In her affectionate meander through the life of Henry David Thoreau, Canadian writer Humphreys imagines moments revealing his inner thoughts and feelings.
The approach here is straightforward yet lyric. Using brief episodes, from a paragraph to a few pages, Humphreys carefully follows the timeline of events from Henry’s first sight of Walden Pond as a 5-year-old to his death at 44. While she covers what might be considered historically significant events—Henry’s two years on Walden Pond, the publications of his books, his interactions with other famous figures of the era such as Emerson, Darwin, and John Brown—the restrained tone matches the seemingly unremarkable simplicity of the life recorded in Henry’s journal. What matters to him are always the small moments: a bird singing, a buttercup blooming unexpectedly, a conversation. Henry’s family looms large, “a club who believed in the same tenets.” He and his three siblings are all close to each other and their parents. Progressive abolitionists, they share an indifference to convention and never fail to support each other. When Henry announces at 16 that he wants to build a boat, the rest of the family pitches in to help. And it’s with John, his brother, that Henry takes his trip down the Concord and Merrimack Rivers. The Thoreaus’ happiness would be too idyllic to believe except for the physical fragility, illnesses, and early deaths that dogged them. Friendship is a more complicated issue for Henry. He values his friends but finds their presence, even Emerson’s, annoying. Romance is more an idea than a reality to him. Thoreau’s real passions are “to remain in the moment” and his “experiences in everyday nature.” He notes the publication of Walden in his journal as if it’s of no more importance than the ripening of the elderberries.
An accessible introduction to Thoreau, whose enthusiasts will find much to delight here.