Log Search Results

7 December 1857. Concord, Mass.

Thoreau writes in his journal:

  Running the long northwest side of Richardson’s Fair Haven Lot.

  It is a fair, sunny, and warm day in the woods for the season. We eat our dinners on the middle of the line, amid the young oaks in a sheltered and very unfrequented place. I cut some leafy shrub oaks and cast them clown for a dry and springy seat . . .

(Journal, 10:220-221)
7 December 1858.

Concord, Mass. Thoreau writes in his journal:

  To Boston. At Natural History Rooms . . . Dr. Bryant calls my seringo (i. e. the faint-noted bird) Savannah sparrow . . . (Journal, 11:366-367).

Cambridge, Mass. Thoreau checks out Voyages curieux et nouveau de Messieurs Hennepin et de La Borde, ou l’on voit une description trè particuliere d’un grand pays dans l’Amerique, entre le Nouveau Mexique, et la mer Glaciale by Louis Hennepin, Relations de la Louisianne et du Mississippi by Henri de Tonti, and Relation of the Voyages, Discoveries, and Death of Father James Marquette by Jacque Marquette from Harvard College Library (Emerson the Essayist, 2:198; Thoreau’s Reading, 161). See entry 19 December.

New Bedford, Mass. Daniel Ricketson writes in his journal:

  December 7th, Tuesday. Dull and cloudy. In town this A.M. Saw Channing at the Mercury office, who informed of Thoreau’s intended visit to me with his English friend, Thomas Cholmondeley, of Hodnet, Shropshire. Received a letter from Thoreau on the arrival of the morning mail to this end. At home this P.M., went to the depot at head of the river (Tarkiln Hill) on arrival of evening train from Boston, where I met Thoreau and his friend Cholmondeley. Spent evening in the Shanty with them, talking of the English poets – Gray, Tennyson, Wordsworth, etc. Retired at ten o’clock.
(Daniel Ricketson and His Friends, 309-310)

Boston, Mass. Ticknor & Fields writes to Thoreau:

Henry D. Thoreau Esq Concord Mass.  

  Dear Sir

  Referring to our file of letters from 1857 we find a note from you of which the enclosed is a copy.

  As our letter to which it is a reply was missent we doubt not but our answer to yours of a few months since has been subjected to the same, or a similar irregularity.

Respectfully yours &c.

Ticknor & Fields

pr Clark

(The Correspondence of Henry David Thoreau, 532)
7 February 1838. Concord, Mass.

Thoreau writes in his journal:

  Zeno, the Stoic, stood in precisely the same relation to the world that I do now. He is, forsooth, bred a merchant—as how many still!—and can trade and barter, and perchance higgle, and moreover lie can  be shipwrecked and cast ashore at the Piracus, like one of your Johns or Thomases.
(Journal, 1:26-27)
7 February 1841. Concord, Mass.

Thoreau writes in his journal:

  Without greatcoat or drawers I have advanced thus far into the snow-banks of the winter, without thought and with impunity. When I meet my neighbors in muffs and furs and tippets, they look as if they had retreated into the interior fastnesses form some foe invisible to me. They remind me that this is the season of winter, in which it becomes a man to be cold.
(Journal, 1:201-205)
7 February 1847. Walden Pond.

Bronson Alcott visits Thoreau at Walden Pond (The Journals of Bronson Alcott, 186).

7 February 1852. Concord, Mass.

Thoreau writes in his journal:

  The warmer weather we have had for a few days past was particularly pleasant to the poor whose wood-piles were low, whose clothes were ragged and thin. I think how the little boy must enjoy it whom I saw a week ago with his shoes truncated at the toes. Hard are the times when the infants’ shoes are secondfoot.
(Journal, 3:283-287)
7 February 1854. Concord, Mass.

Thoreau writes in his journal:

  P.M.—Down river with C. [William Ellery Channing] . . .

  Made a fire on the snow-covered ice half a mile below Ball’s Hill . . . These afternoons the shadows of the woods have already a twilight length by 3 or 4 P.M. . . .

(Journal, 6:104-106)
7 February 1855. Concord, Mass.

Thoreau writes in his journal:

  The coldest night for a long, long time was last. Sheets froze stiff about the faces. Cat mewed to have the door opened, but was at first disinclined to go out . . . My pail of water was frozen in the morning so that I could not break it. Must leave many buttons unbuttoned, owing to numb fingers. Iron was like fire in the hands. Thermometer at about 7:30 A.M. gone into the bulb, -19° at least. The cold has stopped the clock.
(Journal, 7:173-175)

Thoreau also writes to Thomas Cholmondeley:

Dear Cholmondeley,

  I am glad to hear that you have arrived safely at Hodnet, and that there is a solid piece of ground of that name which can support a man better than a floating plank in that to me as yet purely historical England.

