Henry David Thoreau: A Life

Henry David Thoreau: A Life

by Laura Dassow Walls
Henry David Thoreau: A Life

Henry David Thoreau: A Life

by Laura Dassow Walls

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Overview

“Walden. Yesterday I came here to live.” That entry from the journal of Henry David Thoreau, and the intellectual journey it began, would by themselves be enough to place Thoreau in the American pantheon. His attempt to “live deliberately” in a small woods at the edge of his hometown of Concord has been a touchstone for individualists and seekers since the publication of Walden in 1854.
 
But there was much more to Thoreau than his brief experiment in living at Walden Pond. A member of the vibrant intellectual circle centered on his neighbor Ralph Waldo Emerson, he was also an ardent naturalist, a manual laborer and inventor, a radical political activist, and more. Many books have taken up various aspects of Thoreau’s character and achievements, but, as Laura Dassow Walls writes, “Thoreau has never been captured between covers; he was too quixotic, mischievous, many-sided.” Two hundred years after his birth, and two generations after the last full-scale biography, Walls restores Henry David Thoreau to us in all his profound, inspiring complexity.
 
Walls traces the full arc of Thoreau’s life, from his early days in the intellectual hothouse of Concord, when the American experiment still felt fresh and precarious, and “America was a family affair, earned by one generation and about to pass to the next.” By the time he died in 1862, at only forty-four years of age, Thoreau had witnessed the transformation of his world from a community of farmers and artisans into a bustling, interconnected commercial nation. What did that portend for the contemplative individual and abundant, wild nature that Thoreau celebrated?
 
Drawing on Thoreau’s copious writings, published and unpublished, Walls presents a Thoreau vigorously alive in all his quirks and contradictions: the young man shattered by the sudden death of his brother; the ambitious Harvard College student; the ecstatic visionary who closed Walden with an account of the regenerative power of the Cosmos. We meet the man whose belief in human freedom and the value of labor made him an uncompromising abolitionist; the solitary walker who found society in nature, but also found his own nature in the society of which he was a deeply interwoven part. And, running through it all, Thoreau the passionate naturalist, who, long before the age of environmentalism, saw tragedy for future generations in the human heedlessness around him.
 
“The Thoreau I sought was not in any book, so I wrote this one,” says Walls. The result is a Thoreau unlike any seen since he walked the streets of Concord, a Thoreau for our time and all time.
 

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780226599373
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Publication date: 09/28/2018
Edition description: First Edition
Pages: 640
Sales rank: 281,587
Product dimensions: 5.90(w) x 9.00(h) x 1.50(d)

About the Author

Laura Dassow Walls is the William P. and Hazel B. White Professor of English at the University of Notre Dame. She is the author most recently of Henry David Thoreau: A Life, also published by the University of Chicago Press.

Read an Excerpt

CHAPTER 1

Concord Sons and Daughters

Minott, Lee, Willard, Hosmer, Meriam, Flint Possessed the land which rendered to their toil Hay, corn, roots, hemp, flax, apples, wool, and wood.
Each of these landlords walked amidst his farm,
Saying, "'Tis mine, my children's, and my name's:
How sweet the west wind sounds in my own trees!"

Ralph Waldo Emerson, "Hamatreya"

Coming to Concord

Emerson found poetry in Concord's ancient names. Among them —"Minott, Lee, Willard, Hosmer, Meriam, Flint" — one will not find Thoreau, though of all Concord's authors he alone was born there. His family were newcomers among neighbors with houses weathered by a hundred New England winters. The very name Thoreau was novel — foreign, French, part of a Revolutionary wave of restlessness that carried European immigrants into New England's market towns and industrial centers. Henry's upright Aunt Maria insisted that her father, Jean Thoreau, was a merchant who emigrated from Jersey to Boston, but Franklin Sanborn, who knew the family well, said Jean was a sailor, shipwrecked from a Jersey privateer off the coast of New England, who was rescued and brought to Boston, with no intention of staying. The year, both agree, was 1773. Jean was only nineteen. Whatever his intentions, he plunged into life on the Boston docks, and soon was fighting with the Patriots.

