Tuesday, October 2, 2012

Walden Audiobook by Henry David Thoreau (Ch 01) - YouTube

Part 1 - Walden Audiobook by Henry David Thoreau (Ch 01) - YouTube


Part 1. Classic Literature VideoBook with synchronized text, interactive transcript, and closed captions in multiple languages. Audio courtesy of Librivox. Read by Gord Mackenzie.

Playlist for Walden by Henry David Thoreau: http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLF90EF9A0507ECC94

Walden free audiobook at Librivox: http://librivox.org/walden-by-henry-david-thoreau/

Walden free eBook at Project Gutenberg: http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/205

Walden at Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walden

View a list of all our videobooks: http://www.ccprose.com/booklist

Part 2 - Walden Audiobook by Henry David Thoreau (Chs 02-04)





Part 2. Classic Literature VideoBook with synchronized text, interactive transcript, and closed captions in multiple languages. Audio courtesy of Librivox. Read by Gord Mackenzie.

Playlist for Walden by Henry David Thoreau: http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLF90EF9A0507ECC94

Walden free audiobook at Librivox: http://librivox.org/walden-by-henry-david-thoreau/

Walden free eBook at Project Gutenberg: http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/205

Walden at Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walden

View a list of all our videobooks: http://www.ccprose.com/booklist

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Monday, October 1, 2012

John Muir - Biography




 

 

John Muir:  Biography


 John Muir - farmer, inventor, sheepherder, naturalist, explorer, writer, and conservationist - was born on April 21, 1838 in Dunbar, Scotland. Until the age of eleven he attended the local schools of that small coastal town. In 1849, the Muir family emigrated to the United States, settling first at Fountain Lake and then moving to Hickory Hill Farm near Portage, Wisconsin, see The Story of My Boyhood & Youth

Muir's father was a harsh disciplinarian and worked his family from dawn to dusk. Whenever they were allowed a short period away from the plow and hoe, Muir and his younger brother would roam the fields and woods of the rich Wisconsin countryside. John became more and more the loving observer of the natural world. He also became an inventor, a carver of curious but practical mechanisms in wood. He made clocks that kept accurate time and created a wondrous device that tipped him out of bed before dawn.

In 1860, Muir took his inventions to the state fair at Madison, Wisconsin where he won admiration and prizes. Also that year he entered the University of Wisconsin. He made fine grades, but after three years left Madison to travel the northern United States and Canada, odd-jobbing his way through the yet unspoiled land.

In 1867, while working at a carriage parts shop in Indianapolis, Muir suffered a blinding eye injury that would change his life. When he regained his sight one month later, Muir resolved to turn his eyes to the fields and woods. There began his years of wanderlust. He walked a thousand miles from Indianapolis to the Gulf of Mexico. He sailed to Cuba , and later to Panama, where he crossed the Isthmus and sailed up the West Coast, landing in San Francisco in March, 1868. From that moment on, though he would travel around the world, California became his home.

It was California's Sierra Nevada and Yosemite that truly claimed him. In 1868, he walked across the San Joaquin Valley through waist-high wildflowers and into the high country for the first time. Later he would write: "Then it seemed to me the Sierra should be called not the Nevada, or Snowy Range, but the Range of Light...the most divinely beautiful of all the mountain chains I have ever seen." He herded sheep through that first summer and made his home in Yosemite.

By 1871 he had found living glaciers in he Sierra and had conceived his controversial theory of the glaciation of Yosemite Valley. He began to be known throughout the country. Famous men of the time - Joseph LeConte, Asa Gray and Ralph Waldo Emerson - made their way to the door of his pine cabin.

Beginning in 1874, a series of articles by Muir entitled "Studies in the Sierra" launched his successful career as a writer. He left the mountains and lived for awhile in Oakland, California. From there he took many trips, including his first to Alaska in 1879, where he discovered Glacier Bay. In 1880, he married Louie Wanda Strentzel and moved to Martinez, California , where they raised their two daughters, Wanda and Helen. Settling down to some measure of domestic life, Muir went into partnership with his father-in-law and managed the family fruit ranch with great success.

