Henry David Thoreau: American Naturalist, Writer, and TranscendentalistThe Rosen Publishing Group, Inc, 2006 M01 15 - 112 páginas Best known for fleeing civilization to live in a cabin on Walden Pond, Thoreau was part of an exciting time in American philosophy. He was a protégé of famous poet Ralph Waldo Emerson, and his essay on civil disobedience influenced leaders such as Gandhi and Martin Luther King Jr. The book covers his childhood, education, and his own famous act of civil disobedience. |
Contenido
CONTENTS | 6 |
FOREFATHERS | 14 |
BUILDING A LIFE IN OPPOSITION | 30 |
EARLY WORKS | 48 |
FINDING HIS OWN WAY | 65 |
THOREAUS LEGACY | 84 |
Términos y frases comunes
abolitionist Alcott American Transcendentalism beauty began belief Boston brother Cape Cod Captain John Brown Civil Disobedience Civil Government civil rights movement Coleridge Concord Academy Concord and Merrimack Concord Lyceum Concord River created equal Cynthia Thoreau Days of Henry Dial Ellery Channing friendship gatherings Harvard College Hedge Club Henry and John Henry David Thoreau Henry Thoreau Henry's higher law humankind ideas individual inspired intellectual John Thoreau Kant land later lecture Library Luther King Jr Maine Woods Margaret Fuller Martin Luther King Massachusetts Merrimack Rivers Mohandas Gandhi moose Mount Katahdin natural world NATURALIST neighbor nineteenth century nonviolent philosophy Plea for Captain poll tax published pursuit Ralph Waldo Emerson Resistance to Civil Retrieved February Retrieved January 26 seasons self-reliance slavery society summer Thatcher thinkers Thomas Carlyle Thoreau found Thoreau was greatly thoughts town of Concord traditions transcendentalist trip U.S. government Unitarian Church Walden Pond Walter Harding Wikipedia writer York Young Man Thoreau