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3 January 1848, Monday; 7:00 p.m.
Concord, Massachusetts; Unitarian Church, Vestry
"An Excursion to Ktaadn"
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NARRATIVE OF EVENT: Although minutes of
individual meetings of the Concord Lyceum were not recorded during the 1847-48 lecture
season, a retrospective summary of the course by the Lyceum secretary, A. G. Fay, lists
Thoreau along with eight other speakers (MassLyc, p. 163). Thoreau, in fact,
lectured three times before the Concord Lyceum during the season, on 3 January, 26
January, and 16 February. On 29 December 1847 he wrote to Emerson, then traveling in
England: "Next week I am going to give an account to the Lyceum of my expedition to
Maine. Theodore Parker lectures tonightWe have had [E. P.] Whipple on
Geniustoo weighty a subject for him . . . . [H. N.] Hudson too has been here with a
dark shadow in the core of him, and his desperate wit so much indebted to the surface of
him" (C, p. 199). On 12 January 1848, Thoreau reported on his lecture in
another letter to Emerson: "I read a part of the story of my excursion to Ktadn to
quite a large audience of men and boys, the other night, whom it interested. It contains
many facts and some poetry" (C, p. 204). Thoreaus brief description of
the lectures content belies the seriousness with which he may have regarded this
lecture, the first "excursion" he delivered after saying a year earlier in the
first of the two "Walden; or, Life in the Woods" lectures he delivered before
his neighbors: "I wanted to live deep and suck out all the marrow of life . . . to
drive life into a corner, and . . . if it were sublime to know it by experience and be
able to give a true account of it in my next excursion."1
ADVERTISEMENTS, REVIEWS, AND
RESPONSES: In his diary entry of 3 January 1848, Bronson Alcott also alluded to the
success of Thoreaus lecture: "EveningMrs. A. accompanied me to the Lyceum
where we heard a lecture from Thoreau on a jaunt of his to Kotarden, the highest mountain
in Maine.The lecture drew a lively picture of these wild scenes and of his
adventures in ascending the rivers to reach the summit of Kotarden."2 Alcotts "Kotarden" spelling, if it
reflects Thoreaus pronunciation, suggests the same New England accent that prompted
Emerson to seek a name change from Lydia to Lidian for his wife so as to avoid hearing her
called "Lidier" by his neighbors. But the spelling may just as well reflect
Alcotts New England ear (compare the New England pronunciation and spelling of
"Harvard," for instance).
DESCRIPTION OF TOPIC: The
relative paucity of surviving leaves from the lecture manuscript, as well as the
relatively brief interval between Thoreaus delivery of the lecture and his
submission to Horace Greeley (early or mid April 1848) of the printers copy
manuscript for the essay, suggests that Thoreau used most or all of his lecture manuscript
in his printers copy manuscript.
Notes
1. Shanley, Making
of Walden, p. 141. [Back to Text]
2. Alcott, MS "Diary
for 1848," entry of 3 January, MH (*59M-308). [Back to Text] |