But ten years of active ranching did not quell Muir's wanderlust. His travels took him to Alaska many more times, to Australia, South America, Africa, Europe, China, Japan, and of course, again and again to his beloved Sierra Nevada.

In later years he turned more seriously to writing, publishing 300 articles and 10 major books that recounted his travels, expounded his naturalist philosophy, and beckoned everyone to "Climb the mountains and get their good tidings." Muir's love of the high country gave his writings a spiritual quality. His readers, whether they be presidents, congressmen, or plain folks, were inspired and often moved to action by the enthusiasm of Muir's own unbounded love of nature.

Through a series of articles appearing in Century magazine, Muir drew attention to the devastation of mountain meadows and forests by sheep and cattle. With the help of Century's associate editor, Robert Underwood Johnson, Muir worked to remedy this destruction. In 1890, due in large part to the efforts of Muir and Johnson, an act of Congress created Yosemite National Park. Muir was also personally involved in the creation of Sequoia , Mount Rainier , Petrified Forest and Grand Canyon national parks. Muir deservedly is often called the "Father of Our National Park System ".

Johnson and others suggested to Muir that an association be formed to protect the newly created Yosemite National Park from the assaults of stockmen and others who would diminish its boundaries. In 1892, Muir and a number of his supporters founded the Sierra Club to, in Muir's words, "do something for wildness and make the mountains glad." Muir served as the Club's president until his death in 1914.

In 1901, Muir published Our National Parks , the book that brought him to the attention of President Theodore Roosevelt. In 1903, Roosevelt visited Muir in Yosemite. There, together, beneath the trees, they laid the foundation of Roosevelt's innovative and notable conservation programs.

Muir and the Sierra Club fought many battles to protect Yosemite and the Sierra Nevada, the most dramatic being the campaign to prevent the damming of the Hetch Hetchy Valley within Yosemite National Park. In 1913, after years of effort, the battle was lost and the valley that Muir likened to Yosemite itself was doomed to become a reservoir to supply the water needs of a growing San Francisco. The following year, after a short illness, Muir died in a Los Angeles hospital after visiting his daughter Wanda.

John Muir was perhaps this country's most famous and influential naturalist and conservationist. He taught the people of his time and ours the importance of experiencing and protecting our natural heritage. His words have heightened our perception of nature. His personal and determined involvement in the great conservation questions of the day was and remains an inspiration for environmental activists everywhere.

Source: Sierra Club Public Affairs
Date: March 1993









John Muir - A Brief Biography









Wednesday, June 27, 2012

History and Culture










History and Culture



Henry David Thoreau


Thoreau at Walden










The excursion park built at Ice Fort Cove






Henry David Thoreau’s sojourn at Walden started a long tradition of people coming to the pond and its surrounding woods for recreation and inspiration. The emergence of Walden as a public park was in keeping with the belief that nature is meant to be enjoyed by people. "I think that each town should have a park…a common possession forever, for instruction and recreation," he wrote in a 1859 journal entry lamenting the deforestation that had taken place around Walden. "All Walden wood might have been preserved for our park forever, with Walden in its midst."


In the latter part of the 19th century, numerous projects were undertaken to make Walden Pond a public destination for recreation. The Fitchburg Railroad, which had laid tracks past Walden the year before Thoreau took up residence there, built an excursion park on the shore at Ice Fort Cove in 1866. The facilities were mainly used for fund-raisers, festivals and groups. The park included concessions, swings, bathhouses, boats, baseball diamond, a hall for dining, dancing and public speaking and a cinder track for runners and bicyclists. The park burned down in 1902 and was never rebuilt.






Bathers at Walden Pond in the early twentieth century






The automobile brought increasing numbers of visitors to Walden Pond. The Town of Concord began offering swimming lessons in 1913 and bathhouses were built in 1917. Summer visitation had risen to 2,000 visitors a day even before the bathhouses were built.