Perhaps returning to Jersey was not an option for an adventurous younger son. The Thoreaus — or "Tiereaus," or perhaps Toraux or Thaureaux — were Huguenots forced to flee Catholic France in 1685. When French dragoons began to terrorize their home in Poitou, Henry's great-great-grandfather swept up his young son Pierre and escaped to the nearby island of Jersey, a protectorate of England and a haven for Huguenot refugees. Here the Thoreaus maintained their Protestant faith and their French language and traditions, part of a global network of Huguenot enclaves preserving their identity until they could at last return home. Some of Pierre's many children carried the Thoreau name to London, New Zealand, and eventually even to Denver; but Philippe, his fourth son, remained on Jersey, a prosperous wine merchant in the port of St. Helier. It was his second son, Jean, who took to sea and landed, by chance or design, in Boston.

Jean must have written home, but it was wartime. Only three letters remain, sent by his younger brother Pierre Thoreau from Jersey starting in 1801. Aunt Maria treasured these letters and passed them on to Henry, who copied them into his Journal — precious relics from his French great-uncle, slender threads to his own past. Thoreau was proud to be "of French extract"; it set him apart from his Yankee neighbors. Later in life he spent years investigating the French foundation of the New World, until he could prove that "the Englishman's history of New England commences, only when it ceases to be, New France." His friends remarked that he pronounced "the letter r with a decided French accent" such that "his speech always had an emphasis, a burr in it."

Henry's grandfather Jean Thoreau was short but stout, strong enough to set a hogshead of molasses upright single-handedly. He worked first in a sail loft, then apprenticed with a Boston cooper. When the British blocked Boston harbor, he could give his men no more work, so Jean went to war, helping fortify Boston harbor. As an experienced sailor at the epicenter of the Revolution, however, he soon became a privateer. For a time Jean was based at Castle Island (soon renamed Fort Independence) under the command of fellow Huguenot Paul Revere ("Rivoire"); when Revere captured the Minerva, Jean shared in the bounty. Without privateers — pirate ships licensed to prey on enemy vessels — the Revolutionary War would have gone quite differently. By April 1776 privateers had captured enough British ships off Boston to break the British occupation. Two years later, the alliance with France opened French ports to America, and Jean worked this dangerous cross-Atlantic passage, too. In November 1779, when John Adams sailed to France on the frigate La Sensible to negotiate peace with Britain, the ship hailed an American privateer off the Grand Banks. When the privateer couldn't make out their name, a lone sailor ran out onto the frigate's bowsprit before the situation escalated, shouting, "La Sensible!" Henry noted proudly in his Journal, "That sailors name was Thoreau."

Most wartime fortunes were squandered in luxury goods or lost to runaway inflation, but Jean saved enough to set up a store on Boston's Long Wharf, the heart of America's busiest port. His grandson was pleased to encounter a Captain Snow, who "remembered hearing fishermen say that they 'fitted out at Thoreau's' — remembered him." As Jean's fortune grew, so did his family. In 1781 he married Jane "Jennie" Burns, whose Boston Quaker mother, Sarah Orrok, had refused to accept the hand in marriage of Jennie's father-to-be, a Scottish immigrant, until he divested himself of the ruffles that covered it. Jennie bore ten children in their house on Prince Street. Eight survived to adulthood. In 1787, following Huguenot custom, they named their first son John, after his father. John followed the custom in turn, and gave his second son a name with a French cognate, "Henri." Four of John's sisters grew up to fill Henry's life with maiden aunts: Elizabeth (Betsy) and Sarah Thoreau ran a boardinghouse on Concord's town square; Jane and Maria Thoreau lived in Boston, paying long, frequent visits to Concord. A fifth sister, Nancy, married Caleb Billings and settled with him in Bangor, giving the Concord Thoreaus a virtual second home in Maine.

