[69]
lord of the manor in Concord, who heard me patiently through, and then said: “Whereunto?
You have not established the preliminary point.
Why should any one wish to have Thoreau's journals printed?”
Ten years later, four successive volumes were made out of these journals by the late H. G. O. Blake, and it became a question if the whole might not be published.
I hear from a local photograph dealer in Concord that the demand for Thoreau's pictures now exceeds that for any other local celebrity.
In the last sale catalogue of autographs which I have encountered, I find a letter from Thoreau priced at $17.50, one from Hawthorne valued at the same, one from Longfellow at $4.50 only, and one from Holmes at $3, each of these being guaranteed as an especially good autograph letter.
Now the value of such memorials during a man's life affords but a slight test of his permanent standing,--since almost any man's autograph can be obtained for two postage-stamps if the request be put with sufficient ingenuity;--but when this financial standard can be safely applied more than thirty years after a man's death, it comes pretty near to a permanent fame.
It is true that Thoreau had Emerson as the editor of four of his posthumous volumes; but it is also true that he had against him the vehement
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