Log Search Results

20 December 1858. Concord, Mass.
Thoreau writes in his journal:

  Walden is frozen over, except two small spots, less than half an acre in all, in middle (Journal, 11:374).
20 December 1859. Concord, Mass.

Thoreau writes in his journal:

  A.M.—To T. Wheeler wood-lot.

  Snows very fast, large flakes, a very lodging snow, quite moist; turns to rain in afternoon. If we leave the sleigh for a moment, it whitens the seat, which must be turned over. We are soon thickly covered, and it lodges on the twigs of the trees and bushes,—there being but little wind,—giving them a very white and soft, spiritual look. Gives them a still, soft, and light look . . .

(Journal, 13:36)
20 February 1837. Cambridge, Mass.

Thoreau checks out Ornithological biography, or An account of the birds of the United States of America, volumes 1–3 by John James Audubon from Harvard College Library (Companion to Thoreau’s Correspondence, 288).

20 February 1840. Concord, Mass.

Thoreau writes in his journal:

  The coward’s hope is suspicion, the hero’s doubt a sort of hope. The gods neither hope nor doubt (Journal, 1:121).
20 February 1841. Concord, Mass.

Thoreau writes in his journal:

  When I am going out for an evening I arrange the fire in my stove, so that I do not fail to find a good one when I return, though it would engage my frequent attention present. So that when I know I am to be at home, I sometimes make believe that I may go out, to save trouble… I hear the faint sound of a viol and voices from the neighboring cottage, and think to myself, “I will believe the Muse only for evermore.” It assures me that no gleam which comes over the serene soul is deceptive. It warns me of a reality and substance, of which the best that I see is but the phantom and shadow. O music, thou tellest me of things of which memory takes no heed; thy strains are whispered aside from memory’s ear.
(Journal, 1:218-219)
20 February 1842. Concord, Mass.

Thoreau writes in his journal:

  I am amused to see from my window here how busily man has divided and staked off his domain (Journal, 1:320-321).
20 February 1843. Concord, Mass.

Thoreau writes to Ralph Waldo Emerson in New York, N.Y.:

My dear Friend,—

  I have read Mr. Lane’s review, and can say, speaking for this world and for fallen man, that “it is good for us.” As they say in geology, time never fails, there is always enough of it, so I may say, criticism never fails; but if I go and read elsewhere, I say it is good,—far better than any notice Mr. Alcott has received, or is likely to receive from another quarter. It is at any rate “the other side,” which Boston needs to hear. I do not send it to you, because time is precious, and because I think you would accept it, after all. After speaking briefly of the fate of Goethe and Carlyle in their own countries, he says, “To Emerson in his own circle is but slowly accorded a worthy response; and Alcott, almost utterly neglected,” etc. I will strike out what relates to yourself, and, correcting some verbal faults, send thin rest to the printer with Lane’s initials.

  The catalogue needs amendment, I think. It wants completeness now. It should consist of such books only as they would tell Mr. [F. H.] Hedge and [Theodore] Parker they had got; omitting the Bible, the classics, and much besides,—for there the incompleteness begins. But you will be here in season for this.

  It is frequently easy to make Mr. Lane more universal and attractive; to write for instance, “universal ends” instead of “the universal end,” just as we pull open the petals of a flower with our fingers where they are confined by its own sweets. Also he had better not say “books designed for the nucleus of a Home University,” until he makes that word “home” ring solid and universal too. This is that abominable dialect. He has just given me a notice of George Bradford’s Fénelon for the Record of the Months, and speaks of extras of the Review and Catalogue, if they are printed,—even a hundred, or thereabouts. How shall this be arranged? Also he wishes to use some manuscripts of his which are in your possession, if you do not. Can I get them?

  I think of no news to tell you. It is a serene summer day here, all above the snow. The hens steal their nests, and I steal their eggs still, as formerly. This is what I do with the hands. Ah, labor,—it is a divine institution, and conversation with many men and hens.

  Do not think that my letters require as many special answers. I get one as often as you write to Concord. Concord inquires for you daily, as do all the members of this house. You must make haste home before we have settled all the great questions, for they are fast being disposed of. But I must leave room for Mrs. Emerson,

Yours,
Henry.

