VI 1849-1851 The Language of the Leopard:
Wildness and Society
52. Shipwreck and Salvation on Cape Cod.
53. Fall 1849, Spring 1850: Hindu Idealism.
54. Spring 1850. 55. ]uly 1850: The Wreck of the
Elizabeth. 56. August and September 1850: The Material
of a Million Concords. 57. Fall 1850: Trip to Canada.
58. The Red Face of Man I. 59. The Red Face of Man II.
60. November 1850 to April 1851: Gramatica Parda.
61. Technological Comervative. 62. Myth and Wildness.
VII 1851-1852 New Books, New Worlds
63. Spring 1851: The Naming of Apples. 64. June 1851:
The Four Worlds of Henry Thoreau. 65. Thoreau, Darwin,
and The Voyage of the Beagle. 66. Summer 1851:
Practical Transcendentalism. 67. Fa/11851: This is my
Home, my Native Soil. 68. December 1851 to February
1852: The Short Days of Winter. 69. Lapidae Crescunt.
70. A Sufficient List of Failures. 71. April 1852: William
Gilpin and the articulation of landscape. 7 2. The
Articulation of Landscape. 73. The Flowering of Man.
74. My Year of Observation. 75. August and September
1852: Country Life.
VIII 1852-1854 Walden, or the Triumph of the Organic
76. Ante-Columbian History. 77. The Jesuit Relations.
78. Pantheism. 79. America. 80. Spring 1853: The
Golden Gates. 81. Summer 1853: Walden Five. 82. Fall
1853: Friends. 83. Chesuncook. 84. ]anuary 1854:
Walden Six. 85. February and March 1854: Triumph of
the Organic. 86. Spring and Summer 1854: Anthony
Bums. 87.July and August 1854: Walden.
IX 1854-1862 The Economy of Nature
88. Night and Moonlight. 89. New Friends. 90. Life
Without Principle. 91. Recovery. 92. The Dispersion of
Seeds and the Succession of Forest Trees. 9 3. Walt Whitman
and the Ethics of lntemity. 94. The lndian. 95. Autumnal
Tints, John Ruskin, and the Innocent Eye. 96. Louis Agassiz
and the Theory of Special Creation. 97. A Plea for Captain
Brown. 98. Darwin and the Developmental Theory.
99. Beyond Transcendentalism: The Natural History
Projects. 100. One World at a Time.
Chronology
Principal Sources
Notes
Index