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         Salt Henry:     more books (100)
  1. Animals' Rights Considered in Relation to Social Progress. -- by Henry Stephens Salt, 2010-10-14
  2. The life of Henry David Thoreau by Henry Stephens Salt, 1890-01-01
  3. Wings Without Birds (Salt Modern Poets) by Brian Henry, 2010-03-30
  4. Henry Salt: Humanitarian Reformer and Man of Letters by George Hendrick, 1977-08-01
  5. A Brief Account Of The Researches And Discoveries In Upper Egypt: Made Under The Direction Of Henry Salt (1836) by Giovanni D'Athanasi, 2010-09-10
  6. The Life and Correspondence of Henry Salt ... Consul General in Egypt, Volume 2 by John James Halls, 2010-03-05
  7. Selections from Thoreau: Edited, with an Introduction by Henry Stephens Salt by Henry David Thoreau, 2005-11-30
  8. The Savour of Salt: A Henry Salt Anthology by Henry S. Salt, 1989-01
  9. The creed of kinship / by Henry S. Salt by Henry Stephens (1851-1939) Salt, 1935
  10. The Life and Correspondence of Henry Salt Consul General in Egypt by John James Halls, 2009-12-25
  11. The Life and Correspondence of Henry Salt, Esq. F.R.S. &c: His Britannic Majesty's Late Consul-General in Egypt. Volume 1 by John James Halls, 2002-03-22
  12. The Life and Correspondence of Henry Salt ... Consul General in Egypt, Volume 1 by John James Halls, 2010-02-23
  13. Henry Salt by Deborah Manley, Peta Ree, 2002-07-01
  14. Seventy years among savages by Henry Stephens Salt, 2010-09-13

1. Henry S. Salt - Humanitarian Reformer Site
Henry Salt is not well know today but his work for humanitarian causes brought him praise from the likes of Mahatma
http://www.radioafrica.co.uk/henrysalt
Henry S. Salt Henry Stephens Salt is not well-known today but he wrote nearly 40 books most of which cogently argued and urged for some much needed humane reforms in prisons, schools, in the economic organisations of society at large, and in the treatment of animals. He also founded the Humanitarian League and was editor of their publications. He had a profound influence on Mahatma Gandhi whom he introduced to Thoreau's writings via his own book on the then little known writer. Gandhi himself acknowledged the intellectual debt to Thoreau's essay on "civil disobedience" and Henry Salt in his own formulation of civil disobedience and non-violent noncooperation. So why is Henry Salt's writing important today? Firstly, hunting with dogs is again an issue in the U.K., his book Killing for Sport along his other writing on fox hunting, hare coursing, stag hunting, cub hunting and other bloodsports clearly demonstrates the sophisms used by the bloodsport lobby. Secondly, his masterpiece Animals' Rights: Considered in Relation to Social Progress remains the best and most readable book on animal "rights". Whichever humanitarian cause he chose to write about he managed to use his wit to show the folly of those opposed to progress. Thirdly, his autobiographies are a fascinating, and amusing, record of England during his lifetime, particularly of Eton, his friends, and socialism. Finally, his studies of Thoreau, Shelley and Jefferies remain among the most insightful ever written. In particular his

2. Henry Stephens SaltHenry Stephens Salt Henry S. Salt Can Be Defined As THE Human
advance the literary reputation of Henry David Thoreau than Henry S. Salt. HENRY S. SALT (18511939) was a biographer
http://www.punkerslut.com/articles/henrystephenssalt.html%20
Main Books Essays Critiques ...
[BACK to the Great Freethinkers.] Henry Stephens Salt By Punkerslut Henry S. Salt can be defined as THE Humanitarian. Salt is responsible for many influencial changes in the political environment in his day and many of those changes still have a lasting effect. However, before I continue to unveil the developments that Salt is responsible for, it is best that his philosophy be placed into word. To quote Salt from his own self-penned funeral address ( Henry Salt, Humanitarian Reformer and Man of Letters ...when I say I shall die, as I have lived, rationalist, socialist, pacifist, and humanitarian, I must make my meaning clear. I wholly disbelieve in the present established religion; but I have a very firm religious faith of my own - a Creed of Kinship I call it - a belief that in years yet to come there will be a recognition of brotherhood between man and man, nation and nation, human and subhuman, which will transform a state of semi-savagery, as we have it, into one of civilisation, when there will be no such barbarity of warfare, or the robbery of the poor by the rich, or the ill-usage of the lower animals by mankind. Plainly stated, he was a Humanitarian and a Rationalist. He believed that every conscious being deserves the right to the consideration of his interests. He believed in rational and logical consideration of doctrines. When he studied the sufferings of others, and compared them with his own, he realized that they were in fact similar. From this, he believed in a kinship as he highly promoted of all conscious beings. He believed in warmth and compassion. He believed that compassion would eventually conquer cruelty, that we will live in a world free from oppression and horror. He was also logical and reasonable in his consideration. He was not bogged down with the unnecessary discrimination and prejudice of his day, or even our day. He did not accept Christ as his savior and he did not accept flesh as his meal. He was an intelligent, caring human being. His net of compassion embraced all conscious beings and his enormous intelligence evicted religion.