(The Correspondence of Henry David Thoreau, 90-91)
Emerson’s wife Lidian encloses the following letter with Thoreau’s:
My dear Husband,—

  Thinking that Henry had decided to send Mr. Lane’s manuscript to you by Harnden to-morrow, I wrote you a sheet of gossip which you will not ultimately escape. Now I will use up Henry’s vacant spaces with a story or two. G. P. Bradford has sent you a copy of his Fénelon, with a freezing note to me, which made me declare I would never speak to him again; but Mother says, “Never till next time!” William B. Greene has sent me a volume of tales translated by his father. Ought there to be any note of acknowledgment? I wish you may find time to fill all your paper when you write; you must have millions of things to say that we would all be glad to read.

  Last evening we had the “Conversation,” though, owing to the bad weather, but few attended. The subjects were: What is Prophecy? Who is a Prophet? and The Love of Nature, Mr. Lane decided, as for all time and the race, that this same love of nature—of which Henry was the champion, and Elizabeth Roar and Lidian (though L. disclaimed possessing it herself) his faithful squiresses—that this love was the most subtle and dangerous of sins; a refined idolatry, much more to be dreaded than gross wickednesses, because the gross sinner would be alarmed by the depth of his degradation, and come up from it in terror, but the unhappy idolaters of Nature were deceived by the refined quality of their sin, and would be, the last to enter the kingdom. Henry frankly affirmed to both the wise men that they were wholly deficient in the faculty in question, and therefore could not judge of it. And Mr. Alcott as frankly answered that it was because they went beyond the mere material objects, and were filled with spiritual love and perception (as Mr. T. was not), that they seemed to Mr. Thoreau not to appreciate outward nature. I am very heavy, and have spoiled a most excellent story. I have given you no idea of the scene, which was ineffably comic, though it made no laugh at the time; I scarcely laughed at it myself,—too deeply amused to give the usual sign. Henry was brave and noble; well as I have always liked him, he still grows upon me. Elizabeth sends her love, and says she shall not go to Boston till your return, and you must make the 8th of March come quickly.

(The Correspondence of Henry David Thoreau, 91-92)
20 February 1849.

Concord, Mass. Thoreau writes to Nathaniel Hawthorne:

Dear Hawthorne,

  I will come to your house in Mall Street on the 28th inst. and go from thence to the Lyceum.

  I am glad to know of your interest in my book, for I have thought of you as a reader while writing it. My MSS. are not even yet in the hands of the printer, but I am doing my best to make him take them into his hands. In any case the MSS which he will begin with is not that from which I shall read.

  I wish to be remembered and read also by Mrs Hawthorne.

  Yrs. sincerely
  Henry D. Thoreau

(Companion to Thoreau’s Correspondence, 184; Essex Institute Historical Collections, 94:191-193; MS, Phillips Library, Peabody Essex Museum, Salem, Mass.)

Boston, Mass. A. Bronson Alcott writes to Thoreau:

Dear Sir,—

  I send you herewith the names of a select company of gentlemen, esteemed as deserving of better acquaintance, and disposed for closer fellowship of Thought and Endeavor, who are hereby invited to assemble at No. 12 West Street, on Tuesday, the 20th of March next, to discuss the advantages of organizing a Club or College for the study and diffusion of the Ideas and Tendencies proper to the nineteenth century; and to concert measures, if deemed desirable, for promoting the ends of good fellowship. The company will meet at 10 a.m. Your presence is respectfully claimed by

  Yours truly,
  A. Bronson Alcott

“This invitation was the start of the Town and Country Club, established in July. It became the ancestor of a much more famous group, the Saturday Club, out of which grew the idea for the Atlantic Monthly. It does not appear that Thoreau ever wanted to be active in either club, in fact, we know that he declined to take part in the Saturday Club.”

(The Correspondence of Henry David Thoreau, 239)
20 February 1852. Concord, Mass.

Thoreau writes in his journal:

  P. M.—To Flint’s Pond.

  The last two or three days have been among the coldest in the winter, though not so cold as a few weeks ago. I notice, in the low ground covered with bushes near Flint’s Pond, many little rabbit-paths in the snow, where they have travelled in each other’s tracks, or many times back and forth, six inches wide. This, too, is probably their summer habit. The rock by the pond is remarkable for its umbilicaria (?).

(Journal, 3:314-318)
20 February 1854. Concord, Mass.

Thoreau writes in his journal:

  P.M.—Skating to Fair Haven Pond. Made a fire on the south side of the pond, using canoe birch bark and oak leaves for kindling… We skated home in the dusk, with an odor of smoke in our clothes . . . (Journal, 6:133-134).

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