Showing posts with label august 19. Show all posts
Showing posts with label august 19. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 19, 2025

A meteorological journal of the mind.

 

The poet must be
continually watching
the moods of his mind.
Henry Thoreau, August 19, 1851


Such cheerful morning news,
In the horizon of my mind
A Week, ("The Inward Morning")



July 23, 1851.  The mind is subject to moods, as the shadows of clouds pass over the earth.   
August 17, 1851 I feel as if this coolness would do me good. If it only makes my life more pensive! Why should pensiveness be akin to sadness? There is a certain fertile sadness which I would not avoid, but rather earnestly seek. It is positively joyful to me. 
August 17, 1851   Ah ! if I could so live that . . . when small fruits are ripe, my fruits might be ripe also!  that I could match nature always with my moods!  that in each season when some part of nature especially flourishes, then a corresponding part of me may not fail to flourish!
 August 18, 1851 It plainly makes men sad to think. Hence pensiveness is akin to sadness. 
August 19, 1851. The poet must be continually watching the moods of his mind . . . What might we not expect from a long life faithfully spent in this wise? . . . A faithful description . . . of the thoughts which visited a certain mind in threescore years and ten . . . A meteorological journal of the mind.
August 28, 1851 The poet is a man who lives at last by watching his moods.  An old poet comes at last to watch his moods as narrowly as a cat does a mouse.
August 30, 1851  I can be said to note the flower's fall only when I see in it the symbol of my own change. When I experience this, then the flower appears to me.
A cold afternoon
windy with some snow not yet
melted on the ground.
My eye wanders as
I sit on an oak stump by
an old cellar-hole.
Methinks that in my 
mood I am asking Nature 
to give me a sign.
Transient gladness.
I do not know what it is –
something that I see.
This recognition
from white pines now reflecting
a silvery light.
Where is my home? 
It is as indistinct as 
an old cellar-hole. 
And  by the old site
I sit on the stump of an
oak which once grew here.
November 30, 1851

December 27, 1851  The man is blessed who every day is permitted to behold anything so pure and serene as the western sky at sunset . . . The sky is always ready to answer to our moods.
January 17, 1852.  As the skies appear to a man, so is his mind. Some see only clouds there; some behold there serenity, purity, beauty ineffable. 
January 26, 1852.  Would you see your mind, look at the sky. Would you know your own moods, be weather-wise.
February 3, 1852 .  The sky must have a few clouds, as the mind a few moods; nor is the evening the less serene for them.
March 5, 1852.  Such is the mood of my mind, and I call it studying lichens.  . . . The habit of looking at things microscopically, as the lichens on the trees and rocks, really prevents my seeing aught else in a walk. 
May 9, 1852. Our moods vary from week to week, with the winds and the temperature and the revolution of the seasons.  It is impossible to remember a week ago. A river of Lethe flows with many windings the year through, separating one season from another.
June 25, 1852.  There is a flower for every mood of the mind.
August 25. 1852At length, before sundown, it begins to rain . . . and now, after dark, the sound of it dripping and pattering without is quite cheering. It is long since I heard it . . . something regular, a fall rain, coincident with a different mood or season of the mind.
March 22, 1853  I am waked by my genius, surprised to find myself expecting the dawn in so serene and joyful and expectant a mood.
March 31, 1853    It is affecting to see a distant mountain-top, like the summits of Uncanoonuc, well seen from this hill, whereon you camped for a night in your youth, which you have never revisited, still as blue and ethereal to your eyes as is your memory of it.  
Distant mountain top
as blue to the memory
as now to the eyes.
March 31, 1853
May 17, 1853 I was surprised, on turning round, to behold the serene and everlasting beauty of the world, it was so soothing . . . It was so much fairer, serener, more beautiful, than my mood had been.
May 23, 1853   Every new flower that opens, no doubt, expresses a new mood of the human mind. 
June 14, 1853  This seems the true hour to be abroad sauntering far from home . . . you are in that favorable frame of mind . . . open to great impressions, and you see those rare sights with the unconscious side of the eye, which you could not see by a direct gaze before. Then the dews begin to descend in your mind, and its atmosphere is strained of all impurities; and home is farther away than ever. Here is home; the beauty of the world impresses you. There is a coolness in your mind as in a well. 
August 7, 1853.  [The poet] sees a flower or other object, and it is beautiful or affecting to him because it is a symbol of his thought . . . The objects I behold correspond to my mood.
July 31, 1856.  I hear the distant sound of a flail, and thoughts of autumn occupy my mind, and the memory of past years.
Thoughts of autumn and
the memory of past years
occupy my mind.
July 31, 1856
 August 18, 1856 I hear the steady shrilling of . . . the alder cricket, clear, loud, and autumnal, a season sound . . . It reminds me of past autumns and the lapse of time, suggests a pleasing, thoughtful melancholy.
September 2, 1856 It commonly chances that I make my most interesting botanical discoveries when I am in a thrilled and expectant mood.
June 6, 1857. A year is made up of a certain series and number of sensations and thoughts which have their language in nature. Now I am ice, now I am sorrel. Each experience reduces itself to a mood of the mind.
October 26, 1857. The seasons and all their changes are in me  . . .  After a while I learn what my moods and seasons are . . . My moods are thus periodical, not two days in my year alike. 
November 2, 1857.  It is only a reflecting mind that sees reflections. I am aware often that I have been occupied with shallow and commonplace thoughts, looking for something superficial, when I did not see the most glorious reflections, though exactly in the line of my vision. 
November 18, 1857.  You cannot perceive beauty but with a serene mind.
January 23, 1858.  It is in vain to write on the seasons unless you have the seasons in you.
August 26, 1858 Each humblest plant, or weed, as we call it, stands there to express some thought or mood of ours.
November 17, 1858.  Not only different objects are presented to our attention at different seasons of the year, but we are in a frame of body and of mind to appreciate different objects at different seasons.
August 20, 1858 The grass and foliage and landscape generally are of a more thought-inspiring color suggest what some perchance would call a pleasing melancholy. 
December 25, 1858.  How full of soft, pure light the western sky now, after sunset! . . . In a pensive mood I enjoy the complexion of the winter sky at this hour.
 April 24, 1859.  The moods and thoughts of man are revolving just as steadily and incessantly as nature’s.
 September 24, 1859.  I would know when in the year to expect certain thoughts and moods, as the sportsman knows when to look for plover.
January 18, 1860,   They are very different seasons in the winter when the ice of the river and meadows and ponds is bare, — blue or green, a vast glittering crystal, — and when it is all covered with snow or slosh; and our moods correspond.
February 18, 1860  Sometimes, when I go forth at 2 P. M., there is scarcely a cloud in the sky, but soon one will appear in the west and steadily advance and expand itself, and so change the whole character of the afternoon and of my thoughts.
 September 18, 1860  If you are not happy to-day you will hardly be so to-morrow.

