the Thoreau Log.
1 January 1862. Concord, Mass.

A. Bronson Alcott writes in his journal:

  Orchards are generous as well as grateful, and in times of war especially should they intimate the courtesies of peace and of fraternity. Mine is thus disposed, and after the day’s business about my paper on “The Countryman in his Garden,” I take apples and bottles of cider to my friends [Nathaniel] Hawthorne, [Ralph Waldo] Emerson, [William Ellery] Channing.

  Also to Thoreau, and spend the evening, sad to find him failing and feeble. He is talkative, however; is interested in books and men, in our civil troubles especially, and speaks impatiently of what he calls the temporizing policy of our rulers; blames the people too for their indifferency to the true issues of national honor and justice. Even Seward’s letter to Earl Grey respecting Mason’s and Liddell’s case, comforting as it is to the country and serving as a foil to any hostile designs of England for the time at least, excites his displeasure as seeming to be humiliating to us, and dishonorable.

  We talk of Pliny, whose books he is reading with delight. Also of Evelyn and the rural authors. If not a writer of verses, Thoreau is a poet in spirit, and has come as near to the writing of pastorals as any poet of his time. Were his days not numbered, and his adventures in the wild world once off his hands, then he might come to orchards and gardens, perhaps treat these in manner as masterly, uniting the spirit of naturalist and poet in his page. But the most he may hope for is to prepare his manuscripts for others’ editing, and take his leave of them and us. I fear he has not many months to abide here, and the spring’s summons must come for him soon to partake of “Syrian peace, immortal leisure.”

(The Journals of Bronson Alcott, 342-343)

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