fv" mii BOUGHT WITH THEINCOMB PllOM THE , ■• SAGE ENDOWMENT FUND —, - • THE GIFT OF 3Hcnrg W. Sage XS91 J^...ik-A..L..0.../..s^..,. /.^./j.../j?..f., 3513-1 Cornell University Library The original of tiiis book is in the Cornell University Library. There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924029651522 A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF HENRY DAVID THOREAU 'Z.-t A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF HENRY DAYID THOEEAU COMPILED BY FRANCIS H. ALLEN BOSTON AND NEW YORK HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY MDCCCCVIII COPYRIGHT, 1908, BY HOUGHTON MIFFLIN CO. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED FIVE HUNDRED AND THIRTY COPIES PRINTED NUMBER /^^ PREFACE The general plan of this book is based on the bibliographies which have preceded it in the series, but certain departures have been made, in ac- cordance with what appeared to be the particular demands of the matter to be presented. The division-headings are, however, self-explanatory, so that it seems unnecessary to say anything further here as to the contents and arrangement, and we may proceed at once to the acknowledg- ments which, in common with all other biblio- graphers, the compiler of this book owes to the many persons who have helped him in his labors. To his predecessors in the field of Thoreau bibliography, first of all, the compiler owes a great debt, especially to Dr. Samuel Arthur Jones, whose admirable "Bibliography of Henry David Thoreau," published by the Rowfant Club of Cleveland in 1894, virtually complete as far as it goes in all the most important particulars, the present writer at the beginning of his work made a sort of base of operations for his own campaign. Further assistance of the same kind was also obtained from the bibliography by Mr. John P. Anderson of the British Museum, appended to Mr. Salt's Life of Thoreau. The books and periodicals examined were mainly found in the great public and semi-pub- vi PREFACE lie libraries of Boston, New York, and Cam- bridge. A large part of the work was done at the Boston Public Library and the Boston Athenaeum, frequent visits were made to the Harvard Uni- versity Library and the Massachusetts State Li- brary, and many hours were spent in the Public Library at Concord, Massachusetts, and in the Lenox and Astor Libraries and the Columbia University Library in New York, to all of which institutions the compiler is grateful, not only for the usual privileges of readers, but in many cases for special kindnesses and attentions. In particu- lar he desires to thank Mr. William C. Lane of the Harvard Library and Miss Kelley of Concord for favors extended to him. To three private collec- tions also the compiler is under heavy obligations. Mr. Stephen H. Wakeman of New York, whose collection of first editions of Thoreau is a par- ticularly interesting and valuable one, and who is now the fortunate possessor of Thoreau's original manuscript journals, has been very kind and helpful. To Mrs. J. Chester Chamberlain of New York the compiler is grateful for the privilege of examining the Thoreau material contained in the collection of the late Mr. Chamberlain. Mr. Her- bert W. Hosmer of Concord, Massachusetts, the present owner of the Thoreau collection made by his late brother, Mr. Alfred W. Hosmer, has very hospitably permitted the compiler to spend many hours with his collection, which is especially rich in biographical* and critical matter concerning Thoreau, — a department which is ignored by PREFACE vii most collectors. Grateful thanks must also be extended to the Misses Hosmer of Concord for many kindnesses, and to Mr. Edwin B. Hill of Lakeland, Michigan, Colonel Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Mr. Charles E. Goodspeed, and the Rev. George Willis Cooke for assistance in various ways. Mr. Luther S. Livingston, besides permit- ting the use of the Thoreau matter printed in his "American Book-Prices Current," has been kind enough to supply the record of this year's sales in advance of the publication of his 1908 volume, and in other ways has been helpful. The compiler is especially grateful to three gentlemen who have had the kindness to read his proofs and make valuable suggestions, — Dr. Samuel A. Jones, the author of the earlier bib- liography before mentioned, whose hearty cooper- ation has been a source of great satisfaction to the compiler and whose friendly letters have been a spur to his spirits ; Mr. Patrick Kevin Foley of Boston, known to all American book-collectors, whose keen but genial criticism has been especially helpful; and Mr. F. B. Sanborn, who has not spared of his intimate and extensive knowledge of Thoreau and his works in assisting the compiler to make this book as complete and accurate as possible. 'Finally, the compiler owes a debt of gratitude to Mr. George B. Ives, not only for special assistance in various ways, but most of all for the many valuable suggestions obtained from a study of his excellent Bibliography of Oliver Wendell Holmes, which has been at once the ad- viii PREFACE miration and the despair of at least one of his successors in this bibhographical series. Thoreau's magazine contributions and other fugitive pieces were so few, however, and Mr. Sanborn and others have been so dihgent in searching them out, that it was not to be expected that any such interesting discoveries could be made in that de- partment of Thoreau bibliography as were pos- sible in the case of Holmes. The compiler, there- fore, has nothing new to offer the reader here, but he has been at some pains to bring together all the published information in regard to Thoreau's writings which the works themselves offer and which his biographers, and especially Mr. San- born, have given us. To these biographers, it is needless to say, this book owes much of whatever interest it may have. The relation of Thoreau's more formal works to his Journal is somewhat peculiar, and perhaps demands a word of explanation in this Preface. The Journal, begun in 1837 and continued until within a few months of his death, was not merely a chronicle of his daily doings : it was the record of his daily thoughts also, and it contained the first drafts of all his writings. The natural course followed by each literary product was in the order of journal entry, lecture, magazine article, and book pubhcation. Not every individual piece of writing went through all the stages, but the begin- ning was always in the Journal. Of course the Journal was not all used in this way : much of it PREFACE ix remained at his death still undrawn upon. Nor is the original draft of every one of his writings still to be seen, for Thoreau destroyed many pages of the Journal in the making of his books and essays. Enough is left, however, to show his methods of work, and readers may, with the help of the footnotes in the published Journal, readily compare for themselves the first drafts with the finished product, and learn the circumstances under which any given passage was originally written. The interrelations of the Works and the Journal are frequently noted in the pages of this bibliography. October, 1908. TABLE OF CONTENTS Page Note on the Frontispiece and Other Portraits OF Thoreatt xiii Thoreau's Books Single Publications 2 Collected Works 51 Selections prom Thoreau's Writings Books entirely devoted to Thoreau . . 55 Other Books containing selections from Thoreau .57 Articles and Poems by Thoreau ... 63 Biographies and other Books relating exclu- sively TO Thoreau 80 Books containing Critical and Biographical Matter 89 Newspaper and Periodical Articles concerning Thoreau and his Works 114 Auction Prices 148 Appendix 163 A. A List of the Poems and Bits of Verse CONTAINED IN ThOREAU's PrOSE WoRKS exclusive of THE JOURNAL . . 165 B. Addenda 169 C. Erratum 171 Index 173 ,^^-M^ ^/ c^^^^^*^ -^^=^ ^2^^—' ^^^.-n^ ^<^ OA Jh. 'j^ ' NOTE ON THE FRONTISPIECE AND OTHER PORTRAITS OF THOREAU The portrait reproduced for the frontispiece of this volume is a daguerreotype hitherto unpub- lished, taken in June, 1856, by Benjamin D. Max- ham of Worcester, Massachusetts. A comparison with the full-face portrait which has been repro- duced so often as to have come to be the most familiar representation of Thoreau proves that the two daguerreotypes were taken at one sitting. The wrinkles in coat .and waistcoat and the tying of the cravat are identical, though the hair is some- what smoother in this new one, and pose and expression are different. This is the daguerreo- type sent by Thoreau to Calvin H. Greene of Rochester, Michigan, in 1856. It was accom- panied by the following letter, which is reproduced in facsimile herewith : — CoNcoBD Saturday Jviiie 21st '36. Dear Sir On the 12 ult' I forwarded the two books to California, observing your directions in every particular, and I trust that Uncle Sam will dis- charge his duty faithfully. While in Worcester this week I obtained the accompanying daguerreotype, which my friends think is pretty good, though better looking than I. • Thoreau habitually wrote "ult." for "inst." when referring to an earlier day in the current month. (See Editor's Preface to the Journal.) xiv PORTRAITS OF THOREAU Books & postage $2.64 Daguerreotype 50 Postage -1^ 3.30 5.00 You will accordingly 3.30 find 1.70 enclosed with my shadow. Yrs. Henby D. Thoreau. Thoreau's correspondence with Greene was first printed in "Some Unpublished Letters of Henry D. and Sophia E. Thoreau," by Dr. Sam- uel A. Jones, to whose kindness the compiler of this Bibliography is indebted for the privilege of reproducing the daguerreotype and the letter, both of which are now in Dr. Jones's possession. That volume also gives some account of the cir- cumstances attending the transmission of the daguerreotype. It seems that Greene had asked Thoreau for his picture, and had also ordered cop- ies of the "Week" and " Walden" sent to his bro- ther in California. Having heard that Thoreau was poor, he enclosed five dollars and requested him to keep the balance "for his trouble" ! The change, however, came back with the picture. Besides this one there appear to be five por- traits of Thoreau from the life, — two other daguerreotypes taken at the same sitting, in June, 1856 ; a crayon drawing by Samuel W. Rowse, made in 1854 and now hung in the Concord Pub- lic Library; and two ambrotypes taken by Dun- PORTRAITS OF THOREAU xv shee in New Bedford for Mr. Daniel Ricketson in August, 1861. From one of these last and from personal recollection Mr. Walton Ricketson made an excellent medallion in profile, which has been reproduced in the "Familiar Letters" and else- where. The medallion deserves to rank with the original portraits, for Mr. Ricketson knew Tho- reau well and seems to have been very success- ful in getting a likeness. Mr. Sanborn says that "it alone of the four likenesses extant shows the aquiline features as his comrades of the wood and mountain saw them, — not weakened by any effort to bring him to the standard of other men in garb or expression." The daguerreotypes were taken during one of Thoreau's visits to Worcester, at the instance of his friends H. G. O. Blake and Theo. Brown. So far as can now be ascertained, but three were taken, two of which went to the Worcester friends, while the third was sent to Mr. Greene. Mr. Blake's has been reproduced a number of times, and is probably the only one published hitherto. It is now in the possession of Mr. Edward Harlow Russell of Worcester. Mr. Brown's is now owned by his son, Mr. William T. Brown of the same city, through whose kindness the writer has been permitted to examine it. It is practically identical in appearance with the Blake negative. ITie Dunshee ambrotype — the two are so nearly identical in pose, expression, and detail that they may be treated as one — deserves to be better known than it is. It has only once been satisfac- xvi PORTEAJTS OF THOREAU torily reproduced, however. That was in "Daniel Ricketson and his Friends," where it appeared in photogravure. The portrait pleased Thoreau's family greatly. In sending it to Miss Thoreau soon after the death of her brother, Mr. Ricketson wrote: "When I heard of your brother's death, I went to the artist who took the picture and got a duplicate of the one I had for you. I send you the strongest impression, the first taken. The one I keep is a little lighter in color, which led me to choose it, but I now see the stronger expression in yours. If you were here, I should like for you to take your choice. We all consider it very life- like and one of the most successful likenesses we ever saw. What is rather remarkable is that it shows scarcely at all Henry's loss of health, suf- fering deeply as he was at the time it was taken, from his disease." Miss Thoreau wrote in reply : "Until a few weeks since I did not know that Henry had his picture taken when in New Bedford last; he accidentally spoke of it, and said that you considered it a good likeness. None of his daguerreotypes have pleased us, and I did not im- agine that the ambrotype would afford us much satisfaction ; still I felt curious to see it, thinking I might get a copy of yours in case we liked it. I need not tell you, for I cannot, how agreeably surprised I was on opening the little box, to find my own lost brother again. I could not restrain my tears. I discover a slight shade about the eyes expressive of weariness, but a stranger might not observe it. I am very glad to possess a picture of PORTRAITS OF THOREAU xvii so late a date. The crayon drawn eight years ago this summer we considered good ; it betrays the poet. I always liked it. Mr. Channing, Emerson, Alcott, and many other friends who have looked at the ambrotype express much satisfaction." There are tintypes in existence taken from this ambrotype and passing for original portraits of Thoreau. The writer has not learned who is responsible for them. Mr. Walton Ricketson writes that he has no knowledge of them, and that but two ambrotypes were made in New Bedford, one of which is in his possession, while the other was the one sent by his father to Miss Sophia Thoreau. The latter is now in the collection of the Concord Antiquarian Society. Mr. Ricketson also states that two exposures were made at the sitting, Dunshee retaining one negative and turn- ing the other over to Mr. Daniel Ricketson. The first negative was the one afterwards sent to Miss Thoreau. So that both of the ambrotypes are original portraits, taken directly from the sitter.* In discussing the portraits of Thoreau, mention must also be made of a full bust by Mr. Walton Ricketson, which was reproduced in photogravure in "Daniel Ricketson and his Friends," and of a crude but amusing pencil sketch made by Mr. Daniel Ricketson and reproduced in the same ' In the pages of this BibKography, portraits are frequently described as "the Ma^am daguerreotype," " the Dunshee ambrotype," etc. Refer- ence in the former case is'usually, if not always, to Mr. Blake's daguerreo- type; where an ambrotype is mentioned, the Concord ajnbrotype is to be understood, except in the case of the one reproduced in Daniel Ricketson and his Friends. xviii PORTRAITS OF THOREAU volume. This sketch was inscribed, "H. D. Thoreau as he presented himself at the door of Brooklawn, Dec. 25th, 1854. Age 37," and it re- presents Thoreau with hat, umbrella, and travel- ling-bag, as he appeared in making his first visit to Ricketson in New Bedford. It is not, of course, a serious attempt at portraiture. The bust was evi- dently modelled after the Rowse crayon, and repre- sents the younger Thoreau, the Thoreau whom the sculptor, then only a boy, first met at his father's house, but with even more of youthful vigor than was his at that time. It is a conception of Tho- reau the poet, and is naturally a somewhat ideal- ized portrait. The fact that the familiar daguerreotype has sometimes been reproduced without reversing — thus showing the subject as he appeared in his mirror but not precisely as his friends saw him — has given rise to the belief that two daguerreotypes have been reproduced, but the writer has been unable to find more than the one portrait, repro- duced directly or reversed as the case might be. It is therefore a peculiar pleasure to be able to publish for the first time this portrait which has hitherto been unknown to most readers and ad- mirers of Thoreau. THOREAU'S BOOKS BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THOREAU A WEEK ON THE CONCORD AND MERRIMACK RIVERS A Week | on the | Concord and Merrimack Rivers. | By | Henry D. Thoreau. | Boston and Cambridge : | James Munroe and Com- pany. I New York : George P. Putnam. Phila- delpliia: Lindsay \ and Blackiston. London: John Chapman. \ 1849. 