Western sunset sky
serene, pure, ineffable
– the unclouded mind.


 A Book of the Seasons, by Henry Thoreau
"A book, each page written in its own season,
out-of-doors, in its own locality.”
~edited, assembled and rewritten by zphx © 2009-2025


Each experience
reduces itself to a mood
of the mind. 

https://tinyurl.com/hdt-mind
;
 

Thursday, August 19, 2021

A Book of the Seasons: August 19 (first fall day, the day & seasons revolve with our moods)

 

The year is but a succession of days,
and I see that I could assign some office to each day
which, summed up, would be the history of the year.
Henry Thoreau, August 24, 1852


Dog-day mists are gone.
This first bright day of the fall –
cooler air braces man.

Wind from the northwest
bracing and encouraging
and now we can sail.

Northwesterly wind,
cool clear and elastic air.
First day of autumn.

The poet must be 
continually watching 
the moods of his mind. 


August 19, 2017

The seasons do not cease a moment to revolve 
and therefore Nature rests no longer 
at her culminating point
 than at any other.


The first bright day of the fall . . . The dog-day mists are gone; the washed earth shines; the cooler air braces man. No summer day is so beautiful as the fairest spring and fall days.  August 19, 1853

The dog-day weather is suddenly gone and here is a cool, clear, and elastic air. You may say it is the first day of autumn. August 19, 1858

After more rain, with wind in the night, it is now clearing up cool. There is a broad, clear crescent of blue in the west, slowly increasing, and an agreeable autumnal coolness.. . . and a considerable wind wafts us along with our one sail and two umbrellas. August 19, 1853

The wind rises and the pasture thistle down is blown about. August 19, 1856.

I see thistle-down, grayish-white, floating low quite across Fair Haven Pond. August 19, 1858. 