3. HENDRICK / Henry Salt
Henry Salt. Hendrick, George. Although detailed information is not yetelectronically available for this older title, you can purchase
http://www.press.uillinois.edu/pre95/0-252-00611-9.html
Henry Salt
Hendrick, George
Although detailed information is not yet electronically available for this older title,
you can purchase it by choosing the link below
228 pages.
Cloth, ISBN 0-252-00611-9. $24.95
Click here to buy this hardcover

4. Henry Salt
Henry Salt. Born in 1785 in Litchfield, Henry Salt was trained as a portraitpainterand first travelled to Egypt in the service of a nobleman (1802-1806).
http://emuseum.mnsu.edu/information/biography/pqrst/salt_henry.html
Henry Salt
Born in 1785 in Litchfield, Henry Salt was trained as a portrait-painter and first travelled to Egypt in the service of a nobleman (1802-1806). The son of a local doctor and trained as a painter of portraits, he studied at the Royal Academy under Farington and Hoppner. Henry Salt became associated with Egyptology as the employer of Belzoni, friend of Burckhardt, and the owner of three important collections of Egyptian Antiquities. ( http://www.geocities.com/paesante/salt.html He first visited Egypt when he toured India and North Africa with the Viscount Valentia and George Annesley. He then returned to Africa in 1809 on a government mission to contact the King of Abyssinia, which took him 2 years to acomplish. ( http://www.geocities.com/paesante/salt.html In 1815 he was appointed as British Consul-General in Alexandria. There he started forming an extensive collection of antiquities for sale to the British Museum. During his time as Consul-General, he sponsored many excavations in Egypt and Nubia, where he ended up acquiring many valuable antiquities for the British Museum, as well as adding to his own already immense collection. Through the help and services of Giovanni d'Athanasi and Giovanni Belzoni, he procured several important monuments from Thebes. ( http://www.geocities.com/paesante/salt.html

5. Henry Salt
Henry Salt Roy Kinnear Roy Mitchell Kinnear was born 8 January 1934in Wigan, Lancashire, England. Kinnear had a solid acting career
http://www.geocities.com/Hollywood/Pavillion/6441/henrysalt.html
Henry Salt
Roy Kinnear
Roy Mitchell Kinnear was born 8 January 1934 in Wigan, Lancashire, England. Kinnear had a solid acting career which began in 1965 and included appearances on "The Avengers" and roles in films such as A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum Scrooge The Three Musketeers and many more. Kinnear died 20 September 1988 in Madrid, Spain after falling from a horse during the filming of the film The Return of the Musketeers
(c) 2000 by Jenna . All Wonka images were created from screencaps I made from the Willy Wonka DVD and painstakingly edited by myself. Please do not take them for other web pages without permission. Thank you.