12mo, pp. 413. Collation: 1, title; 2, copy- right and imprint (Thurston, Torry and Com- pany, Boston, 31 Devonshire Street) ; 3, four lines of verse; 4, four lines of verse; 5, eight lines of verse ; 6, blank ; 7-14, " Concord River ; " 15, half-title with motto; 16, blank; 17-44, ] "Saturday;" 45, half-title with motto; 46, motto; 47-120, "Sunday;" 121, half-title with motto; 122, motto; 123-185, "Monday;" 186, blank; 187, half-title with motto; 188, blank; 189-246, "Tuesday;" 247, half-title with motto; 248, blank; 249-311, "Wednesday;" 312, blank; 313, half-title with motto; 314, blank; 315-350, "Thursday;" 351, half-title with motto; 352, motto; 353-413, "Friday;" blank; advertisement: "Will soon be pub- lished, Walden, or Life in the Woods. By Henry D. Thoreau." The book is bound in cloth and lettered in gilt on back A Week \ on the \ Concord and | Merrimack | Rivers | Munroe & Co. THOREAU'S BOOKS 3 A thousand copies were printed at the author's risk. Of these 75 were given away and 219 sold by Munroe, and the remaining 706 returned, October 28, 1853, to the author, who succeeded in disposing of a few of them himself. Thoreau's account of his receipt of the unsold remainder has often been quoted, but for completeness' sake should be reprinted here. The Journal for October 28, 1853, contains the following entry : — "For a year or two past, my publisher, falsely so called, has been writing from time to time to ask what disposition should be made of the copies of 'A Week on the Concord and Merri- mack Rivers ' still on hand, and at last suggesting that he had use for the room they occupied in his cellar. So I had them all sent to me here, and they arrived to-day by express, filling the man's wagon, — 706 copies out of an edition of 1000 which I bought of Munroe four years ago and have been ever since paying for, and have not quite paid for yet. The wares are sent to me at last, and I have an opportunity to examine my purchase. They are something more substantial than fame, as my back knows, which has borne them up two flights of stairs to a place similar to that to which they trace their origin. Of the remaining two hundred and ninety odd, seventy-five were given away, the rest sold. I have now a library of nearly nine hundred volumes, over seven hundred of which I wrote myself. Is it not well that the author should behold the fruits of his labor ? My works are piled up on one side of my chamber half as high as my head, my opera omnia. This is authorship ; these are the work of my brain. There was just one piece of good luck in the venture. The unbound were tied up by the printer four years ago in stout wrappers, and inscribed, — H. D. Thoreau's Concord River 50 cops. So Munroe had only to cross out ' River' and write ' Mass.' and deliver them to the expressman at once. I can see now what I write for, the result of my labors. "Nevertheless, in spite of this result, sitting beside the inert mass of my works, I take up my pen to-night to record what thought or experience I may have had, with as much satisfac- THOREAU'S BOOKS 4 tion as ever. Indeed, I believe that this result is more inspiring and better for me than if a thousand had bought my wares. It affects my. privacy less and leaves me freer." Under date of November 20, 1853, he records how at one time he had considered speculating in cranberries as a means of raising money to pay his debt to Munroe. The settlement was finally made November 28 and he then placed twelve copies of the Week with Munroe on sale. He goes on to say: "I have paid him directly out of pocket since the book was pubUshed two hundred and ninety dollars and taken his receipt for it. This does not include postage on proof-sheets, etc., etc. I have received from other quarters about fifteen dollars. This has been the pecuniary value of the book." A memorandum in the Journal states that he "sent Fields 12 copies of the Week, Oct. 18th, '54," a little over two months after the publication of Walden. It was not imtU 1862, however, that Ticknor & Fields put their imprint on the book, as appears in the next title. Meanwhile Thoreau continued to sell the book from time to time from the stock he had carried into his attic. A copy recently sold in New York for $60 was originally bought from Thoreau by Miss Sarah E. Sanborn in April, 1855, for $1.25. The demand was slight, however, and but few copies were thus disposed of. By a blunder in the printing-office three lines were dropped out at the bottom of page 396. Thoreau wrote in the missing lines in pencil whenever he sold a copy of the book, and a num- ber of such copies are in existence. The bulk of the edition, however, both those bearing the date 1849 and those with the 1862 title-page, lack this correction. A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers was made up largely — probably almost entirely — from Thoreau's Journal from the period of his earliest journalizing in 1837 up to the time of the completion of the manuscript, which was probably in 1847. Many Journal passages used in writing the book are printed in the Journal as issued in the Walden Edition and in- dicated there by footnotes, but the great bulk of them were de- stroyed by Thoreau in the making of the book. Many of the poems appearing in the Week and a few prose essays embodied therein had first found pubhcation in The Dial, and these will be found noted in the list of Dial articles and poems on pp. 64-68. It was long after the Week was completed before Thoreau THOREAU'S^ BOOKS 5 found a publisher for it, but be appears to have made certain emendations in it in the interval. The essay on Friendship in- corporated in the "Wednesday" chapter was added at this time, as appears from an entry in Mr. AJcott's diary under date of January 13, 1848, where he says that Thoreau had that day read him an essay on Friendship which he had just written.^ Among the most interesting copies extant of this first edition of the Week are those in the {Possession of Mr. Stephen H. Wakeman of New York. They include the copies once belonging to William CuUen Bryant, Na- thaniel Hawthorne, H. G. O. Blake, and EUery Channing, — the last very fully annotated by that most intimate friend of Thoreau's. Mr. Paul Lemperly of Cleveland, Ohio, owns a copy bearing the author's inscription to his sister and containing corrections by Thoreau and notes by Sophia Thoreau. A Week | on the | Concord and Merrimack Rivers. | By | Henry D. Thoreau, | Author of " Walden." | Boston : | Ticknor and Fields. \ 1862. 16mo, pp. 413. The. copies with this title-page are of the first edition, rebound. The binders omitted to remove the leaf an- nouncing the future publication of Walden. An article by Dr. S. A. Jones telling the story of these volumes in a playful way appeared in The Inlander, a magazine published by the students of the University of Michigan, and is quoted by Dr. Jones in his Bibliography of Thoreau. A Week | on the | Concord and Merrimack Rivers. | By Henry D. Thoreau, | Author of "Walden," etc. | New and Revised Edition. | [Device] \ Boston : [ Ticknor and Fields. \ 1868 [1867]. 16mo, pp. 415. The first 8 pages are front matter; p. 1 is a half-title 1 F. B. Sanborn, Thoreau, p. 304. THOREAU'S BOOKS 6 and p. 2 a list of Thoreau's books. On p. 8 appears for the first time a quotation of four lines from Ovid, with a translation. There are also two new quotations from the Robin Hood Ballads on the "Monday" half-title and its back. This edition was printed from new plates. It contains two unfortunate misprints, — " souls " for " stools," p. 273, third Une from bottom, and " interrupt " for "interpret," p. 414, line 12, — which persisted in the Riverside Edition, but were corrected in the Manu- script and Walden editions. Later impressions of this edition were issued in 12mo size. See Addenda. A Week on the Concord | and Merrimag [sic] Rivers, | By Henry Thoreau: With | a Prefatory Note by | Will H. Dircks. | London : | Walter Scott, 24s Warwick Lane. | Toronto: , W. J. Gage & Co. [1889.] Square 16mo, pp. xx, 349. In the Camelot series. Though "Merrimac" is the common way of spelling the name of the river at the present day, the American editions of the book have always preserved Thoreau's old-fashioned spell- ing of it. The Same. With a Prefatory Note by Will H. Dircks. "London: Walter Scott Limited. [1895.] 16mo, pp. XX, 349. Electrogravure frontis- piece, Thoreau's Cove. A Week on the Concord | and Merrimack | Rivers. | By | Henry David Thoreau | [Device] \ Boston and New York | Houghton, Mifflin and Company \ The Riverside Press, Cam- bridge I MDCCCXCIV [1893]. Crown 8vo, pp. xviii, 531. Vol. i of the River- side Edition. With Publishers' Advertisement THOREAU'S BOOKS 7 to the edition (2 pp.). Introductory Note (9 pp.), Table of Poetical Quotations, index, and photogravure frontispiece from the Rowse crayon portrait of 1854. A Week on the Concoed | and Merrimack Rivers | By Henry David Thoreau | Cam- bridge I Printed at the Riverside Press \ 1894 [1893]. 8vo, pp. xviii, 531. Volume i of the Large- Paper Edition. Portrait by Rowse. Limited edition of 150 copies printed from the plates of the Riverside Edition and issued at the same time. The Same. With an Introduction by Nathan H. Dole. New York: Thomas Y. Growell & Co. [1900.] 16mo and 12mo, pp. xxiv, 399. With illus- trations. Issued in several styles. The Writings of | Henry David Thoreau | A Week on the | Concord and Merrimack | Rivers | [Device] \ Boston and New York j Houghton Mifflin and Company \ MDCCCCVI. Svo, pp. xlviii, 435. Vol. i of the Manu- script Edition, limited to 600 copies. With Biographical Sketch by R. W. Emerson, In- troductory Note, portrait, and five photo- gravure illustrations from photographs by Herbert W. Gleason. Collation; i, half-title; ii, number of set, with autograph signature of the publishers; iii, title; iv, copyright; v-vii. Publishers' Advertisement to the Manuscript THOREAU'S BOOKS 8 Edition of Thoreau's Writings; viii, blank; ix-xi, contents; xii, blank; xiii, list of illustra- tions; xiv, blank; xv-xl, Biographical Sketch; xli-xlvii. Introductory Note; xlviii, blank; 1, half-title; 2, poetical mottoes; 3^20, text; 421, half-title; 422, blank; 423-427, Table of Poetical Quotations; 428, blank; 429-435, index; [436], printers' imprint, "The River- side Press," etc. The frontispiece portrait is a photogravure of the Max- ham daguerreotype. Immediately before it is inserted a piece of Thoreau's manuscript. See also description of this edition on pp. 52, 53. The Same. Boston and New York: Houghton, Mifflin & Co. 1906. 12mo, pp. xlviii, 435. Vol. i of the Walden Edition. With Biographical Sketch by R. W. Emerson, Introductory Note, portrait, and five photogravure illustrations from photo- graphs by Herbert W. Gleason. Collation: i, half-title; ii, blank; iii, title; iv, copyright; v-vii. Publishers' Advertisement to the Wal- den Edition; otherwise as in Manuscript Edi- tion. The illustrations are as in the Manuscript Edition, but the manuscript is omitted. Printed from the plates of the Manuscript Edition. WALDEN Walden; | or, [ Life in the Woods. | By Henry D. Thoreau, | Author of "A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers." | {Cut of THOREAU'S BOOKS 9 Thoreau's hut at Walden Pond] \ [Motto] | Boston: Ticknor and Fields. \ MDCCCLIV-C/^' 16mo, pp. 357. Map of Walden Pond facing p. 307. Collation: 1, title; 2, copyright and imprint (Stereotyped at the Boston Stereotype Foundry) ; 3, contents ; 4, blank; 5-357, text. On p. 87, following the first chapter, are lines from T. Carew headed "Complemental Verses." (The dates of the advertisements at the end of the book cannot be regarded as of serious importance. At a recent sale, however, a copy having advertising dated April, 1854, brought a much higher price than one with advertising dated May, 1854, and this in spite of the fact that the book itself was not published till August of that year!) The book was bound in cloth and lettered on back Walden | Life in the Woods \ Thoreau \ Ticknor & Co. Walden, like the Week, was written largely if not almost entirely in Thoreau's Journal before it was made into a book, and the writing was by no means confined to the years he spent on the shore of Walden Pond, though the bulk of it was done there. The Journal entries incorporated in Walden date from at least as far back as 1839 and extend to within a few months of the publication of the book. Many of them are to be found in the Journal as published, but most of them, especially of those belonging to the Walden period, were destroyed in making the copy for the book. The lines beginning "Light-winged Smoke, Icarian bird" were published in The Dial for April, 1843, under the title of "Smoke," but nothing else in the book appears ever to have been printed before. Walden was pubhshed August 9, 1854. The first re- printing seems to have been in 1864. Mr. Paul Lemperly of Cleveland, Ohio, has in his possession a copy of Walden formerly belonging to THOREAU'S BOOKS 10 Thoreau himself, which contains many interesting cor- rections and annotations made by the author. Several transcripts of these notes are in existence. Dr. S. A. Jones and Mr. E. B. Hill have copies, and there is another in the office of Houghton Mifflin Company. Such of these corrections as are merely typographical have been em- bodied in the latest impression of the Riverside Edition of WaMen. Among these is the alteration of the word "post" to "port" on page 24 (Riv. Ed. p. 35). Of the other annotations, two of the most important from the point of view of natural history are the correction of " single spruce " to " double spruce " on page 137 and of " white spruce" to "black spruce" on page 217. Walden. Edinburgli: David Douglas. London: Hamilton, Adams & Co. 1884. Post 8vo, pp. 357. This edition, which, as nearly as can be judged from the evidence at the compiler's command, was issued under the joint imprint indicated above, is doubtless simply the American edition with a new title-page. It was pub- lished in April, 1884, and was the first edition of Walden to appear under an Enghsh imprint. The Same. | With an Introductory Note by Will H. Dircks. London: Walter Scott, 24i Warwick Lane, Paternoster Row. 1886. Square 16mo, pp. xxviii, 336. In the Came- lot Classics, edited by Ernest Rhys. The first original English edition. An appendix gives a selection from the Week and three of Thoreau's poems. The Same. With an Introductory Note by Will H. Dircks. London: Walter Scott. Toronto: W. J. Gage & Co. 1888. Square 16mo. Printed from the same plates as the 1886 London edition. THOREAU'S BOOKS 11 The Same. In the Riverside Aldine Series. Bos- ton: Houghton, Mifflin & Co. 1889. 2 vols. 16mo, pp. 1-259, [i-vi], 261-514. The first six pages of vol. i are made up of front matter. A small first edition was issued with uncut edges and paper label. Walden I OB, Life in the Woods | By | Henry David Thoreau | [Motto] \ [Device] \ Boston and New York | Houghton, Mifflin and Com- pany I The Riverside Press, Cambridge | MDCCCXCIV [1893]. Crown 8vo, pp. i-viii, 7-522. Vol. ii of the Riverside Edition. With Introductory Note (2 pp.) and index. The text is printed from the plates of the Riverside Edition. Walden | or, | Life in the Woods | By | Henry D. Thoreau | [Motto] \ Cambridge | Printed at the Riverside Press | 1894 [1893]. 8vo, pp. i-viii, 7-522. Vol. ii of the Large- Paper Edition. A limited edition of 150 copies printed from the plates of the Riverside Edition and issued at the same time. The Same. With an Introductory Note by Will H. Dircks. London: Walter Scott Limited. [1895.] 16mo, pp. XXX, 336. Electrogravure frontis- piece, Walden Pond. Walden | By | Henry D. Thoreau | With an In- troduction by Bradford Torrey | Illustrated with Photogravures | In Two Volumes | I [II] | THOREAU'S' BOOKS 12 [Device] | Boston and New York | Houghton, Mifflin and Company \ The Riverside Press, Cambridge | MDCCCXCVII. (7y'?7) 12mo, pp. i-xliv, 7-259; i-vi, 261-522. 31 full-page illustrations. Known as the Holiday Edition. The text is printed from the plates of the Riverside Edition. It was pub- lished in London with a new title-page bearing imprint of Gay & Bird, 1897. Walden; OB, Life in the Woods. By Henry David Thoreau. With a Biographical Sketch by Ralph Waldo Emerson. Boston : Houghton, Mifflin & Co. [1897.] Crown 8vo, pp. xxxviii, 7-522. Popular Edition. Printed from the plates of the Riverside Edition with the Emerson Biographical Sketch prefixed. The Same. In Cambridge Classics. Boston: Houghton, Mifflin & Co. [1898.] Identical with the Popular Edition except in binding. Walden. With an Introduction by Charles G. D. Roberts. New York: T. Y. Crowell & Company. [1899.] 16mo and 12mo, pp. xvi, 350. With illus- trations. Issued in several styles. Walden | By Henry David Thoreau | With an Introduction | by Bradford Torrey | Illustrated with Photogravures | [Device] \ Boston and New York | Houghton, Mifflin and Company | The Riverside Press, Cambridge | 1902. 12mo, pp. xliv, 7-522. THOREAU'S BOOKS 13 A new "Holiday Edition" in one volume with the illus- trations of the two-volume edition and printed from the same plates. It was published in London with a new title-page bearing imprint of Gay & Bird, 1902. Walden: My Life in the Woods. London: AHhur Q. Fifield, Simple Life Press. 1904. 16mo, paper, pp. 158. Abridged edition, with portrait and cut of Thoreau's Walden hermitage from a sketch by Miss May Alcott (not by Mr. Alcott,as stated, and not unpublished ; see p. 90). Published at sixpence. There is also a shilling edition from the same plates with three more illustrations. The Wettings of | Henry David Thoreau | Walden | [Device] \ Boston and New York j Houghton Mifflin andCampany \ MDCCCCVI. (/'?^C) 8vo, pp. X, 375. Vol. il of the Manuscript Edition, limited to 600 copies. With Intro- ductory Note and five photogravure illustra- tions from photographs by Herbert W. Gleason. Collation: i, half-title; ii, number of set; iii, title; iv, copyright; v, contents; vi, blank; vii, list of illustrations; viii, blank; ix, x. In- troductory Note; 1, half-title; 2, blank; 3-367, text ; 368, blank ; 369-375, index ; [376], printers' imprint. See also description of this edition on pp. 62, 53. The Same. Boston and New York: Houghton, Mifflin & Co. 1906. 12mo, pp. X, 375. Vol. ii of the Walden Edition. With Introductory Note and five photogravure illustrations from photographs by Herbert W. Gleason. Collation : i, half-title ; ii, blank ; otherwise as in Manuscript Edition. THOREAU'S BOOKS 14 Printed from the plates of the Manuscript Edition and with the same illustrations. Walden, OB Life in the Woods. With an In- troduction by Theodore Watts-Dunton. Lon- don: Henry Frowde, Oxford University Press. [1906.] 18mo, pp. xvi, 299. In the World's Classics. Walden. With an Introduction by Richard Whiteing. London : Blackie & Son. [1906.] 18mo, pp. xii, 410. The Same. With an Introductory Essay on Thoreau by R. W. Emerson. London : George Routledge & Sons. Crown 8vo, pp. 256. TRANSLATIONS Walden, Deutsch von Emma Emmerich. Mun- chen : Verlag Concord [J. Palm]. 