Henry
David Thoreau was an influential author,
philosopher and environmentalist. He
graduated from Harvard University in
1837. After college, Thoreau became
a school teacher and wrote poems for The
Dial but failed as a freelance
writer in New York City. After the
sudden death
of his brother, Thoreau moved to a forest
along the shores of Walden Pond, near Concord,
Massachusetts. Thoreau's experience at
Walden formed the basis of his legendary
work Walden, or, Life in the Woods,
published in 1854. The book described his
memoires of his life along the beautiful
pond as a spiritual quest. Although he
spent 26 months on Walden Pond, the book
compresses the time as one calendar year
(four seasons, each describing a stage
of human development).
Thoreau
went on to write a two million word
journal (over 24 years) about the natural
history of Concord and surrounding
areas, and wrote "excursion" books
about the natural wonders of Cape Cod,
Canada, and the Maine Woods. He also
wrote essays on fall foliage, seed
dispersion, and the wonders of hiking
and canoeing. He was among the first
to advocate land conservation and wilderness
as well as Charles Darwin's Theory
of Evolution. Today, Henry David
Thoreau is considered America's first
environmentalist.
Every
creature is better alive than dead,
men and moose and pine trees, and
he who understands it aright will
rather preserve its life than destroy
it. - Henry David Thoreau
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