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20 April 1849, Friday; 7:30 p.m.
Worcester, Massachusetts; City Hall
"Economy"
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NARRATIVE OF EVENT: In the spring of 1849
Thoreau gave his first three lectures in Worcester on 20 and 27 April, and on 3 May.
Commentators have linked these lectures with the unspecified sponsorship of his friend H.
G. O. Blake, which is a reasonable assumption, but a letter of invitation from Blake does
not exist, nor do newspaper articles or other sources mention his influence. On 17 April
1849, Thoreau did write to Blake as follows: "It is my intention to leave Concord for
Worcester, via Groton, at 12 oclock on Friday of this week. Mr. Emerson tells me
that it will take about two hours to go by this way. At any rate I shall try to [secure] 3
or 4 hours in which to see you & Worcester before the lecture" (C, p.
242). These lectures, the only time in his entire career when Thoreau can be said to have
delivered an entire course of lectures, were not part of the 1848-49 lecture course of the
Worcester Lyceum, a fact perhaps further arguing for the good offices of his friend and
admirer, Blake.
ADVERTISEMENTS, REVIEWS, AND
RESPONSES: The review of the lecture in the 25 April Worcester Palladium, here
quoted in part, suggests a more favorable reaction by the general audience than by the
reviewer, who apparently had not actually heard Thoreau lecture:
Life In The Woods. A sylvan philsopher
(Mr Thoreau of Concord,) delivered a lecture at the City Hall Friday evening. His
discourse was intended as an autobiography of two years of life in the woods;an
experiment by the lecturer to illustrate, not perhaps so much the absurdity of the present
organization and customs of society, as the ease with which a man of resolution and stern
expedients may have ample leisure for the cultivation of his intellectual powers and the
acquisition of knowledge. This sylvan philosopher, after leaving college, (perhaps a
little charmed by some "representative" man1)
betook himself to the woods, where they slope down to the margin of a lakelet. . . . His
lecture was a history of his experience; and is said to have been witty, sarcastic, and
amusing.
Such philosophers illustrate the
absurdities the human mind is capable of. What would a forest of them be good for? Nothing
but curiosities for people to look after, as they pay their shilling to see a menagerie.
They are watches without any pointers; their springs and wheels are well adjusted, and
perform good service; but nobody is the wiser for it, as they do not tell the time of day.
They are a train of carwheels; they run well, and in good time, but can carry no
passengers or luggage. A wheel-barrow, with an Irishman for its vitals, renders the world
a far better service.
In view of the final paragraph in this review, the following reference in the 28 April Salem
Observer is rather perplexing:
Mr. Thoreau, of Concord,
"the
forest seer,
The
minstrel of the natural year,"
as he is well called by Emerson in his "Wood-notes," has delivered his lecture
upon the Scholars Life in the Woods, in Worcester. It is favorably noticed by the
Palladium.
Subsequently, in a 3 May review of
Thoreaus second Worcester lecture, a reporter for the Worcester Daily Spy
gave hearsay testimony that the 20 April first lecture had been a success with the general
audience: "Being absent from town on the evening when the first lecture was given, we
did not have the good fortune to hear ita circumstance we regretted, because the
commendations we hear of it assure us that it would have been a source of enjoyment to
us." According to Walter Harding, "Aunt Maria Thoreau, having heard about the Palladium
account [of Thoreaus lecture], was sure that Worcester had had enough of her nephew,
and confessed that she was as disgusted with what he had to say as the Palladium
had been" (Days, p. 242).
DESCRIPTION OF TOPIC: See lecture 15.
Notes
1. An allusion to
Emerson, who had delivered a course of lectures on "Representative Men"
throughout New England and in England during the preceding years and would the following
year publish the course as a book of the same title. [Back to Text] |