6. History Of Vegetarianism - Henry S. Salt (1851-1939)
Gandhi himself acknowledged the intellectual debt to Thoreau's essay on civil disobedience and henry salt in his own formulation of civil disobedience and non
http://www.ivu.org/history/salt/
International Vegetarian Union History of Vegetarianism Henry S. Salt
Henry S. Salt is probably not well-known today but he wrote nearly 40 books most of which cogently argued and urged for some much needed humane reforms in prisons, schools, in the economic organizations of society at large, and in the treatment of animals. He had a profound influence on Gandhi whom he introduced to Thoreau 's writings via his own book on the then little known writer. Gandhi himself acknowledged the intellectual debt to Thoreau's essay on "civil disobedience" and Henry Salt in his own formulation of civil disobedience and non-violent non-cooperation. Henry Salt also was visited by and influenced people like George Bernard Shaw , William Morris, G. K. Chesterton, H.M. Hyndman, Sidney and Beatrice Webb, Ramsay MacDonald and even Havelock Ellis. Though well-educated and destined for a lucrative career, Henry Salt choose to live a modest and very frugal life of a reform writer. He was practicing vegetarianism since he could not stomach seeing how the individual, living animal is "warped from its natural standard" to then be at our hands "scarcely more than animated beef or mutton or pork". Henry Salt is indeed an interesting turn-of-the-century writer whose ideas have been greatly influential and whose books are still worth reading. It is remarkable and hopeful how the ideas of a few thoughtful individuals can in the end wield such a large and progressive influence upon the world at large.

7. History Of Vegetarianism - On Henry Salt's 'Animal Rights'
henry S. salt (18511939) On henry salt's 'Animal Rights'. One of the classic bookson the subject was published in 1892 by the great humanitarian henry salt.
http://www.ivu.org/history/salt/rights.html
International Vegetarian Union History of Vegetarianism Henry S. Salt
On Henry Salt's 'Animal Rights'
by Stephen Ronan
The philosophical basis for animal protection using the concept of "rights" is not, as many believe, a recent phenomenon. One of the classic books on the subject was published in 1892 by the great humanitarian Henry Salt . His book is entitled "Animals' Rights: Considered in Relation to Social Progress." Peter Singer, in a preface to the Society for Animal Rights edition, states, "More momentous still was [Salt's] influence on Gandhi , whom Salt had befriended when Gandhi first arrived in England, alone, unknown and unable to find vegetarian food. Gandhi later wrote that he owed his thoughts about civil disobedience and non-cooperation to Salt's book on the then little-known American radical, Henry Thoreau Gandhi also, apparently, once stated, "It was Mr. Salt's book, "A Plea for Vegetarianism", which showed me why, apart from hereditary habit, and apart from my adherence to a vow administered to me by my mother, it was right to be a vegetarian. He showed me why it was a moral duty incumbent on vegetarians not to live upon fellow-animals." The following are the words of Henry Salt excerpted from the start of his 1892 book, "Animals' Rights: Considered in Relation to Social Progress."

8. On Henry Salt's "Animals' Rights"
On henry salt's "Animals' Rights" by Stephen Ronan The philosophical basis for animal protection using the concept of "rights" is not, as many believe, a recent phenomenon.
http://articles.animalconcerns.org/ar-voices/archive/H_Salt.html
On Henry Salt's "Animals' Rights"
by Stephen Ronan
Introduction
The philosophical basis for animal protection using the concept of "rights" is not, as many believe, a recent phenomenon. One of the classic books on the subject was published in 1892 by the great humanitarian Henry Salt . His book is entitled "Animals' Rights: Considered in Relation to Social Progress." Peter Singer, in a preface to the Society for Animal Rights edition, states, "More momentous still was [Salt's] influence on Gandhi, whom Salt had befriended when Gandhi first arrived in England, alone, unknown and unable to find vegetarian food. Gandhi later wrote that he owed his thoughts about civil disobedience and non-cooperation to Salt's book on the then little-known American radical, Henry Thoreau." Gandhi also, apparently, once stated, "It was Mr. Salt's book, A Plea for Vegetarianism , which showed me why, apart from hereditary habit, and apart from my adherence to a vow administered to me by my mother, it was right to be a vegetarian. He showed me why it was a moral duty incumbent on vegetarians not to live upon fellow-animals." The following are the words of Henry Salt excerpted from the start of his 1892 book, "Animals' Rights: Considered in Relation to Social Progress."

