图书标签: 瓦尔登湖 梭罗 哲学 自然 英文原版 心灵深处的宁静 外国文学 简朴生活
发表于2024-11-22
Walden pdf epub mobi txt 电子书 下载 2024
Published in association with the Walden Woods Project, this beautiful commemorative edition of Thoreau's masterpiece features spectacular color photographs that capture Walden as vividly as Thoreau's words do.
Henry David Thoreau was just a few days short of his twenty-eighth birthday when he built a cabin on the shore of Walden Pond and began one of the most famous experiments in living in American history. Originally he was not, apparently, intending to write a book about his life at the pond, but nine years later, in August of 1854, Houghton Mifflin's predecessor, Ticknor and Fields, published Walden; or, a Life in the Woods. At the time the book was largely ignored, and it took five years to sell out the first printing of two thousand copies. It was not until 1862, the year of Thoreau's death, that the book was brought back into print, and it has never been out of print since. Published in hundreds of editions and translated into virtually every modern language, it has become one of the most widely read and influential books ever written.
SCOT MILLER is a professional photographer whose photographs have appeared in numerous books and publications, including Walden: The 150th Anniversary Illustrated Edition of the American Classic and Cape Cod: Illustrated Edition of the American Classic . Miller lives in Dallas, Texas, with his wife, Marilyn, where they operate Sun to Moon Gallery, a fine art photography gallery.
Biography
Henry David Thoreau was born on July 12, 1817, in Concord, Massachusetts, the third of four children. His family lived on a modest, sometimes meager, income; his father, John, worked by turns as a farmer, schoolteacher, grocer, and pencil-maker; his mother, Cynthia, was a teacher and would take in boarders when money was scarce. Young Henry's gifts manifested themselves early. He wrote his first piece, "The Seasons," at age ten, and memorized portions of Shakespeare, the Bible, and Samuel Johnson while studying at the Center School and Concord Academy. In addition to his academic pursuits, Henry rambled through the countryside on exploratory walks and attended lectures at the Concord Lyceum, where as an adult he would fascinate audiences with his discourses on life on Walden Pond.
Thoreau began his studies at Harvard College in 1833. His years at Harvard were stimulating, if solitary; he immersed himself in a traditional humanities curriculum of multiple languages, anatomy, history, and geography. Upon graduation in 1837, he began teaching in Concord at the Center School, the public school he'd attended as a boy, but left his post after being told to administer corporal punishment to a student. During these years following college Thoreau published his first essay and poem, began lecturing at the Concord Lyceum, and attended Transcendentalist discussions at the home of his mentor, the renowned essayist and poet Ralph Waldo Emerson. At Emerson's urging, Thoreau started a journal -- a project that would become his lifelong passion and culminate in more than two million words.
A boat trip with his brother, John, in 1839 set the foundation for his well known work A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers. Sadly, unforeseen tragedy separated the tightly knit brothers in 1842, when John died of lockjaw caused by a razor cut. The following year, Thoreau joined Emerson in editing the Transcendental periodical The Dial, a publication to which Thoreau would become a prolific contributor. He also pulled up stakes for a time, accepting a position to tutor Emerson's children in Staten Island, New York. Half a year later, Thoreau returned to his family's house in Concord, deeply affected by the abolitionists he had met in Manhattan. He dedicated much of his time to lectures and essays advocating abolition and became involved in sheltering runaway slaves on their journey north.
In 1846 Thoreau was briefly imprisoned for refusing to pay a poll tax to the village of Concord, in protest against the government's support of slavery, as well as its war of expansion with Mexico. His experience in the Concord jail led to the writing of what would later be titled "Civil Disobedience." Unappreciated in Thoreau's lifetime, "Civil Disobedience" is now considered one of the country's seminal political works.