The wind comes from the northwest and is bracing and encouraging, and we can now sail up the stream. August 19, 1853

It is cool with a considerable northwesterly wind, so that we can sail to Fair Haven. August 19, 1858

The sun comes out now about noon, when we are at Rice's, and the water sparkles in the clear air, and the pads reflect the sun. August 19, 1853

This is a world where there are flowers. August 19, 1851 

Small rough sunflower by side of road between canoe birch and White Pond, — Helianthus divaricatus. August 19, 1851 

Now for the pretty red capsules or pods of the Hypericum Canadense. August 19, 1851

I see Hypericum Canadense and mutilum abundantly open at 3 P. M. Apparently they did not bear the dry, hot weather of July so well. They are apparently now in prime, but the Sarothra is not open at this hour. The perforatum is quite scarce now, and apparently the corymbosum; the ellipticum quite done. The small hypericums have a peculiar smart, somewhat lemon-like fragrance, but bee-like. August 19, 1856 

I spent my afternoon among the desmodiums and lespedezas, sociably. . . . All the lespedezas are apparently more open and delicate in the woods, and of a darker green, especially the violet ones. August 19, 1856

I feel an agreeable surprise as often as I come across a new locality for desmodiums. Rarely find one kind without one or two more species near, their great spreading panicles, yet delicate, open, and airy, occupying the August air. August 19, 1856

The fragrance of the clethra fills the air by water sides. August 19, 1851

I noticed the localities of black willows as far up as the mouth of the river in Fair Haven Pond . . . and from the last observations I infer that the willow grows especially and almost exclusively in places where the drift is most likely to lodge, as on capes and points and concave sides of the river. August 19, 1858

The Viburnum dentatum berries are now blue. August 19, 1852 

What countless varieties of low blackberries! Here, in this open pine grove, I pluck some large fresh and very sweet ones when they are mostly gone without. So they are continued a little longer to us. August 19, 1856 

The small fruits of most plants are now generally ripe or ripening, and this is coincident with the flying in flocks of such young birds now grown as feed on them. August 19, 1852 

I meet the rain at the edge of the wood, and take refuge under the thickest leaves, where not a drop reaches me, and, at the end of half an hour, the renewed singing of the birds alone advertises me that the rain has ceased, and it is only the dripping from the leaves which I hear in the woods. August 9, 1851 

The blue heron has within a week reappeared in our meadows, and the stake-driver begins to be seen oftener, and as early as the 5th I noticed young summer ducks about; the same of hawks, owls, etc. This occurs as soon as the young birds can take care of themselves, and some appear to be very early on the return southward, with the very earliest prospect of fall. Such birds are not only more abundant but, methinks, more at leisure now, having reared their family, and perhaps they are less shy. August 19, 1858

Blue herons, which have bred or been bred not far from us (plainly), are now at leisure, or are impelled to revisit our slow stream. August 19, 1858

The goldfinch, though solitary, is now one of the commonest birds in the air. August 19. 1851. 

Flocks of bobolinks go tinkling along about the low willows, and swallows twitter, and a kingbird hovers almost stationary in the air, a foot above the water. August 19, 1853

A great reddish-brown marsh hawk circling over the meadow there.
August 19, 1853 


See painted tortoise shedding scales, half off and loose. August 19, 1855

It is already fall in some of these shady, springy swamps, as at the Corner Spring. Here is a little brook of very cold spring-water, rising a few rods distant, sometimes running underground, meandering exceedingly, with a gray sandy and pebbly bottom, flowing through this dense swampy thicket. The sun falls in here and there between the leaves and shines on its bottom. The water has the coldness it acquired in the bowels of the earth. August 19, 1852

Here is a recess apparently never frequented. Thus this rill flowed here a thousand years ago, and with exactly these environments. August 19, 1852

For some days past I have noticed a red maple or two about the pond, though we have had no frost. August 19, 1851 

There is such a haze we see not further than our Annursnack, which is blue as a mountain. August 19, 1854

The near meadow is very beautiful now, seen from the railroad through this dog-day haze, which softens its fresh green of so many various shades, blending them harmoniously, — darker and lighter patches of grass and the very light yellowish-green of the sensitive fern which the mowers have left. It has an indescribable beauty to my eye now, which it could not have in a clear day. August 19, 1854

As the rays of the sun fall horizontally across the placid pond, they light up the side of Baker's Pleasant Meadow Wood. The different shades of green of different and the same trees make a most glorious soft and harmonious picture, only to be seen at this season of the day and perhaps of the year. August 19, 1853

As toward the evening of the day the lakes and streams are smooth, so in the fall, the evening of the year, the waters are smoothed more perfectly than at any other season August, 19, 1853

The day is an epitome of the year. August, 19, 1853

The seasons do not cease a moment to revolve, and therefore Nature rests no longer at her culminating point than at any other. If you are not out at the right instant, the summer may go by and you not see it. August 19, 1851

The poet must be continually watching the moods of his mind.
August 19, 1851  


August 19, 2015

A Book of the Seasons, by Henry Thoreau:


