ShmoopTube

Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.

Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos


19th-Century Literature Videos 51 videos

A Christmas Carol
33105 Views

How did Scrooge go from being naughty to nice so quickly, and why? (Hint: contrary to popular belief, it has nothing to do with the ghost of Santa...

The Tell-tale Heart
937 Views

What would YOU do if the heart of the person you buried under the floorboards started making noise? Only one way to find out... (Note: Shmoop does...

Lady of Shalott
441 Views

Meet the Lady of Shalott. Not to be confused with the Lady of Shallot, who is frequently in a pickle.

See All

ELA 11: 4.2a Henry David Thoreau 248 Views


Share It!


Description:

If you ever feel like taking off, living in the woods alone, and refusing to pay for anything, just tell people you're a transcendentalist. They'll respect you more.

Language:
English Language

Transcript

00:03

Ah, the simple life... That's the life for Henry David Thoreau. [Thoreau in the wilderness]

00:07

No crazy parties, no loud, crowded places. Yeah, he was a Netflix and chill kind of [crowded party]

00:14

guy. Thoreau was born in Concord, Massachusetts in 1817. While he later [Concord, MA on a map]

00:19

dismissed college as a place where students couldn't pick up a practical [Thoreau at college]

00:22

skill to save their lives, he thoroughly enjoyed himself at Harvard reading as [Thoreau reads at Harvard]

00:27

many books been taking as many classes as he could. Yeah, he was one of those kids. In

00:32

1837, Thoreau happened to attend a lecture given by Ralph Waldo Emerson, high [Emerson speaks]

00:36

lord of the Transcendentalists. Thoreau loved what Emerson had to say, and he

00:40

introduced himself. The two became such good friends that Thoreau eventually [Emerson and Thoreau meet]

00:44

became Emerson's housekeeper and the "manny" to his kids... He was basically Mary

00:50

Poppins, minus the umbrella and high heels, and flying and all that. But then [Thoreau dressed as Mary Poppins]

00:54

in 1842, tragedy struck. Thoreau's older brother and his best friend died. [brother and friend die]

00:58

A devastated Thoreau took to wandering the New England woods and setting forest [Thoreau wanders through woods]

01:03

fires. Well, to Smokey the Bear, he was public enemy number one. Okay, so he [Smokey the bear appears]

01:07

didn't start fires... at least not on purpose, anyway. In 1845, Emerson asked Thoreau to

01:12

replant trees on his property at Walden Pond. It was at this point that Thoreau [Thoreau and Emerson talk]

01:16

had the idea that would make him famous. See, Thoreau couldn't understand why [Thoreau has idea]

01:20

people were so gung-ho about industrialization. He didn't get why his

01:24

fellow Americans were so dead set on acquiring stuff. Thoreau wanted to live

01:29

as simply as possible, so he decided to build a cabin on the shores of Walden [Thoreau builds cabin]

01:32

Pond and well, basically do just that. Now Thoreau's experiment wasn't as

01:37

radical as he would later make it sound. While he did grow his own food and

01:40

perform odd jobs around town, he was living rent-free on Emerson's property. [Thoreau lives in cabin]

01:45

Not to mention the fact that both Emerson and mama Thoreau lived right down the

01:49

street and were always looking to feed Thoreau a hot meal. While people frequently

01:53

criticized Thoreau for being an unmotivated hippie, which we at Shmoop [Thoreau as a hippie]

01:57

actually think is kind of cool, the fact is that he got a lot of writing

02:01

done while he lived in his cabin. Well, much of that writing would become the

02:04

book Walden, which laid out Thoreau's ideas on nature and conservation. While [Thoreau writes Walden]

02:09

Thoreau wasn't necessarily the first environmentalist, he was the first to try

02:13

and formulate a coherent philosophy about environmentalism itself. By 1848, [Environmentalist philosophy forms]

02:18

Thoreau had moved out of his cabin and embarked on a one-man crusade against [Thoreau protests government]

02:22

the U.S. government. Thoreau hated slavery, and he hated the Mexican-American war. There

02:27

was a lot of hate in such a peaceful guy. But yeah, he believed the American

02:31

government to be unjust, so he refused to support it. He refused to pay his poll [Thoreau criticizes president]

02:36

tax, a crime that got him thrown in prison overnight. And remember, poll tax [Thoreau in jail]

02:40

was so you could vote, right? Thoreau was perfectly willing to rot in jail for longer, but a

02:45

friend bailed him out against his will. "Against his will"... sure there, Henry. In 1849, Thoreau's [friend bails Thoreau out]

02:52

discourse on this experience was published as a text entitled Civil

02:56

Disobedience. His words would go on to inspire Martin Luther King Jr. and [Civil Disobedience inspires others]

03:00

others working for equal rights. Well, in 1862, Thoreau died of a cross between

03:04

consumption and a bad cold. While many people thought him a silly and [Thoreau dies]

03:09

self-indulgent sort of fellow, the fact is that Thoreau was perfectly happy doing

03:13

his own thing. And check out some of those shows on Alaska on Discovery [modern Alaska TV show]

03:17

Channel if you want an idea for the modern day version. He also inspired many people to worry less

03:22

about buying lots of stuff and spend more time doing things that actually [man in cluttered garage]

03:26

matter. Like, you know, accidentally torching Walden Woods. [woods on fire]

Related Videos

A Christmas Carol
33105 Views

How did Scrooge go from being naughty to nice so quickly, and why? (Hint: contrary to popular belief, it has nothing to do with the ghost of Santa...

The Tell-tale Heart
937 Views

What would YOU do if the heart of the person you buried under the floorboards started making noise? Only one way to find out... (Note: Shmoop does...

Lady of Shalott
441 Views

Meet the Lady of Shalott. Not to be confused with the Lady of Shallot, who is frequently in a pickle.

ELA 11 5.1: Harriet Jacobs
136 Views

Harriet Jacobs' narrative gave Americans an unprecedented account of what it meant to be a fugitive of slavery. Check out this video for more about...

ELA 11 5.2: William Lloyd Garrison
108 Views

Oh, William Lloyd Garrison and his radical ideas... like... you know... freedom and equality. Weird, right?