1897. Cr. 8vo, pp. xxii, 356. Catalogued in Kayser's Neues Biicher-Lexicon. The Ver- lag Concord, named after Thoreau's birthplace ("nock dem Geburtsort Thoreaus benannt"), is now located in Stettin, Prussia, under the management of Otto Carius. Henry D. Thobeau | Walden | oder Leben IN DEN Waldebn | Mit Portrat | [Device] | [Rule] I Verlegt bei Eugen Diederichs \ Jena und Leipzig. 1905. Crown 8vo, pp. xxiv, 341. On title-back : " Aus dem Englischen tibersetzt von Wilhelm Nobbe." The portrait is a reproduction of the ambrotype. There are a 24-page biographical sketch and 8 pages of notes. The biographical sketch is dated St. Louis, Mo., Januar, 1905, and signed Wilhelm Nobbe. THOREAU'S BOOKS 15 EXCURSIONS ExcuESiONS. I By | Henry D. T^oreau. | Author of "Walden," and "A Week on the Concord and I Merrimack Rivers." | [Device] \ Boston: Ticknor and Fields. \ 1863. 16mo, pp. 319 ; steel portrait. Collation of front matter: 1, blank; 2, advertisement of Thoreau's Writings ; 3, title ; 4, copyright and imprint (Riverside, Cambridge: Stereotyped and printed by H. O. Houghton) ; 5, contents ; 6, blank. Contents: — Biographical Sketch, by R. W. Emerson, 7-34. Natural History of Massachusetts, 37-72. A Walk to Wachusett, 73-96. The Landlord, 97-108. A Winter Walk, 109-134. The Succession of Forest Trees, 135-160. Walking, 161-214. Autumnal Tints, 215-265. Wild Apples, 266-306. Night and Moonlight, 307-319. Pages 35 and 36 are the half-title " Excursions " and its blank back. The portrait is from Rowse's crayon. The book was bound in cloth and lettered on back Excursions \ hy \ H. D. \ Thoreau. \ Author of \ Walden \ and \ A Week on | Concord | River. \ Ticknor & Co. Excursions was formerly often listed under the title of "Excursions in Field and Forest." The last four words were merely explanatory, however, and never appeared on the title-page. The papers composing the book were collected by Miss Sophia E. Thoreau from various sources. "Natural History of Massachusetts" and "A Winter Walk" first appeared in The Dial, "A Walk to Wachu- THOREAU'S BOOKS 16 sett" in the Boston Miscellany, "The Landlord" in the Democratic Review, "The Succession of Forest Trees" in the New York Tribune, and "Walking," "Autumnal Tints," "Wild Apples," and "Night and Moonlight" in the Atlantic Monthly. Excursions | By | Henry David Thoreau | [Device] \ Boston and New York | Houghton, Mifflin and Company \ The Riverside Press, Cambridge | MDCCCXCIV [1893], Crowp 8vo, pp. X, 472. Vol. ix of the River- side Edition. With Introductory Note (4 pp.) and index. Contents : — A Yankee in Canada. Natural History of Massachusetts. The Landlord. A Winter Walk. A Walk to Wachusett. The Succession of Forest Trees. Walking. Autumnal Tints. Wild Apples. Night and Moonlight. May Days. Days and Nights in Concord. It will be noticed that this book differs materially in contents from the book originally published under this title. The Biographical Sketch is omitted (trans- ferred to the volume entitled Miscellanies), and the long narrative of the Canadian excursion and two papers com- posed of extracts from Thoreau's Journal are added. These last papers had been printed in the Atlantic and Scribner's respectively. "A Yankee in Canada" had formerly been published in a volume with Anti-Slavery and Reform Papers. THOREAU'S BOOKS 17 ExcuESiONS I By I Henry David Thoreau | Cam- bridge I Printed at the Riverside Press | 1894 |!l893]. Svo, pp. X, 472, Vol. IX of the Large-Paper Edition. A limited edition of 150 copies printed from the plates of the Riverside Edition and issued at the same time. THE MAINE WOODS The Maine Woods | By Henry D. Thoreau, | Author of "A Week on the Concord and Merri- mack Rivers," | "Walden," "Excursions," etc., etc. I Boston: | Ticknor and Fields. \ 1864. 16mo, pp. [vi], 328. Collation : List of Tho- reau's Writings; [i], title; [ii], copyright and imprint (University Press: Welch, Bigelow, and Company, Cambridge); [iii], [note]; [iv], blank; [v], contents; [vi], blank; 1-304, text; 305, half-title; 306, blank; 307-328, Appendix. 23 pages of advertising at end. Contents: — Ktaadn, pp. 1-84. Chesuncook, pp. 85-160. The Allegash and East Branch, pp. 161-304. Appendix: — I. Trees, pp. 307, 308. n. Flowers and Shrubs, pp. 308-311. ni. List of Plants, pp. 312-320. IV. List of Birds, pp. 331, 322. V. Quadrupeds, p. 322. VI. Outfit for an Excursion, pp. 322, 323. vn. A List of Indian Words, pp. 324-328. Edited jointly by Sophia E. Thoreau and William EUery Channing. The note on p. [iii] reads : — THOREAU'S BOOKS 18 "The first of the papers following was published in ' The Union Magazine ' (New York), in 1848 ; the second, ' Chesuncook,' came out in the 'Atlantic Monthly,' in 1858 ; and the last is now for the first time printed." The book was bound in cloth, and lettered on back The 1 Maine \ Woods \ by \ Thoreau. \ Author of \ W olden \ and I A Week on | Concord | River \ Ticknor & Co. The paper entitled " The Allegash and East Branch," as well as the Appendix, was not entirely prepared for the press until after the author's death, and it suffers from careless editing. The Maine Woods | By | Henry David Thoreau | [Device] \ Boston and New York | Houghton, Mifflin and Company \ The Riverside Press, Cambridge ] MDCCCXCIV [1893]. Crown 8vo, pp. x, 442. Vol. iii of the River- side Edition. With Introductory Note (4 pp.). Appendix (27 pp.), and Index. The Maine Woods | By | Henry David Thoreau | Cambridge | Printed at the Riverside Press j 1894 [1893]. 8vo, pp. X, 442. Vol. Ill of the Large-Paper Edition. A limited edition of 150 copies printed from the plates of the Riverside Edition and issued at the same time. The Whitings of | Henry David Thobeau | The Maine Woods | [Device] \ Boston and New York : | Houghton Mifflin and Company \ MDCCCCVI. Svo, pp. xii, 364. Vol. iii of the Manuscript Edition, limited to 600 copies. With Introduc- tory Note and five photogravure illustrations THOREAU'S BOOKS 19 from photographs' by Herbert W. Gleason. Collation: i, half-title; ii, number of set; iii, title; iv, copyright; v, contents; vi, blank; vii, list of illustrations ; viii, blank ; ix-xi. Introduc- tory Note; xii, blank; 1, half-title; 2, blank; 3-327, text; 328, blank; 329-357, appendix; 358, blank; 359-364, index; [365], blank; [366], printer's imprint. See also description of this edition on pp. 52, 53. The Same. Boston and New York: Houghton, Mifflin & Co. 1906. 12mo, pp. xii, 364. Vol. iii of the Walden Edition. With Introductory Note and five photogravure illustrations from photographs by Herbert W. Gleason. Collation as in Manu- script Edition except that p. ii is blank. Printed from the plates of the Manuscript Edition and having the same illustrations. The Same. With an Introduction by Annie Russell Marble. New York: Thomas Y. Crowell & Co. [1906.] 16mo and 12mo, pp. xvi, 359. With illus- trations. Issued in several styles. CAPE COD Cape Cod. | By | Henry D. Thoreau, | Author of "A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers," | "Walden," "Excursions," "The Maine Woods," | etc., etc. | [Motto] \ [Device] | Boston : I Ticknor and Fields. \ 1865 [1864]. THOREAU'S BOOKS 20 16mo, pp. [iv], 252. Collation: A list of Thoreau's writings; [i], title; [ii], copyright and imprint (University Press : Welch, Bigelow, and Company, Cambridge); [iii], contents; [iv], blank; 1-252, text; 24 pages of advertis- ing. Edited by Sophia E. Thoreau and William EUery Channing. Contents : — The Shipwreck. Stage-coach Views. The Plains of Nauset. The Beach. The Wellfleet Oystennan. The Beach Again. Across the Cape. The Highland Light. The Sea and the Desert. Provincetown. The first four chapters were published by their author in Putnam's Magazine in 1855. The fiftii and eighth appeared in the Atlantic Monthly in October and Decem- ber, 1864. The book was bound in cloth and lettered on back Ca'pe \ Cod \ by | Thoreau. \ Author of | Walden | and I A Week on \ Concord \ River \ Ticknor & Co. An edition from the same plates was published in London, June 1, 1865, by Sampson Low, Son & Marston. It appears to have been the first edition of any of Tho- reau's books to be issued under a foreign imprint. Cape Cod. | By | Henry David Thoreau | [Motto] [Device] | Boston and New York | Houghton, Mifflin and Company | The Riverside Press, Cambridge | MDCCCXCIV [1889]. Crown 8vo, pp. viii, 336. Vol. iv of the THOREAU'S BOOES 21 Riverside Edition. With Introductory Note (1 p.) and index. Cape Cod | By | Henry David Thoreau | Cam- bridge I Printed at the Riverside Press | 1894 [1893]. 8vo, pp. viii, 336. Vol. iv of the Large- Paper Edition, limited to 150 copies. Printed from the plates of the Riverside Edition and issued at the same time. Cape Cod | By | Henry David Thoreau | With Illustrations from Sketches | in Colors by Amelia M. Watson | In Two Volumes | I [II] | [Device] \ Boston and New York | Houghton, Mifflin and Company \ The Riverside Press, Cambridge | MDCCCXCVI. Crown 8vo, pp. i-viii, 1-173; 1-208. Fron- tispieces and many marginal illustrations. The Same. With an Introduction by Annie Russell Marble. New York: Thomas Y. Crowell & Co. [1907.] 16mo and 12mo, pp. xiv, 263. With illustra- tions. Issued in several styles. LETTERS TO VARIOUS PERSONS Lettebs I TO Vaeiotjs Peesons. I By | Henry D. Thoreau, | Author of "A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers," | "Walden," etc., etc. I [Device] \ Boston: | Ticknor and Fields. I 1865. 16mo, pp. [vi], 229. Collation : List of Tho- reau's Writings; [i], title; [ii], copyright and THOREAU'S BOOKS 2» imprint (University Press : Welch, Bigelow & Co., Cambridge); [iii], Editor's Notice, signed R. W. E., 12 May, 1865; [iv], blank; [v], con- tents; [vi], blank; 1-207, Letters; 208, blank; 209, half-title; 210, blank; 211-229, Poems. The Editor's Note reads : — " It may interest the reader of this book to know that nearly all these letters have been printed directly from the original autographs furnished by the persons to whom they were addressed. A few have been carefully copied, but without alteration, from the worn and torn originals. In some letters, passages have been omitted, on account of private or personal references. Otherwise, the letters have been printed as they stood, with very few verbal corrections." The nine poems included are : — Sympathy. "Romans, Countrymen, and Lovers." Inspiration. The Fisher's Boy. Mountains. Smoke. Smoke in Winter. Mist. Haze. The book is bound in cloth, lettered on back Letters \ by I H". Z>. I Thoreau \ Author of \ Excursions \ and \ A Week on | Concord \ River \ Ticknor & Co. The letters were collected and edited by Ralph Waldo Emerson. A YANKEE IN CANADA, WITH ANTI-SLAVERY AND REFORM PAPERS A I Yankee in Canada, | with | Anti-Slavekt AND Reform | Papebs. | By | Henry D. Tho- reau, I Author of "A Week on the Concord and THOREAU'S BOOKS 23 Merrimack Rivers," | "Walden," "Cape Cod," etc., etc. I [Device] \ Boston: | Ticknor and Fields. I 1866. 16mo, pp. [iv], 286. Collation: [i], title; [ii], copyright and imprint (University Press: Welch, Bigelow & Co., Cambridge); [iii], contents; [iv], blank; 1, half-title and mottoes; 2, blank; 3-93, A Yankee in Canada; 94, blank; 95, half-title; 96, blank; 97-286, Anti- Slavery and Reform Papers. Contents : — A Yankee in Canada. j I. Concord to Montreal, pp. S-18. n. Quebec and Montmorenci, pp. 18-36. ra. St. Anne, pp. 37-63. IV. The WaDs of Quebec, pp. 64-78. v.->The Scenery of Quebec; and the River St. Lawrence, pp. 78-93. The first three chapters appeared in Putnam's Magazine under the title of "Excursion to Canada," but the later chap- ters were withdrawn by the author on account of a disagree- ment with the editor, George William Curtis. See page 71. Anti-Slavery and Reform Papers. Slavery in Massachusetts, pp. 97-116. (An address de- livered at the Anti-slavery Convention at Framingham, Mass., July 4, 1854, and printed in The Liberator for July 21 of that year.) Prayers, pp. 117-122. (This article was ascribed to Tho- reau by mistake, only the verses beginning "Great God, I ask thee for no meaner pelf" being his. The essay itself, which was printed in The Dial, was by Emerson and is now published in his posthumous volume The Natural History of Intellect.) Civil Disobedience, pp. 123-151. (First printed under the title of "Resistance to Civil Government" in Es- thetic Papers, edited by Miss Elizabeth P. Peabody, 1849.) THOREAU'S BOOKS 24 A Plea for Captain John Brown, pp. 162-181. (This address was first printed in James Redpath's Echoes of Harper's Ferry, Boston, 1860. See also p. 74.) Paradise (to be) Regained, pp. 182-205. (A review of a book by J. A. Etzler. It was first printed in The Democratic Review for November, 1843.) Herald of Freedom, pp. 206-210. (A notice of the anti- slavery paper of that name; printed in The Dial for April, 1844.) Thomas Carlyle and his Works, pp. 211-247. (Prom Graham's Magazine, March and April, 1847.) Life without Principle, pp. 248-273. (I*rinted posthu- mously in the Atlantic Monihly, October, 1863.) Wendell Phillips before the Concord Lyceum, pp. 274-277. (A letter published in The lAherator, March 28, 1846.) The Last Days of John Brown, pp. 278-286. (Printed in The Idberator for July 27, 1860, as part of a report of a memorial meeting held at North Elba, N. Y., July 4, 1860, where this address was read by the Secretary.) The book was bound in cloth, and lettered in gilt on back A I Yankee | in | Canada \ By | Thoreau. \ Author o/\ Wal- den I and \ A Week on | Concord \ River \ Ticknor & Co. EAELY SPRING IN MASSACHUSETTS Eably Spring in Massachusetts. | From the Journal of | Henry D. Thoreau, | Author of "A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers," | "Walden," etc. | [Motto] \ [Device] Boston: | Houghton, Mifflin and Company. \ The Riverside Press, Cambridge. | 1881. 12mo, pp. viii, 318. Collation: i, title; ii, copyright and imprint; iii-vii. Introductory, signed H. G. O. Blake; viii, blank; 1-318, text. Thoreau's sister Sophia, vrho inherited his manuscript journals, bequeathed them upon her death in October, 1876, to her brother's friend and correspondent, Harrison THOREAU'S BOOKS 25 G. O. Blake of Worcester, Mass. Mr. Blake wished to bring the thoughts imbedded in the Journal before the public, and judged that a selection from the abundance of material was the most practicable way to accomplish his end. His arrangement of the selections is explained in his introduction to this first volume that he compiled. " In reading the Journal for my own satisfaction, I had sometimes been wont to attend each day to what was written on the same day of the month in some other year ; desiring thus to be led to notice, in my walks, the phe- nomena which Thoreau noticed, so to be brought nearer to the writer by observing the same sights, sounds, etc., and if possible have my love of nature quickened by him. This habit suggested the arrangement of dates in the following pages, viz., the bringing together of passages under the same day of the month in different years. In this way I hoped to make an interesting picture of the progress of the seasons, of Thoreau's year." This method of treating Thoreau's journals had been suggested some years earlier by Mr. Alcott in his Concord Days (1872). Early Spring | in Massachusetts | From the Journal of | Henry David Thoreau | Edited by H. G. O. Blake | [MoUo] \ [Device] \ Boston and New York | Houghton, Mifflin and Com- pany I The Riverside Press, Cambridge | MDCCCXCIV [1893]. Crown 8vo, pp. x, 354. Vol. v of the River- side Edition. With Introductory Note (5 pp.), signed H. G. O. Blake (with postscript signed H. G. O. B.), index, and frontispiece portrait reproduced in photogravure from the Maxham daguerreotype. This edition contains matter covering the first four days of April, which had appeared in the Atlantic Monthly THOREAU'S BOOKS 26 in April, 1878, but had been omitted from the first edition of the book. The Same. Cambridge: Printed at the River- side Press. 1894 [1893], 8vo, pp. X, 354. Vol. V of the Large-Paper Edition. A limited edition of 150 copies printed from the plates of the Riverside Edition and issued simultaneously with it. SUMMER Summer : From the Journal | of Henry D. Tho- reau | Edited by H. G. O. Blake | [Motto] \ [Device] | Boston | Hoiighton, Mifflin and Company \ New York: 11 East Seventeenth Street | The Riverside Press, Cambridge I 1884. 12mo, pp. vi, 382. With a map of Concord. Collation: i, title; ii, copyright and printer's imprint (The Riverside Press, Cambridge: Electrotyped and Printed by H. .O Houghton & Co.) ; iii-v. Introductory, signed The Editor and dated Worcester, May, 1884; vi, blank; 1-372, text; 373-382, index. The double-page map of Concord is inserted as a frontispiece. A panel of advertising (list of Thoreau's books) precedes the map, and there are 16 pages of ad- vertising at the end of the book. The book follows the plan of Early Spring in Massachusetts in its arrange- ment. The Same. London: T. Fisher Unwin. 1884. 8vo, pp. vi, 382. The American edition with a new title-page, published in September, 1884. THOREAU'S BOOKS 27 Summer | From the Journal of [ Henry David Thoreau | Edited by | H. G. O. Blake | [Motto] \ [Device] \ Boston and New York | Houghton, Mifflin and Company \ The Riverside Press, Cambridge | MDCCCXCIV [1893]. Crown 8vo, pp. viii, 382. Vol. vi of the River- side Edition. With Introductory Note (3 pp.) signed The Editor, index, and a map of Con- cord. The text was printed from the plates of the first edition. The Same. Cambridge: Printed at the River- side Press. 1894 [1893]. 8vo, pp. viii, 382. Vol. yi of the Large-Paper Edition. A limited edition of 150 copies issued simultaneously with the Riverside Edition and printed from the same plates. WINTER Wintee: From the Journal | of Henry D. Tho- reau I Edited by H. G. O. Blake | [Motto] [Device] \ Boston and New York | Houghton, Mifflin and Company \ The Riverside Press, Cambridge | 1888 [1887]. 