August 19, 2013

Walden, "Spring" ("The day is an epitome of the year. The night is the winter, the morning and evening are the spring and fall, and the noon is the summer.")
November 3, 1853 (“There are very few phenomena which can be described indifferently as occurring at different seasons of the year, for they will occur with some essential difference.”) 
March 18, 1853 ("This the foreglow of the year, when the walker goes home at eve to dream of summer”)
April 24, 1859 ("There is a season for everything, and we do not notice a given phenomenon except at that season, if, indeed, it can be called the same phenomenon at any other season.")
June 6, 1857 ("Each season is but an infinitesimal point.”)
June 6, 1857 ("Each experience reduces itself to a mood of the mind.")
June 25, 1852("There is a flower for every mood of the mind.")
July 23, 1851 ("The mind is subject to moods, as the shadows of clouds pass over the earth")
July 26, 1854 ("The broods of birds just matured find thus plenty to eat.”)
July 27, 1853 ("This the afternoon of the year. How apt we are to be reminded of lateness, even before the year is half spent!")
August 6, 1856 (“Desmodium rotundifolium, some days at least.”);
August 7, 1856 (“At Blackberry Steep . . . D. rotundifoliumis there abundant;. . . as also at Heywood Peak. All these plants seem to love a dry open hillside, a steep one.”)
August 7, 1853 ("The objects I behold correspond to my mood.")
August 12, 1856  (“The sarothra — as well as small hypericums generally — has a lemon scent.”)
August 12, 1860 ("The clethra is in prime")
August 12, 1853 ("See the blue herons opposite Fair Haven Hill, as if they had bred here.”)
August 13, 1854 ("Now the mountains are concealed by the dog-day haze ”)
August 13, 1858 ("The dullish-blue or lead-colored Viburnum dentatum berries are now seen, not long, overhanging the side of the river.")
August 14, 1852("Viburnum dentatum berries blue.")
August 14,1859 (" If you would know the depth of the water on these few shoalest places of Musketaquid, ask the blue heron that wades and fishes there")
August 15, 1852 (“See a blue heron on the meadow.”)
August 15, 1860 ("See a blue heron.”)
August 15, 1852 ("Some naked viburnum berries are quite dark purple amid the red, while other bunches are wholly green yet")
 August 16. 1858 ("A blue heron, with its great undulating wings, prominent cutwater, and leisurely flight, goes over southwest, cutting off the bend of the river west of our house.")
August 15, 1853 ("A
n inky darkness as of night under the edge of the woods, now at noonday heralding the evening of the year.”)
August 15, 1854 ("I see the goldfinch eating the seeds of the Canada thistle. I rarely approach a bed of them or other thistles nowadays but I hear the cool twitter of the goldfinch about it.")
August 15, 1859 ("Hypericum Canadense, Canadian St. John's-wort, distinguished by its red capsules.")
August 17, 1856 ("Hypericum Canadense well out at 2 p. m.")
August 17, 1851 ("The lead-colored berries of the Viburnum dentatum now.")
August 17, 1851 (" I see a goldfinch go twittering through the still, louring day, and am reminded of the peeping flocks which will soon herald the thoughtful season.")
August 17, 1851 (" I see a solitary goldfinch now and then. ")
August 18, 1853 ("The night of the year is approaching.”)

August 21, 1859 ("The blue herons must find it easy to get their living now. Are they not more common on our river such [drought] years as this?")
August 22, 1854 (“See a blue heron — apparently a young bird, of a brownish blue — fly up from one of these pools, and a stake-driver from another, and also see their great tracks on the mud, and the feathers they had shed, — some of the long, narrow white neck-feathers of the heron. The tracks of the heron are about six inches long.”)
August 23, 1853 ("I am again struck by the perfect correspondence of a day — say an August day — and the year. I think that a perfect parallel may be drawn between the seasons of the day and of the year.”)
August 23, 1858 ("There is no plateau on which Nature rests at midsummer, but she instantly commences the descent to winter.")
August 24, 1854 (“See a blue heron standing on the meadow at Fair Haven Pond. At a distance before you, only the two waving lines appear, and you would not suspect the long neck and legs.”)
August 25, 1856 ("Why is the black willow so strictly confined to the bank of the river? ")
August 26, 1856 (“A blue heron sails away from a pine at Holden Swamp shore and alights on the meadow above.”)
August 26, 1856 (“The desmodium flowers are pure purple, rose-purple in the morning when quite fresh, excepting the two green spots. The D. rotundifolium also has the two green (or in its case greenish) spots on its very large flower. . . . The round-leafed desmodium has sometimes seven pods and large flowers still fresh”)
August 27, 1859 ("Perfectly fresh and large low blackberries, peculiarly sweet and soft, in the shade of the pines at Thrush Alley,-- so much sweeter, tenderer, and larger.")
August 28, 1856 (“low blackberries done, high blackberries still to be had.”)
August 28, 1856 ("A goldfinch twitters away from every thistle now, and soon returns to it when I am past. I see the ground strewn with the thistle-down they have scattered on every side")
August 30, 1856 ("The sarothra is now apparently in prime on the Great Fields, and comes near being open now, at 3 p. m. Bruised, it has the fragrance of sorrel and lemon, rather pungent or stinging, like a bee.”)
August 31, 1856 ("A painted tortoise shedding its scales")
August 31, 1852 ("The evening of the year is colored like the sunset.")
September 1, 1852 ("A delicate hint of approaching autumn, when the first thistle-down descends on some smooth lake's surface, full of reflections, in the woods, sign to the fishes of the ripening year.”)
September 24, 1859 ("I would know when in the year to expect certain thoughts and moods")

