Walking began as a lecture, first read in 1852, and was one of Thoreau's most repeated speeches over a decade. Thoreau used his instances of oratory to test ideas and polish them; So Walk evolved in an essay that was published in the Boston magazine The Atlantic Monthly in June, 1862, a month after the author's death. Although late, this text became, for Thoreau and for his audience, an introduction to the rest of his work; Even, we would think, as a medullary outbreak of his thought where
Praises the walk and the approach that this provides with nature and its rhythms.
Henry David Thoreau (Concord, Massachusetts, 1817-1862) was an essayist, poet, lecturer, as well as a surveyor, pencil maker and naturalist. A passionate about nature, throughout his life he spent long hours daily watching and reflecting on the flora and fauna of his region. Ready to move away from society ...read more