Family stories preserve only glimpses of these early years. Boston was still so rural that, as John remembered, the family "had milk of a neighbor, who used to drive his cows to and from the Common every day." Boiled green corn was sold piping hot out of "large baskets on the bare heads of negro women, and gentlemen would stop, buy an ear, and eat it in the street." Jean Thoreau would rise before dawn and share his breakfast with John before opening the store, the father eating the undercrusts of biscuits and his son the upper. There were also memories of a darker cast. One of the Thoreaus' future neighbors, recalling her Boston childhood, said her mother always respected Jean Thoreau because he was a religious man; he used to ride to their house "when they made cheeses, to drink the whey, being in consumption." Once, he asked where blue vervain grew, "which he wanted, to make a syrup for his cough," and she ran and gathered some. That cough was an ominous sign. Like so many New England men and women, Jean Thoreau was cursed with tuberculosis, the insidious disease named "consumption" for the way it consumed its victims from within. The first of several tragedies came when Jennie's father died while in Scotland trying to claim an inheritance; Jennie herself died only six weeks after giving birth to her tenth child, David, in 1796. Jean found himself alone with eight children to care for and his Long Wharf store to run.

A year later, Jean Thoreau married Rebecca Hurd Kettell of Concord, thus solving both their problems: his orphaned children had a new mother, and she escaped a widow's poverty. They met perhaps through church — she was religious, too — or perhaps through commerce, for Rebecca's sister was married to Deacon John White, who owned Concord's most prosperous store at the town square's busy crossroads. In 1799, Jean bought the house next door — today, it forms the north end of the Colonial Inn — and in 1800 the Thoreaus moved in. Soon young John was studying at the Lexington Academy, and his parents, having joined the First Parish Church, were hosting the Reverend Ezra Ripley for tea. The Thoreaus arrived as one of Concord's best families. Everything promised happiness and prosperity.

It was over in months. According to family tradition, Jean Thoreau was out patrolling the Boston streets in a severe rainstorm and caught a cold that inflamed his tuberculosis; he died weeks later, on March 7, 1801, just forty-seven years old. His eight orphaned children found themselves in the care of their stepmother Rebecca, widowed once again. It should have worked out better than it did: Jean left a huge estate, $25,000 all told, including houses in Concord and Boston and cash and securities worth $12,000. But by the time the pious Rebecca died in 1814, the houses were mortgaged and the money was gone. Her brother Joseph Hurd, a Charlestown merchant who administered the estate, had used it up paying himself legal fees and expenses, leaving Jean Thoreau's children to grow up in deepening penury. Fourteen-year-old John, who upon his father's death became the man of the family, had to leave school to juggle relentless creditors while hoping to duplicate his father's success as a merchant.

For a while John clerked in Deacon White's store, but in 1807 he went to Salem, one of the world's leading ports for Chinese ceramics, silks and cottons, furniture, and spices, to learn the dry-goods trade. This was shooting for the top: imported goods required a large investment. In 1808, he came of age at twenty-one; he borrowed $1,000 on his anticipated inheritance to open his own store, partnering with Isaac Hurd Jr., who'd been to Canton and knew the China trade. His family must have had high hopes when John opened the "yellow store" on the square, but somehow the partnership soured. When John sought to dissolve it, Hurd took him to court, and though Hurd lost the case, in the legal mess John lost his store. In the meantime, John's sister Nancy had married Caleb Billings and gone north to Bangor, where Billings opened his own store. John, his hopes ruined, followed them for a spell, "selling to the Indians (among others)." Meanwhile, his neighbor Moses Prichard bought John's old inventory for their own "green store" across the square, and when the United States declared war on Great Britain in 1812, the value of that inventory skyrocketed. Then Prichard's store was named the local post office too. For twenty years, the "green store" was the hub of Concord, with two hundred customers on the books and so much trade they didn't bother to advertise. It must have hurt.

