Henry D. Thoreau

audiobook

Henry D. Thoreau

by F. B. (Franklin Benjamin) Sanborn

EN·~6 hours·17 chapters

Chapters

17 total
1

HENRY D. THOREAU

0:56
2

PREFACE

10:38
3

CHAPTER I. BIRTH AND FAMILY.

36:26
4

CHAPTER II. CHILDHOOD AND YOUTH.

36:01
5

CHAPTER III. CONCORD AND ITS FAMOUS PEOPLE.

39:18
6

CHAPTER IV. THE EMBATTLED FARMERS.

30:25
7

CHAPTER V. THE TRANSCENDENTAL PERIOD.

28:01
8

CHAPTER VI. EARLY ESSAYS IN AUTHORSHIP.

30:43
9

CHAPTER VII. FRIENDS AND COMPANIONS.

30:58
10

CHAPTER VIII. THE WALDEN HERMITAGE.

16:33

Description

A vivid portrait emerges from this early biography, drawn by a writer who spent years alongside Thoreau’s family and close friends. The author’s firsthand observations lend a warm, nuanced texture to the story, revealing the shy yet fiercely independent mind behind the legendary wanderer of Concord. Readers are guided through the formative moments that shaped his character—his modest upbringing, his restless curiosity, and the circles of thinkers that both challenged and nurtured him.

The narrative follows Thoreau’s restless quest for a life stripped of excess, culminating in his famous retreat to the woods by Walden Pond. It captures his fierce dedication to nature, his experiments in simple living, and the quiet determination that set him apart from the bustling world around him. Through anecdotes and personal reflections, the biography paints a picture of a man whose ideas on freedom, conscience, and the natural world still echo in today’s conversations about purpose and sustainability.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~6 hours (388K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Diane Monico and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)

Release date

2016-03-12

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

F. B. (Franklin Benjamin) Sanborn

F. B. (Franklin Benjamin) Sanborn

1831–1917

A lively voice from the world of abolitionism and New England letters, this writer stood close to many of the great reformers and thinkers of the 19th century. His work preserves both the political struggles and the literary friendships of his era.

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