August 19, 2016

If you make the least correct 
observation of nature this year,
 you will have occasion to repeat it
 with illustrations the next, 
and the season and life itself is prolonged.

 August 18  .<<<<<      August 19  >>>>>   August 20


A Book of the Seasons, by Henry Thoreau, August 19
A Book of the Seasons, by Henry Thoreau
"A book, each page written in its own season,
out-of-doors, in its own locality.”
~edited, assembled and rewritten by zphx © 2009-2022

tinyurl.com/HDT19August




Painted tortoise shedding scales.

 


August 19.


See painted tortoise shedding scales, half off and loose.


H. D. Thoreau, Journal,  August 19, 1855



Painted tortoise shedding scales.
See August 31, 1856 ("A painted tortoise shedding its scales"); September 15, 1855 ("See many painted tortoise scales being shed, half erect on their backs. "); September 22, 1855 (" Many tortoise-scales about the river now. "); October 12, 1855 ("Is not this the only way they get rid of the moss, etc., which adhere to them?") See also A Book of the Seasons:  the Painted Turtle (Emys picta)


August 19. See A Book of the Seasons,  by Henry Thoreau, August 19


A Book of the Seasons,  by Henry Thoreau
"A book, each page written in its own season,
out-of-doors, in its own locality.”
~edited, assembled and rewritten by zphx © 2009-2021

Monday, August 19, 2019

This is a world where there are flowers.


August 19.
 
AUGUST 19, 2017

Clematis Virginiana; calamint; Lycopus Europeus, water horehound. This is a world where there are flowers. 

Now, at 5 a. m., the fog, which in the west looks like a wreath of hard-rolled cotton-batting, is rapidly dispersing. The echo of the railroad whistle is heard the horizon round; the gravel train is starting out. The farmers are cradling oats in some places.

For some days past I have noticed a red maple or two about the pond, though we have had no frost. The grass is very wet with dew this morning.

 The way in which men cling to old institutions after the life has departed out of them, and out of themselves, reminds me of those monkeys which cling by their tails, — aye, whose tails contract about the limbs, even the dead limbs, of the forest, and they hang suspended beyond the hunter's reach long after they are dead. It is of no use to argue with such men. They have not an apprehensive intellect, but merely, as it were, a prehensile tail. Their intellect possesses merely the quality of a prehensile tail. The tail itself contracts around the dead limb even after they themselves are dead, and not till sensible corruption takes place do they fall.

The black howling monkey, or caraya. According to Azara, it is extremely difficult to get at them, for "when mortally wounded they coil the tail round a branch, and hang by it with the head downwards for days after death, and until, in fact, decomposition begins to take effect." The commenting naturalist says, "A singular peculiarity of this organ is to contract at its extremity of its own accord as soon as it is extended to its full length." I relinquish argument, I wait for decomposition to take place, for the subject is dead; as I value the hide for the museum. They say, " Though you 've got my soul, you sha'n't have my carcass." 

P. M. — To Marlborough Road via Clamshell Hill, Jenny Dugan's, Round Pond, Canoe Birch Road (Deacon Dakin's), and White Pond. 

How many things concur to keep a man at home, to prevent his yielding to his inclination to wander! If I would extend my walk a hundred miles, I must carry a tent on my back for shelter at night or in the rain, or at least I must carry a thick coat to be prepared for a change in the weather. So that it requires some resolution, as well as energy and foresight, to undertake the simplest journey. Man does not travel as easily as the birds migrate. He is not everywhere at home, like flies. When I think how many things I can conveniently carry, I am wont to think it most convenient to stay at home. My home, then, to a certain extent is the place where I keep my thick coat and my tent and some books which I cannot carry; where, next, I can depend upon meeting some friends; and where, finally, I, even I, have established myself in business. But this last in my case is the least important qualification of a home. 

