September 1858
Salem or Gloucester, Massachusetts
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On Tuesday, 21 September 1858, Thoreau
traveled to Salem, where he met the lichenist John Russell. That afternoon the two set off
on foot to Cape Ann, where they stayed until Friday, 24 September. Thoreaus journal
record of the excursion gives no indication that he may have delivered a lecture while at
Salem or while on the cape (J, 11:170-80). But in a long, blustery, phlegmatic
entry in his journal on 16 November, he railed against (among other things) his inability
to get a fair hearing as a lecturer. After mentioning "One of our New England
towns" that "is sealed up hermetically like a molasses hogshead" and
"a cape which runs six miles into the sea that has not a man of moral courage upon
it"the latter clearly a reference to Cape AnnThoreau wrote:
I have been into the town, being
invited to speak to the inhabitants, not valuing, not having read even, the
Assemblys Catechism, and I try to stimulate them by reporting the best of my
experience. I see the craven priest looking round for a hole to escape at, alarmed because
it was he that invited me thither, and an awful silence pervades the audience. They think
they will never get me there again. But the seed has not all fallen in stony and shallow
ground. (J, 11:326-327)
A little later in the entry, Thoreau writes, "It is no compliment to be invited to
lecture before the rich Institutes and Lyceums"; and later still he mentions
Bostons "Lowell Institute with its restrictions, requiring a certain faith in
the lecturers" and "the Philomathean Institute in the next large town,"
which kept a list of unoffending lecturers (J, 11:327, 328). All of this suggests
that Thoreau had delivered a lecture recently, and most likely while on his excursion to
Salem and Cape Ann, but we have found no record of such a lecture. |