Herald of Freedom (essay) - Printed Sources

Printed Sources

  • My Thoughts are Murder to the State by Henry David Thoreau (ISBN 978-1434804266)
  • The Higher Law: Thoreau on Civil Disobedience and Reform (ISBN 978-0691118765)
  • Collected Essays and Poems by Henry David Thoreau (ISBN 978-1-88301195-6)
Henry David Thoreau
Speeches
  • Remarks After the Hanging of John Brown (1859)
Essays
  • The Service (1840)
  • A Walk to Wachusett (1842)
  • Paradise (to be) Regained (1843)
  • Sir Walter Raleigh (1844)
  • Herald of Freedom (1844)
  • Wendell Phillips Before the Concord Lyceum (1845)
  • Reform and the Reformers (1846–48)
  • Thomas Carlyle and His Works (1847)
  • Resistance to Civil Government, or Civil Disobedience (1849)
  • Slavery in Massachusetts (1854)
  • A Plea for Captain John Brown (1859)
  • The Last Days of John Brown (1860)
  • Walking (1861)
  • Life Without Principle (1863)
Books
  • A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers (1849)
  • Walden (1854)
Related
  • Thoreau Society
  • The Writings of Henry D. Thoreau
  • Wheeler-Minot Farmhouse
  • Excursions (1863)

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Famous quotes containing the words printed and/or sources:

    Everything that is printed and bound in a book contains some echo at least of the best that is in literature.
    Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862)

    Even healthy families need outside sources of moral guidance to keep those tensions from imploding—and this means, among other things, a public philosophy of gender equality and concern for child welfare. When instead the larger culture aggrandizes wife beaters, degrades women or nods approvingly at child slappers, the family gets a little more dangerous for everyone, and so, inevitably, does the larger world.
    Barbara Ehrenreich (20th century)