Walking
by Henry David Thoreau -
1862
"...
in Wildness is the preservation of the World"
Introduction: Simply
Walking - by Mark Stabb
Walking in three parts: Part
1 - Part 2 - Part
3
"Few writers of any era or discipline have exerted
so great and lasting an influence on American culture's configuration of
the man-nature relationship as did Henry David Thoreau, whose writings
on the subject defined both a literary form -- the nature essay -- and
a seminal philosophical understanding." - introduction to Excursions
at the Library of Congress site.
Walking began as a lecture called "The Wild," delivered by Henry
at the Concord Lyceum on April 23, 1851. He gave this lecture many times,
developing it into the essay finally published in the Atlantic Monthly
after his death, in 1862.
Margaret M. Brulatour writes, "Wildness: it is
the philosophy ... that enabled Thoreau to outgrow, as Howarth says, 'the
airy insubstantiality of [Transcendentalist] aesthetics. He put a solid
ground of reality under Emerson's ideals, showed how his metaphysics actually
work in the physical world'. Thoreau truly believed Emerson's theory: 'Particular
natural facts are symbols of particular spiritual facts.' He devoted his
lifetime to close scrutiny of the the natural facts in order to perceive
their spiritual message. He saw the American wilderness as the country's
'historic trust, the ultimate challenge to acquisitive drives.'"
The Margaret Brulatour quote above and
much information in the annotations is from Hypertext
of Walking, Margaret M. Brulatour, copyright 1999. The text
is from the 1906 Houghton Mifflin edition, originally adapted to HTML by
Bradley Dean, from the Thoreau
Home Page website. The Thoreau Reader's Walking is divided into
three parts for easier online reading. Quotes of Ralph Waldo Emerson are
from his biographical essay on Thoreau.
More information on Walking
is in the Lecturing
section of the Thoreau
Home Page.
Search for words in Walking
at Concordances of Great
Books
Another point of view: For
wildness, hope lies in reality, not romanticism - by Chet Raymo
[ 홈 ] [ Introduction ] [ Thoreau's Walden ] [ Maine Woods ] [ Cape Cod ] [ Thoreau's Civil Disobedience ] [ Life Without Principle ] [ Slavery in Massachusetts ] [ A Plea for Captain John Brown ] [ Thoreau's Walking ] [ Thoreau's World ] [ Transcendentalism ]
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