12mo, pp. vi, 439. Collation: i, title; ii, copyright and printer's imprint; iii-vi. Intro- ductory, signed The Editor; 1-430, text; 431- 439, index. Winter | From the Journal of | Henry David Thoreau | Edited by | H. G. O. Blake | [Motto] \ [Device] \ Boston and New York | Houghton, Mifflin and Company \ The Riverside Press, Cambridge | MDCCCXCIV [1893]. THOREAU'S BOOES 28 Crown 8vo, pp. viii, 439. Vol. viii of the Riverside Edition. With Introductory Note (4 pp.) signed The Editor, and index. Printed from the plates of the first edition with changed folios and running title in Introductory Note. The Same. Cambridge: Printed at the River- side Press. 1894 [1893]. 8vo, pp. viii, 439. Vol. viii of the Large- Paper Edition. A limited edition of 150 copies printed from the same plates as the Riverside Edition and issued simultaneously. TRANSLATION Winter. Gedanken und Stimmungsbilder. Deutsch von Emma Emmerich. Mtinchen, 1900. Verlag Concord. 8vo, pp. 288. ANTI-SLAVERY AND REFORM PAPERS Anti-Slavery | and | Reform Papers | By | Henry D. Thoreau | Selected and Edited | by H. S. Salt. I [Device] \ London: | Swan Son- nenschein & Co., \ Paternoster Square. | 1890. | 12mo, pp. [iv], 141. Contents : — Introductory Note [signed H. S. Salt]. Civil Disobedience. A Plea for Captain John Brown. The Last Days of John Brown. Paradise (to be) Regained. Life without Principle. THOREAU'S BOOKS 29 ESSAYS AND OTHER WRITINGS Essays and Other Writings | of Henry Tho- reau : | Edited, with a Prefatory | Note, by Will H. Dircks. [London: | Walter Scott, 24 War- wick Lane, j Paternoster Row. [n. d.] [1891.] 16mo, pp. xvi, 271. In the Camelot series. Contents : — Walking. A Winter Walk. Night and Moonlight. The Landlord. Life without Principle. Civil Disobedience. A Plea for Captain John Brown. The Last Days of John Brown. Love. (This and the next taken from a letter to Mr. Blake.) Chastity and Sensuality. Thomas Carlyle and his Works. Letters. (A selection from Letters to Various Persons.) Poems. (From Letters to Various Persons.) AUTUMN Autumn : From the Journal | of Henry D. Tho- reau | Edited by H. G. O. Blake | [Mottoes] \ {Device] \ Boston and New York | Houghton, Mifflin and Company \ The Riverside Press, Cambridge | 1892. 12mo, pp. vi, 470. Collation: i, title; ii, copyright and printer's imprint ; iii-vi. Preface, signed The Editor; 1-459, text; 460, blank; 461-470, index. THOREAU'S BOOKS 30 Autumn | From the Journal of | Henry David Thoreau | Edited by | H. G. O. Blake | [Mottoes] | [Device] \ Boston and New York | Houghton, Mifflin and Company | The Riverside Press, Cambridge | MDCCCXCIV [1893]. Crown 8vo, pp. vi, 470. Vol. vi of the River- side Edition. With Preface (4 pp.), signed The Editor, and index. Printed from the plates of the first edition. The half- title at the beginning is not included in the pagination. The Same. Cambridge : Printed at the Riverside Press. 1894 [1893]. 8vo, pp. vi, 470. Vol. vii of the Large-Paper Edition. A limited edition of 150 copies issued simultaneously with the Riverside Edition and printed from the same plates. MISCELLANIES Miscellanies ] By | Henry David Thoreau | With a Biographical Sketch | by | Ralph Waldo Emerson | and a General Index | to the Writ- ings I [Device] | Boston and New York | Hough- ton, Mifflin and Company \ The Riverside Press, Cambridge | MDCCCXCIV [1893]. Crown 8vo, pp. xii, 429. Vol. x of the River- side Edition. With Introductory Note (5 pp.). General Index (65 pp.), and steel engraving of the Dunshee ambrotype of Thoreau. Colla- tion: i, half-title; ii, blank; iii, title; iv, copy- right and printer's imprint; v, contents; vi, blank; vii-xi. Introductory Note; xii, blank; THOREAU'S BOOKS 31 1-33, Biographical Sketch; 34, blank; 35-364, text; 365-429, General Index. Contents : — Biographical Sketch, pp. 1-33. The Service : QuaUties of the Recruit, pp. 35-37. Now first collected. Reprinted from Cmicord Lec- tures in Philosophy. Paradise (to be) Regained, pp. 38-69. Herald of Freedom, pp. 70-75. Wendell Phillips before the Concord Lyceum, pp. 76-80. Thomas Carlyle and his Works, pp. 81-130. Civil Disobedience, pp. 131-170. Slavery in Massachusetts, pp. 171-196. A Plea for Captain John Brown, pp. 197-236. The Last Days of John Brown, pp. 237-248. After the Death of John Brown, pp. 249-252. Now first collected. Reprinted from Echoes from Harper's Ferry. Life without Principle, pp. 253-287. The Prometheus Bound of .^schylus, pp. 288-336. Translations from Pindar, pp. 337-357. Poems, pp. 358-364. Inspiration (28 lines). Pilgrims. To a Stray Fowl. The Black Knight. The Moon. Omnipresence. Inspiration (quatrain). Prayer. Mission. Delay. The prose pieces except as otherwise indicated were reprinted from A Yankee in Canada, with Anti-Slavery and Reform Papers. The translations and four of the poems — "To a Stray Fowl," "The Black Knight," "The Moon," and "Prayer" — were reprinted from THOREAU'S BOOKS 32 The Dial. "Inspiration" (the longer poem of that name) was reprinted from Letters to Various Persons, and the four quatrains, "Omnipresence," "Inspiration," "Mis- sion," and "Delay," had previously appeared in the Critic for March 26, 1881. "Pilgrims" had been included by George Parsons Lathrop in his volume entitled A Masque of Poets, issued by Roberts Bros, in their No Name Series in 1878, where it appeared anonymously. FAMILIAR LETTERS Familiar Letters of | Henry David Thoreatj | Edited, with an Introduction and Notes | by j F. B. Sanborn | [Device] | Boston and New York I Houghton, Mifflin and Company | The Riverside Press, Cambridge | 1894. Crown 8vo, pp. xii, 483. Uniform with the Riverside Edition of Thoreau's Writings. Frontispiece portrait reproduced in photo- gravure from the medallion by Walton Ricket- son. Collation: i, title; ii, copyright and printer's imprint; iii, contents; iv, blank; v-xii. Intro- duction, signed F. B. S., Concord, Mass., March 1, 1894; 1-464, text; 465-483, index. This book contains all the letters printed in Letters to Various Persons and others besides, together with a con- nective tissue of biographical and explanatory matter. The Same. Large-Paper Edition. 1894. 8vo, pp. xii, 483. Uniform with the Large- Paper Edition of Thoreau's Writings. With portrait reproduced in photogravure from the Ricketson medallion. Printed from the plates of the previous edition and published four months earlier. Limited to 150 copies. THOREAU'S BOOKS 33 The Writings of | Henry David Thoreau | Familiar Letters | Edited by F. B. Sanborn | Enlarged Edition | [Device] \ Boston and New York I Houghton Mifflin and Company I MDCCCCVI. 8vo, pp. xvi, 460. Vol. vi of the Manuscript Edition, limited to 600 copies. With portrait, five photogravure illustrations from photo- graphs by Herbert W. Gleason, and a General Index to the six volumes of Thoreau's Works, including the Letters. Collation: i, half-title; ii, number of set; iii, title; iv, copyright; v, vi, contents; vii, list of illustrations; viii, blank; ix-xv, Introduction signed F. B. S. ; xvi, blank ; 1, half-title; 2, blank; 3-400, text; 401, half- title; 402, blank; 403-413, appendix; 414, blank ; 415, half-title ; 416, numbered list of vol- umes included in the index; 417-460, General Index; [461], blank; [462], printer's imprint. The portrait is a photogravure of the Ricketson medal- lion. "The present volume is enlarged by some thirty pages, chiefly by additional letters to Ricketson, and all those to C. H. Greene " (Introduction). The Ricket- son letters are incorporated in the text in their chro- nological places; the letters to Calvin H. Greene of Rochester, Mich., and also two to Isaac Hecker, to- gether with comment thereon, form the appendix. The Introduction is dated Concord, Mass., March 1, 1906. See also description of this edition on pp. 52, 53. The Same. Boston and New York: Houghton, Mifflin & Go. 1906. 12mo, pp. xvi, 460. Vol. vi of the Walden Edition. With portrait, five photogravure illus- THOREAU'S BOOKS 34 trations from photographs by Herbert W. Glea- son, and a General Index to the six volumes of Thoreau's Works, including the Letters. Colla- tion as in Manuscript Edition except that p. ii is blank. Printed from the plates of the Manuscript Edition and having the same illustrations. POEMS OF NATURE Poems of Nature | By Henry David Thoreau | Selected and Edited by Henry S. Salt | and Frank B. Sanborn | [Device] \ Boston and New York I Houghton, Mifflin & Co. \ London: John Lane \ The Bodley Head | MDCCCXCV. i6mo, pp. XX, 122. Collation: i, ii, blank; iii, half-title; iv, blank; v, title; vi, blank; vii-- ix, contents; x, blank; xi-xix. Introduction; XX, blank; 1-122, text. The Introduction says : " The fifty poems here brought together . . . are perhaps two thirds of those which Thoreau preserved. Many of them were printed by him, in whole or in part, among his early contributions to Emerson's Dial, or in his own two volumes, the Week and Walden, which were all that were issued in his lifetime. Others were given to Mr. Sanborn for publica- tion, by Sophia Thoreau, the year after her brother's death (several appeared in the Boston Commonwealth in 1863) ; or have been furnished from time to time by Mr. Blake, his literary executor." Contents : — Nature. Hitherto unpublished. Inspiration. Reprinted from the Commonwealth. THOREAU'S BOOKS 35 Sic Vita. The Fisher's Boy. The Atlantides. The Aurora of Guido. Previously unpublished. Sympathy. Friendship. True Kindness. To the Maiden in the East. Five of the nine stanzas had appeared in the Week. Free Love. Rumors from an JSolian Harp. Lines : "Though all the Fates should prove unkind." Stanzas: "Away! away! away! away!" A River Scene. River Song. Some Tumultuous Little Rill. Boat Song. To My Brother. Reprinted from Sanborn's Thoreau. Stanzas: "Nature doth have her dawn each day." The Inward Morning. Greece. Reprinted from the CommonweaUh. The last four of the twelve lines were used in the Week. The Funeral Bell. Reprinted from the Commonwealth. The Summer Rain. Mist. Smoke. Haze. The Moon. The Vireo. The Poet's Delay. Lines: "AH things are current found." Nature's Child. The Fall of the Leaf. All but the last three stanzas were first printed in the Com- monwecJih, a part of it under the title of "The Soul's Season." Winter Memories. THOREAU'S BOOKS 36 Stanzas written at Walden. The Thaw. Previously unpublished, except that the first two lines appeared in Excursions in a slightly different form. A Winter Scene. Previously unpublished. The Crow. To a Stray Fowl. Mountains. The Respectable Folks. Poverty. Previously unpublished. Conscience. PUgrims. The Departure. Previously printed in the Commonwealth and Sanborn's Thoreau. Independence. First printed in full in the Commonweatih. The last four- teen lines had appeared under the title of "The Black Knight" in The Dial and had been reprinted in Miscel- lanies. Ding Dong. Previously unpublished. See p. 47. My Prayer. Except as otherwise noted, these poems had previously been published in the Week, Walden, Excursions, and Miscellanies, but very often without titles. UNPUBLISHED LETTERS Some Unpublished | Letteks of | Henry D. and Sophia E. | Thoreau | A Chapter in the His- tory I of a Still-born Book | [Motto] \ Edited with a Prefatory Note | By | Samuel Arthur Jones | [Device] \ Printed oniheMarionPress \ Jamaica, Queensborough, New York | 1899 [1898]. Svo, pp. xxxvi, 86 . Six heliotype illustrations . THOREAU'S BOOKS 37 One hundred and fifty copies printed. The letters by Thoreau included are six addressed to Galvin H. Greene of Rochester, Mich. They are reprinted in the Manu- script and Walden editions of the Familiar Letters. OF FRIENDSHIP Or Fbiendship | An Essay from | A Week on the Concord and | Merrimack Rivers | Henry David Thoreau | [Ornament] | The Riverside Press I 1901. Tall 12mo, pp. vi, 88. Five hundred numbered copies printed. Here then is that Helpful as well | as Ennobling Discourse entitled | The Essay on | Friend- ship I by I Henry D. Thoreau. | Done into a Book by the Roycropers at | the Shop in East Aurora, New York: MCMIII. 4to, pp. [iv], 36. With illuminated initials and colophon. The Friendship essay excerpted from the Week. THE SERVICE The Service | By Henry David Thoreau | Edited by F. B. Sanborn | [Device] \ Boston | Charles E. Goodspeed | 1902. Tall 8vo, pp. xii, 31. Printed from an old manuscript of Thoreau's found in Emerson's portfolios, bearing pencil date of July, 1840. With notes by the editor. This is the complete form of the essay, a part of which was included in Miscellanies. Most of its contents will be found scattered through the earlier pages of the Journal. A limited edition of 500 copies printed. THOREAU'S BOOKS 38 LIFE WITHOUT PRINCIPLE Life without Principle. With a short Bio- graphy of the Author by Ralph Waldo Emer- son. A Reprint: Published for Subscribers at the Sign of the Hop-Pole, Eden Bridge, which is in Kent, England. 1902. Tall 32mo, pp. 56. One thousand copies printed. The Same. London : A. G. Fifield. 1905. 12mo. CIVIL DISOBEDIENCE On the Duty of Civil Disobedience. Lon- don: The Simple Life Press, 5 Water Lane, E. C. 1903. 18mo, pp. 38. With a note signed A. C. F. and a supplementary paper, entitled "The Cost of Disobedience," signed W. L. H. FIRST AND LAST JOURNEYS The I FiBST and Last Journeys | of | Tho- REAu I Lately discovered among his unpub- lished journals | and manuscripts | Edited by | Franklin Benjamin Sanborn | [Device] \ Bos- ton: MDCDV I Printed exclusively for mem- bers of I The Bibliophile Society. 2 vols. Svo, pp. xxxix, 146, 134. With por- trait (from Dunshee ambrotype) and fac- similes of Thoreau's manuscripts. Prefatory Note signed H. H. H. Introduction by F. B. Sanborn. Addendum in vol. i; index in vol. ii. THOREAU'S BOOKS 39 A considerable part of the first volume appears in substantially the same form in the Week and the Journal. This book was not actually distributed till 1907. The " first journey " is the one on the Concord and Merrimac Rivers described in the Week ; the "last" is the trip to Minnesota with young Horace Mann in 1861. There are also fragments of the Staten Island journal of 1843 and a part of an essay on Conversation. The Addendum to vol. i consists of various fragments of journals and other writings, including a number of poems not otherwise pub- lished. The manuscripts, consisting of fragments of Tho- reau's original journals, drafts of essays, and rough pencil notes, are the property of Mr. W. K. Bixby of St. Louis. Following is a list of the verse contained in vol. i: — Morning: "Thou unconverted Saint," p. xiv. Another form of the bit of verse beginning "An early un- converted Saint " printed in the Week, containing four additional lines. "Upon the bank at early dawn," pp. jcvi, xvii. Nine four-line stanzas. The Breeze's Invitation: "Like two careless swifts let 's sail," p. 51. Four five-line stanzas. The complete poem in six stanzas appears in Journal, vol. i, p. 86. Epitaph on Pursy: "Traveller, this is no prison," pp. 81, 82. A part was used in the Week in somewhat altered form in the lines beginning " Here lies an honest man." Epitaph on the World : " HereUes thebody of this world," p. 82. "Heathen without reproach," p. 122. Eight lines. Another form of " Morning," cited above. To the Moimtains: "And when the sun puts out his lamp," p. 123. Twenty-two lines. Fog : "Dull water-spirit and Protean god," p. 126. Ten lines. Another form of the poem beginning "Low- anchored cloud" used in the Week. The Friend: "The great Friend," pp. 126-128. Forty lines. The Battle of Life: "How Uttle curious is man," p. 129. THOREAU'S BOOKS 40 Twenty-six lines. This poem with two additional lines appears in Journal, vol. i, pp. 459, 460. The Threadbare Trees: "The threadbare trees so poor and thin," p. 130. Three four-line stanzas. The third stanza was used in the poem "Inspiration." "Until at length the north winds blow," p. 132. Four lines. The Virgin: "With her calm, inquiring eyes," p. 134. Eight lines. Solitude: " We walk in Nature stiU alone," pp. 134, 136. Thirty-two lines. This appears in somewhat different form as the latter part of the poem "To a Marsh Hawk in Spring," in Journal, vol. i, pp. 472, 473. "Love equab swift and slow," p. 136. Fo^r lines. Printed in the first edition of the Week, p. 285. True Freedom: '.'Wait not tiU slaves pronounce the word," p;p. 137, 138. Eleven four-line stanzas. Our Neighbors: "The respectable folks," pp. 139, 140. Twenty-five lines. Another form of the poem in the Week. "My groimd is high," p. 140. Four lines. The same with four additional lines appears in Journal, vol. i, p.. 245. "If from your price ye wiU not swerve," pp. 140, 141. Ten lines. This appears in Journal, vol. i, pp. 245, 246. Independence: "Ye princes, keep your realms," p. 141. Four four-line stanzas. A different form of the poem of this title printed in the Commonwealth and in Poems of Nature and Excursions, and Poems. A Winter and Spring Scene : "The willows droop," pp. 144-146. Eighty-two lines. A longer and otherwise different form of "A Winter Scene " as published in Poems of Nature, p. 90. SIR WALTER RALEIGH Sir Wai/ter Raleigh | By | Henry David Tho- reau | Lately discovered among his unpub- lished journals | and manuscripts | Introduc- tion by I Franklin Benjamin Sanborn | Edited THOREAU'S BOOKS 41 by I Henry Aiken Metcalf | [Device] \ Boston : MDCDV I Printed exclusively for members of I The Bibliophile Society. 8vo, pp. xiv, 106. With portrait of Raleigh. Preface signed Henry Aiken Metcalf. Intro- duction and Notes by F. B. Sanborn. Written, the Introduction states, between 1842 and 1845, probably for The Dial. (See, however, pp. 115, 116.) Though bearing the date 1905, the book was not actually distributed till 1907. This essay appears in small part in the Week and in the first volume of the Journal. The manuscript is owned by Mr. W. K. Bixby of St. Louis. CAPE COD, AND MISCELLANIES The Writings of | Henry David Thoreau | Cape Cod | and | Miscellanies | [Device] \ Boston and New York | Houghton Mifflin and Company \ MDCCCCVI. 