Solid Seasons
The Friendship of Henry David Thoreau and Ralph Waldo Emerson
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Publication
2019 - Counterpoint Press
Language
English
Word Count
92,000 words, Guess
Page Count
368 pages
Identifiers
- ISBN-139781640091313
- ISBN-101640091319
- Library of Congress Control Number2018045435
- OCLC Control Number1049797764
- Better World Books9781640091313
and 2 more
- Better World BooksP9-CPT-178
- Open LibraryOL28912484M
Classifications
- LCCPS3053.C83 2019
- LCCPS3053 .C83 2019
Description
A thoughtfully researched, movingly presented dual-biography of two iconic American writers, each trying to find the ideal friend with whom they could share their journey through our imperfect world. Any biography that concentrates on either Henry David Thoreau or Ralph Waldo Emerson tends to diminish the other figure, but in Solid Seasons both men remain central and equal. Through several decades of writing, friendship remained a primary theme for them both. Collecting extracts from the letters and journals of both men, as well as words written about them by their contemporaries, Jeffrey S. Cramer beautifully illustrates the full nature of their twenty-five-year dialogue. Biographers like to point at the crisis in their friendship, focusing particularly on Thoreau's disappointment in Emerson--rarely on Emerson's own disappointment in Thoreau--and leaving it there, a friendship ruptured. But the solid seasons remained, as is evident when, in 1878, Anne Burrows Gilchrist, the English writer and friend of Whitman, visited Emerson. She wrote that his memory was failing "as to recent names and topics but as is usual in such cases all the mental impressions that were made when he was in full vigour remain clear and strong." As they chatted, Emerson called to his wife, Lidian, in the next room, "What was the name of my best friend?" "Henry Thoreau," she answered. "Oh, yes," Emerson repeated. "Henry Thoreau."
Subjects
Other Editions
- Solid Seasons
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