  But have I not seen you with my own eyes, a piece of England herself? And has not your letter come out to me thence? I have now reason to believe that Salop is as real a place as Concord, with, at least, as good an underpinning of granite floating in liquid fire. I congratulate you on having arrived safely at that floating isle, after your disagreeable passage in the steamer America. So are we not all making a passage, agreeable or disagreeable in the steamer Earth, trusting to arrive at last at some less undulating Salop or Brother’s house?

  I cannot say that I am surprised to hear that you have joined the militia after what I have heard from your lips, but I am glad to doubt if there will be occasion for your volunteering into the line. Perhaps I am thinking of the saying that it is always darkest just before the day. I believe that it is only necessary that England be fully awakened to a sense of her position, in order that he may right herself—especially as the weather will soon cease to be her foe.

  I wish I could believe that the cause in which you are embarked is the cause of the people of England. However, I have no sympathy with the idleness that would contrast this fighting with the teachings of the pulpit, for perchance more true virtue is being practiced at Sebastopol than in many years of peace. It is a pity that we seem to require a war from time to time to assure us that there is any manhood still left in man.

  I was much pleased by [J.J.G.] Wilkinson’s vigorous & telling assault on Allopathy, though he substitutes another and perhaps no stronger thigh for that. Something as good on the whole conduct of the war would be of service. Cannot Carlyle supply it? We will not require him to provide the remedy. Every man to his trade.

  As you know, I am not in any sense a politician. You who lives in that snug and compact isle may dream of a glorious Commonwealth, but I have some doubts whether I am the new king of the Sandwich Islands shall pull together. When I think of the gold-diggers and the Mormons, the slaves and the slave-holders, and the flibustiers, I naturally dream of a glorious private life. No—I am not patriotic; I shall not meddle with the gem of the Antilles; Gen. Quitman cannot count on my aid [in capturing Cuba], alas for him! nor can Gen. Pierce.

  I still take my daily walk or skate over Concord fields or meadows, and on the whole have more to do with nature than with man. We have not had much snow this winter, but have had some remarkable cold weather, the mercury Feb 6 not rising above 6° below zero during the day, and the next morning falling to 25°. Some ice is still 20 inches thick about us. A rise in the river has bade uncommonly good skating which I have improved to the extent of some 30 miles at a time, 15 out &15 in.

  Emerson is off westward, enlightened the Hamiltonians & others, mingling his thunder with that of Niagara. Since his themes are England & slavery some begin to claim him as a practical man.

  Channing still sits warming his 5 wits—his sixth you know is always limber—over that stove, with the dog down cellar.

  Lowell has just been appointed Professor of Belles Lettres in Harvard University, in place of Longfellow, resigned, and will go very soon to spend another year in Europe before taking his seat.

  I am from time to time congratulating myself on my general wants of success as a lecturer—apparent want of success, but it is not a real triumph? I do my work clean as I go along, and they will not likely to want me anywhere again. So there’s no danger of me repeating myself and getting to a varell of sermons which you must upset & begin again with.

  My father & mother & sister all desire to be remembered to you, & trust that you will never come within range of Russian bullets.

  Of course I would rather think of you as settled down there in Shropshire, in the camp of the English people, making acquaintance with your men—striking at the root of the evil—perhaps assaulting that rampart of cotton bags that you tell of. But it makes no odds where a man goes or stays if he is only about his business.

  Let me hear from you, wherever you are, and believe me yours ever in the good fight,—whether before Sebastopol or under the wreken—

  Henry D Thoreau

(The Correspondence of Henry David Thoreau, 370-372)
7 February 1857. Concord, Mass.

Thoreau writes in his journal:

  I am surprised to see over Walden Pond, which is covered with puddles, that seething or shimmering in the air which is observed over the fields in a warm day in summer, close over the ice for several feet in height, notwithstanding that the sky is completely overcast . . . It is so warm that I am obliged to take off my greatcoat and carry it on my arm . . .
(Journal, 9:243)
7 February 1858. Concord, Mass.

Thoreau writes in his journal:

  Aunt Louisa has talked with Mrs.Monroe, and I can correct or add to my account of January 23d . . . (Journal, 10:275-276).

Return to the Log Index

Donation

$