In 1922, the Emerson, Forbes and Heywood families granted approximately 80 acres surrounding the pond to the Commonwealth of Massachusetts with the stipulation of "preserving the Walden of Emerson and Thoreau, its shores and nearby woodlands for the public who wish to enjoy the pond, the woods and nature, including bathing, boating, fishing and picnicking." Middlesex County was given the responsibility for management of the reservation. In the summer of 1935, some 485,000 people visited Walden Pond, with Sunday crowds numbering as high as 25,000 visitors.


In November of 1945, the centennial of Thoreau’s move to Walden, Roland Wells Robbins, an amateur historian and Thoreau enthusiast, discovered and excavated the foundation of Thoreau’s chimney. In July of 1947, the Thoreau Society dedicated the inscribed fieldstone that marks the hearth site today. In 1965, the National Park Service designated Walden Pond as a Registered National Historic Landmark.


















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Flowersa and Grass gone wild...

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Kitty on the prowl
Kittywake fly by


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                                                           Ingatestone hall reflection
 
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Damselfly
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Friday, June 22, 2012

Henry David Thoreau

 


"Live each season as it passes; breathe the air, drink the drink, taste the fruit, and resign yourself to the influences of each."
"Do not be too moral. You may cheat yourself out of much life. Aim above morality. Be not simply good; be good for something."
"If you would convince a man that he does wrong, do right. Men will believe what they see."
"What people say you cannot do, you try and find that you can."
"Do not hire a man who does your work for money, but him who does it for love of it."
"There is no remedy for love but to love more."
Journal, July 25, 1839
"He enjoys true leisure who has time to improve his soul's estate."
Journal, February 11, 1840
"If a man does not keep pace with his companions, perhaps it is because he hears a different drummer. Let him step to the music which he hears, however measured or far away."
Walden, Conclusion, 1854
"Our houses are such unwieldy property that we are often imprisoned rather than housed in them."
Walden: Economy, 1854
"Man is the artificer of his own happiness."
Journal, January 21, 1838
"Goodness is the only investment that never fails."
Walden: Higher Laws, 1854
"I know of no more encouraging fact than the unquestioned ability of a man to elevate his life by conscious endeavor."
"If you have built castles in the air, your work need not be lost; that is where they should be. Now put the foundations under them."
"That man is the richest whose pleasures are the cheapest."
"[Water is] the only drink for a wise man."
"Men are born to succeed, not fail."
"It is an interesting question how far men would retain their relative rank if they were divested of their clothes."
Walden, 1854
"How many a man has dated a new era in his life from the reading of a book."
Walden: Reading, 1854

Featured Books
The following books and tapes are available through Amazon.com:

  • Walden Paperback by Henry David Thoreau - Every library should have it and its spine should be well cracked. (I'm going to crack mine as soon as I'm finished here.)
  • Civil Disobedience, Solitude and Life Without Principle Paperback by Henry David Thoreau - The justification for his rebellion (he refused to pay taxes because of the Mexican American War).
  • Henry David Thoreau : Three Complete Books Hardcover by Henry David Thoreau - Get Walden, Cape Cod, and The Maine Woods in a hardbound edition surely to last forever in your bookcase (especially if you don't read it).
  • The Portable Thoreau Paperback by Henry David Thoreau, Carl Bode - If you are actually planning on reading his works, this is the book to buy. At 698 pages, it hardly seems portable, but you receive a collection of his works to keep you reading for awhile. Enjoy!

For more information about Henry David Thoreau, try these links:

  • Thoreau World Wide - A good introduction to Henry David Thoreau. Make sure you read Background behind Walden.
  • The Life of Henry David Thoreau - No snazzy pictures, but a good outline of the author's life.
  • The Writings of Henry D. Thoreau - A great site! You can view a scan of Thoreau's handwriting (including analysis and translation), a list of related sites, and a frequently asked questions (FAQ) file.






Articles - The Quotations Page