8vo, pp. xii, 489. Vol. iv of the Manuscript Edition, limited to 600 copies. With Intro- ductory Note and five photogravure illustra- tions from photographs by Herbert W. Gleason. Collation: i, half-title; ii, number of set; iii, title; iv, copyright; v, vi, contents; vii, list of illustrations; viii, blank; ix-xii, Introductory Note; 1, half-title; 2, blank; 3-273, Cape Cod; 274, blank; 275, half-title; 276, blank; 277- 482, Miscellanies; 483, half-title; 484, blank; 485-489, index; [490], printer's imprint. The contents of the Miscellanies are identical with those of the Riverside Miscellanies, except that the Biographical Sketch and the Poems are omitted. See also description of this edition on pp. 52, 53. THOREAU'S BOOKS 42 The Same. Boston and New York : Houghton, Mifflin & Co. 1906. 12mo, pp. xii, 489. Vol. iv of the Walden Edition. With Introductory Note and five photogravure illustrations from photographs by Herbert W. Gleason. Collation as in Manu- script Edition except that p. ii is blank. Printed from the plates of the Manuscript Edition and having the same illustrations. EXCURSIONS, AND POEMS The Writings of | Henbt David Thoreau | Excursions | and | Poems | [Device] | Boston and New York | Houghton Mifflin and Com- pany I MDCCCCVI, 8vo, pp. xvi, 431. Vol. v of the Manuscript Edition, limited to 600 copies. With Introduc- tory Note and five photogravure illustrations from photographs by Herbert W. Gleason. Collation: i, half-title; ii, number of set; iii, title; iv, copyright; v-vii, contents; viii, blank; ix, list of illustrations; x, blank; xi-xv, In- troductory Note; xvi, blank; 1, half-title; 2, mottoes; 3-333, Excursions; 334, blank; 335, half-title; 336, blank; 337-392, Translations; 393, half-title; 394, blank; 395-419, Poems; 420-422, A List of the Poems and Bits of Verse scattered among Thoreau's Prose Writ- ings exclusive of the Journal; 423, half-title; 424, blank; 425-431, index; [432], printers' im- print. THOREAU'S BOOKS 43 The Excursions are identical with those of the River- side Edition, except that "May Days" and "Days and Nights in Concord" are "omitted as consisting merely of extracts from Thoreau's Journal and therefore super- seded by the publication of the latter in its complete form." The collection of Poems (and Translations) is based on that in the Riverside Miscellanies and on Poems ofj^ature. Poems occurring in other volumes of the Manuscript Edition are omitted and no unpublished or uncollected pieces are added. See also description of this edition on pp. 52, 53. Contents of Translations and Poems: — Tbanslations. The Prometheus Bound of iEschylus. Translations from Pindar. Poems. Nature. Inspiration. The Aurora of Guido. To the Maiden in the East. To my Brother. Greece. The Funeral Bell. The Moon. The Fall of the Leaf. The Thaw. A Winter Scene. To a Stray Fowl. Poverty. Pilgrims. The Departure. Independence. Ding Dong. Onmipresence. Inspiration (quatrain). Mission. Delay. Prayer. THOREAU'S BOOKS 44 The Same. Boston and New York: Houghton, Mifflin & Co. 1906. 12mo, pp. xvi, 431. Vol. v of the Walden Edition. With Introductory Note and five photogravure illustrations from photographs by Herbert W. Gleason. Collation as in Man- uscript Edition except that p. ii is blank. Printed from the plates of the Manuscript Edition and having the same illustrations. JOURNAL The Writings of | Henry David Thoreau | Journal | Edited by Bradford Torrey | I [II- XIV] I 1837-1846 [other dates in other volumes]. [Device, red] | Boston and New York | Hough- ton Mifflin and Company \ MDCCCCVI. 8vo, pp. lii, 488; (ii) xii, 505; (in) xii, 487; (iv) xii, 495; (v) xii, 532; (vi) x, 491; (vii) xii, 527; (viii) x, 468; (ix) xii, 503; (x) xii, 511; (xi) xii, 457; (xii) xii, 458; (xiil) x, 430; (xiv) X, 459. Vols, vii-xx of the Manuscript Edition. Collation of Vol. i: i, half-title "The Writings of Henry David Thoreau, .in twenty volumes, volume vii;" ii, "Manuscript Edition, limited to six hundred copies, Number [ ];" iii, title; iv, copyright; v, vi. Publishers' Note; vii-ix. Editor's Preface; x, blank; xi-xv, con- tents; xvi, blank; xvii, list of illustrations; xviii, blank ; xix-li. Introduction, signed B. T. ; Iii, blank; 1, half-title, "Henry D. Thoreau, Gleanings, or What Time has not reaped of my Journal;" 2, explanatory matter and poeti- THOREAU'S BOOKS 45 cal mottoes; 3-488, text; [489], blank; [490], printers' imprint "The Riverside Press, H. O. Houghton and Company, Cambridge, Massa- chusetts." Vol. XIV contains (pp. 347-459) an index to the whole Journal. This edition is illustrated with photogravures from photographs by Herbert W. Gleason and with cuts in the text from rude drawings by Thoreau. The frontis- piece to vol. I is a photogravure from the Rowse crayon. Vol. xrv contains at the end, just before the index, an indexed map of Concord compiled by Herbert W. Gleason, showing the localities mentioned by Thoreau in his Journal. Further particulars as to tiie format will be found in the description of the Manuscript Edition of Thoreau's Writings, pp. 52, 53. Extracts from the Journal had previously been pub- lished under the titles Early Spring in Massachusetts, Summer, Winter, and Autumn, and also in Channing's Thoreau, the Poet-Naturalist (q. v., pp. 81, 82) and in Ex- cursions, Riverside Edition. Selections from the present complete Jourrud, also, were printed in the Atlantic in January-May, 1905, in advance of book publication. Thoreau's Journal in thirty-nine manuscript volumes was bequeathed by his sister Sophia to Mr. H. G. O. Blake, who, upon his death, left it in turn to Mr. E. Harlow Russell of Worcester. Mr. Russell arranged with the publishers to bring it out in extenso. The greatest care was taken to produce an accurate text, and the work of copying, comparing, and printing the Journal occu- pied three years and a half. As printed it is virtually complete and unabridged, the few omissions noted in the Editor's Preface being of an unimportant character. The earliest volumes of the original Journal were de- stroyed by Thoreau in writing the Week and Walden, but transcripts of unused passages were taken and pre- served. This explains the half-title preceding text quoted THOREAU'S BOOKS 46 in collation above. The manuscript Journal after the printing was sold by Mr. Russell and is now in the possession of Mr. Stephen H. Wakeman of New York. The dates covered by the several volumes are: — I. 1837-1846. n. 1850-September 15, 1851. m. September 16, 1851-Aprn 30, 1852. rv. May 1, ISSa-Febniary 27, 1853. V. March 5-November 30, 1853. VI. December 1, 1853-August 31, 1854. VII. September 1, 1854-October 30, 1855. vni. November 1, 1855-August 15, 1856. IX. August 16, 1856-August 7, 1857. X. August 8, 1857-Juiie 29, 1858. XI. July 2, 1868-Pebruary 28, 1859. XII. March 2, 1859-November 30, 1859. XIII. December 1, 1859-July 31, 1860. XIV. August 1, 1860-November 3, 1861. Following is a list of the verse contained in the Journal : — Vol. I. Friendship, p. 40: "I think awhile of Love, and, while I think." The Bluebirds, p. 43. May Morning, p. 49. Walden, p. 50 : "True, our converse a stranger is to speech." "Truth, Goodness, Beauty, — those celestial thrins," p. 51. "In the busy streets, domains of trade," p. 51. Chffs, p. 51: "The loudest sound that burdens here the breeze." My Boots, p. 60. Fair Haven, p. 62 : "When whiter fringes every bough." AH but the last stanza, somewhat revised and without title, was printed in Excursions. Anacreon's Ode to the Cicada, p. 66. Printed in Excursions with a single verbal variation. Anacreontics. Retiu-n of Spring, p. 69. Printed in Excursions. Cupid Wounded, p. 70. Printed in the Week with variations in lines 2 and 3. THOREAU'S BOOKS 47 The Thaw, p. 71. Has one more stanza than as printed in Poems of Nature. "Last night, as I lay gazing with shut eyes," p. 71. Love, p. 72: "We two that planets erst had been." "The deeds of king and meanest hedger," p. 72. " 'T wiU soon appear if we but look," p. 72. The Evening Wind, p. 72: '.'The eastern mail comes lumber- ing in." Printed in the Week. The Peal of the Bells, p. 73. Published in Poems of Nature imder the tide of "Ding Dong," somewhat revised and without the last stanza. The Shrike, p. 74. The second of the two stanzas was printed in Excursions. Sympathy, p. 80 : "Lately, alas, I knew a gentle boy." Used in the Week. Fu-st printed m The Dial, July, 1840. The "Book of Gems," p. 82. The Assabet, p. 84: "Up this pleasant stream let's row." Three or four of the twelve stanzas were printed in the Week. The Breeze's Invitation, p. 86. '! Nature doth have her dawn each day," p. 87. Printed in the Week. First printed in The Dial, January, 1841. Farewell, p. 95. Noon, p. 96. '.'Each more melodious note I hear," p. 102. Included in The Service. The Fisher's Son, p. 110. Of the nineteen stanzas, four, beginning "My years are like a stroU upon the beach," were used in the Week and iovx others were printed in the Introduction to the Familiar Letters. '.'By a strong liking we prevaD," p. 113. The Freshet, p. 122. The greater part of the poem, beginning with "The river sweUeth more and more," appears in Excursions. '.'Two years and twenty now have flown," p. 127. Three of the five stanzas were used in the Week under the title of "The Poet's Delay." '.'Wait not till I invite thee, but observe," p. 205. THOREAU'S BOOKS 48 Friendsliip, p. 242 : "Now we are partners in such legal trade." On the Sun coming out in the Afternoon, p. 243. "They who prepare my evening meal below," p. 243. "My ground is high," p. 245. "If from your price ye will not swerve," p. 245. Friendship's Steadfastness, p. 248. "Death cannot come too soon," p. 249. Wachusett, p. 256. A part of the poem "Mountains," beginning "With frontier strength ye stand your ground," printed in the Week and (abridged) in Excursions. Westward, Ho ! p. 259 : "The needles of the pine." Printed in Excursions. The Echo of the Sabbath Bell heard in the Woods, p. 259. Used in the Week with some variations and without title. "My life hath been the poem I would have writ," p. 276. Used in the Week with a slight verbal variation. "Greater is the depth of sadness," p. 283. "Where I have been," p. 285. "Better wait," p. 287. "Packed in my mind lie all the clothes," p. 291. This, with the lines beginning on the succeeding page, was printed under the title of "The Inward Morning " in The Dial for October, 1842, and in the Week. This version contains an additional stanza (the second) and other varia- tions. " What is it gilds the trees and clouds," p. 292. "Within the circuit of this plodding life," p. 304. Printed in revised form in Excursions. "Tell me, ye wise ones, if ye can," p. 373. Eight lines of this poem, beginning "A finer race and finer fed," somewhat altered, were used in the Week. "And Memnon's mother sprightly greets us now," p. 376. Six of the eight lines were used (with revision) in the Week in the stanza begiiming " This is my Carnac, whose un- measured dome." " The Earth," p. 390. The Hero, p. 403. Twenty-six lines of this, somewhat revised, appeared in A MorSque of Poets (1878) under the title of "Pilgrims," and were reprinted in Miscellanies. THOREAU'S BOOKS 49 "At midnight's hour I raised my head," p. 407. "I seek the present time," p. 409. "I was born upon thy bank, river," p. 438. "My friends, why should we Uve?" p. 447. "I mark the summer's swift dechne," p. 449. "Far o'er the bow," p. 457. The first four lines of a poem the remainder of which, beginning "Where gleaming fields of haze," was used in the Week. "Methinks that by a strict behavior," p. 457. "I have rolled near some other spirit's path," p. 457. Fog, p. 457 : "Thou drifting meadow of the air." Used in the Week abridged and revised, beginning "Low- anchored cloud." "How little curious is man," p. 459. "On fields o'er which the reaper's hand has passed," p. 463. To a Marsh Hawk in Spring, p. 471. "I fain would stretch me by the highway-side," p. 477. Another form of "The Thaw." "Yet let us thank the purblind race," p. 477. "I've seen ye, sisters, on the mountain-side," p. 477. "Ye do commend me to all virtue ever," p. 479. Vol. n. "And once again," p. 54. "The man of wild habits," p. 54. This and the preceding are parts of a poem printed in Excursions imder the titl6 of "The Old Marlborough Road," with considerable revision. "Without inlet it lies," p. 57. Two lines of this appear in Walden with other lines begin- ning "It is no dream of mine." Tall Ambrosia, p. 59. "I saw a delicate flower had grown up two feet high," p. 66. "To-day I climbed a handsome rounded hill," p. 67. "I am the little Irish boy," p. 117. Vol. m. "I do not fear my thoughts wiU die," p. 113. "I am the Uttle Irish boy," p. 243. Another form (see three lines above). THOREAU'S BOOKS 50 Vol. X. " 'T was thirty years ago," p. 138. "Forever in my dream and in my morning thought," p. 144. "The chickadee," p. 172. The Writings of | Henry David Thoreait | Journal | Edited by Bradford Torrey | I [II-XIV] I [Journal dates] | [Device] \ Boston and New York | Houghton Mifflin and Com- pany I The Riverside Press, Cambridge | 1906. 12ino, pp. as in Manuscript Edition. Vols, vii-xx of the Walden Edition. Collation of Vol. I : i, half-title, "Walden Edition, The Writ- ings of Henry David Thoreau;" ii, blank; otherwise as in Manuscript Edition. Printed from the plates of the Manuscript Edition and having the same illustrations. The Journal is as yet published only as a part of these two editions of Thoreau's complete writings and is not to be had separately. GODFREY OF BOULOGNE Unpublished Poems by Bryant and Thoreau : "Musings," by William CuUen Bryant, and "Godfrey of Boulogne," by Henry D. Thoreau. 'Boston: Bibliophile Society. 1907. 8vo, pp. xxviii. Pages xxi, xxii, facsimile of Thoreau's poem; xxiii, xxiv. Introduction by F. B. Sanborn ; xxvii, xxviii, the poem. Edition limited to 470 copies printed for members of the society. THOREAU'S BOOES 51 COLLECTED WORKS Riverside Edition. 10 vols., crown 8vo. With portraits and In- troductory Notes. Boston: Houghton, Mifflin & Co. 1894 [1893]. Vol. I. A Week on the Concohd and Mbekimack RiVEES. Vol. n. Walden; or, Life in the Woods. Vol. in. The Maine Woods. Vol. IV. Cape Cod. Vol. v. Early Spring in Massachusetts. Vol. VI. Summer. Vol. VII. Autumn. Vol. VIII. Winter. Vol. IX. Excursions. Vol. X. Miscellanies. The portraits are from the Rowse crayon, the Worces- ter daguerreotype, and the New Bedford ambrotype. The Introductory Notes are biographical and biblio- graphical in character, and were prepared by Mr. Horace E. Scudder. Volume x has a General Index to the Writings. This was the first regularly collected complete edition of Thoreau's writings, but for some years before its publication Thoreau's books had been issued in a uniform 12mo style bound in green cloth with gilt tops. Early Spring, Summer, Winter, and Autumn made their first appearance in this 12mo form. The Familiar Letters, upon its appearance in 1894, was added to the Riverside Edition as an eleventh vol- ume, being brought out in uniform style, though it lacked the half-title with the volume-number. THOREAU'S BOOKS 52 Labge-Papeb Edition. 10 vols., 8vo. Cambridge: Printed at the Riverside Press. 1894 [1893]. Printed from the plates of the Riverside Edition and issued simultaneously with it. Limited to 150 numbered copies. The Familiar Letters, published in 1894, was first issued in a Large-Paper Edition uniform with this edition of Thoreau's writings. Manuscript Edition, 20 vols., 8vo. With 3 portraits and 101 illus- trations from photographs by Herbert W. Gleason. Boston: Houghton, Mifflin & Co. 1906. Vol. I. A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers. Vol. n. Walden. Vol. m. The Maine Woods. Vol. rv. Cape Cod, and Miscellanies. Vol. v. Excursions, and Poems. Vol. VI. Familiar Letters. Edited by F. B. San- born. Vols, vii-xx. Journal. Edited by Bradford Torrey. This edition is based on the Riverside Edition, with the addition of the complete Journal in fourteen volumes. (See pp. 44-50, Journal.) Besides the changes in arrange- ment indicated by the volume-titles given above, it is to be noted that the Biographical Sketch by Emerson is transferred from Excursions to the first volume; a General Index to the "Works," the first six volumes of the set, is added to Vol. vi; and the four volumes of Journal extracts edited by Mr. H. G. O. Blake — Early Spring in Massachusetts, Summer, Autumn, and Winter — are omitted as having been superseded by the publication of the complete Journal. The two papers entitled "May Days" and "Days and Nights in Con- THOREAU'S BOOKS 53 cord," consisting of extracts from Thoreau's Journal, which are printed in the Riverside Edition of Excursions, are omitted ; the collection of Poems is enlarged by the addition of a number of poems taken from Poems of Na- ture; and the Familiar Letters is revised and enlarged by the editor. The fourteen volumes of the Journal contain many text cuts from rude sketches by Thoreau. The last volume has a " Map of Concord, Mass., showing Local- ities mentioned by Thoreau in his Journals, compiled by Herbert W. Gleason, 1906," with a two-page index to the same. This edition was limited to six hundred numbered copies, and the first volume of each set contains a piece of Thoreau's autograph manuscript mounted and bound in before the frontispiece. These manuscripts vary in interest, some of them adding materially to the value of the sets. Some of the sets, issued in fine bindings, have two frontispieces to each volume, a carbon photograph of a flower and a colored photogravure. The edition was printed on a specially manufactured paper with " Thoreau " in the watermark. Walden Edition. 