9. Henry Salt - Humanitarian Reformer
Information on the works of the rationalist, socialist, pacifist, and humanitarian.
http://www.radioafrica.co.uk/henrysalt/intro.htm
New Sections: Henry S. Salt Collection Wanted Items and the Salt Family Tree "I shall die, as I have lived, rationalist, socialist, pacifist, and humanitarian" Henry Salt is not well know today but his work for humanitarian causes brought him praise from the likes of Mahatma Gandhi. It was Henry Salt's book A Plea for Vegetarianism that had a profound influence on Mahatma Gandhi's vegetarian beliefs. But it was Salt's book on Thoreau's, then little known writer, that was to help shape history, as Gandhi himself acknowledged the intellectual debt to Thoreau's essay on "civil disobedience" and Henry Salt in his own formulation of civil disobedience and non-violent noncooperation. Henry Salt wrote nearly 40 books most of which cogently argued and urged for some much needed humane reforms in prisons, schools, in the economic organisations of society at large, and in the treatment of animals. He was the founder of the Humanitarian League and editor of their publications. Even some sixty years after his death, Henry Stephens Salt's writings on humanitarian causes are still of profound importance to humanitarian campaigners for several reasons. Firstly, hunting with dogs is once again an issue in the U.K., his book

10. John Henry's Food Products - We Sell Mail-order Barbeque Products
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11. Salt (Henry S.) -
salt (henry S.). salt (henryS.) Les droits de l´animal Pour en savoir plus FF 300,00 euros 45,73.
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Histoire de la médecine Index par sujets
Histoire de la psychiatrie et de psychanalyse
Index par sujets ... Plaquette > Rubrique: Salt (Henry S.) Salt (Henry S.)
Les droits de l´animal

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12. Salt (Henry S.)
Translate this page salt (henry S.) Les droits de l´animal. in-8, 128 pp Paris, H.Welter,1914. FF 300,00 euros 45,73. Quantité 1. Retour.
http://42ligne.free.fr/produits/p1364.html
Histoire de la médecine Index par sujets
Histoire de la psychiatrie et de psychanalyse
Index par sujets ... Plaquette Salt (Henry S.)
Les droits de l´animal

in-8, 128 pp
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13. Henry S. Salt Collection
Rights. henry salt founded the Humanitarian League. salt's henry DavidThoreau The Socialist Review, January/March 1918 (photocopy); The
http://www.radioafrica.co.uk/henrysalt/institute.htm
The Henry S. Salt Collection Much of Henry Salt's writing is now in institutions or private collections inaccessible to the general public. The aim of the Henry S. Salt site is to collect all the works and material relating to Henry Salt, the Humanitarian League, his influence on animal rights, vegetarianism, environmentalism, and his literary studies of Henry David Thoreau, Percy Bysshe Shelley and Richard Jefferies, to name but a few. The collection, when complete, will be made available to the general public in order that his contribution to social reform can be fully appreciated. Wanted see the list Salt wrote for several journals, especially during the 1880's, and as yet few appear in our collection. If you have access to the following essays or journals please contact us: Humanity, The Humanitarian, The Humane Review, Justice Progress To-day The Nineteenth Century, Temple Bar Seed-time (The Fellowship of the New Life) , Hygienic Review, Social Democrat, The Gentleman's Magazine, Time.

14. Stroup, Works Cited, "Henry Salt On Shelley: Literary Criticism And Ecological I
Works Cited list for 'henry salt on Shelley Literary Criticism and EcologicalIdentity' by William Stroup. salt, henry S. The Creed of Kinship.
http://www.rc.umd.edu/praxis/ecology/stroup/stroup_wc.html
Henry Salt on Shelley: Literary Criticism and Ecological Identity
William Stroup, Keene State College
abstract about William Stroup

Works Cited
Adams, Carol J. The Sexual Politics of Meat: A Feminist-Vegetarian Critical Theory . New York: Continuum, 1990. Axon, William E. A. Shelley's Vegetarianism . London, 1891. Reprinted. New York: Haskell House, 1971. Bate, Jonathan. Romantic Ecology: Wordsworth and the Environmental Tradition . London: Routledge, 1991. Bennett, Betty and Stuart Curran, eds. Shelley: Poet and Legislator of the World . Baltimore: Johns Hopkins UP, 1996. Cameron, Kenneth Neill. The Young Shelley: Genesis of a Radical. London: Macmillan, 1950. Carpenter, Edward. England's Ideal . London: Swan Sonnenschein, 1887. Dowden, Edward. The Life of Percy Bysshe Shelley. London: Kegan Paul, 1886. Elder, John. Reading the Mountains of Home. Cambridge, MA: Harvard UP, 1998. Eliot, T.S. The Use of Poetry and the Use of Criticism: Studies in the Relation of Criticism to Poetry in England . London: Faber, 1933. Foot, Paul.