During this period, Thoreau built his cabin on Walden Pond and lived there for a little more than two years. In this small home on Emerson's property, he began writing his most enduring work, Walden; or, Life in the Woods, and finished the manuscript for A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers. Sales were exceedingly poor, with Thoreau eventually acquiring 706 unsold copies of the original 1000 copy print run. Thoreau quipped, "I have now a library of nearly nine hundred volumes, over seven hundred of which I wrote myself." When Walden was published in 1854, sales were brisk and its reception favorable, although Thoreau's work as a whole remained somewhat obscure during his lifetime.
By the time Walden was published, Thoreau had turned from the largely symbolic approach to nature that he had learned from Emerson and other Romantic writers to a much more empirical approach, more in keeping with new scientific methods. His observations of nature throughout the 1850s, largely recorded in his journals, have come to be regarded as a model of ecological attentiveness, even though the term "ecology" was not coined until 1866. He developed several talks on the natural history of the Concord region, and even set to work on a series of longer, book-length manuscripts. Two of these, one on the dispersal of tree seeds and the other on the region's many wild fruits, were not published until 1993 and 2000 respectively. Today, Thoreau's writing is valued for both the poetic imagination and the scientific methodology it displays.
As the years passed, Thoreau's commitment to the antislavery movement strengthened, as did his popularity as a lecturer and essayist. Even in the declining health of his later years, he remained a man of conviction and action, writing on many subjects and participating in various political causes until shortly before his death from tuberculosis. George Eliot's review of Walden singles out qualities that attract readers to this day: "a deep poetic sensibility" and "a refined as well as a hardy mind." Henry David Thoreau died on May 6, 1862, in Concord.
不仅不认识的单词多(这么多拉丁语希腊语才懒得查) 句子还拖老长 算是较难读的一本书 除了第一章印象不好之外后面章节都很优美 最后一章不服从不很同意 不过可以佩服一下你
评分不仅不认识的单词多(这么多拉丁语希腊语才懒得查) 句子还拖老长 算是较难读的一本书 除了第一章印象不好之外后面章节都很优美 最后一章不服从不很同意 不过可以佩服一下你
评分不仅不认识的单词多(这么多拉丁语希腊语才懒得查) 句子还拖老长 算是较难读的一本书 除了第一章印象不好之外后面章节都很优美 最后一章不服从不很同意 不过可以佩服一下你
评分为了减低厌倦感找了个有声书每天散步听,听了两天果断还是算了……
评分先读的英文版,再看看中国翻译家们如何描绘出梭罗的瓦尔登湖
文/ 梦游三水 湖是风景中最美丽、最富于表情的姿容。它是大地的眼睛,观看着它的人也可衡量自身天性的深度。湖边的树是眼睛边上细长的睫毛,而四周郁郁葱葱的群山和悬崖,则是眼睛上浓密的眉毛。 ——《瓦尔登湖》 (一) 一...
评分“即使它描绘的境界让你沮丧,你也应对待它的纯灼,如同仰视黑夜里的繁星。” 欢迎添加。 1) 我觉得一个人若生活得诚实,他一定是生活在一个遥远的地方了。(P2) 2) 我们天性中最优美的品格,好比果实上的粉霜一样,是只能轻手轻脚,才得保全的。然而,人与人之间就是没有能...
评分文/ 梦游三水 湖是风景中最美丽、最富于表情的姿容。它是大地的眼睛,观看着它的人也可衡量自身天性的深度。湖边的树是眼睛边上细长的睫毛,而四周郁郁葱葱的群山和悬崖,则是眼睛上浓密的眉毛。 ——《瓦尔登湖》 (一) 一...
评分《瓦尔登湖》徐迟译本,是好不容易读完的。时隔两年,虽然对于《瓦尔登湖》的具体内容已经记不清,但某些句子的印象还是有的。然而重读王家湘的译本时,竟然完全不觉得自己在读一本读过的书,而更像读一本新书,并且读得非常流畅——那种流畅并非出自熟悉,仅仅是出于文字表达...
评分Walden pdf epub mobi txt 电子书 下载 2024