The poet must be continually watching the moods of his mind, as the astronomer watches the aspects of the heavens. What might we not expect from a long life faithfully spent in this wise? The humblest observer would see some stars shoot. A faithful description as by a disinterested person of the thoughts which visited a certain mind in threescore years and ten, as when one reports the number and character of the vehicles which pass a particular point. 

As travellers go round the world and report natural objects and phenomena, so faithfully let another stay at home and report the phenomena of his own life, — catalogue stars, those thoughts whose orbits are as rarely calculated as comets. It matters not whether they visit my mind or yours, — whether the meteor falls in my field or in yours, — only that it come from heaven.

 (I am not concerned to express that kind of truth which Nature has expressed. Who knows but I may suggest some things to her? Time was when she was indebted to such suggestions from another quarter, as her present advancement shows. I deal with the truths that recommend themselves to me, — please me, — not those merely which any system has voted to accept.) 

A meteorological journal of the mind. You shall observe what occurs in your latitude, I in mine. Some institutions — most institutions, indeed — have had a divine origin. But of most that we see prevailing in society nothing but the form, the shell, is left; the life is extinct, and there is nothing divine in them. Then the reformer arises inspired to reinstitute life, and whatever he does or causes to be done is a reestablishment of that same or a similar divineness. But some, who never knew the significance of these instincts, are, by a sort of false instinct, found clinging to the shells. 

Those who have no knowledge of the divine appoint themselves defenders of the divine, as champions of the church, etc. I have been astonished to observe how long some audiences can endure to hear a man speak on a subject which he knows nothing about, as religion for instance, when one who has no ear for music might with the same propriety take up the time of a musical assembly with putting through his opinions on music. 

This young man who is the main pillar of some divine institution, — does he know what he has undertaken? If the saints were to come again on earth, would they be likely to stay at his house? would they meet with his approbation even ? Ne sutor ultra crepidam. They who merely have a talent for affairs are forward to express their opinions. A Roman soldier sits there to decide upon the righteousness of Christ. The world does not long endure such blunders, though they are made every day.

The weak-brained and pusillanimous farmers would fain abide by the institutions of their fathers. Their argument is they have not long to live, and for that little space let them not be disturbed in their slumbers; blessed are the peacemakers; let this cup pass from me, etc. 

How vain it is to sit down to write when you have not stood up to live! Methinks that the moment my legs begin to move, my thoughts begin to flow, as if I had given vent to the stream at the lower end and consequently new fountains flowed into it at the upper. A thousand rills which have their rise in the sources of thought burst forth and fertilize my brain. You need to increase the draught below, as the owners of meadows on Concord River say of the Billerica Dam. Only while we are in action is the circulation perfect. The writing which consists with habitual sitting is mechanical, wooden, dull to read. 

The grass in the high pastures is almost as dry as hay.

The seasons do not cease a moment to revolve, and therefore Nature rests no longer at her culminating point than at any other. If you are not out at the right instant, the summer may go by and you not see it.

How much of the year is spring and fall! how little can be called summer! The grass is no sooner grown than it begins to wither. How much Nature herself suffers from drought ! It seems quite as much as she can do to produce these crops. 

The most inattentive walker can see how the science of geology took its rise. The inland hills and promontories betray the action of water on their rounded sides as plainly as if the work were completed yesterday. He sees it with but half an eye as he walks, and forgets his thought again. Also the level plains and more recent meadows and marine shells found on the tops of hills. The geologist painfully and elaborately follows out these suggestions, and hence his fine-spun theories. 

The goldfinch, though solitary, is now one of the commonest birds in the air. What if a man were earnestly and wisely to set about recollecting and preserving the thoughts which he has had ! How many perchance are now irrecoverable! Calling in his neighbors to aid him.

I do not like to hear the name of particular States given to birds and flowers which are found in all equally, — as Maryland yellow -throat, etc., etc. The Canadenses and Virginicos may be suffered to pass for the most part, for there is historical as well as natural reason at least for them. Canada is the peculiar country of some and the northern limit of many more plants. And Virginia, which was originally the name for all the Atlantic shore, has some right to stand for the South. 

The fruit of the sweet-gale by Nut Meadow Brook is of a yellowish green now and has not yet its greasy feel. 

The little red-streaked and dotted excrescences on the shrub oaks I find as yet no name for. 

Now for the pretty red capsules or pods of the Hypericum Canadense.

 White goldenrod is budded along the Marlborough road. Chickadees and jays never fail. 

The cricket's is a note which does not attract you to itself. It is not easy to find one.

