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Notes

 
[1]

See Wendell Glick, "Thoreau and the 'Herald of Freedom,'" New England Quarterly, 22 (1949), pp. 193-204. Hereafter cited as Glick.

[2]

H. D. T., "Herald of Freedom," Dial, April 1844, p. 507. Hereafter cited as D, by page number (D, 507).

[3]

For a detailed discussion of the writing of Thoreau's first book, see the author's Historical Introduction to A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers, ed. Carl Hovde et al. (1980). Hereafter cited as W, by page number.

[4]

Glick, p. 197. See also Louis Filler, "Parker Pillsbury: An Anti-Slavery Apostle," New England Quarterly, 19 (1946), especially pp. 324-327.

[5]

The Journals and Miscellaneous Notebooks of Ralph Waldo Emerson, vol. IX (1843-1847), ed. Ralph H. Orth and Alfred R. Ferguson (1971), p. 204.

[6]

A Collection from the Newspaper Writings of Nathaniel Peabody Rogers (Concord, N. H.: J. R. French, 1847 [publisher's notice is dated June 24, 1847]). For a complete bibliographical description, see Walter Harding, Emerson's Library (1967), p. 231.

[7]

The leaf of notes, plus two leaves of fair-copy material, all of the same paper Thoreau used for the first draft of Walden and the second draft of A Week, is preserved in the Houghton Library, bMS Am 278.5, folder 11. For a description, see William L. Howarth, The Literary Manuscripts of Henry D. Thoreau, No. 3 in Calendars of American Literary Manuscripts (1974), p. 204. As Howarth suggests, "the paper, hand, and contents" of these leaves indicate that they were composed for A Week. Quotations from manuscripts in the Houghton Library, hereafter cited as MH, by folder number in bMS Am 278.5, are by permission of the Harvard College Library.

[8]

These leaves, which probably date from late 1847 or 1848, are in MH, 15, F.

[9]

Henry D. Thoreau, A Yankee in Canada, with Anti-Slavery and Reform Papers (1866), p. 206. Hereafter cited as YC, by page number (YC, 206).

[10]

Henry D. Thoreau, Reform Papers, ed. Wendell Glick (1973), p. 292. Hereafter cited as RP, by page number (RP, 292).

[11]

The two surviving leaves are in MH, 11 (see above, note 7). Since Thoreau canceled a passage on the verso of the second leaf, which breaks off in mid-sentence, he probably also omitted a third leaf, which has not survived. For convenience, references to the text of the two surviving leaves are to the edited text in RP, 56-57 ("Such timely . . . merit has been overlooked.") and 298 n. ("He was born . . . near the bridge").

[12]

Thoreau's shifts in emphasis as he revised A Week are discussed in detail in the author's study, "A Complex Weave: The Writing of Thoreau's A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers, with the Text of the First Draft" (forthcoming).