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David Thoreau as a writer of Transcendental period



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Transdentalism Marjona

2.David Thoreau as a writer of Transcendental period
As we know that David Henry was born in Thoreau in 1817, he was the only one of the Transcendentalists native to Concord. His father, John, was a shopkeeper who turned, later on, to the manufacture of pencils. His mother, Cynthia, was active in charitable causes and a founder of the Concord Women’s Anti-Slavery Society. His siblings included a brother, John, and two sisters, Helen and Sophia.
The family not well-to-do and determined that they could only afford to send one of their two sons to college. They chose David, the more studious of the two, over his older brother. He entered Harvard at the then not unusually early age of sixteen. He seems to have passed unnoticed by most of his fellow classmates.
In search of a vocation, Thoreau found a teaching position with the town school but resigned when instructed by a member of the school committee to flog his students. After a futile search for teaching positions elsewhere he and his brother took over the Concord Academy. Three years later John’s health gave out, forcing the closure of the school. Shortly thereafter, in 1841, he moved into the Emerson household as handyman and gardener remaining for a period of two years. A proposal of marriage to Ellen Sewell, daughter of a Unitarian minister, came to naught and he remained a bachelor the rest of his life [8,72].
By this time he had come under the influence of Emerson, who mentored him in his fledgling career as a writer. He encouraged him to keep a journal, welcomed him into the Transcendental Club which met from time to time at the Emerson home, and sought to place his early writings in the Dial magazine, a Transcendentalist periodical. In developing his identity as a writer he decided to change his name from David Henry to Henry David.
His first major publication, in the Dial for July of 1842, was an essay on “The Natural History of Massachusetts,” foreshadowing his reputation as an ecologist and environmental writer. In hopes of furthering Thoreau’s career, Emerson secured a position for him as a tutor for his brother’s children on Staten Island where Thoreau might also meet with New York publishers. Frustrated and homesick, he stayed for barely six months, though he did manage in that time to find an influential benefactor and literary agent in Horace Greeley, publisher of the New York Tribune.
On returning to Concord Thoreau rejoined his father in the family pencil business. His improvements to their product made it the best on the market at the time. His relationships with Emerson, Bronson Alcott, Margaret Fuller and Nathaniel Hawthorne deepened in this period and strengthened his resolve to become a successful author. The tragic death of his brother from lockjaw in January 1842 was devastating and prompted him to write, as a memorial, an account of a trip they had taken together by boat up the Concord and Merrimack rivers in 1839.
From his college days Thoreau had toyed with the idea of building a cabin in the woods where he might seek solitude and commune more closely with nature. In the spring of 1845 he commenced building his cabin near the shore of Walden Pond on property owned by Emerson. There he found the quietude and inspiration he needed to complete his first book, A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers. He also began to compose Walden, an account of his stay at the pond in the form of a manual on self-culture and simple living [9,59].
Contrary to some impressions of him, Thoreau was not reclusive, even during this time. As much as he enjoyed solitude and nature, he took pleasure in socializing with friends and neighbors and keeping up with the local gossip. On one of his visits into town, in July of 1846, he was approached by the town jailer and tax-collector who informed him that he had not paid his poll tax. He had refused to pay the tax as a silent protest against slavery and, most recently, the U.S. invasion of Mexico. When he told the tax-collector that he had no intention of paying he was taken to the local jail. He was released the next day after someone, perhaps one of his aunts, paid his tax.
He recounted his famous night in jail in a lecture given at the Concord Lyceum in January 1848. It was subsequently published as “Resistance to Civil Government“ in Elizabeth Peabody’s Aesthetic Papers. After his death the essay was retitled “Civil Disobedience,” and in time exerted a major influence on non-violent protest movements in South Africa, India and the U.S.
He left his cabin at the pond in 1847 when Emerson asked him to move back into the Emerson home to look after his family while he went to England on a lecture tour. Emerson was gone for a period of ten months. Though he became close to Emerson’s wife and children during this time, his relationship with Emerson himself had become strained. As he matured as a writer he sought to break free of Emerson’s tutelage.

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