15. This Is What He Meant
illusage of the lower animals by mankind.". henry Stephens salt henry salt, Humanitarian Reformer and Man of Letters
http://www.punkerslut.com/articles/thisiswhathemeant.html%20
Main Books Essays Critiques ... Links
This Is What He Meant By Punkerslut [Author's Note: Started Wednesday, Apirl 3, 2002; ended April 4, 2002.] "...when I say I shall die, as I have lived, rationalist, socialist, pacifist, and humanitarian, I must make my meaning clear. I wholly disbelieve in the present established religion; but I have a very firm religious faith of my own - a Creed of Kinship I call it - a belief that in years yet to come there will be a recognition of brotherhood between man and man, nation and nation, human and subhuman, which will transform a state of semi-savagery, as we have it, into one of civilisation, when there will be no such barbarity of warfare, or the robbery of the poor by the rich, or the ill-usage of the lower animals by mankind." Henry Stephens Salt [ Henry Salt, Humanitarian Reformer and Man of Letters For 108,
Punkerslut

16. Stroup, "Henry Salt On Shelley: Literary Criticism And Ecological Identity", Rom
henry salt on Shelley Literary Criticism and Ecological Identity. Such we are now,through our shared and enduring attention to Percy Shelley, for henry salt.
http://www.rc.umd.edu/praxis/ecology/stroup/stroup.html
Henry Salt on Shelley: Literary Criticism and Ecological Identity
William Stroup, Keene State College
abstract about William Stroup
Two key stages in the development of Percy Shelley's posthumous reputation came a half century apart. In 1886, revival of interest in the poet expanded with the publication of Edward Dowden's massive biography and the founding of the Shelley Society. By the mid-1930's, famous and influential critiques of the poet by T.S. Eliot and others felled trees over Shelleyan paths it would take years to clear. What makes these dates remarkable here is how they frame the active career of Henry Stephens Salt (1851-1939), one of Shelley's most perceptive readers and a forerunner, I will argue, of contemporary Ecocriticism. From his first book ( A Shelley Primer , 1887) to the final chapter of his last ( The Creed of Kinship , 1935), Salt remained engaged with Shelley's ideas and cited Shelley as a key inspiration for his reformist efforts. Of the nearly forty books Salt wrote , a handful announce themselves as specifically about Shelley: the Primer , obviously, plus critical studies of Julian and Maddalo and Hogg's Life of Shelley , prepared for the Shelley Society. Some of this material became part of the often-reprinted

17. On Henry Salt
On henry salt. Ted Altar. Though welleducated and destined for a lucrative career,henry salt choose to live a modest and very frugal life of a reform writer.
http://articles.animalconcerns.org/ar-voices/archive/H_Salt2.html
On Henry Salt
Ted Altar
"If the use of flesh-meat can itself be dispensed with, how can it be argued that the pain, which is inseparable from slaughtering, can be otherwise than unnecessary also?"
[Henry Salt, 1982, from "Animal Rights: Consideration to Social Progress] "The emancipation of men from cruelty and injustice will bring with it in due course the emancipation of animals also. The two reforms are inseparably connected, and neither can be fully realized alone.
[from "Seventy Years Among Savages"] "I cannot see how there can be any real and full recognition of Kinship as long as men continue either to cheat or to eat their fellow beings."
[from a letter to Gandhi, 1932] Henry S. Salt (1851-1939) is probably not well-known today but he wrote nearly 40 books most of which cogently argued and urged for some much needed humane reforms in prisons, schools, in the economic organizations of society at large, and in the treatment of animals. He had a profound influence on Gandhi whom he introduced to Thoreau's writings via his own book on the then little known writer. Gandhi himself acknowledged the intellectual debt to Thoreau's essay on "civil disobedience" and Henry Salt in his own formulation of civil disobedience and non-violent non-cooperation. Henry Salt also was visited by and influence people like George Bernard Shaw, William Morris, G. K. Chesterton, H.M. Hyndman, Sidney and Beatrice Webb, Ramsay MacDonald and even Havelock Ellis.