I fear that the character of my knowledge is from year to year becoming more distinct and scientific; that, in exchange for views as wide as heaven's cope, I am being narrowed down to the field of the microscope. I see details, not wholes nor the shadow of the whole. I count some parts, and say, "I know."

The cricket's chirp now fills the air in dry fields near pine woods. 

Gathered our first watermelon to-day. 

By the Marlborough road I notice the richly veined leaves of the Neottia pubescens, or veined neottia, rattlesnake-plantain. I like this last name very well, though it might not be easy to convince a quibbler or proser of its fitness. We want some name to express the mystic wildness of its rich leaves. Such work as men imitate in their embroidery, unaccountably agreeable to the eye, as if it answered its end only when it met the eye of man; a reticulated leaf, visible only on one side; little things which make one pause in the woods, take captive the eye. 

Here is a bees' or wasps' nest in the sandy, mouldering bank by the roadside, four inches in diameter, as if made of scales of striped brown paper. It is singular if indeed man first made paper and then discovered its resemblance to the work of the wasps, and did not derive the hint from them. 

Canoe birches by road to Dakin's. Cuticle stripped off; inner bark dead and scaling off; new (inner) bark formed. 

The Solomon's-seals are fruited now, with finely red-dotted berries. There was one original name well given, Buster Kendal.

The fragrance of the clethra fills the air by water sides. 

In the hollows where in winter is a pond, the grass is short, thick, and green still, and here and there are tufts pulled up as if by the mouth of cows. 

Small rough sunflower by side of road between canoe birch and White Pond, — Helianthus divaricatus.  

Lespedeza capitata, shrubby lespedeza, White Pond road and Marlborough road. 

L. polystachya, hairy lespedeza, Corner road beyond Hubbard's Bridge.

H. D. Thoreau, Journal, August 19,  1851


This is a world where there are flowers.See April 18, 1852 "Why should just these sights and sounds accompany our life ,,, why just this circle of creatures completes this world? ") Walden ("Why do precisely these objects which we behold make a world?") 

A faithful description as by a disinterested person of the thoughts which visited a certain mind in threescore years and ten, as when one reports the number and character of the vehicles which pass a particular point. See December 28, 1852 ("Keep the time, observe the hours of the universe, not of the cars. What are threescore years and ten hurriedly and coarsely lived to moments of divine leisure in which your life is coincident with the life of the universe?")

The seasons do not cease a moment to revolve, and therefore Nature rests no longer at her culminating point than at any other. If you are not out at the right instant, the summer may go by and you not see it. See July 19, 1851 ("Yesterday it was spring, and to-morrow it will be autumn."); June 6, 1857 ("Each season is but an infinitesimal point. It no sooner comes than it is gone. It has no duration."); August 23, 1858 ("There is no plateau on which Nature rests at midsummer, but she instantly commences the descent to winter.")

How vain it is to sit down to write when you have not stood up to live! See September 2, 1851 ("We cannot write well or truly but what we write with gusto. . . . Expression is the act of the whole man. . . A writer, a man writing, is the scribe of all nature; he is the corn and the grass and the atmosphere writing. It is always essential that we love to do what we are doing, do it with a heart.”); May 6, 1854 ("Every important worker will report what life there is in him.”); January 23, 1858. (" It is in vain to write on the seasons unless you have the seasons in you."); see also October 18, 1855 (“Pursue some path, however narrow and crooked, in which you can walk with love and reverence.”); November 18, 1857 "Each man's necessary path, though as obscure and apparently uneventful as that of a beetle in the grass, is the way to the deepest joys he is susceptible of .”); April 29, 1852 (“The art of life, of a poet's life, is, not having anything to do, to do something”);

I am being narrowed down to the field of the microscope. I see details, not wholes.
See March 5, 1852 ("Such is the mood of my mind, and I call it studying lichens. The habit of looking at things microscopically, as the lichens on the trees and rocks, really prevents my seeing aught else in a walk")

The poet must be continually watching the moods of his mind.
 See June 6, 1857 ("Each experience reduces itself to a mood of the mind."); June 25, 1852 ("There is a flower for every mood of the mind."); August 28, 1851 The poet is a man who lives at last by watching his moods. An old poet comes at last to watch his moods as narrowly as a cat does a mouse. See also A Book of the Seasons, by Henry Thoreau, Moods and Seasons of the Mind.

August 19. See A Book of the Seasons,  by Henry Thoreau, August 19

Sunday, August 19, 2018

You may say it is the first day of autumn.

August 19. 

P. M. — Sail to Baker Farm shore. 

It is cool with a considerable northwesterly wind, so that we can sail to Fair Haven. The dog-day weather is suddenly gone and here is a cool, clear, and elastic air. You may say it is the first day of autumn. 

