Log Search Results

18 August 1856. Concord, Mass.

Thoreau writes in his journal:

  P. M.—To Beck Stow’s.

  Now, perhaps, get thoroughwort. The lecheas in the Great Fields are now turning red, especially the fine one.

  As I go along the hillsides in sprout-lands, amid the Solidago stricta, looking for the blackberries left after the rain, the sun warm as ever, but the air cool nevertheless, I hear the steady (not intermittent) shrilling of apparently the alder cricket, clear, loud, and autumnal, a season sound. Hear it, but see it not. It reminds me of past autumns and the lapse of time . . .

(Journal, 9:8-9)
18 August 1857. Concord, Mass.

Thoreau writes to Daniel Ricketson:

Dear Sir,

  Your Wilson Flagg seems a serious person, and it is encouraging to hear of a contemporary who recognizes nature so squarely, and selects such a theme as “Barns.” (I would rather “Mt Auburn” were omitted.) But he is not alert enough. He wants stirring up with a pole. He should practice turning a series of somersets rapidly, or jump up & see bow many times he can strike his feet together before coming clown. Let him make the earth turn round now the other way—and whet his wits on it, whichever way it goes, as on a grindstone;—in short, see how many ideas he can entertain at once.

  His style, as I remember, is singularly vague ( I refer to the book) and before I got to the end of the sentences I was off the track. If you indulge in long periods you must be sure to have a snapper at the end. As for style of writing—if one has any thing to say, it drops from him simply & directly, as a stone falls to the ground for there are no two ways about it, but down it comes, and he may stick in the points and stop wherever he can get a chance. New ideas come into this world somewhat like falling meteors, with a flash as an explosion, and perhaps somebody’s castle roof perforated. To try to polish the stone in its descent, to give it a peculiar turn and make it whistle a tune perchance, would be of no use, if it were possible Your polished stuff turns out not to be meteoric, but of this earth.—However there is plenty of time and Nature is an admirable schoolmistress.

  Speaking of correspondence, you ask me if I “cannot turn over a new leaf in this time.” I certainly could if I were to receive it; but just then I looked up and saw that your page was dated “may 10th” though mailed in August, and it occurred to me that I had not seen you since that date this year . Looking again, it appeared that your note was written in ‘56!! However, it was a new leaf to me, and I turned it over with as much interest as if it had been written the day before. Perhaps you kept it so long in order that the MS & subject matter might be more in keeping with the old fashioned paper on which it was written.

  I travelled the length of Cape Cod on foot, soon after you were here, and within a few days have returned from the wolds of Maine, where I have made a journey of 325 miles with a canoe & canoe an Indian & a single white companion, Edward Hoar of this town, lately from California,—traversing the headwaters of the Jennebeck—Penobscot—& St Johns.

  Channing was just leaving Concord for Plymouth when I arrived, but said be should be here again in 2 or 3 days.

  Please remember me to your family & say that I have at length learned to sing Tom Bowling according to the notes.

Yrs truly
Henry D. Thoreau

(The Correspondence of Henry David Thoreau, 489-490)

Thoreau writes to H.G.O. Blake:

Mr. Blake,—

  Fifteenthly. It seems to me that you need some absorbing pursuit. IT does not matter much what it is, so it be honest. Such employment will be favorable to your development in more characteristic and important directions. You know there must be impulse enough for for steerage way, though it the not toward your port, to prevent your drifting helplessly on to rocks or shoals. Some sails are set for this purpose only. There is the large fleet of scholars and men of science, for instance, always to be seen standing off and on every coast, and saved thus from running on to reefs, who will at last run into their proper haven, we trust.

  It is a pity you were not here with [Theo] Brown and [B.B.] Wiley. I think that in this case, for a rarity, the more the merrier.

  You perceived that I did not entertain the idea of our going together to Maine on such an excursion as I had planned. The more I thought of it, the more imprudent it appeared to me. I did think to have written to you before going, though not to propose your going also; but I went at last very suddenly, and could only have written a business letter, if I had tried, when there was no business to be accomplished. I have now returned, and think I have had a quite profitable journey, chiefly from associating with an intelligent Indian. My companion Edward Hoar, also found his account in it, though he suffered considerable from being obliged to carry unusual loads over wet and rough “carries,”—in one instance five miles through a swamp, where the water was frequently up to our knees, and the fallen timber higher than our heads. He went over the ground three times, not being able to carry all his load at once. This prevented his ascending Ktaadn. Our best nights were those when it rained the hardest, on account of the mosquitoes. I speak of these things, which were not expected, merely to account for my not inviting you.

  Having returned, I flatter myself that the world appears in some respects a little larger, and not as usual, smaller and shallower, for having extended my range. I have made a short excursion into the new work which the Indian dwells in, or is. He begins where we leave off. It is worth the while to detect new faculties in man,—he is so much the more divine; and anything that fairly excites our admiration expands us. The Indian, who can find his way so wonderfully in the woods, possesses so much intelligence which the white man does not, and it increases my own capacity, as well as faith, to observe it. I rejoice to find that intelligence flows in other channels that I knew. It redeems for me portions of what seemed brutish before.

