The Essays of Henry D. Thoreau
Material type: TextPublication details: Farrar, Straus & GirouxDescription: 448 pagesISBN:- 9780865475854
- 814.3
- PS3042
Item type | Current library | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Book | Lake Chapala Society | 814.3 THOR (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 61850 |
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814 IRBY We Are Never Meeting in Real Life: Essays | 814.3 BAKE Emerson Among The Eccentrics | 814.3 EMER Self-Reliance and Other Essays | 814.3 THOR The Essays of Henry D. Thoreau | 814.5 BOMB Four of a Kind | 814.5 LEAR Why We Suck | 814.52 BENCH The Best of Robert Benchley |
Thoreau's major essays annotated and introduced by one of our most vital intellectuals. With "The Essays of Henry D. Thoreau," Lewis Hyde gathers thirteen of Thoreau's finest short prose works and, for the first time in 150 years, presents them fully annotated and arranged in the order of their composition. This definitive edition includes Thoreau's most famous essays, "Civil Disobedience" and "Walking," along with lesser-known masterpieces such as "Wild Apples," "The Last Days of John Brown," and an account of his 1846 journey into the Maine wilderness to climb Mount Katahdin, an essay that ends on a unique note of sublimity and terror. Hyde diverges from the long-standing and dubious editorial custom of separating Thoreau's politics from his interest in nature, a division that has always obscured the ways in which the two are constantly entwined. "Natural History of Massachusetts" begins not with fish and birds but with a dismissal of the political world, and "Slavery in Massachusetts" ends with a meditation on the water lilies blooming on the Concord River. Thoreau's ideal reader was expected to be well versed in Greek and Latin, poetry and travel narrative, and politically engaged in current affairs. Hyde's detailed annotations clarify many of Thoreau's references and re-create the contemporary context wherein the nation's westward expansion was bringing to a head the racial tensions that would result in the Civil War.
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