20 vols., 12mo. Boston: Houghton, Mifflin & Co. 1906. Printed from the same plates as the Manuscript Edi- tion, which it followed. Sold only by subscription for the entire set. SELECTIONS FROM THOREAU'S WRITINGS SELECTIONS FROM THOREAU'S WRITINGS BOOES ENTIRELY DEVOTED TO THOREAU The Succession of Fobest Trees, Wild Apples, and Sounds. With a Biographical Sketch by Ralph Waldo Emerson. Boston: Houghton, Mifflin & Co. [1887.] 16mo, paper, pp. 103. No. 27 of the River- side Literature Series. With a Preface and annotations for the use of schools. Thobeau's Thoughts | Selections from the Writings | of Henry David Thoreau | Edited by I H. G. O. Blake | [MoUo] \ [Device] | Boston and New York | Houghton, Mifflin and Com- pany I The Riverside Press, Cambridge | 1890. 16mo, pp. vi, 153. Collation: i, title; ii, copyright; iii-v, Introductory; vi, blank; 1-123, Selections from Thoreau ; 124, blank ; 125, half- title with motto ; 126, blank; 127-129, Preface; 130, blank; 131-146, A Contribution toward a Bibliography of Henry David Thoreau [by Dr. Samuel A. Jones]; 147-153, index. Selections fbom | Thobeau | Edited, with an Introduction | by | Henry S. Salt | Author of 'The Life of Henry David Thoreau' | London | Macmillan and Co. | 1895 | All rights reserved. 16mo, pp. xxii, 330. Photogravure portrait. SELECTIONS FROM THOREAU'S WRITINGS 56 From A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers. Concord River, pp. 1-12. Sunday Thoughts, pp. 13-28. Friendship, pp. 29-41. From Walden. Where I Lived and What I Lived for, pp. 42-63. Higher Laws, pp. 64-79. House- Wanning, pp. 80-88. From The Maine Woods. Primeval Nature, pp. 89-102. The Murder of the Moose, pp. 103-117. Forest Phenomena, pp. 118-123. From Cape Cod. The Shipwreck, pp. 124-135. The Beach, pp. 136-150. The Weimeet Oysterman, pp. 151-167. From Excursions. Natural History of Massachusetts, pp. 168-198. Walking, pp. 199-237. From Anti-Slavery and Reform Papers. Civil Disobedience, pp. 238-266. A Plea for Captain John Brown, pp. 267-300. Life without Principle, pp. 301-330. Extracts from Thoreau. Selected by Emily R. Lyman. [Mottoes.] Philadelphia: Printed by J. B. Lippincott Co. MDCCCXCIX. Crown 8vo, pp. 175. Ten illustrations from photographs. A limited number printed for private distribution only. Preface signed E. R. L. Life and Friendship. Selected from Essays and Diaries of Henry D. Thoreau. Prefatory Note by Harry Roberts. London : Anthony Treheme & Co. 1904. 18mo, pp. 218. SELECTIONS FROM THOREAU'S WRITINGS 57 Henry D. Thoreau : A Little Book of Nature Themes. Selected by Thomas Coke Watkins. Portland, Me. : Thomas B. Mosher. 1906 [1907]. , 32mo, pp. xvi, 80. With a Foreword. Selections from the Week and Walden, with one of Channing's composite quotations from Thoreau's Journal printed as a "Proem." Golden Thoughts from Thoreau. Edited with a Preface by Dorothy Eastwood. London : John Lane. [1907.] 18mo, pp. xvi, 115. Short selections classified under the heads of Man, Solitude and Society, etc., together with two of the poems. In Touch with Thoreau. Quotations from the Writings of Henry D. Thoreau. Compiled by Harriet A. Townsend. Bu£falo. 1907. Privately printed. A year-book, with a Foreword in verse signed H. A. T. A Happt Life: Thoughts from Thoreau. London: C. W. Daniel. 1907. 16mo. Listed in the English Catalogue. OTHER BOOKS CONTAINING SELECTIONS FROM THOREAU Ctclop^dla. of American Literature. Edited by Evert A. Duyckinck and George L. Duyck- inck. l 65-69, 71-73, 75-78. "Extracts from Thoreau," 56. F., E. M., "Henry Thoreau's Mo- ther," 126. Fair Haven: "When winter fringes every bough," 46. " Faithful Lover of Nature, A," 130. FaU of the Leaf, The, 36, 76, 77. Familiak Letters of Henbt David Thoeeau, 3^-34, 47, 51, 62, 73, 74, 79; L. J. Block's re- view in the Dial, 132. "Famihar Studies of Men and Books," 109. "Far o'er the bow," 49. Farewell, 47. Fedem, Karl, 98, 170. Fields, Annie, 98. ■Fields, James T., 5, 98. Fifield, Arthur C, 13, 38, 62. Fireplaces, Thoreau and, 145. First and Last JomiNErs op Tho- reau, The, 38-40, 99, 108; Mr. Sanborn in Springfield RepubU- can on, 146. "First Books of Some American Authors," 137. "First Century of the Republic, The," 112. Fisher, Mary, 98. Fisher's Boy, The, 35, 59, 61, 62, 166. See also Upon the Beach. Fisher's Sm, The, 47. Flagg, Wilson, 98. "Flj^g, Wilson, Thoreau and," 123. Flint's Pond, 144. Fog, 39, 49; manuscript, 160. Forest Phmomena, 56. "Forester, The," 85, 119. "Forever in my dream and in my morning thought," 50. Fortnightly Review, Grant Allen's "Sunday at Concord," 128; Mr. Salt's review of the Walden Edi- tion, 147. Fonun, The, 136. Fragments of Pindar, 68. Frank Leshe's Popular Monthly, 130. Eraser's Magazine, 122. Fraternity Lecture, 118, 119. Free Love, 36, 66, 167. "Freedom of the Fields, The," 90. French criticism of Thoreau, 141, 143. Freshk, The, 47. Friend, The, 39. "FViends on the Shelf," 110. Friendship .• " I think awhile of Love, and, while I think," 46. Friendship: "Let such pure hate still imderprop," 35, 66, 167. Friemdship: "Now we are partners in such legal trade," 48. Friendship, essay on, 5, 56. Friendship, Op. See Op Friend- ship. Friendship, The Essay on, 37. Friendship, From Chaucer's Ro- maunt of the Rose, 67. Friendship's Steadfastness, 48. "FVom a College Window," 92. "Prom the Easy Chair," 96. Frothingham, Octavius Brooks, 98. 184 INDEX Froude, James Anthony, 99. "Froude to Thoreau," 138. Fuller, Margaret, 100, 162. Funeral BeU, The, 35, 76. Ganong, W. F., 144. Gamett, Richard, 99. "General Survey of American Lit- erature, A," 98. Gentleman's Magazine, 140. German criticism of Thoreau, 85, 86, 98, 102, 104, 146. "Greschichte der Nordamerikan- ischen Literatur," 102. Gibbon, Charles. See Ainsworth R. Spofford. Gill, Wilham Fearing, 98. Gleason, Herbert W., 46, 52, 54. "Glimpses of Authors," 130. Godeys Lady's Book, 116. GoDPBET OF Boulogne, 60; manu- script, 160. Golden Rule, The, 124. "Golden Thoughts from Thoreau," 57, 97. Good Words, 128. "Gospel of the Open, The," 139. Graham, P. Anderson, 99, 104. Graham's Magazine, 69. Granite Monthly, 107, 140. " Oreat God, I ask thee for no meaner pelf," 65. See also My Prayer. Great Thoughts, W. J. Jupp's arti- cle in, 132. " Greater is the depth of sadness," 48. Greece, 35, 76. "Greece, who am I that shoM re- member thee," 165. See also Greeley, Horace, 69-71, 162. Greenacre School, the, 134, 136. Greene, Calvin H., 33, 37, 84, 138; and Thoreau's daguerreotype, sdii-xv. Greenough, Chester Noyes, 112. Griswold, Hattie Tjag, 99. Griswold, Rufus Wilmot, 99. "Halcyon Days," 98. "Half-Hours with the Best Ameri- can Authors," 59, 104. "Handbook of American Authors," 58. "Handbook of English Literature, A," 58, 111. "Happy Life, A: Thoughts from Thoreau," 57. Harper, H. H. (H. H. H.), 38, 99. "Harper's Cyclopaedia of British and American Poetry," 59. Harper's Monthly, G. W. Curtis's reminiscences, 120, 122; Miss Hannah R. Hudson's "Concord Books," 123; Ciulis's review of Sanborn's "Thoreau," 126; Whip- ple's "Recollections of Ralph Waldo Emerson," 126; HoweUs's "My First Visit to New England," 132. Harris, Amanda B., 99, 123. Harris, William T, 58, 108. Harvard College, a junior forensic, 78 ; Thoreau's commencement part at, 115; subscription towards the purchase of books for the library of, 161; exercise written during sophomore year at, 161. Harvard Magazine, review of Wal- DEN, 117; Edwin Morton's article, 117; Storrow Higginson's article, 119. Harvard Monthly, D. G. Mason's articles in, 137 (fris). Harvard Register, The, Sanborn's article in, 125; Isabella King's re- view of Eaelt Spuing in lk£issA- CHTJSETTS, 125. Haskins, David Green, 99. Haverhill Evening Gazette, 147. Hawthorne, Julian, 100. Hawthorne, Nathaniel, 61, 100; Conway's Life of, 100; James's Life of , 101 ; Mrs. Lathrop's Mem- ories of, 102 ; Stearns's Life of, 109. "Hawthorne, Nathaniel, and his Wife," 100. Haee, 35, 68, 62, 67, 166. "Heathen withovt reproach," 39. Hecker, Isaac T, 33; "A Bit of Unpublished Correspondence be- tween Henry Thoreau and Isaac Hecker," 73, 74, 86, 106, 142, 149; Life of, 97. Heidelberg, University of, 87. "Heine, Henry, and Henry Tho- reau," 137. INDEX 185 Herald of Freedom, 24, 31, 68. "Here lies an honest man," 39, 168. "Here lies the body of this tuorld," 39. "Here then an aged shepherd dwelt," 165. "Hennit of Concord, The," 122. "Hennit's Notes on Thoreau, A," 139. Hero, The, 48. Higginson, Samuel Storrow, paper on Thoreau, 83, 85, 119. Higginson, Thomas Wentworth, 100, 104; review of The Maine Woods, 121 ; review of Cape Cod, 121; review of Lettebs to Va- BI0U8 Pehsgns, 121; article on the Transcendental authors, 130; "Walks with Ellery Channing," 141. "High Places about the Historic Town of Concord, Of," 134. High School Voice, 133. Higher Laws, 56. Highland Light, The, 20, 58, 59, 73. Hill, Edwin B., 10, 81, 83, 85, 100. Hinton, R. J., 119. "Hired Furnished," 113. "His steady sail he never furls," 168. "Historical and Biographical In- troduction to accompany The Dial, An," 68. Hoar, George Frisbie, 101, 137. Holland, F. M., 127, 141. Holmes, Ohver Wendell, 101. Homer, Ossian, Chaucer, 68. "Homes of American Authors," 96, 116. Horton, Edward A., 132. Hosmer, Alfred W., 81, 85, 133; "Chronology of the Life of Henry D. Thoreau," 83; letter to Natu- ral Food, 133; "An Evening with Thoreau," 133, 134. Hosmer, Horace R., 131. Hosmer, Miss Jane, 133. Hosmer, Joseph, 124. House-W arming, 66. "How Utile curious is man," 39, 49. Howe, M. A. De Wolfe, 101, 136. Howe, Will D., 144. Howells, Wilham Dean, 104; "My First Visit to New England," 132. Hubbard, Elbert, 101 ; "Little Jour- neys to the Homes of Great Phi- losophers : Thoreau," 83. Hubert, Philip G., Jr., 101, 104; "Thoreau's Concord," 135; "At Thoreau's Pond," 136. Hudson, Miss Hannah R., 123. Hudson, W. H., 101. Hughes, Thomas, 104; review of Page's "Thoreau, Hjs Ijfe and Aims," 123. Humane Review, The, 144, 146. "Humane Study of Natural His- tory, Henry David Thoreau and the," 144. Hut, the Walden, 9, 13, 84, 90, 124. Hutchinson, Ellen Mackay. See Edmund Clarence Stedman. "7 am a partxl of vain strivings tied." See Sic Vita. "I am hound, I am bound, for a dis- tant shore," 165. "/ am the autumnal sun." See Nature's Child. "I am the little Irish boy," 49. "I do not fear my thoughts will die," 49. "I fain wotdd stretch me by the highway-side," 49. " I have rolled near some other sp/rits vath," 49. "/ hearing gel, who had but ears," 167. "I make ye an offer," 165. "I mark me summer's swift decline," 49. "/ sailed up a river vdth a pleasant wind," 165. "I saw a delicate flower had grown up two feet high," 49. "/ see the civil sun drying earth's tears." See Thaw, The. "I seek the present time," 49. "I think awhile of Love, and, while I think," 46. "I've seen ye, sisters, on ffie moun- tain-side'' 49. "I was born upon thy bank, river" 49. "Ideal for Freethinkers, An," 131. "Idealistic Basis of Thoreau's Genius, The," 137. 186 INDEX "Idyllisls of the Country-side," 97. "// from your price ye will not mverve," 40, 4S. Immartdliiy, 60. "Imperial Democracy," 102. "In Portia's Gardens," 102. "In Praise of Walking," 62. "In the busy streets, domains of trade," 46. In the Maine Woods, 58. "In Thoreau's Country," 129. "In Touch with Thoreau," 67. "In two years' time 't had thus," 168. Indejmdmce, 36, 40, 76; manu- script, 159. Independent, The, review of Early Spbing in Massachusetts, 125 ; Irving Allen's artide in, 133; G. W. Cooke's "The Two Tho- reaus," 135; Sanborn on "The Two Thoreaus," 135; review of Sanborn's edition of Channing's "Thoreau" and of Mrs. Marble's book, 142. Index, The, review of Summeb in, 127 ; Holland's " Emerson and the Concord School of Philosophy," 127. Indian implements, 105. "Indoor Studies," 93. Inlander,' The, "An Afternoon in the University Library," 5, 130; "James Russell Lowell," 130; "Thoreau's Inheritance," 131; review of Riverside Edition, 132; review of Holiday Edition of Waldbn, 137; "Thoreau's In- carceration," 138. Inquirer, The, review of Salt's Life of Thoreau in, 134; "Thoreau and his Teaching," 138. Inspiration, 34, 40, 68, 60, 61, 76.^ InspiraMcm (quatrain), 77. "International Encydopeedia, The New," 101. "International library of Famous Literature, The," 61. Investigator, Boston, 141. Inward Morning, The, 35, 48, 61, es, 167. "/* is no dream of mine," 167. Ives. Ella Gilbert, 139. James, Henry, Jr., 101, 104. Janvier, T. A., 126. Japp, Alexander H. (H. A. Page, psetid.), 104; "Thoreau: His Life and Aims," 84, 123, 140; "Tho- reau's Pity and Humour," 124; review of Walden and Stjmmeh in Spectator, 127; article in Wel- come, 128; review of Salt's Life of Thoreau in Spectator, 129. " Jefferies, Thoreau and," 139. "Jefferies, Richard, 'The Eulogy of," 92. "Jefferies, Richard: A Study," 107. Jersey relatives, 113. See aUo Peter Thoreau. Johnson, Clifton, 170. Johnson, Rossiter, editor of Little Classics, 59. "Johnson's Universal Cydopsedia," 92. Jones, Dr. Samuel Arthur, 5, 10; and the Greene daguerreotype of Thoreau, xiv; Some Unpub- lished Leitees of Henbt D. AND Sophia E. Thoeeaxt, xiv, 36, 37, 84, 101, 138, 139; Biblio- graphy in " Thoreau's Thoughts," with Preface, 55, 101; "Thoreau: A Glimpse," 84, 128; "Thoreau's Inheritance," 84; "Thoreau," 85; "Pertaining to Thoreau," 85, 139,151; bibliographies of Tho- reau, 88, 151; "An Afternoon in the University Library," 130; "Thoreau and his Biographers" in Lippincott's Magazine, 130; "James Russell Lowell" in the Inlander, 130; review of River- side Edition in the Inlander, 132; "Vox Clamantis in Deserto," re- view of Holiday Edition of Walden, 137; "Thoreau's Incar- ceration," 138; review of The Service, 141. Jordan, David Starr, 102. JOTJBNAL, 9, 37, 39-41, 44SO, 73- 75, 79; P. E. More's review of, 145; P. H. AUen's letter to New York Evening Post on, 145; San- bom's review of, 146; record of Thoreau's visits to Haverhill in, 147. See also Walden Edition. INDEX 187 Journal, Thoreau's, 3, 4, 9, 24-27, 43, 45, 46, 70, 72, 74, 75, 79, 100, 141 ; Chaiming's extracts from, 84. Journal of Speculative Philoso- phy, John Albee's poem "At Tho- reau's Cairn," 124; Greorge Willis Cooke's "Historical and Biogra- phical Introduction to The Dial," 127. Jupp, W. J., 132. Kaufman, Louis Rene, 139. Kennedy, William Sloane, 102; "A New Estimate of Thoreau," 124; "Portraits of Thoreau with a Beard," 125 ; poem "At Thoreau's Grave" in "Poems of the Weird and Mystical," 170; "Concord Recollections," 171. "Kentucky Cardinal, A," 91. King, Isabella, 126. King, Moses, 78. Kiper, Florence, 145. Knickerbocker Magazine, 85, 117. Knortz, Karl, 102; "Ein amerikan- ischer Diogenes (Henry D. Tho- reau)," 85. Ktaadn, 17, IS. Ktaadn and ike Maine Woods, 70. L., A., "In Thoreau's Country," 129. Labour Prophet, John Trevor's article in, 131. "Land of the Lingering Snow," 93. Landlord, The, 15, 16, 29, 69. Lang, Andrew. See Donald G. Mitchell. Large-Paper Edition, 62; auction prices, 157, 158. Last Days of John Brown, The, 24, 28, 29, 31, 70, 119. "Last night, as I lay gazing with shut eyes," 47. "Last of the Puritans, The," 102. "Lately, alas, I knew a gentle boy." See Sympathy. Lathrop, George Parsons, 77. Lathrop, Rose Hawthorne, 102, 104. Laughlin, Clara E., 102; "Two Famous Bachelors and their Love- Stories," 142. Laws of Menu, The, 66. Lawton, William Cranston, 102. "Leaf and Tendril," 94. Le Brun, Mrs. Jean Munroe, 126. Lectures by Thoreau, 115, 118, 119, 130. Lee, Gerald Stanley, 145. Le GaUienne, Ridiard, review of Poems op Natukb, 134. Leighton, Walter, 144. Lemmon, Leonard, 100. Lemperly, Paul, 5, 9. Leominster Daily Enterprise, 139. "Let suchpure hate still underprop." See Friendship. Letter to R. W. Emerson, a, 77. Letters written by Thoreau, 21, 22, 32, 33, 36, 37, 73, 74, 77-79; man- uscript, 158-161. Lettebs to Vabious Persons, SI, 22, 29, 32, 59, 64; review in The Radical, 121; Higginson's review in Atlantic, 121 ; Lowell's review in North American Review, 121, 122; auction prices, 151, 152. Lewin, Walter, 104; review of SuM- MBB, 127; review of Salt's Life of Thoreau and of Anti-Slaveet AND Reform Papers, 129; re- view of Salt's "Selections from Thoreau," 133. Liberator, The, 69; report of Fra- ternity Lecture on John Brown, 119 ; report of John Brown memo- rial celebration, 119; Ricketson's poem, 120; Sanborn's sonnet, 120. "Liberty and a Living," 101. Library Magazine, 128. "Library of American Literature, A,'' 59, 109. "Library of Choice Literatin:e and Encyclopaedia of Universal Au- thorship, The," 60. "Library of Literary Criticism of English and American Authors, The," 61, 104. "Library of Poetry and Song, A TSfew," 60. "Library of the World's Best Liter- ature," 60, 94. "Life and Riendship," 56. Life in the Wilderness, 70. "Life of Henry David Thoreau," 188 INDEX by Henry S. Salt, 86, 88; reviews of, 129, 134, 135. Life without Principle, 24, 28, 29, 31, 56, 7S. Life ■without PBiNcrpLE, 35. " Light-mnged Smoke, Icarian bird." See Smoke. " Idke two careless swifts let 's sail," 39. Lines: "AH things are current found," 35, 61, 167. Lines: "TPjough all the Fates should prove unkind," 35, 76, 166. Lippineott's Magazine, Joel Ben- ton's "The Poetry of Thoreau," 128; Salt's review of Anti-Slav- EET AND Rbfokm Papees, 129; Dr. Jones's "Thoreau and Ms Biographers," 130; C. C. Abbott's artide, 133. "Literary Art, Essays on," 108. Literary Digest, 142. "Literary History of America, A," 112. "Literary Landmarks of Boston," 109. "Literary Landmarks of Concord," 135. "Literary Shrines," 112. "Literary Values, and Other Pa- pers," 94. Literary World (Boston), review of Eaklt Spring m Massachtj- SETxa, 125; review of Sanborn's "Thoreau," 126; review of StJM- MEB, 127 ; review of Winter, 128 ; review of Salt's Life of Thoreau, 136. "Literature and Life in School," 95. "Literature in America, A History of," 112. "Literature of Field and Hedge- row," 139. Littell's Living Age, review of Chan- ning's "Thoreau," 122; Steven- son's article, 124; Japp's reply to Stevenson, 124; Salt's review of the Walden Edition, 147. Litterarisches Echo, 146. "Little Book of Nature Themes, A," 67. "Little Classics: Nature," 59. "Little Journeys to the Homes of Good Men and Great" (John Ruskin), 101. "Little Journeys to the Homes of Great Philosophers : Thoreau," 83. Living Age, The. See Littell's Liv- ing Age. Livingston, Luther S., "The First Books of Some American Au- thors," 137; "American Book- Prices Current," 149. London Daily Chronicle, 133. London Evening Post, 129. London Standard, 129. London Star, 134. Loomis, E. J., 110, 132. Lothrop, Harriet Mulford, 102. Love, 29. Love: " We two that planets erst had been," 47. "Love eqwds svdft and slow," 40, 166. "Low-anchored cloud" {Mist), 35, 39, 58-61, 166. "Low in the eastern shy." See To the Maiden in the East. Lowell, James Russell, 104; editor of the Atlantic, 72; review of the Week, 85, 116; "My Study Win- dows," 99, 103, 122; "A Fable for Critics," 103; review of Letters to Various Persons, 121, 122; essay on Thoreau, 122; address at Concord 250th Anniversary celebration, 127; manuscript of letter to, 160. "Lowell and Thoreau, About," 140. Lyman, Emily R., "Extracts from Thoreau," 56, 103; "Thoreau," 85. Mabie, Hamilton Wright, 103 ; arti- cle on John Burroughs, 136; "Thoreau, a Prophet of Nature," 144. McDonald, E. M., 131, 138. "McGuffey's Fifth Eclectic Read- er," 58. Magazine of Poetry, 133. Maiden in the East, To the, 35, 66, 166. Maine Woods, The, 17-19, 70, 72, 162; selections from, 56, 58, INDEX 189 59; review in New York Times, 121; review in Commonwealth, 121 ; review in Atlantic, 121 ; Mrs. Eckstorm's account of Thoreau's guide on his Chesuncook excur- sion, 144; Mrs. Eckstorm's arti- cle on, 147; auction prices, 152, 153; verse in, 167. "Mammals of the Adirondack Re- gion. The," 103. " Man who was always a Boy, The," 147. Mann, Horace, 39. "Man's litUe acts are grand," 166. Manuscript Edition, SS, 53. Mantiscripts, auction prices of, 168- 162. Marble, Annie Russell, introduc- tion to the Maine Woods, 19, 103; Introduction to Cape Cod, 21, 103; "Thoreau: His Home, Friends, and Books," 88, 142, 143; article on Channing, 140; "Where Thoreau Worked and Wandered," 141. MarshHawk in Spring, To a, 40, 49- Mason, Daniel Gregory, "The Idealistic Basis of Thoreau's Genius," 137; "Harrison G. O. Blake, '35, and Thoreau," 137; "A Thanksgiving Pilgrimage to Thoreau," 142. "Masque of Poets, A," 48, 77. "Massachusetts Board of Agricul- ture, Eighth Annual Report of the Secretary of the," 75. Massachiisetts Quarterly Review, 116. "Masterpieces of American Litera- ture," 59, 108. Matthews, Brander, 103, 104. Maxham, B. D., his daguerreotypes of Thoreau, odii-xviii, 8, 25, 51, 84, 88, 125, 126, 130, 170. May Days, 16, 43, 73. May Morning, 46. Medallion. See Walton Ricketson. " Memorial History of Boston, The," " Memorials of American Authors," 136. "Men are by birth equal in this, that given," 167. "Men dig and dive hut cannot my wealth spend," 167. "Men say they know many things," 167. Merriam, C. Hart, 103. "Merrimack River, The, Hellenics, and Other Poems," 91.' Merwin, Henry Childs, 143. Metcalf, Henry Aiken, 41, 103. "Methinks that by a strict behavior," 49. Middlesex Agricultural Society, 74, 75. "Middlesex Agricultural Society, Transactions of the, for the Year 1860," 75. Middlesex Patriot, 140. Miles, Emma Bell, 145. Millard, Bailey, 103. Miller, Wilhehn, 140. MiUington, Mrs. L. A., 123. Minnesota, trip to, 39. Miscellanies, SO-Sg, 41, 42, 65-72, 74, 77, 78. Mission, 77. Mist: "Low-anchored cloud," 35, 39, 58-61, 166. Mitchell, Donald G., 104 (bis). Mitchell, Donald G., and Andrew Lang, "The International Li- brary of English Literature," 61. "Modern Enghsh Prose," 62, 94. "Modern Humanists," 106. Monitor, The, Mr. Sanborn's son- net, 120; "Walden," by S. Rip- ley Bartlett, 120; notice of 1862 Walden, 120. Monthly Religious Magazine, The, Alger's "The Hermit of Con- cord," 122; review of Channing's "Thoreau," 122. Mom, The, 35, 66. More, Paul Ekner, 104 (bis), 170; "A Hermit's Notes on Thoreau," 139 ; review of Journal, 145, 146 ; "Thoreau and German Romanti- cism," 146; "Thoreau's Journal," 170. Morning: "Thou unconverted Saint," 39. Morris, Charles, 59, 104. Morton, Edwin, 85, 117. "Mosses from an Old Manse," 100. 190 INDEX Moulton, Charles Wells, 61, 104. Mount Tom: An All Outdoors Magazine, 145. Mountains, 36, 48, 166, 168. Mountains, To the, 39. Muir, John, 144. Mvinroe, Alfred, 123. Munroe, James, & Co., 3-4. Mmisey's Magazine, 141. Murder of the Moose, The, 56. Mnret, Maurice, 141. "My books I'd fain cast off, I cannot read." See Summer Rain, The. My Boots, 46. My Brother, To, 35. "My First Visit to New England," 132. "My friends, why should ux live?" 49. "My ground is high," Jfl, 48. My Life: "My life is like a stroll upon the beach," 61. See also Fisher's Boy, The. "My life hath \fias'\ been the poem I would have writ" 48, 167. "My life is like a stroll upon the beach." See Fisher's Boy, The. " My love must be as free." See Free Love. My Prayer, 36, 61, 62. See also "Great God, I ask thee for no meaner pelf;" and Prayer. Nation, The, review of Channing's "Thoreau," 122; "Philosophy at Concord," 124; A. G._ Sedg- wick's review of Sanborn's " Tho- reau," 126; review of STJMMEiH, 127; review of "The PersonaUty of Thoreau," 140; review of The Service, 141; review of Mrs. Marble's book, 142; review of Sanborn's edition of Channing's "Thoreau," 142; P. K More's "Thoreau and Gierman Roman- ticism," 146; notice of last ten volumes of Walden Edition, 146. Natural Food, Hector Waylen's article in, 133; A. W. Hosmer's letter in, 133. Natural history, manuscript notes on, 159-161. Natural History of Massachusetts, 15, 16, 56, es. Nature, S4, 62. "Nature and Culture," 103. "Nature doth have her dawn each day," 35, 47, 61, 64, 167. "Nature in Books," 99. Nature Notes, J. L. Otter's article in, 130; "Literature of Field and Hedgerow," 139; H. S. Salt's "Thoreau and Jefferies," 139. Natures Child, 35, 167. "Nature's Diary," 60. "Nelson's Eneydopsedia,'' 104. "Neunzehnte Jahrhundert in Bild- nissen. Das," 170. New Age, 139, 140. "New England, My First Visit to," 132. "New England in Letters," 112. New Engknd Magazine, Sanborn's "Emerson and his Friends in Concord," 129; Charlotte Beck- er's quatrain, 143; Florence Ki- per's poem, l45. New Englander, The, 130. " New Estimate of Thoreau, A," 124. "New Hampshire Biography and Autobiography," 107. "New Library of Poetry and Song, A," 60. "New Spirit, The," 97. New York Evening Post, Amanda B. Harris's "Thoreau's Hermit- age," 123; "In Thoreau's Coun- ty," 129; notice of The Service, 141; P. E. More's review of Tho- reau's JoTJKNAL, 145; F. H. Al- len's letter to, 145; notice of the last ten volumes of Walden Edi- tion, 146. New York Times, review of The Maine Woods, 121; review of Some TJnpiiblished Lettees, 139; review of "Pertaining to Thoreau," 139; review of "The PersonaUty of Thoreau," 140; review of The Service, 141 ; H. W. Boynton's review of the &st ten volumes of the Walden Edi- tion, 145; review of the last ten volumes of the Walden Edition, 147. INDEX 191 New York Tribune, 74, 76, 85; George Ripley's review of the Week, 116; John Albee's "Remi- niscences of Emerson," 126; P. G. Hubert, Jr.'s "Thoreau's Con- cord," 135. Nichol, John, 104. Night and Moonlight, 15, 16, 29, 73; Manuscript, 160. Nobbe, Wilhehn, 14, 104. "Noble Lives and Noble Deeds," 132. Noon, 47. " NordamerikanischenLiteratur, Ge- schichte der," 102. North American Review, notice of Walden, 117; Lowell's review of Letters to Vaeiotjs Peesons, 121, 122. "Not unconcerned Wachusett rears his head," 168. "Notes of the Night, and Other Outdoor Sketches," 90. ' " Now chiefly is my natal hour," 166. "Now we are partners in such legal trade," 48. O'Connor, J. V., 123. O'Connor, W. D., 110. Of Friendship, 37; auction prices, 153. " Oft, as I turn me on my pillow o'er," 167. Old and New, 123. "Old Concord: Her Highways and Byways," 102. Old Marlborough Road, The, 49, 168. Omnipresence, 77. "On fields o'er which the reaper's harid has passed," 49. " On Ponhawtasset, since we took our way," 165. "On Ponkawtasset, since, with such dday," 165, note. On the Duty of CrwL Disobedi- ence, 38. On the Sun coming out in the After- noon, 48. "Ontario Educational Association, Rroceedings of the 39th Annual Convention of the," 109. Orphics, 67. Orson, a scholastic and pastoral, 116. Ossoli, Margaret Fuller, 100, 162. Otter, J. L., 130. Our Country, 78. Our Neighbors, 40. "Our New England," 103. "Our Poet-Naturalist," 98. "Our uninquiring corpses lie rruyre low,'' 166. "Outline Sketch of American Liter- ature, An," 91. Outlook, The, "Reminiscences of Thoreau," 138; H. W. Mabie's "Thoreau, a Prophet of Nature," 144. Oxford Point of View, Hugh de Selincourt's article in, 141. P., J. B., review of Autumn, 131. P., T. M., review of Page's "Tho- reau," 140. " Packed in my mind lie all the clothes," 48. Page, H. A. See Japp, A. H. Pahn, J., 14. "Papyrus Leaves," 98. Paradise (to be) Regained, 24, 28, 31, 69. "Park-Street Papers," 74. "Parnassus," 68. Paternoster Review, 130. Patrick, David, 61. Pattee, Fred Lewis, 104, 105. Payne, William Morton, 122. Peabody, Andrew P., 104, 117. Peabody, Elizabeth P., "Esthetic Papers," 70, 153. Peabody Museum of American Archiolog' and Ethnology, 105. Peal of the BeUs, The, 47. Peale, R. S., and J. A. Hill, 60. Penn Monthly, The, 124. Perry, Bliss, 105; "The Editor who was never an Editor," 74. Perry, Jennette Barbour, "Between Books," 137; "Was Thoreau a Lover of Nature?" 143. Persiu^ Flaccus, Avhis, 64. Personal Aims, 60. "Personal Sketches of Recent Au- fhors " 99 "PersonaUty of Thoreau, The," 68, 78, 87; G. H. Sargent's review in Boston Transcript, 140; review in 192 INDEX New York Times, 140; reTiew in Nation, 140. "Persons and Places," 92. "Pertaining to Thoreau," 85; review in New York Times, 139; W. Miller's review in Country Life in America, 140; auction price, 161. Phillips, Wmdett, before the Concord Lyceum, 24, 31, 69. "Philosophy at Concord," 124. Pilgrims, 36, 48, 77. Pindar, Fragments of, 68. Pindar, Translations from, 31, 68. Pines, correspondence on the im- mortality 01, 140. Plains of Nausel, The, 20, 71. Plea for Captain John Brown, A, 24 28, 29, 31, 56, 74. "Ply the oars! away I away I" See River Song. "Poem read at the Annual Dinner of the Class of Eighteen Hundred and Thirty-Seven, February 26, 1874," 111. Poems, collections of, 22, 31, 32, 34- 36, 39, 40, 42-44; hsts of, 22, 31, 34-36, 39, 40, 43, 46-50, 165- 168. Poems and bits of verse contained in Thoreau's prose works exclu- sive of the Journal, a list of the, 165-168. "Poems and Bits of Verse scattered among Thoi^au's Prose Writings exclusive of the Journal, A List of the," 42. Poems of Natdee, 34-36, 64-67, 76-78; review in London DaUy Chronicle, 133; review in Satur- day Review, 134; Le Gallienne's review, 134 ; review in Athenaeum, 135; auction prices, 153. "Poems of Personahty," 106. " Poems of the Weird and Mystical," 170. Poems on Thoreau, 81, 90, 91, 93, 95, 103, 106, 110, 111, 121, 124, 137, 141, 143, 145. "Poete-Naturaliste Am^cain, Un," 141. "Poetry of Thoreau, The," 128. Poet's Delay, 'The, 35. 47, 66, 167. "Poets of Transcendentalism, The," 61, 96. "Points at Issue, and Some Other Points," 91. "Portraits and Biographical Sketch- es of Tweniy American Authors," 105. "Portraits of Thoreau withaBeard," 125. Poverty, 36. Powers, H. N., review of Sanborn's "Thoreau," 126. Powys, John Covpper, 105. "Pray, to what earth does this sweet cold belong," 78. Prayer, 77. See also " Great Ctod, I ask thee for no meaner pdf ; " and My Prayer. Prayer, My, 36, 61, 62. See also "Great God, I ask thee for no meaner pelf;" and Prayer. "Prayers," 23. Preaching of Buddha, The, 68. Primeval Nature, 56. Prinzinger d. J., A., "Henry D. Thoreau, ein amerikanischer Na- turschilderer," 86. PromeOieus Bound of Mschylus, The, 31, 66. "Prose Writers of America, The," 99. Provincetown, 20. Purves, James, 104; review of San- born's "Thoreau," 126. Putnam's Monthly Magazine, 71; review of Walden in, 85, 117. Quarles, Francis, 61.. "Quebec, Transactions of the Lit- erary and EQstorical Society of," 109. Quebec and Montmorenn, 23. R., E. A., "A Summer Ramble to the Hermit-Home of Thoreau," 122. Radical, The, 121. Raleigh, Sir Wai/teh, 40, 41, 115, 116. Raleigh, Sir Walter, lecture on, 115. Raymond, Walter, 106. Reader Magazine, 144. INDEX 193 "Reader's History of American Lit- erature, A," 100. "Recent Rambles," 90. "Recollections of Eminent Men," 112. Redpath, James, "Echoes ot Har- per's Ferry," 74; auctionprice, 153. Remarks at Concord on the Day of the Execution of John Brovm, 74. "Remembrances of Emerson," 90. Rena, S. E., 134. Resistance to Civil Oovemmmt, 70, 71. Respectable Folks, The, 36, 40, 165. Return Journey, The, 70. Return of Spring (from Anacreon), 4$, 168. Revue, La, 141. Revue Philosopliique de la France et de I'Etranger, 143. Rhodora, article in, 144. Richardson, Charles F., 104, 105. Richmond Comity Gazette, 123. Ricketson, Anna and Walton, 79, 105. Ricketson, Daniel, and the Dunshee ambrotypes, xiv-xvii; his pencil sketch of Thoreau, xvii, xviii, 105, 106; letters to, 33; "The Autumn Sheaf," 106; his poem " Walden," 120. "Ricketson, Daniel, and his Friends," xvi-xviii, 79, 105, 106. Ricketson, Walton, xvii, 133; his medallion of Thoreau, xv, 32, 33, 128 ; his bust of Thoreau, xvii, xviii, 106. Rickett, Arthur, 106. Rickoff, Andrew J., 58. Ripley, George, review of the Week, 85, 116. River Scene, A, 35, 168. River Song, 35, 166. Riverside Edition, SI; review in Boston Herald, 131; Dr. Jones's review in Inlander, 132; auction price, 158. Robbins, H. Hayes, 133. Robbins, Reginald C, 106. Roberts, Charles G. D., 12, 106. Roberts, Harry, Prefatory Note to Life and Friendship, 56, 106. Robertson, John M., 106. Rogers, Nathaniel P., 68. Romance, article in, 135. Rowfant Club, 88, 96. Rowse, Samuel W., his crayon por- trait of Thoreau, xiv, xvii, 7, 15, 45, 51, 84, 86, 124. Rumors from an Molian Harp, 35, 61, 62, 66, 166. Russell, Edward Harlow, xv, 45, 137; A Bit of Unpublished Corre- spondence between Henry D. Tho- reau and Isaac T. Heclcer, 73, 74, 86, 106, 142; address on Thoreau, 139. St. Anne, 23. St. Nicholas, 147. "Salmm Brook," 167. Salt, Henry S., 104; editor of Anti- SlAVBRT AND REFORM PaPEHS, 28, 107; ot Poems op Nature, 34, 107; of "Selections from Thoreau," 55, 107; "The Life of Henry David Thoreau," 86, 88, 129, 134, 135; "Literaiy Sketch- es," 106; "Richard Jefferies: A Study," 107; article in Temple Bar, Eclectic Magazine, Library Magazine, and Critic, 128; article on Thoreau's poetry in Art Re- view, 129; review of ANn-SiAV- BBT AND Reform Papers in Lip- pincott's Magazine, 129; "Tho- reau's Gospel of Simplicity "_ in Paternoster Review, 130; article in Vegetarian Review, 134; "Tho- reau Illustrated" in Saturday Re- view, 138; review of "Some Un- published Letters " in Academy, 138 ; " Thoreau and Jefferies," 139 ; "Thoreau and Gilbert White," 139; "Henry David Thoreau and the Humane Study of Natural History," 144; "Thoreau and the Simple Life," 146; review of the Walden Edition, 147. _ Sanborn, Franldin Benjamin, xv, 71,72, 78, 84, 104, 162, 169, 171; "Henry D. Thoreau," 5 note, 78, 81, 86. 87, 126, 127, 131; Fa- miliar Letters, 32, 33, 87; Po- ems OP Nature (edited), 34, 112; The Service (edited), 37; The 194 INDEX PlHST AND LAST^-JOTJBNBrS OF Thobeatt, 38, 108; Sir Walter Raleigh (edited), 40, 41, 108; Unpublished Poems bt Bry- ant AND Thorbatt (edited), 60; "The Personality of Thoreau," 68, 78, 87, 140; his weekly, the Commonwealth, 67, 69, 76, 82; "Thoreau's Poeins of Nature" (magazine article), 77, 132; "Tho- reau's Unpublished Poetiy," 77, 125; in "Fifth Year Book" of the Bibliophile Society, 79, 108; his sonnet on Thoreau, 81, 120 (bis) ; his publication of Channing's "Thoreau, the Poet-Naturalist" in the Commonwealth, 82; his edition of the same, 82; Chan- ning's "Poems of Sixty-five Years " (edited)', 95; "Memoirs of John Brown," 107; in "Essays from 'The Critic,'" 107; "The Life and Letters of John Brown," 107; "Baljih Waldo Emerson" (Bea- con Biographies), 107; "The Per- sonality of Einerson," 107; "New Hampshire Biography and Auto- biography," 107; "John Brown and his Friends," "107; "A. Bronson Alcott: His Life and Philosophy" (with William T. Harris), 108; editorial in regard to reprinting certain of Thoreau's writings in the Commonwealth, 120; article in the Harvard Re- gister, 125; "Emerson and his Friends in Concord " in New England Magazine, 129; on some of Thoreau's poems, 130; on Thoreau's reading, 130; the "Breakfast Table" column in the Boston Daily Advertiser, 130, 131; "The Emerson-Thoreau Correspondence," 131; review of AtJTUMN in the Boston Daily Ad- vertiser, 131; "Thoreau and his EngUsh Friend Thomas Chol- mondeley," 131; correspondence about the Thoreau fami ly in Bos- ton Daily Advertiser, 132; "Tho- reau's Poems of Nature" in Scrib- ner's Magazine, 132; "Thoreau and the Walden Woods" in Bos- ton Herald, 134; addresses at the Greenacre School, 134, 136; let- ters to Springfield Republican, 135, 137, 138, 140-143, 146; arti- cle on "The Two Thoreaus" in Independent, 135; "Thoreau and Emerson" in the Forum, 136; notice of Some Unpublished Letters, 138; "Ellery Charming in New Hampshire," 140; on T. W. Higginson's selections from Emerson's journal concerning Channing and Thoreau, 141 ; re- view of Mr. Cooke's book on the Dial, 143; "A Concord Note- Book," 145; "Ellery Channing and his Table-Talk," 145; "Tho- reau and EUeiy Channing," 145 ; "The Women of Concord," 145; on the essay on Raleigh, the Wal- den Edition, and "The First and Last Journeys of Thoreau," 146; review of Walden Edition in the Dial, 146. Sanborn, Miss Sarah E., 4, 157. Sargent, Epes, 59. Sargfent, George H., 140. Sartain, John, and his Union Maga- zine, 70. Saturday Review, "An American Rousseau," 121 ; "A Week on the Concord," 128; review of Poems OP Nature, 134 ; Mr. Salt's "Tho- reau Blustrated," 138. Saville, S. E., 140. Scenery of Quebec, The, and the River St. Lawrence, 23. Schiller, Thoreau and, 