  It is a great satisfaction to find that your oldest convitious are permanent. With regards to essentials, I have never had occasion to change my mind. The aspect of the world varies from year to year, as the landscape is differently clothed, but I find that the truth is still true, and I never regret any emphasis which it may have inspired. Ktaadn is there still, but much more surely my old conviction is there, respecting with more than mountain breadth and weigh on the world, the source still of fertilizing streams, and affording glorious views from its summit, if I can get up to it again. As the mountains still stand on the plain, and far more unchangeable and permanent,—stand still grouped around farther or nearer to my maturer eye, the ideas which I have entertained,—the everlasting teats from which we draw our nourishment.

(Letters to Harrison Gray Otis Blake (98-99) edited by Wendell Glick (from Great Short Works of Henry David Thoreau edited, with an introduction, by Wendell Glick (New York: Harper & Row, 1982). Reprinted courtesy of HarperCollins Publishers)

18 August 1858. Concord, Mass.

Thoreau writes in his journal:

  P.M.—To Fair Haven Hill . . .

  Having left my note-book at home, I strip off a piece of birch bark for paper . . .

  I sit under the oaks at the east end of Hubbard’s Grove, and hear two wood pewees singing close by . . .

(Journal, 11:111-112)

Thoreau also writes to George William Curtis:

Dear Sir,

  Channing’s poem “Near Home” was printed (if not published) by James Munroe and Co. Boston. C. brought it to me some seven weeks ago with the remark—“Knowing your objection to manuscript, I got it printed”—and I do not know that he presented it to anyone else. I have not been to the city of late, but Emerson told me that he found a small pile of them at Munroe’s, and bought two or three; though Munroe said that he was forbidden to advertise it. Of course this is equivalent to dedicating it “to whom it may concern.” Others also have bought it, for fifty cents; but C. still persists, in his way, in saying that it is not published. Ought not a poem to publish itself?

  I am glad if you are not weary of the Maine Woods, partly because I have another and a larger slice to come. As for the presidency,—I cannot speak for my neighbors, but, for my own part, I am politically so benighted (or belighted?) that I do not know what Seward’s qualifications are. I know, however, that no one in whom I could feel much interest would stand any chance of being elected. But the nail which is hard to drive is hard to draw.

  Yours truly

  Henry D. Thoreau

(The Correspondence of Henry David Thoreau, 519-520; MS, Abernethy collection of American Literature. Middlebury College Special Collections, Middlebury, Vt.)
18 August 1859.

Concord, Mass. Thoreau writes in his journal:

  Half the leaves of some cherries in dry places are quite orange now and ready to
fall (Journal, 12:288).

Cambridge, Mass. Welch, Bigelow & Company writes to Thoreau:

Mr Thoreau

Dear Sir

  Inclosed please find $15 00 for which send us 10 lbs Blacklead by return of express—directed as usual

Yours truly
Welch, Bigelow, & Co

(The Correspondence of Henry David Thoreau, 554; MS, Henry David Thoreau papers (Series IV): Henry W. and Albert A. Berg Collection of English and American Literature, New York Public Library)
18 August 1860. Concord, Mass.

Thoreau writes in his journal:

  The note of the wood pewee sounds prominent of late (Journal, 14:54).
18 December 1837. Concord, Mass.

Thoreau writes in his journal:

  Men are pleased to be called the sons of their fathers,—so little truth suffices them,—and whoever addresses them by this or a similar title is termed a poet. The orator appeals to the sons of Greece, of Britannia, of France, or of Poland; and our fathers’ homely name acquires some interest from the fact that Sakai-suna means sons-of-the-Sakai.
(Journal, 1:19)
18 December 1841. Concord, Mass.

Thoreau writes in his journal:

  Some men make their due impression upon their generation, because a petty occasion is enough to call forth all their energies; but are there not others who would rise to much higher levels, whom the world has never provoked to make the effort? I believe there are men now living who have never opened their months in a public assembly, in whom nevertheless there is such a well of eloquence that the appetite of any age could never exhaust it; who pine for an occasion worthy of them, and will pine till they are dead; who can admire, as well as the rest, at the flowing speech of the orator. but do yet miss the thunder and lightning; and visible sympathy of the elements which would garnish their own utterance.
(Journal, 1:297-298)
18 December 1845. Concord, Mass.

Thoreau issues the following receipt to Sally Pierce Hosmer:

The Misses Hosmer & H.D. Thoreau
To surveying wood-lot, and making a plan of the same.
——$2.50
Recd — Payt
Henry D Thoreau
(Thoreau Society Bulletin, no. 157 (Fall 1981):1; MS, Abel Moore Papers. Special Collections, Concord (Mass.) Free Public Library)
18 December 1846. Concord, Mass.

Ralph Waldo Emerson pays Thoreau $5 for work (Ralph Waldo Emerson’s account books. Houghton Library, Harvard University, Cambridge, Mass.).

18 December 1849. Boston, Mass.

Samuel Cabot writes to Thoreau:

  It [the American goshawk] was first described by [Alexander] Wilson; lately [John James] Audubon has identified it with the European goshawk, thereby committing a very flagrant blunder. It is usually a very rare species with us. The European bird is used in hawking; and doubtless ours would be equally game. If Mr. [Jacob] Farmer skins him now, he will have to take second cut; for his skin is already off and stuffed,—his remains dissected, measured, and deposited in alcohol.
(The Correspondence of Henry David Thoreau, 252)

Return to the Log Index

Donation

$