Caleb and Nancy Billings hung on and made a go of it; their daughter Rebecca would later marry George Thatcher, whose invitations to explore the Maine Woods changed Henry Thoreau's life. But John Thoreau didn't stay in Bangor. There were still four unmarried sisters to look out for, and he'd bought a bit of farmland out on Virginia Road, too, next door to Captain Jonas Minott's farm. When exactly did he meet Minott's stepdaughter Cynthia? Perhaps while chatting over the back fence, or at church. For something drew him back to Concord — likely the tall, accomplished, "handsome, high-spirited woman ... with a voice of remarkable power and sweetness in singing," who helped run Captain Minott's Virginia Road farm and raised her voice every Sunday in Ezra Ripley's First Parish Church.

* * *

Cynthia Dunbar came to Concord about the same time as John, but by a very different road. While John's Patriot father was sailing the high seas, Cynthia's mother, Mary Jones Dunbar, was caught in a civil war between her Tory father, the immensely wealthy Colonel Elisha Jones, and her Patriot husband, the witty and genial Reverend Asa Dunbar. Mary's father, a fierce Royalist, had set himself against the insurgents; as the violence escalated, he even raised a private army to defend his Weston estate until, defeated, he fled to occupied Boston. Trapped in Boston, Elisha Jones watched as the Americans destroyed everything he'd built. He collapsed and died in March 1776, just as George Washington was about to drive the British out of Boston. Colonel Jones thus "escaped banishment by death," but most of his fourteen sons escaped death by banishment, either joining the British army or fleeing to Canada. The Jones family lost everything. Their immense fortune — including farms, estates, and acreages scattered across Massachusetts — was confiscated.

And Mary? After her splendid wedding in 1772, she and the Reverend Asa Dunbar had settled in Salem, where her husband became pastor of the First Congregational Church. When all hell broke loose, they rushed back to her family estate in Weston so Mary could care for her bereft mother and help her Tory brothers. On that fateful day of April 19, 1775, it was her brother Stephen who showed British soldiers the short way to Lexington so they could reinforce the retreating British troops. Later, her brother Josiah was captured and jailed for bringing food to the British in Boston. Seventy-seven years later, Henry Thoreau recalled what happened after his grandmother carried ripe cherries to her jailed brother: "They secreted knives furnished them with their food sawed the grates off & escaped to Weston. Hid in the cider mill. Mary heard they were in the mill put on her riding hood — was frightend." She captured "Old Baldwin's the sheriff's horse," harnessed him up to the family chaise, and drove to her brother, who with his two fellow escapees whipped up the horse all the way to Portland and "pawned him for 2 bushels of potatoes — wrote back to Baldwin where he'd find his horse by paying charges." No word on whether Baldwin ever got his horse back.

Thoreau's grandfather stayed loyal to his treasonous wife even though his own sympathies were with the Patriots. Asa Dunbar must have had a golden tongue, for when suspicion turned on him, he protested his innocence and was believed. When deteriorating health forced him to resign the Salem ministry, he reinvented himself as a lawyer. In 1782 he resettled his family in the frontier town of Keene, New Hampshire, where his nephew was the Episcopal minister. For a few years the family throve: Asa became a charter member (and the first Master) of a Masonic Lodge and was elected first town clerk and then selectman. It was a bustling, full household when Mary gave birth to her sixth child, Cynthia, on May 28, 1787. But not a month later, Asa took ill, and in two days he was dead. The town, shocked, buried him with full Masonic honors.

Mary Jones Dunbar was now a widow with a houseful of children, little money, and no family. Resourceful as ever, she turned her house into a licensed tavern; her children served the customers. Keene, the county seat, was a favorite stop on the road to Boston, and Mary's tavern stood on the highway in the heart of town. Captain Jonas Minott regularly traveled that highway. A Concord farmer with property in New Hampshire, Captain Minott had earned his title before the American Revolution — indeed, it was he who warned the British that American militia were expected "to meet at one minutes warning equipt with arms and ammunition." When the alarm came and his own militia arrived late, Minott was suspected of lingering Tory sympathies — a failure that led, ironically, to the town's signature: the Concord Minutemen. Minott, a widower since 1792, married the plucky Mary Jones Dunbar in 1798. Mary moved her family into his farmhouse on Virginia Road, where Cynthia Dunbar, then eleven years old, finished growing up.

