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- Henry David Thoreau
- American literature during the first half of the nineteenth century
- took many forms and ideas that still effect our ever so changing
- society today. Henry David Thoreau was among the notable writers
- during this time, and his impact of American literature will not soon
- be forgotten. His perseverance, love for nature, and humanitarian
- beliefs helped to mold the ideas and values of early American history.
- He was born in Concord, Massachusetts on July 12 in 1817. His
- parents, both abolitionists of slavery, were John and Cynthia
- Thoreau. During his childhood years his parents, along with Henry’s
- older siblings John Jr. and Helen, often took the family on long walks
- though the valleys and hills of Concord. The seeds of Henry’s love
- for nature were planted during this time.
- As a young school boy, at the Concord public school and later at the
- Concord Academy, many of his peers sought after him as loner who took
- everything too serious. In 1833 Henry’s parents had saved enough money to
- send him off to college at Harvard University. Even though he barely passed
- the entrance exam, he would later become one of the top students in his
- graduating class. In 1836 financial and health problems forced Thoreau to
- postpone his studies at Harvard and seek a job. He taught school for a
- semester in Canton, Massachusetts and returned to Harvard in the Spring of
- 1837. He took a full load of classes that Spring and Summer semesters and
- graduated in August of 1837. After graduating Thoreau had no idea what he
- wanted to do with his education. After debating over many different careers
- he finally concluded that teaching would be his calling. He landed a position
- at Center School in 1837 in Concord, however he resigned two weeks later
- after many teachers and students complained of his teaching methods and strictness in the classroom. Over the
- next year he worked many small jobs around Concord, and also
- became friends with Ralph Waldo Emerson. The elder Emerson
- influenced Thoreau in his belief in Transcendentalism. “Thoreau was
- indelibly marked by his mentor’s philosophy” (Sanborn 122).
- In 1838 Henry and his brother John started their own public school in
- Concord. John taught English and math, while Henry taught science and
- foreign languages. The brothers had completely different teaching methods
- and often times came at odds with each other. Nevertheless, the school
- brought in more and more enrollment every year. In 1841 John became
- deathly ill and they were forced to close the school. It was during this time,
- while watching his brother die, Henry began writing the Dial. The Dial was
- mostly poetry and short essays written over the following four years.
- Despite the prolong struggle with John health, he died in 1842. The death of
- John stuck Henry severely. After his death Henry sought after his brother
- through travels in nature in remembrance of his brother’s love for nature. In
- 1844 another unfortunate event happen when Thoreau and a friend, Edward
- Hoar, where camping in the Concord woods. Thoreau accidentally started a
- fire that would burn up a larough Thoreau could easily afford it he refuse and
- was sent to jail. Thoreau believed that he would set an example for the
- community in revolting against the tax. Eventually Thoreau’s sister would
- pay the tax for Henry and get him out of jail. After living at Walden Pond
- for a year he once again ran into financial difficulties. He moved in with the
- Emersons, and later with his parents in 1947. “Once again he found
- himself without a steady job” (Paul 25). In 1848 he became
- somewhat of a professional in surveying and lecturing. Over the next
- five years Thoreau worked diligently on revising Walden and later
- wrote A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers. The last
- fifteen years of his life he traveled much of the upper United States
- and Canada. It was also during this time that Thoreau became a
- strong advocate of abolition. He was one of the few that supported
- John Brown’s protests.Perhaps taxation and slavery were issues on which he felt
- compelled to take a public stand precisely because they were
- so clearly threats to the individual integrity and freedom of
- every American, whether free or slave. (Schnieder 23)
- In 1861 he became seriously ill with weak lungs. Doctors told him to
- go to Minnesota where the air was drier and easier on easier on his lungs. When he was well enough, he moved their with a
- friend named Horace Mann Jr. Shortly after he became homesick
- and chose to move back to Concord to die in the place loved. On
- May 6, 1862, at the age of 45, Henry David Thoreau died quietly in
- the bed that he built. Thoreau’s idea and beliefs make him a
- renowned author in American literature still today.
- <br><br><b>Bibliography</b><br><br>
- Paul, Sherman. Thoreau: A Collection of Critical Essays. Englewood
- Cliffs: Prentice-Hall, 1962.
- Sanborn, F.B. The Life of Henry David Thoreau. Boston and New
- York: Houghton Mifflin, 1917.
- Schneider, Richard. Henry David Thoreau. Boston: Twayne Up,
- 1987.
- <br><br><b>Bibliography</b><br><br>
- Paul, Sherman. Thoreau: A Collection of Critical Essays. Englewood
- Cliffs: Prentice-Hall, 1962.
- Sanborn, F.B. The Life of Henry David Thoreau. Boston and New
- York: Houghton Mifflin, 1917.
- Schneider, Richard. Henry David Thoreau. Boston: Twayne Up,
- 1987.
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