Page:Henry D. Thoreau.djvu/343

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INDEX.
323

INDEX. 323 with Thoreau, 196; extract from diary, 198, 199; intro duces John Brown to Thoreau, 199; letter to Thoreau, 197. Sanborn, T. P., his "Endym- ion" quoted, 260. Sartain, John, 232. " Service, The," 172. Sewall, Ellen, 163. " Shay," a one-horse, 131-133. Slave, fugitive, 195. Staten Island, 89, 92, 305. Sunday prospect, 152. Sunday walkers, 85. TACITUS, quoted, 64. Teufelsdrbckh, 210. Thoreau family, 4, 5, 27-31. Thoreau, Helen, 59-61. Thoreau, Henry, his ancestry, 1-10 ; born in Concord, 12 ; his mother, 8, 24 ; his father, 25 ; as a pencil-maker, 37 ; first dwelling-place, 45 ; at the Con cord Academy, 46 ; enters Har vard College, 46 ; at Chelms- /ord, 49 ; his childish stoicism, 50 ; his graduation, 51 ; as school teacher, 52 ; a benefi ciary of Harvard College, 53, 54; his certificate from Dr. Ripley, 57, 58 ; from Emerson, 59 ; be ginning of acquaintance with Emerson, 59 ; his " Sic Vita " 60 ; Quincy s certificate, 61 ; a Transcendentalist, 124; first essays in authorship, 149, 153 ; description of a visit to Fair- haven Cliffs, 153, 154; his early poems, 164-167 ; his first lecture, 168 ; his " Walk to Wa- chusett," 169 ; his earliest com panion, 175; his friendship with Ellery Channing, 178-183; his praise of Alcott, 186; goes to Alcott s conversations, 18" ; visits Chappaqua and Walt Whitman, 188 ; his burial place, 189; his relation with Emerson, 189, 190 ; reads his " Week to Alcott, 192 ; de signs a lodge for Emerson, 194 ; his acquaintance with San- born, 195 ; at Walden, 201 ; his reasons for going to Walden, 212; edits "The Week," 212; talks with W. H. Channing and Greeley, 216 : his essay on Car- lyle, 218-225; his paper on " Ktaadn and the " Maine Woods," 225 ; his " Week," 230 ; asks Greeley for a loan, 235 ; his " Canada," and " Cape Cod," 235, 236 ; Greeley asks him to become a tutor, 241; his out-door life, 242 ; collects specimens for A^assiz, 243, 245 ; his visits to Maine, 245, 248 ; as a naturalist, 249-252 ; a night on Mount Washington, 254 ; his Monadnoc trip, 256- 257 ; his description of a Con cord heifer, 258, 259 ; his apos trophe to the "Queen of Night," 259: his face, 199, 261,266; de scribed by Channing, 262 ; by Ricketson, 263-266; travels on. Cape Cod, 264 : domestic char- racter, 267 , dances, 268 ; sings " Tom Bowline, 1 269 ; his so cial traits, 270-273 ; as author and lecturer, 274-277 ; his man ual labor, 278 ; fashion of his garments, 279 ; income from authorship, 280 ; lives in Emer son s household, 281 ; his para ble, 285 : his habit of versifica tion, 286 ; his reading, 286 ; as naturalist, 288-291 ; his theory of labor and leisure, 288 ; hia political philosophy, 292 : eraa in his life, 297: his aim in writing, 298 ; his religion, 299 ; his business in life, 300 ; his method in writing, 304 ; his sunset walks, 307 ; his aversion to society, 307 ; his decline and death, 313-316; his funeral, 317. Thoreau, John, the father, 25, Thoreau, John, the brother, 17 178. Thoreau, John, the Jerseyma 1, 5-7, 37. Thoreau, Maria, 1-8. Thoreau, Sophia, 29, 38, 44, 2* 282, 301, 305, 310, 315 : lettr from, 176, 268, 306, 310-31 letters to, 189, 216, 281.