Cynthia long remembered the quiet on the eastern edge of Concord's Great Field. All she heard on summer nights was "the lowing of cows, or cackling of geese," or perhaps Joe Merriam whistling to his team; "she used to get up at midnight and go and sit on the door-step when all in the house were asleep, and she could hear nothing in the world but the ticking of the clock in the house behind her." Virginia Road was named, according to tradition, for "Old Virginia," a freed slave who built his cabin on the outskirts of Concord and wore the footpath walking to town. Today its curves have been smoothed to speed cars on their way to corporate parks and shopping malls, but in those days it was "an old-fashioned, winding, at-length-deserted pathway" with mossy banks and tumbling stone walls. In 1798, the farm was already 150 years old, and the fine high-style farmhouse, built decades before, had already seen one generation grow up and leave. Now the old house was filled again, with a new generation carrying on what was, and remains today, one of America's oldest farms.

(Continues…)


Excerpted from "Henry David Thoreau"
by .
Copyright © 2017 The University of Chicago.
Excerpted by permission of The University of Chicago Press.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Preface
 Introduction: Land of the Grass-Ground River
Tahatawan’s Arrowhead
Enclosures and Commons
The Genesis of Musketaquid
The Coming of the English
Living the Revolution
Part I
The Making of Thoreau

Chapter 1
Concord Sons and Daughters
Coming to Concord
The Early Years of John and Cynthia Thoreau
Making Concord Home
Chapter 2
Higher Learning from Concord to Harvard (1826-1837)
A Concord Education
A Harvard Portrait
Learning to Leave Harvard
Chapter 3
Transcendental Apprentice (1837-1841)
Sic Vita
Transcendental Self-Culture
Concord Social Culture
The Thoreau School
“There is no remedy for love but to love more”
Compensations
Chapter 4
“Not till We Are Lost” (1842-1844)
The Death of John Thoreau
“Surely joy is the condition of life!”: New Friends, New Ventures
Thoreau on Staten Island
The Road to Walden
Part II
The Making of Walden

Chapter 5
“Walden, Is It You?” (1845-1847)
Preparations
On Walden Pond: The First Season
Going to Extremes I: Thoreau in Jail
Going to Extremes II: Thoreau on Katahdin
Leaving Walden
Chapter 6
A Writer’s Life (1847-1849)
“Will you be my father?”: Thoreau at the Emersons’
“Lectures multiply on my desk”: Thoreau Finds His Audience
“Civil Disobedience”
A Basket of Delicate Texture: Weaving Thoreau’s Week
Chapter 7
From Concord to Cosmos: Thoreau’s Turn to Science (1849-1851)
“The law which reveals”: Cape Cod
“Even this may be the year”: 1850
“The captain of a huckleberry party”
Chapter 8
The Beauty of Nature, the Baseness of Men (1852-1854)
Abolition and Reform after the Fugitive Slave Law
The Hermit at Home
The Higher Law from Chesuncook to Walden
Reading Walden
Part III
Successions

Chapter 9
Walden-on-Main (1854-1857)
“What Shall It Profit?”: Thoreau after Walden
Illness and Recovery
“The infinite extent of our relations
Chapter 10
Wild Fruits (1857-1859)
The Last Excursions to Cape Cod and the Maine Woods
Life in the Commons: Village, Mountain, River
“A Transcendentalist above all”: Thoreau and John Brown
Chapter 11
A Constant New Creation (1860-1862)
The Year of Darwin
“The West of which I speak”: Thoreau’s Last Journey
“The leaves teach us how to die”
Acknowledgments
Abbreviations
Notes
BibliographyIndex
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