Walden Walden

Publisher Description

Nature was a form of religion for naturalist, essayist, and early environmentalist Henry David Thoreau (1817 62). In communing with the natural world, he wished to "live deliberately, to front only the essential facts of life, and learn what it had to teach." Toward that end Thoreau built a cabin in the spring of 1845 on the shores of Walden Pond on land owned by Ralph Waldo Emerson outside Concord, Massachusetts. There he observed nature, farmed, built fences, surveyed, and wrote in his journal. One product of his two-year sojourn was this book a great classic of American letters. Interwoven with accounts of Thoreau's daily life (he received visitors and almost daily walked into Concord) are mediations on human existence, society, government, and other topics, expressed with wisdom and beauty of style.

Walden offers abundant evidence of Thoreau's ability to begin with observations on a mundane incident or the minutiae of nature and then develop these observations into profound ruminations on the most fundamental human concerns. Credited with influencing Tolstoy, Gandhi, and other thinkers, the volume remains a masterpiece of philosophical reflection."

GENRE
Fiction & Literature
RELEASED
2026
4 March
LANGUAGE
DE
German
LENGTH
437
Pages
PUBLISHER
Neobooks
SIZE
1.8
MB
Walden Walden
1862
Civil Disobedience Civil Disobedience
1866
Walking Walking
1861
Walden Walden
2019
Walden Walden
2012
Wild Apples Wild Apples
1862