Guiding Questions

How have competing promises and ideals for a “New World” shaped the culture and history of the United States?

And how do American writers use language to communicate their relationship to these promises and ideals?

Henry David Thoreau

Thought Starters

We tend to think of Thoreau in extremes, as either our first and foremost eco-saint or as a hypocrite who had his sister do his laundry while he lived in Walden (Richard Smith). The truth is he was much more complex and, therefore, interesting than either of these extremes.

On this page, I hope to supplement what your text gives you on Thoreau with some other literary critics' thoughts and ideas about Thoreau. As you read the Thoreau selections in the Bedford Anthology, consider these ideas as conversation starters--interesting ideas to debate with--not as limitations on or boundaries for your own thinking.

As you consider these critical views of "Resistance to Civil Government" and Walden, look for evidence in the text to confirm, rebut, or complicate these readings and/or help you craft your own views of Thoreau's message and style. And, of course, do not forget about our guiding questions (see above):

"Resistance to Civil Government"

On the Thoreau Reader's "Resistance to Civil Government" pages, Lawrence Rosenwald offers this analysis:

"The essay is individualist, secular, anarchist, elitist and anti-democratic; but it has influenced persons of great religious devotion, leaders of collective campaigns, and members of resistance movements."

Look for signs of those labels Rosenwald applies to the essay. Where can we find Thoreau the "individualist," the "secular, anarchist," the "elitist" or the anti democrat? Why, despite these traits or perhaps even because of them has this essay been so influential? Where is the rhetorical magic in this text that makes it such a landmark?

In a brief introduction to "Resistance to Civil Government" in his anthology Transcendentalism, Joel Myerson sums up the two primary ways that readers respond to this text:

"Depending on how one reacts to Transcendentalism, this essay can be seen as either the ultimate in transcendental self-reliance ( "any man more right than his neighbors constitutes a majority of one") or the height of antisocial Transcendentalist self-importance and egotism" (547)

Do you read Thoreau from one of these two sides of Myerson's binary or do you find something else in the essay/lecture?

Walden

The Thoreau Reader page on Walden includes an interesting quote from an obvious Thoreau enthusiast, Professor Kathryn VanSpanckeren:

"In Walden, Thoreau ... opens the inner frontier of self-discovery as no American book had up to this time. As deceptively modest as Thoreau's ascetic life, it is no less than a guide to living the classical ideal of the good life. Both poetry and philosophy, this long poetic essay challenges the reader to examine his or her life and live it authentically."

Is this how you feel about Walden? What lines can you find in the text that verify or challenge this assessment?

Here is a great thought starter from Richard Schneider in his essay on Walden in the Cambridge Companion to Henry David Thoreau:

Most readers approach Walden assuming that they will find the "hard bottom" of its truth in the popular cultural myth of Thoreau as the hermit sitting meditatively by Walden Pond. It is a myth of retreat, a myth of a return to Eden, a myth of stasis, and it is a very appealing myth to a postindustrial society faced with overwhelming change. That myth is in Walden, to be sure, but the alert reader will find that it does not take him or her any more than halfway to the full significance of the book. A closer reading of Walden reveals a Thoreau who is often less interested in stasis than in change, less interested in meditation than in a journey of exploration" (92).

Is Schneider right? Is there a tension between Thoreau the hermit and Thoreau the philosophical adventurer in the text? Look for passages that pull you in one direction or the other (or both simultaneously, for that matter!).

Thoreau Timeline

1817 Born

1820 Missouri Compromise

1828 Andrew Jackson elected president.

1830 Peter Cooper invents first locomotive.

1833 Thoreau Enters Harvard

1837 Graduates Harvard; Begins keeping ; major financial collapse occurs in United States--lasts seven years.

1838 Trail of Tears

1839 Trip on Concord and Merrimack Rivers

1841 Moves in with Emerson

1844 Accidentally sets fire to Concord Woods

1845 Builds Walden pond cabin and moves in on July 4 (Emerson owns land): "I went to the woods because I wished to live deliberately, to front only the essential facts of life, and see if I could not learn what it had to teach, and not, when I came to to die, discover that I had not lived."

1846 Arrested for refusing to pay poll tax (objects to War with Mexico and other government politics).

1847 Leaves Walden: "If a man does not keep pace with his companions, perhaps it is because he hears a different drummer. Let him step to the music which he hears, however measured or far away."

1848 Delivers what we now know as "Resistance to Civil Government": "Under a government which imprisons any unjustly, the true place for a just man is also a prison." Gold Rush in California.

1849 Publishes first book, A Week on the Concord and Merrimac: "The frontiers are not east or west, north or south, but wherever a man "fronts" a fact."

1851 Thoreau active in Underground Railroad shuttling escaped slaves en route to Canada.

1854 Publishes Walden ("Simplify, simplify") and delivers "Life Without Principle" lecture ("Let us consider the way in which we spend our lives").

1857 Thoreau meets John Brown; Dred Scott Case;

1859 Delivers "A Plea for Captain John Brown" lecture after Brown's raid.

1860 Major labor unrest in Northeast; Lincoln elected president.

1861 Civil War begins; Thoreau delivers what will become "Walking" (published after his death in 1862): "... in Wildness is the preservation of the world"

1862 Dies of tuberculosis; "Walking" published in the Atlantic: "Hope and the future for me are not in lawns and cultivated fields,
not in towns and cities, but in the impervious and quaking swamps."

1865: Cape Cod published: "The sea-shore is a sort of neutral ground, a most advantageous point from which to contemplate this world. It is even a trivial place. The waves forever rolling to the land are too far-traveled and untamable to be familiar. Creeping along the endless beach amid the sun-squall and the foam, it occurs to us that we, too, are the product of sea-slime."

 

 

 

 

 

Featured Links

Thoreau Reader Link
The Thoreau Reader
(a phenomenal site run by the Thoreau Society)

Link to Walden Page

Walden
Text and Other Goodies!

Link to Thoreau Blog
The Blog of
Henry David Thoreau

(selections from his journals)
Jim Sullivan • Letters Department • MiraCosta College
Office: OC 3615 • Office Hours: M/W 12-1 PM.; T/Th 11 A.M - 12 Noon • Phone: (760) 757-2121 ext. 6303