You notice the louder and clearer ring of crickets, and the large, handsome red spikes of the Polygonum amphibium are now generally conspicuous along the shore. The P. hydropiperoides fairly begins to show. The front-rank polygonum is now in prime. 

We scare up a stake-driver several times. The blue heron has within a week reappeared in our meadows, and the stake-driver begins to be seen oftener, and as early as the 5th I noticed young summer ducks about; the same of hawks, owls, etc. 

This occurs as soon as the young birds can take care of themselves, and some appear to be very early on the return southward, with the very earliest prospect of fall. Such birds are not only more abundant but, methinks, more at leisure now, having reared their family, and perhaps they are less shy. 

Yes, bitterns are more frequently seen now to lift themselves from amid the pontederia or flags, and take their sluggish flight to a new resting-place, —bitterns which either have got through the labors of breeding or are now first able to shift for themselves.

And likewise blue herons, which have bred or been bred not far from us (plainly), are now at leisure, or are impelled to revisit our slow stream. I have not seen the last since spring. 

When I see the first heron, like a dusky blue wave undulating over our meadows again, I think, since I saw them going northward the other day, how many of these forms have been added to the landscape, complete from bill to toe, while, perhaps, I have idled! 

I see two herons. A small bird is pursuing the heron as it does a hawk. Perhaps it is a blackbird and the herons gobble up their young! 

I see thistle-down, grayish-white, floating low quite across Fair Haven Pond. There is wont to be just water [sic] enough above the surface to drive it along. 

The heads of the wool-grass are now brown and, in many meadows, lodged. 

The button-bush is about done. Can hardly see a blossom. 

The mikania not yet quite in prime. 

Pontederia has already begun to wane; i. e., the fields of them are not so dense, many seed-vessels having turned down; and some leaves are already withered and black, but the remaining spikes are as fair as ever. 

It chances that I see no yellow lilies. They must be scarce now. 

The water is high for the season. Water cool to bather. 

We have our first green corn to-day, but it is late.

The saw-grass (Paspalum?) of mown fields, not long. 

I noticed the localities of black willows as far up as the mouth of the river in Fair Haven Pond, but not so carefully as elsewhere, and from the last observations I infer that the willow grows especially and almost exclusively in places where the drift is most likely to lodge, as on capes and points and concave sides of the river, though I noticed a few exceptions to my rule. 

It is so cool, some apprehend a frost to-night.

H. D. Thoreau, Journal, August 19, 1858

The dog-day weather is suddenly gone and here is a cool, clear, and elastic air. You may say it is the first day of autumn. See August 19, 1853 ("The first bright day of the fall . . .. The dog-day mists are gone; the washed earth shines; the cooler air braces man. No summer day is so beautiful as the fairest spring and fall days.”)

I see thistle-down, grayish-white, floating low quite across Fair Haven Pond. September 1, 1852 (“-- a delicate hint of approaching autumn, when the first thistle-down descends on some smooth lake's surface, full of reflections, in the woods, sign to the fishes of the ripening year.”)

Blue herons, which have bred or been bred not far from us (plainly), are now at leisure, or are impelled to revisit our slow stream. See August 12, 1853 ("See the blue herons opposite Fair Haven Hill, as if they had bred here.”); August 14,1859 (" If you would know the depth of the water on these few shoalest places of Musketaquid, ask the blue heron that wades and fishes there"): August 15, 1852 (“See a blue heron on the meadow.”); August 15, 1860 ("See a blue heron.”); August 16. 1858 ("A blue heron, with its great undulating wings, prominent cutwater, and leisurely flight, goes over southwest, cutting off the bend of the river west of our house."); August 21, 1859 ("The blue herons must find it easy to get their living now. Are they not more common on our river such [drought] years as this?"); August 24, 1854 (“See a blue heron standing on the meadow at Fair Haven Pond. At a distance before you, only the two waving lines appear, and you would not suspect the long neck and legs.”); August 22, 1854 (“See a blue heron — apparently a young bird, of a brownish blue — fly up from one of these pools, and a stake-driver from another, and also see their great tracks on the mud, and the feathers they had shed, — some of the long, narrow white neck-feathers of the heron. The tracks of the heron are about six inches long.”); August 26, 1856 (“A blue heron sails away from a pine at Holden Swamp shore and alights on the meadow above.”) See also A Book of the Seasons, by Henry Thoreau, the Blue Heron


August 19. See A Book of the Seasons,  by Henry Thoreau, August 19

A Book of the Seasons,  by Henry Thoreau
"A book, each page written in its own season,
out-of-doors, in its own locality.”
~edited, assembled and rewritten by zphx © 2009-2021





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