Contemporary Notices
and Reviews of
Walden; or, Life in
the Woods
_______
"How to Live—Mr. Thoreau's Example"
and "Reply"
New-York Daily Tribune (2
April 1849): p. 3
To
the Editor of the Tribune:
I notice in your
paper this morning a strong commendation of one Mr. Thoreau for going
out into the woods and living in a hut all by himself at the rate of about
$45 per annum, in order to illustrate the value of the soul. Having
always found in The Tribune a friend of sociability and neighborly
helping-each-other-along, I felt a little surprise at seeing such a
performance held up as an example for the young men of this country, and
supposed I must have mistaken the sense of your article. Accordingly I
called in my wife, Mrs. Thorough, and e studied it over together, and came
to the conclusion that you really believed the Concord hermit had done a
fine thing. Now I am puzzled, and write in a friendly way to ask for a
little light on this peculiar philosophy. Mrs. T. is more clear in her
mind than I am. She will have it that the young man is either a whimsy or
else a good-for-nothing, selfish, crab-like sort of chap, who tries to
shirk the duties whose hearty and honest discharge is the only thing that
in her view entitles a man to be regarded as a good example. She declares
that nobody has the right to live for himself a lone, away from the
interests, the affections, and the sufferings of his kind. Such a way of
going on, she says, is not living, but a cold and snailish kind of
existence, which, as she maintains, is both infernal and internally
stupid.
Yours, truly Timothy
Thorough.
Le Roy Place,
April2, 1849
Reply.
Mr. Thorough is indeed in a fog—in fact, we suspect there is a mistake in his
name, and that he must have been changed at nurse for another boy whose
true name was Shallow. Nobody has proposed or suggested that it becomes
everybody to go off into the woods, each build himself a hut and live
hermit-like, on the vegetable products of his very moderate labor. But
thee is a large class of young men who aspire to Mental Culture through
Study, Reading, Reflection, &c. These are too apt to sacrifice their
proper independence in the pursuit of their object—to run in debt, throw
themselves on the tender mercies of some patron, relative, Education
Society, or something of the sort, or to descend into the lower deep of
roping out a thin volume of very thin poems, to be inflicted on a
much-enduring public, or to importune some one for a sub-Editorship or the
like. Now it does seem to us that Mr. Thoreau has set all his brother
aspirants to self-culture, a very wholesome example, and shown them how,
by chastening their physical appetites, they may preserve their proper independence
with starving their souls. When they shall have conned that lesson, we
trust, with Mr. Thorough otherwise Shallow's permission, he will give them
another.
Ed. Trib.
Return
to Henry D. Thoreau: Works: Walden
Return to Henry D. Thoreau: Works: Walden:
Contemporary Notices and Reviews
Return to Henry D. Thoreau: Life
& Writings
|