Page:Writings of Henry David Thoreau (1906) v5.djvu/473

Rh " Thou dusky spirit of the -wood," verse, 113. Three Rivers (Que.), 21, 93. Three-o'clock courage, 208, 209. To a Stray Fowl, verse, 411. To Aristoclides, Victor at the Ne- meau Games, translation, 384. To Asopichus, or Orchomenos, on his Victory in the Stadic Course, translation, 378. To My Brother, verse, 403. To the Maiden in the East, verse, 400. To the Lyre, translation, 379. Toil, translation, 389. Translations, 337-392. Translations from Pindar, 375-392. Trappers, 115. Traverse, the, 92. Traveling outfit, the best, 31-34. Trees, Canadian, 48 ; the suggestions of, 125; the natural planting of, 186-202 ; a town's need of, 272-278 ; for seasons, 276. Tree-tops, things seen and found on, 245,246. Troy (N. H.), 4. Turtle, the snapping, 124. "Upon the lofty elm tree sprays," verse, 112. Val Cartier (Que.), 89. Varennes, the church of, 97, 98. Veery, the, 112. Vegetation, the type of all growth, 128. Vergennes (Vt.), 7. Village, a continuous, 42, 43; the, 213 ; trees in a, 275-278. Virgil, reading, 138, 143, 144. Wachusett, a view of, 138 ; range, the, 139; ascent of, 142; birds or vegeta- tion on summit of, 143; night on, 145, 146 ; an observatory, 147. Walls, Quebec and other, 74. "Walk to Wachusett, A, 133-152. "Walkers, the order of, 206, 207. "Walking, 205-248. Walks, not on beaten paths, 213, 214; the direction of, 216-219; adven- turous, 285; by night, 326. Watatic, 137, 147. " We pronounce thee happy, Ci- cada," verse, 108. West, walking towards the, 217-220 ; general tendency towards the, 219- 224. Westmoreland, etymology of, 6. Whales in the St. Lawrence, 91. " Whate'er we leave to God, God does," verse, 396. " When life contracts into a vulgar span," verse, 404. " When the world grows old by the chimney-side," verse, 417. "When winter fringes every bough," verse, 176. " Where they once dug for money," verse, 214. Whitney, Peter, quoted, 312. " Who equaleth the coward's haste," verse, 417. "Whoa," the crying of, to mankind, 235. Wild Apples, 290-322. Wildness, the necessity of, 224-236 ; in literature, 230-233; in domestic animals, 234-236. Willow, golden, leaves, 266. Winter Scene, A, verse, 410. Winter Walk, A, 163-183. Winter, warmth in, 167, 168; the woods in, 168, 169 ; nature a hortus siccus in, 179 ; as represented in the almanac, 182 ; ignored in Hebrew revelation, 183 ; evening, 183. "With frontier strength ye stand your ground," verse, 133. " Within the circuit of this plodding life," verse, 103. Wolfe and Montcalm, monument to, 73. Wolfe's Cove, 22. Women, Canadian, 34. Woodbine, 3, 4, 276. Woodchopper, winter to be repre- sented as a, 182. Woodman, hut and work of a, 172, 173. Woods in winter, the, 168, 169. Wordsworth, reading, 143, 144. Yankee in Canada, A, 1-101. " Yorrick," the, 112, note.