142. Schmz, Albert, 143. Scribner's Magazine, 77, 171; San- bom's article on "Thoreau's Poems of Nature," 77, 132; H. C, Merwin's "Books about Nature," 143. Scribner's Monthly, 77. Scudder, Horace E., Litroductory Notes to Riverside Edition, 51, 108; "American Prose," 58, 108; biographical sketch of Thoreau, 108. Sea and the Desert, The, 20. Sears, Lorenzo, 108. Sedgwick, A. G., 126. INDEX 195 Seed-Tiine, A. W. Hosmer's article in, 134. "Selections from Thoreau," 55; W. Lewin's review in Academy, 133. Selincourt, Hugh de, 141. Service, The, S7, 47; notice in New York Evening Post, 141; review in Boston Transcript, 141 ; Dr. Jones's review in Detroit Journal, 141 ; review in New York Times, 141 ; review in the Nation, 141 ; auction prices, 153. Service, The: Qvalities of the Re- cruit, 31, 78. Shakespeare, 61. Sharp, Wilham, 104, 108. "Shelburne Essays," 104, 170. Shipwreck, The, 20, 56, 71. "Short History of American Liter- ature, A," 93. "Short History of America's Liter- ature, A," 110. "Short History of England's and America's Literature, A," 109. "Short Studies of American Au- thors," 100. Shrike, The, 47. Sic Vita, 35, 64, 167. Sidney, Margaret, 102. Sims, rendition of, 70. "Since that first 'Away! away!'" See River Song. Sm Waiter Raleigh, 40, 4U 108 ; Mr. Sanborn in Springfield Re- publican on, 146. Slavery in Massachtnetts, 23, 31, 70. Smith, Frederick M., 104, 139. Smith, Sidney L., 82. Smoke, 35, 58, 60, 61, 87, 167. Smoke in Winter, 59, 168. Snyder, Helena Adell, 87. "Solitary Summer, The," 91. Solitude, 60. Solitude (verse), 40. "Solitudes of Nature and of Man, The," 90. " Some twnvMwms Hide rill," 35, 165. Some Unpublished Lettees of Henht D. and Sophia. E. Tho- reau, xiv, 36, 37, 84, 99; notice by Mr. Sanborn in Springfield Repubhcan, 138; review by Mr. Salt in Academy, 138; review in New York Times, 139; auction prices, 153, 154. " Sometimes I hear the veery's clari- on," 168. "Songs and Saunterings by a Poet and NaturaUst," 93. "Songs of the Press," 103. "Sonnets and Canzonets," 90. Sonnets on Thoreau, 81, 103, 120 (bis), 141. SoiiPs Season, The, 77. Sounds, 55, 58, 69. Sounds at Evening, 60. Southbridge Journal, 134. Speaker, The, review of Salt's Life of Thoreau and of Aoti-Siavubt AND Reform Papers, 129. "Specimen Days & Collect," 112. Spectator, The, Japp's reply to Stevenson in, 124; review of San- bom's "Thoreau," 127; Japp's review of Walden and Summer, 127; Japp's review of Salt's Life of Thoreau, 129. Spofford, Ainsworth R., and Charles Gibbon, "The Library of Choice Literature and Encyclopaedia of Universal Authorship," 60. Spring beside Walden, 59. Springfield Republican, report of Mr. Blake's remarks and read- ings at the Concord School of Philosophy, 124; Annie J. Ward on "Transcendental Wild Oats," 134 ; Mr. Sanborn's letters to, 135, 137, 138, 140-143; John Albee's review of Sanborn's edition of Channing's "Thoreau," 143. Stage-coach Views, 20, 71. Stanley, Hiram M., 108; "Thoreau as a Prose Writer," 135. Stanzas: "Away! away! away! away!" 35, 166. Stanzas: "Nature doth have her dawn each day,'' 35, 47, 61,64, 167. Stanzas written at Walden: "When Winter fringes every bough," 36, 46, 168. Staten Island, 39. Stearns, Frank Preston, 109. "Stearns, George Luther, The Life and Public Services of," 109. 196 INDEX Stedman, Arthiir, 109. Stedman, Edmund Clarence, "An American Anthology," 61. Stedman, Edmund Clarence, and EUen Mackay Hutchinson, "A Library of American Literature," 59, 109. Stevenson, A., 109. Stevenson, Robert Louis, 104, 109; "Henry David Thoreau: His Character and Opinions," 124. Stewart, George, Jr., "Thoreau: the Hermit of Walden," 87, 109; "Evenings in the Library: No. 2, Emerson," 123; article in Cana- dian Magazine, 132. "Stories of Authors' Loves," 102. "Story of the Innumerable Com- pany, The, and Other Sketches," 102. Stray Fowl, To a, 36. "Studies in History and Letters," 100. Style in Writing, 60. Succession of Forest Trees, The, 15, 16, 74, 75. Succession of Forest Trees, The, Wild Apples, and Sounds, 55. "Such waters do the gods distill," 166. SuMMBH, S6, 27, 51, 52, 73; extracts from, 62; Sara A. Underwood's review in the Index, 127; review in Literary World, 127; review in Nation, 127; Walter Lewin's re- view in Academy, 127; Japp's review in Spectator, 127; auction prices, 154. Summer Rain, The, 35, 66, 167. _ "Summer Ramble to the Hermit- Home of Thoreau, A," 122. Sumner, Charles, 161. Sun coming ovi in the Afternoon, On the, 48. "Sunday at Concord," 128. Sunday Thoughts, 56. Swayne, Josephine Latham, 109. Swift, Lindsay, 109. "Syllabus of a Course of Six Lec- tures on Representative American Writers," 105. Sympathy: "Lately, alas, I knew a gentle boy," 35, 47, 68, 64, 166. "'T wasihirty years a^o,'' 50. " 'T wiU soon appear if we but look," 47. TaU Ambrosia, 49. Tappan, Eva March, 109, 110. " Tdl me, ye wise ones, if ye can," 48. Temple Bar, Mr. Salt's article in, 128. "Text from Thoreau, A," 110. "Thanksgiving Pilgrimage to Tho- reau, A," 142. "That Phaetm of our day," 166. Thatcher, George A., 159. Thaw, The, 36, 47, 49, 168. " The chickadee," 50. "The deeds of king and meanest hedger," 47. " The Earth," i8. " The eastern mail comes lurribering in," 47. See also "The western wind came lumbering in." " The Good how can we trust 9 " 167. " The great Friend," 39. "The loudest sound that burdens here the breeze," 46. " The man of wUd habits^' 49. " The needles of the pike" 4S, 168. " The respectable folks," 36, 40, 165. " The river sweUeth more and more." See River Scene, A. "The sluggish smoke curls up from some deep dell." See Smoke in Winter. "The threadbare trees so poor and thin," 40. " The waves slowly beat," 166. " The western wind came lumbering in" 166. See also " The eastern mail comes lumbering in." " The willows droop," 40. "Then idle Time ran gadding by," 166. • " Then spend an age in whetlmg thy desire," 166. " They who prepare my evening meal below," 48. Thide, OUvia, 136. "This is my Camac, whose un- measured dome," 4^, 168. ' ' Thoreau," poem by Florence Kiper, 145. "Thoreau," poem by Muriel Wil- ton, 124. INDEX 197 "Thoreau," quatrain by Charlotte Becker, 143. "Thoreau," sonnet by James Buck- ham, 141. Thoreau, Cynthia Dunbar, Tho- reau's mother, 81, 97, 132-134. "Thoreau, Henry D.," by F. B. Sanborn, 6 note, 78, 81, 86, 87; A. G. Sedgwick's review in the Nation, 126; T. A. Janvier's re- view in the American, 126 ; review in the Literary World, 126; H. N. Powers's review in the Dial, 126; Curtis's review in Harper's Monthly; 126; James Purves's review in the Academy, 126; Theodore Watts's review in the Athenaeum, 126; review in the Spectator, 127; review in the Truth Seeker, 131. "Thoreau, Henry D. : A Little Book of Nature Themes," 57. "Thoreau, Hemy D., ein amerikan- ischer Naturschilderer," 86. "Thoreau, Hennr David, Life of." See "Life of Henry David Tho- reau." Thoreau, John, grandfather of H. D. T., his house, 131. Thoreau, John, Jr., brother of H. D. T., 115. Thoreau, Peter, 134. Thoreau, Sophia E., 5, 15, 17, 20, 24, 34, 45, 84, 133, 138; corre- spondence vdth Daniel Ricketson on the ambrotype, xvi, xvii. "Thoreau: A Ghmpse," 84, 128. "Thoreau, a Prophet of Nature," 144. "Thoreau and German Romanti- cism," 146. "Thoreau and Gilbert White," 139 "Thoreau and his Books," 117. "Thoreau and his Critics," 140. "Thoreau and his English Friend, Thomas Chohnondeley," 73, 131. "Thoreau and his Teaching," 138. "Thoreau and Jefferies," 139. "Thoreau and New England Tran- scendentalism," 123. "Thoreau and the Simple Life," "Thoreau and the Walden Woods," 134. "Thoreau and Wilson Flagg," 123. "Thoreau as a Diarist," 144; re- viewed in Current Literature, 145. "Thoreau as a Humorist," 139. "Thoreau, Flagg, and Burroughs." See W. G. Barton. "Thoreau: Hermit and Thinker," 123. "Thoreau: EGs Home, Friends, and Books," 86 ; review in the Nation, 142; review in the Critic, 142; review in the Lidependent, 142; review in the Dial, 143. "Thoreau: His Life and Anns," 84; review in Athensetun, 123 ; Thom- as Hughes's review in Academy, 123; review in New Age, 140. "Thoreau in Vermont in 1856," 79, 147. "Thoreau of Walden," 103. " Thpreau : The Hermit of Walden," 87, 109. "Thoreau, the Poet-Naturalist," 81, 8H; reviews of first edition, 122; reviews of Sanborn's edition, 142, 143. "Thoreau, the Poet-Philosopher," 124. "Thoreau's Attitude toward Na- ture," 138. "Thoreau's, H. D., Book," 116. "Thoreau's Bright World," 146. "Thoreau's Concord," 135. "Thoreau's Demand upon Nature," 110. "Thoreau's Example," 127. "Thoreau's Flute," 81, 120. "Thoreau's Gospel of Simplidfy," 130. "Thoreau's Grave, At," 170. "Thoreau's Guide, The Death of," 144. "Thoreau's Hermitage," 123. "Thoreau's Incarceration," 138. "Thoreau's Inheritance," 131. Thoreau's Journal, in Atlantic Monthly, 74; review of, 145. "Thoreau's Joy in Nature," 170. "Thoreau's Luxury," 141. "Thoreau's, Henry, Mother," 81, 126. 198 INDEX "Thoreau's Philosophy of Life," by Helena AdeU Snyder, 87. "Thoreau's Philosophy of Life," by Louis E«ne Kaufman, 139. "Thoreau's Pity and Humour," 124. "Thoreau's Poems of Nature," 77. "Thoreau's Portrait — By Him- self " 125. "Thoreau's Thoughts," 55. "Thoreau's Uncle Peter," 134. "Thoreau's Unpaid Occupations," 136. "Thoreau's Unpublished Poetry," 77, 125. "Thoreau's Voice," 134. "Thoreau's Wildness," 125. " Thou driping meadow of the air," 49. "Thou dusky spirit of the wood." See Crow, The. " Thorn unconverted Saint," 39. " Though all the Fates should prove unkind," 35, 76, 166. Threadbare Trees, The, 40. "Three Letters," 81. " Thus, perchance, the Indian hunt- er." See Boat Song. To a Marsh Ha/wh in Spring, 40, 49. To a Stray Fowl, 36, 67. To my Brother, 35, 78. To the Maiden in the East, 35, 66, 165. To the Mountains, 39. "To-day- I climbed a handsome rounded hill," 49. Tolman, Benjamin, 75. Torrey, Bradford, 104; Introduc- tion to Waiden, 11, 12, 110; Thoreau's Joubnal (edited), 44, 60, 110; "ATextfromThoreau," 110; "Thoreau," 110, 135; "Tho- reau's Demand upon Nature," 110 ; "Writers that are Quotable," 138 ; " Thoreau's Attitude towards Nature," 138; "Thoreau as a Diarist," 144 ; review of his " Tho- reau as a Diarist," 146. "Town and Rural Humbugs," 85, 117, 118. Townsend, Harriet A., 57, 110. "Transcendental Wild Oats," 134. Translations, Walden, 14 ; Winter, 28. Translations, Thoreau's, 43, 68. Translations from Pindar. See Pindar. Transportation and Planting of Seed, 68. Traubel, Horace, 110; review of Sanborn's edition of Channing's "Thoreau," 143. "Traveller, this is no prison," 39. Travelling, 76. Trent, William P., 110, 111. Trevor, John, 131. Triggs, Oscar Lovell, 111. True Freedom, 40. True Kindness: "True kindness is a pure divine affinity," 35, 166. " True, our converse a stranger is to speech," 46. Truth Seeker, The, "Henry D. Thoreau's Works," 130; review of Sanborn's "Thoreau," 131; "An Ideal for Freethinkers," 131; "Henry D. Thoreau," 136; "Memories of Thoreau," 136; obituary of C. H. Greene, 138. Tryon, Kate, "A Day Afield," 133; "Of High Places about the His- toric Town of Concord," 134; "Thoreau's Hill," 136. Tuckerman, Henry T., 111. "Two Famous Bachelors and their Love-Stories," 142. "Two Thoreaus, The," 135 (his). " Two years and twenty now have flown," 47. Underwood, Francis H., 74, 104; "Handbook of Enghsh Litera- ture: American Authors," 58, 111; "The Builders of American Lit- erature," 111; article in Good Words, 128. Union Magazine, The, 70. Unitarian, Dr. Jones's "Thoreau: A Glimpse," 128; H. Hayes Rob- bins's article on Concord, 133. Unity,RobertCollyer'sarticlein,123. UNPUBLiaHED Lettebs. See Some UNPtTBLISHED LETTERS, etC. Unptjblished Poems by Bktant AND Thoreau, 50. INDEX 199 "Until at length the north winds blow," 40. " Up this pleasant stream let 's row," 47. " Upon the bank at early daion," 39. Upon, the Beach, 69. "upon the lofty elm tree sprays." See Vireo, The. "Vagabond in Literature, The," 106. Vassar Miscellany, 131. Vegetarian Review, 134. Verlag Concord, 14, 28. " Vermont, Thoreau in, in 1856," 79, 147. Vermont Botanical Club, Bulletin No. 3, 79, 147. Village Festival, A, 60. Vincent, Leon H., 111. Vireo, The, 35, 77, 168. Virgin, The, 40. Vose, Henry, 79, 115. "Vox Clamantis in Deserto," 137. W., C. K., report of Thoreau's Fra- ternity Lecture, 119. W., K. M., "Thoreau and his Teaching," 138. W., S. F., review of Salt's Life of Thoreau, 134. "Wait not till I invite thee, but ob- serve," 47. "Wait not till slaves pronounce the word," 40. Wachusett, 48. Wakeman, Stephen H., 5, 46, 123. Walden, OB Life in the Woods, 2, 5, 8-U, 45, 49, 67, 161, 170; selections from, 56-62; review in Christian Register, 117; A. P. Peabody's notice in North Ameri- can Review, 117; C. F. Briggs's "A Yankee Diogenes," 85, 117; review in Harvard Magazine, 117 ; "Town and Rural Humbugs," 117; Marian Evans's review of, 117; notice of 1862 edition in The Monitor, 120; Japp's review in Spectator, 127; Dr. Jones's re- view of Hohday Edition, 137; auction prices, 154, 155; verse contained in, 167. Walden: "True, our converse a stranger is to speech," 46. "Walden," by Daniel Ricketson, 120. "Walden," by John A. Dorgan, 121. "Walden," by S. Ripley Bartlett. 120. "Walden," poem in Boston Tran- script, 137. Walden Edition, 5S; H. W. Boyn- ton's review in New York Times, 145 ; Mr. Salt's review in Humane Review, 146; notice of last ten volumes in New York Evening Post, 146; notice of last ten vol- umes in Nation, 146; review in Chicago Evening Post, 146; Mr. Sanborn in Springfield Republi- can on, 146; Mr. Sanborn's re- view in Dial, 146; notice in Lit- terarisches Echo, 146; review in Boston Transcript, 146 ; review of the last ten volumes in New York Times, 147; review of final ten volumes in Chicago Evening Post, 147; Mr. Salt's review in Fort- nightly, 147. Walden hermitage, 9, 13, 84, 90, 124. Walden Pond, 11. " Walden Pond, A Visit to," 133. "Walden Pond," poem by Emma Mortimer Babson, 121. Walden Pond (selection), 58. Walden Pond in Winter, 61. "Walden Woods, Thoreau and the," 134. Walk to WachuseU, A, 15, 16, 69. Walking, 15, 16, 29, 56, 60, 62, 7S. "Walking: A Fme Art," 62. Walls of Quebec, The, 23. Ward, Annie J., 134. Warner, Charles Dudley, 60. Warren, Ina Russelle, 104, 133. "Was Thoreau a Lover of Nature ? " 143. Wasson, D. A., 120. Waterman, Henry, 143. Watkins, Thomas Coke, editor of " A Little Book of Nature Themes," 57, 111. Watson, Amelia M., 21. Watts-Dunton, Theodore, 14, 111; review of Eaklt Spbing in Mas- 200 INDEX BACHtrSBTTS and Sanborn's " Tho- reau," 126. Waylen, Hector, 133. " We pronounce thee happy. Cicada " (from Anacreon), 4^, 168. " We two that planets erst had been," 47. " We walk in Nature stUl alone," 40. Week on the Concord and Mbe- HIMACK RlVBES, A, S-8, 10, 39- 41, 45-49, 64-68, 76, 99, 100, 137, 159; selections from, 56, 57; Rip- ley's review of, 85, 116 ; notice in Godey's Lady's Book, 116 ; review in Athenaeum, 116; Lowell's re- view of, 116; "A Week on the Concord" in Saturday Review, 128; auction prices, 156, 157; poems and bits of verse contained in, 165-167; emendations in sec- ond edition, 169, 170. Weiss, John, article on Thoreau, 85, 121; "Poem read at the Annual Dinner of the Class of Eighteen Hundred and Thirty-Seven, Feb- ruary 26, 1874," 111. Welcome, Japp's article in, 128. Wellfleet Oysterman, The, 20, 56, 59, 73. Welsh, Alfred H., 104, 111. Wendell, Barrett, 104, 112. Westminster Review, review of Walden, 117, 118. Westward, Ho I 48. What he Lived for, 62. " What is it gilds the trees and clouds," 48. "What 'sthe railroad tome?" 167. " When Winter fringes every bough." See Stanzas written at Walden. " Wheregleaming fieldsof haze," 166. "Where I have been," 48. Where I Lived and What I Lived for, 56, 62. " Where Thoreau Worked and Wan- dered," 141. "Where'er thou saU'st who sailed with me," 165. Whipple, Edwin P., 104, 112; "Some Recollections of Ralph Waldo Emerson," 126. "White, Gilbert, Thoreauand," 139. Whiteing, Richard, 14, 112. Whitman, Walt, on Thoreau, 110, 112. "Whitman, Walt, a Life of," 92. "Whitman, Walt: His Life and Work," 105. "Whitman, Walt, in Camden, With," 110. "Whitman's Ideal Democracy, and Other Writings," 170. Whittier, John Greenleaf, 116, 154. "Who sleeps by day and walks by night," 165, Wild Apples, 15, 16, 55, 59, 7S; manuscript, 159. WUds of the Penobscot, The, 70. Williams, Henry, sketch of Thoreau, 85, 112. Wilson, Rufus Rockwell, 112. Winter, S7, ^8, 51, 52, 73; extracts from, 62; review in Literary World, 128; auction prices, 157. Winter and Spring Scene, A, 40. Winter Days, 73. Winter Memories: "Within the cir- cuit of this plodding life," 35, 48, 167. Winter Scene, A, 36, 40. Winter Walk, A, 15, 16, 29, 59, 67, 68, 78. " With frontier strength ye stand your ground." See Mountains. "With her calm, inquiring eyes," 40. "With Walt Wiiitman in Camden," 110. "WiMn the circuit of this plodding life." See Winter Memories. "Without inlet it lies," 49. Wolfe, Theodore P., 104, 112. "Women of Concord, The," 145. Wood, James B., 140. Woodberry, George Edward, 113. Woodbury, Charles J., 113, 129. "Woods and By-Ways of New Eng- land, The," 98. "Woof of the sun, ethereal gauze." See Haze. Worcester, xiii, xv ; reminiscences of Thoreau and others in, 137. Worcester Evening Gazette, 137. "Worcester Literary Days, Early,'' 135. Worcester Spy, review of Channing's "Thoreau," 128. INDEX 201 Worcester Telegram, 135. Wcyrk and Pay, 60. Wright, Margaret B., 113, 134. "Writers that are Quotable," 138. Yale Literary Magazine, review of Eaklt Spring m Massachtj- SEITS, 125. "Yankee Diogenes, A," 85, 117. Yankee in Canada, A, 16, ^S; manu- script, 159. Yankee m Canada, A, with Anti- Slavert and Retobm Papers, SS-24, 65, 68-72, 74; auction prices, 158. " Ye do commend me to all virtue ever," 49. " Ye princes, keep your realms," 40. " Yet let us thank the purblind race," 49. Youth's Companion, Senator Hoar's "A Boy Sixty Years Ago," 137. €f)e JlliijerjSi&e ^tt^^ CamfiriDge A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF HENRY DAVID THOREAU r ALLEN