< Page:Familiar letters of Henry David Thoreau.djvu
This page needs to be proofread.

2ET.38.] TO DANIEL RICKETSON. 309

TO DANIEL RICKETSON (AT NEW BEDFORD).

CONCORD, September 27, 1855.

FRIEND RICKETSON, I am sorry that you were obliged to leave Concord without seeing more of it, its river and woods, and various pleasant walks, and its worthies. I assure you that I am none the worse for my walk with you, but on all accounts the better. Methinks I am regaining my health ; but I would like to know first what it was that ailed me.

I have not yet conveyed your message to Mr. Hosmer, 1 but will not fail to do so. That idea of occupying the old house is a good one, quite feasible, and you could bring your hair-pillow with you. It is an inn in Concord which I had not thought of, a philosopher s inn. That large chamber might make a man s idea expand proportionably. It would be well to have an interest in some old chamber in a deserted house in every part of the country which attracted us.

1 This was Edmund Hosmer, a Concord farmer, before men tioned as a friend of Emerson, who was fond of quoting his sagacious and often cynical remarks. He had entertained George Curtis and the Alcotts at his farm on the " Turnpike," southeast of Emerson s ; but now was living on a part of the old manor of Governor Winthrop, which soon passed to the ownership of the Hunts ; and this house which Mr. Ricketson proposed to lease was the " old Hunt farmhouse," in truth built for the Winthrops two centuries before. It was soon

after torn down.

    This article is issued from Wikisource. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.