Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- List of Abbreviations
- Introduction
- Part I Thoreau’s Human Ecology
- Part II Self-Culture and Ecological Survivorship in Walden and Reform Papers
- Part III History and Ecological Succession in Thoreau’s Travel Narratives
- Part IV America’s Destiny and Ecological Succession
- Works Cited
- Index
5 - Succession in A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 May 2021
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- List of Abbreviations
- Introduction
- Part I Thoreau’s Human Ecology
- Part II Self-Culture and Ecological Survivorship in Walden and Reform Papers
- Part III History and Ecological Succession in Thoreau’s Travel Narratives
- Part IV America’s Destiny and Ecological Succession
- Works Cited
- Index
Summary
IN HIS EARLIEST “NATURE” ESSAY, “A Natural History of Massachusetts,” Thoreau critiques a series of government reports on the plants and animals of Massachusetts and gives the authors of the reports faint praise. But despite the dryness of their prose, he credits them with at least beginning the study of Massachusetts's flora and fauna: “We will not complain of the pioneer, if he raises no flowers with his first crop” (Exc 27). However, the goal of the pioneer scientist, he says, should be more “direct intercourse and sympathy” with nature in order to “possess a more perfect Indian wisdom” (28). Thoreau thus early sees the study of nature as an ongoing process, as is the study of human culture: “The natural history of man himself is still being gradually written” (27).
Prologue: Natural and Human History in “A Walk to Wachusett”
This progressive theory of both natural and human history appears in one of Thoreau's other early nature excursion essays. In “A Walk to Wachusett” his walk westward takes him and his companion through small villages that remind him of pioneer settlements. A small, unnamed village near the town of Sterling has “already a certain western look”; it has “a smell of pines and roar of water, recently confined by dams” (Exc 36). The village, however, seems not to have tamed the wilderness but rather to have made it seem wilder:
When the first inroad has been made, a few acres leveled, and a few houses erected, the forest looks wilder than ever. Left to herself, nature is always more or less civilized, and delights in a certain refinement; but where the axe has encroached upon the edge of the forest, the dead and unsightly limbs of the pine, which she had concealed with green banks of verdure, are exposed to sight. (Exc 36)
This passage reflects Thoreau's youthful (and sometimes annoying) love of paradox, but it also suggests that the essay is about human history as well as about nature. As Linck Johnson points out, in one of the manuscripts of the essay, Thoreau wrote “though a ‘Journey of a Day,’ we meant that it should be a ‘Picture of Human Life’” (Historical Introduction 445).
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Civilizing ThoreauHuman Ecology and the Emerging Social Sciences in the Major Works, pp. 99 - 117Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2016