Showing posts with label Amos Bronson Alcott. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Amos Bronson Alcott. Show all posts

Monday, October 9, 2023

After Walden


Henry David Thoreau left Walden, but in a way you carry that experience around with you. He stayed with the Emerson family while Waldo traveled to Europe to do lectures. Such an odd thing to step in and be the male role model and leader in another family temporarily, but it makes sense in a way.

We know what happened to Thoreau during this period because he wrote letters to Emerson.

Sophia Foord (1802-1885) proposed marriage to Henry. A 45 year old women who taught Emerson's children for a year, when Henry was 30. She had lived with the Alcott's. Henry declined the offer. She sent him semi-incoherent letters and saw herself as his soulmate, they would be united in heaven.

Amos Bronson Alcott was hired to build a structure, maybe thought to be a writers place, but it was too ramshackled. It's speculated that it was a way to give Alcott and Thoreau money for Emerson. A quixotic project they seemed to work on for a while that never quite came off. 

The Walden home was moved, and it was almost a new home until the gardener fought with his wife and left, and the rebuild languished. Then it was moved again and then later scrapped for parts, and you could say some boards still exist in a barn in the area.

The railroad sparks kept setting fire to Emerson's land, at Walden and by his home. They fire burned woods would eventually be clear cut, and Thoreau's Walden would be gone.

Emerson's (second) wife Lidian got sick. Emerson was worried but took a side trip to Paris in time for the 1848 revolution. Meanwhile Margaret Fuller was writing about the revolutions in Rome. Emerson wanted to rescue her, but she was married and with child. Lidian recovered, and resumed writing letters abroad to Emerson. With such an intimate relationship, one wonders what it was like for Lidian and Henry. 

We have no information about Thoreau's sexual life, was he gay or bi or asexual? Was sexuality so cut off in these times? As a naturalist, he saw it all as natural, he wrote some things Walt Whitman would approve of in his journal. But the trail goes dead and we just don't know.

Friday, June 23, 2023

Amos Bronson Alcott


Amos Bronson Alcott (1799-1888) was the father of the author of Little Women, Louisa May Alcott. He was an educator but lost students when it came out he was honest about sex. He went to England and was fairly popular there, two disciples came back from England to Concord. Around that time Alcott was refusing to pay taxes based on principles, and was waiting for the jailer to come back when someone paid his taxes. This was a principled stand at not paying taxes. I think it was about slavery. So I wonder if Thoreau leaned his civil disobedience a little from him.

I have a problem where I read about other people and I want to put down my biography of Thoreau and read one about Alcott. I don't know if it's attention deficit, feels sort of unique to the advent of the information age. I'm curious about so many things, but reading a big biography is quite time consuming and maybe I want more instant gratification to my questions. I'm really fascinated by his veganism.