18. Henry Stephens Salt
supported by this site/transcribed by Punkerslut) henry S. salt at the InternationalVegetarian Union henry salt at Latin Quarter at Radio Africa henry salt on
http://www.punkerslut.com/articles/henrystephenssalt.html
Main Books Essays Critiques ...
[BACK to the Great Freethinkers.] Henry Stephens Salt By Punkerslut Henry S. Salt can be defined as THE Humanitarian. Salt is responsible for many influencial changes in the political environment in his day and many of those changes still have a lasting effect. However, before I continue to unveil the developments that Salt is responsible for, it is best that his philosophy be placed into word. To quote Salt from his own self-penned funeral address ( Henry Salt, Humanitarian Reformer and Man of Letters ...when I say I shall die, as I have lived, rationalist, socialist, pacifist, and humanitarian, I must make my meaning clear. I wholly disbelieve in the present established religion; but I have a very firm religious faith of my own - a Creed of Kinship I call it - a belief that in years yet to come there will be a recognition of brotherhood between man and man, nation and nation, human and subhuman, which will transform a state of semi-savagery, as we have it, into one of civilisation, when there will be no such barbarity of warfare, or the robbery of the poor by the rich, or the ill-usage of the lower animals by mankind. Plainly stated, he was a Humanitarian and a Rationalist. He believed that every conscious being deserves the right to the consideration of his interests. He believed in rational and logical consideration of doctrines. When he studied the sufferings of others, and compared them with his own, he realized that they were in fact similar. From this, he believed in a kinship as he highly promoted of all conscious beings. He believed in warmth and compassion. He believed that compassion would eventually conquer cruelty, that we will live in a world free from oppression and horror. He was also logical and reasonable in his consideration. He was not bogged down with the unnecessary discrimination and prejudice of his day, or even our day. He did not accept Christ as his savior and he did not accept flesh as his meal. He was an intelligent, caring human being. His net of compassion embraced all conscious beings and his enormous intelligence evicted religion.

19. This Is What He Meant
warfare, or the robbery of the poor by the rich, or the illusage of the lower animalsby mankind. henry Stephens salt henry salt, Humanitarian Reformer
http://www.punkerslut.com/articles/thisiswhathemeant.html
Main Books Essays Critiques ... Links
This Is What He Meant By Punkerslut [Author's Note: Started Wednesday, Apirl 3, 2002; ended April 4, 2002.] "...when I say I shall die, as I have lived, rationalist, socialist, pacifist, and humanitarian, I must make my meaning clear. I wholly disbelieve in the present established religion; but I have a very firm religious faith of my own - a Creed of Kinship I call it - a belief that in years yet to come there will be a recognition of brotherhood between man and man, nation and nation, human and subhuman, which will transform a state of semi-savagery, as we have it, into one of civilisation, when there will be no such barbarity of warfare, or the robbery of the poor by the rich, or the ill-usage of the lower animals by mankind." Henry Stephens Salt [ Henry Salt, Humanitarian Reformer and Man of Letters For 108,
Punkerslut

20. Salt / Life Of Henry David Thoreau
henry S. salt. Of all the biographers of Thoreau, henry salt best captures Thoreau'sspirit. Walter Harding, author of The Days of henry Thoreau.
http://www.press.uillinois.edu/f00/salt.html
Life of Henry David Thoreau
Henry S. Salt Edited by George Hendrick, Willene Hendrick, and Fritz Oehlschlaeger No Englishman did more in the nineteenth century to advance the literary reputation of Henry David Thoreau than Henry S. Salt. A remarkable reformer who participated broadly in his era's movements for social change, Salt published two versions of his Life of Henry David Thoreau. The present volume is the third version of the biography, completed in 1908 but never published in Salt's lifetime. Combining a concise narrative of Thoreau's life with a perceptive treatment of his ideas and writings, Life of Henry David Thoreau stands as a penetrating study of Thoreau, stressing his distinctive individuality. Through an astute analysis of the text and a concise biography, the editors illustrate Salt's growth as a scholar and his changing views on Thoreau and Thoreau's philosophy. "Of all the biographers of Thoreau, Henry Salt best captures Thoreau's spirit." Walter Harding, author of The Days of Henry Thoreau "A beautifully written and very sympathetic short biography of Thoreau that all Thoreauvians should treasure. . . . Salt was just the person to write about Thoreau. He was in complete sympathy with Thoreau's ideas, and he wrote about them and him beautifully."

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