Teaming up with Thoreau
One hundred fifty years after the publication of Walden, Henry David Thoreau is helping scientists monitor global warming
- By Michelle Nijhuis
- Photographs by Richard Howard
- Smithsonian magazine, October 2007, Subscribe
The upright citizens of Concord, Massachusetts, didn't think much of young Henry David Thoreau. The cabin on Walden Pond, the night in jail for tax evasion, the constant scribbling in journals—it all seemed like a waste of a perfectly good Harvard education. Even more mysterious was his passion for flowers. "I soon found myself observing when plants first blossomed and leafed," Thoreau confided to his journal in 1856, "and I followed it up early and late, far and near, several years in succession, running to different sides of the town and into the neighboring towns, often between twenty and thirty miles in a day."
Watch a video of Concord's flora
Thoreau planned to turn his vast botanical records into a book, but he died of tuberculosis in his mid-40s, the project undone. Walden and his handful of other published writings languished in near obscurity, and even his close friend and mentor, Ralph Waldo Emerson, said that Thoreau had squandered his talents on the woods. "I cannot help counting it a fault in him that he had no ambition. ...Instead of engineering for all America, he was the captain of a huckleberry party," Emerson lamented in his eulogy of Thoreau.
Walden, of course, is now a classic of American literature, and Thoreau is considered a secular prophet. In Concord, tourists buy T-shirts printed with Thoreau's best-known sayings, including "beware of all enterprises that require new clothes." Much has changed in Concord. On the shore of Walden Pond in summer, warblers and blueberry bushes are still commonplace, but so are teenagers in shocking-pink bikinis.
Thoreau's unassuming gravestone, marked simply "HENRY," rests on a mossy ridge not far from the center of town and is decorated with pine boughs and pebbles left by admirers. On a sunny slope nearby, two botanists crouch in the grass, paying a different sort of tribute to Concord's famous son.
"We've got bluets. First time this year," Abe Miller-Rushing says.
"Are you sure you didn't see some yesterday?" teases his mentor, Richard Primack of Boston University.
"First time," Miller-Rushing says with a grin.
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Comments (3)
Aside from the ecological value of Thoreau's observations, more important is his initiative at passive resistance, perhaps the first recorded in American history, whereby a lone person takes it upon himself to insulate himself from what he perceives as the threatening forces around him, in this case, an entire town. Whether Thoreau's existence at Walden Pond is seen as the visioning of a madman, or the politically incorrect posture of a visionary may be the ultimate debate in American society by the script he left behind, but may well provide a context in which to view American history and its struggle with democracy between majority and minority forces that finds a broad audience in the liberty that Americans find so appealing, and so necessary. That it may also be found to be of similar value to other nations and cultures is more a matter of its acceptance at home and whether it is relegated to fine literature or fine political activism but relevant no more. It is the relevance of Walden Pond in a society of political complacency in which it finds its most logical voice, if a noise it makes upon the horizon of human history, or in the hearts of its patrons.
Posted by Pat on December 30,2008 | 01:09 PM
The comment I posted earlier was the first comment I have posted and the first time i've been on the site, although i am a subscriber. I didn't finish the article when i posted it because i didn't see that it scrolled to another page. Please omit my comments i see the relevance now and answered a lot of my questions and saw many faults in my comments. haha my bad. I still think thoreau was up to something else on a smaller scale within the season and it was a lucky coincidence that his work could be used to reinforce the blantant obvious fact of global warming. Can we see a steady correlation of flowering through the 20th century? It seems as far back as the 1900's global warming was observed in flowering trees and plants but if it is steady and oil is exponential could this be evidence of non anthropogenic warming?
Posted by TOM LYLE on March 19,2008 | 01:20 AM
Excellent article by an excellent journalist. I've enjoyed the work of Michelle Nijhuis ever since she started as an intern at High County News about ten years ago. I hadn't seen anything by her for several years until I ran across this article in a doctor's office. I'm glad she's still around and doing well.
Posted by Tim Stevens on March 8,2008 | 08:39 PM
Great read, I have been keeping records of bird migration (spring) for the past 6 years. I am also doing inventory of the plants on my 2 acres of mostly native habitat. http://www.birdbox.us/plants/pages/3index.html I never considered recording the date of flowering. I may add such to my records. There is so much to know, so little a window to do it, as spring shows up with brevity, everything rushing to maturation while the window allows. Thanks for the article. tp
Posted by Tom Peterson on January 29,2008 | 02:46 PM