boston and Cambridge. Among those
regularly in this circle were Bronson
Alcott (father of Louisa May), the
poet Ellery Channing, Margaret Fuller (editor of The Dial),
Nathaniel Hawthorne and his wife Sophia and Sophia’s accomplished
sisters Elizabeth and Mary Peabody.
Although
only a few years older than Thoreau,
Emerson became not only a friend but a
surrogate father. He encouraged Thoreau to publish his first work in The Dial and
instructed him to start a personal journal. From 1841-44 he actually lived most of the time in Emerson’s home functioning as a tutor to his children, an editorial assistant for the busy writer, and a handyman.
Later, he
would enter the family pencil business,
working side by side with his employees. He continued this, with the notable exception of his two years at
Walden, for most of the rest of his
life. He was on one hand alienated by the distractions of day to day
business, and on the other quite
diligent. He adapted new methods of pencil manufacture which mixed clay as a binder with graphite for improved stability and longer
life, and in his last years
pioneered the use of graphite to ink
typesetting machines.
He often spoke of establishing a small subsistence
farm to get away from business and concentrate
on his writing. His move to Emerson’s woodlot in April of
1845 was sort of an experimental
half-step to that dream. Emerson
agreed to allow Thoreau to build his cabin
and cultivate a small garden in
exchange for clearing part of the
woodlot and continuing to do other chores for the Emerson family.
His plan
was to live as simply as possible
while supplying his basic needs for
food, shelter, clothing and fuel.
The woodlot provided ample fuel,
and the garden was productive. He
also fished Walden Pond for
food. He did buy staples—flour, sugar,
coffee, lard, etc. His mother frequently brought gifts of food, and,
of course he dined regularly with
Emerson.
He built
the simple one room 10 foot x 15 foot cottage, which he
described as being in the English style,
with shingled siding and a hard packed dirt floor. In his meticulously
kept records he wrote that he spent only $28.12½ in his first
year. All of this he accounts in the
first chapter of a book. He actually cultivated an acre and a half in beans for a cash crop,
earning more than $8.00 from the sale of the
Walden; or, Life
in the Woods was a somewhat rambling account
of his time there and includes musings
on his reading habits, solitude,
the spiritual inspiration of nature;
accounts of his daily activities
including his housekeeping and chores, almost daily visits to Concord, and his rambles in the woods.
The woodlot and cabin were a pleasant stroll from
the very center of the town, perhaps the most intellectual village in American
History where Emerson encouraged his coterie of friends and intellectual
collaborators to settle in his orbit.
Throughout his stay Thoreau accepted visitors and regularly visited in
return. He typically spent Sunday
afternoons dining and visiting with Emerson and other friends. He also regularly saw his supportive, if
perplexed, mother.
It was Thoreau’s intention to experiment with living
simply and frugally to avoid the distractions and temptation of society, commune
with nature, and dedicate himself to a writing project, the book that would
become
A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers.
He kept track of visitors—more
than 30 in all—including a runaway slave
who he hid and helped to escape. He complained of the sound of a train whistle, which reminded him of
the corruption of nature by commerce and extolled a basically vegetarian diet which he admittedly did not always keep himself. He postulated
a number of Higher Laws.
On one trip into the village in July of 1846, Thoreau had a chance encounter with the local tax collector, who demanded payments for six
years in arrears Poll Taxes. He refused
to pay in protest to the Mexican War
and the Fugitive Slave Law and was
arrested. He was released the next day when, against
his will, his mother paid his arrange. He later used this
experience as the basis for lectures at the Concord Lyceum in 1848, The Rights and Duties of the Individual in
relation to Government, which he amended
into an essay now known as Civil
Disobedience published by Elizabeth
Peabody in the Aesthetic Papers.
Thoreau’s
main project for his stay at Walden was to complete a book that would become known
as A
Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers, the account of his 1839 trip with his
brother John. In August Thoreau briefly
left Walden for to a trip to Maine, of
which he would write much later in his book The Maine Woods. When he returned Thoreau finished work on the
manuscript and left the cabin in September 1847 after two years and two months.
He unsuccessfully sought a publisher
for his manuscript and finally took Emerson’s advice to print it at his own expense. He commissioned
1000 copies of A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers from Emerson’s publisher, but was only ever able to sell 300. He had to work for years at the pencil factory to pay off this debt, which cooled
his relationship with Emerson.
While working at the factory, Thoreau polished
his journal notes into a manuscript compressing
his two year experience into a single year for the book, divided in symbolic seasonal quarters.
The title page from the first edition of Walden. |
On
August 9, 1854 one of the most
influential books in American history
was published in Boston by Ticknor and Fields, the publisher of
the Uncle
Tom’s Cabin. The slender book, Walden;
or, Life in the Woods, was
eagerly awaited by the Transcendentalists, Thoreau’s intellectual community and close circle of friends
who were busy trying to re-imagine
everything from God to the politics of human relations. Few
of them, however, suspected that it would outlast most of their own high
flown essays, sermons, and poems.
The book was a modest success outside of that
influential circle and established him as an original thinker.
Thoreau became a prolific writer and
essayist. He produced books on local history and became an increasingly skilled naturalist. His later books on nature helped inspire the ecology
movement more than a century later. He
also remained a defiant abolitionist
and became one of the few writers who publicly
came to the defense of John Brown
after the failed raid at Harper’s Ferry.
He never married, although he claimed to be an admirer of women. Louisa
May Alcott believed his lopsided
features and the scraggly neck beard he wore in his Walden period
repelled women who might otherwise have been interested. Modern
biographers refer to him as largely
asexual.
He suffered from Consumption—Tuberculosis—from at least 1836, which left him in fragile health despite his frequent extended tramps in
the woods and fields. He contracted bronchitis while trying to count tree rings of recently felled old growth trees in a cold rainstorm in 1859 and never
recovered his strength. He spent his last years bed ridden and editing his
final manuscripts.
In the second and final photo setting of his life in 1861 Thorough looked much better in a full beard and a well tailored suit but he only ad a year to live. |
He died at peace with himself on
May 6, 1862 at the age of 44. Bronson
Alcott arranged the funeral service
where Ellery Channing read an original
elegy and Emerson, almost beside
himself with grief, delivered the eulogy. He was buried
in a family plot which was later moved
to Concord’s Sleepy Hollow
Cemetery.
Thoreau’s reputation grew
posthumously, especially after his journals and other private writings were
published in the late 19th Century.
Walden became required reading in many high school English classes and influenced the emerging counter-culture of the 1960’s.
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