Contemporary Notices
and Reviews of
Walden; or, Life in
the Woods
_______
New-York Daily Tribune (2
April 1849): p. 3
Henry
D. Thoreau of Concord, Mass. has recently been lecturing on "Life in
the Woods," in Portland and elsewhere. There is not a young man in
the land—and very few old ones—who would not profit
by an attentive hearing of that lecture. Mr. Thoreau is a young student,
who has imbibed (or rather refused to stifle), the idea that a man's soul
is better worth living for than his body. Accordingly, he has built
him a house ten by fifteen feet in a piece of unfrequented woods by the
side of a pleasant little lakelet, where he devotes his days to study and
reflection, cultivating a small plat of ground, living frugally on
vegetables, and working for the neighboring farmers whenever he is is need
of money or additional exercise. It thus costs him some six to eight
week's rugged labor per year to earn his food and clothes, and perhaps an
hour or two per day extra to prepare his food and fuel, keep his house in
order, &c.—He has lived in this way four [sic] years, and his
total expenses for last year were $41.25, and his surplus earnings at the
close were $13.31, which he considers a better result than almost any of
the farmers of Concord could show, though they have worked all the time.
By this course Mr. Thoreau lives free from pecuniary obligation or
dependence on others, except that he borrows some books, which is an equal
pleasure to lender and borrower. The man on whose land he is a squatter
is no wise injured or inconvenienced thereby. If all our young men
would but hear this lecture, we think some among them would feel less
strongly impelled either to come to New York or go to California.
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