Log Search Results

18 September 1859. Concord, Mass.

Thoreau writes in his journal:

  P.M.—To Grape Cliff . . .

  Rice, who walks with me, thinks that that fine early sedge grass would be a capital thing to stuff cushions and beds with, it is so tough. (In hollows in woods.) . . .

  Dr. Bartlett handed me a paper to-day, desiring me to subscribe for a statue to Horace Mann . . .

(Journal, 12:333-335)
18 September 1860. Concord, Mass.

Thoreau writes in his journal:

  P.M.—To beeches . . . (Journal, 14:89-90).
18 to 19 April 1851. Concord, Mass.

Thoreau surveys land that he breaks up into lots for Cyrus Stow (A Catalog of Thoreau’s Surveys in the Concord Free Public Library, 11; Henry David Thoreau papers. Special Collections, Concord (Mass.) Free Public Library).

1822. Boston, Mass.
Henry D. Thoreau starts school (The Life of Henry David Thoreau, 35).
1822. Walden Pond.

Henry D. Thoreau recalls, in an August 1845 journal entry, his first visit to Walden Pond:

  Twenty-three years since, when I was five years old, I was brought from Boston to this pond, away in the country,—which was then but another name for the extended world for me,—one of the most ancient scenes stamped on the tablets of memory, the oriental Asiatic valley of my world, whence so many races and inventions have gone forth in recent times. That woodland vision for a long time made the drapery of my dreams.
(Journal, 1:380-381)
1830. Concord, Mass.
Henry D. Thoreau’s maternal aunt, Louisa, moves in with the Thoreaus (The Days of Henry Thoreau, 21; Thoreau, 22).
19 April 1825. Concord, Mass.

Young Henry D. Thoreau witnesses Concord’s jubilee and cheer as the residents celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Concord Battle, held around the corner from his home.

19 April 1840. Concord, Mass.

Thoreau writes in his journal:

  The infinite bustle of Nature of a summer’s noon, or her infinite silence of a summer’s night, gives utterance to no dogma. They do not say to us even with a seer’s assurance, that this or that law is immutable and so ever and only can the universe exist. But they are the indifferent occasion for all things and the annulment of all laws.
(Journal, 1:133)
19 April 1849. Washington, D.C.

The Washington Daily National Intelligence reprints the North American and United States Gazette article of 11 April (Transcendental Log, 44; Studies in the American Renaissance, 1995, 173).

19 April 1852. Concord, Mass.

Thoreau writes in his journal:

  6 A.M.—Rain still, a fine rain. The robin sang early this morning over the bare ground, an hour ago, nevertheless, ushering in the day. Then the guns were fired and the bells rung to commemorate the anniversary of the birth of a nation’s liberty . . .

  A stormy day.

  2 P.M.—With C. over Wood’s Bridge to Lee’s back by Baker Farm.

  It is a violent northeast storm, in difficult and almost useless to carry am soon wet to my skin over half my body. At first, and for a long time, I feel cold and as if I had lost some vital heat by it, but at last the water in my clothes feels warm to me, and I know not but I am dry. It is a wind to turn umbrellas. The meadows are higher, more wild and angry . . .

  To see the larger and wilder birds, you must go forth in the great storms like this. At such times they frequent our neighborhood and trust themselves in our midst. A life of fair-weather walks might never show you the goose sailing on our waters, or the great heron feeding here. When the storm increases, then these great birds that carry the mail of the seasons lay to. To see wild life you must go forth at a wild season. When it rains and blows, keeping men indoors, then the lover of Nature must forth. Then returns Nature to her wild estate. . . .

(Journal, 3:439-446)

Return to the Log Index

Donation

$