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Art & Creativity Quote by Henry David Thoreau

"When I hear music, I fear no danger. I am invulnerable. I see no foe. I am related to the earliest times, and to the latest"

About this Quote

Music, for Thoreau, isnt entertainment; its temporary citizenship in a larger timeline. The bravado of "I fear no danger. I am invulnerable" reads like a woodsman shrugging off the world, but the subtext is less macho than metaphysical. Thoreau is writing from a 19th-century America obsessed with utility, progress, and moral alarmism, and hes carving out a counterspace where the self is unbothered by the eras usual threats: social conformity, market logic, and the nagging pressure to justify every hour.

The rhetoric works because it escalates fast. First, the body: danger, foes, vulnerability. Then, the mind: relation, time, ancestry. That jump mirrors what music does in real life: it bypasses argument and reorganizes your nervous system, then smuggles in a worldview. "I see no foe" is especially telling. Thoreau isnt claiming enemies vanish; hes describing a perceptual shift where antagonism stops being the default lens. Its a quiet rebuke to the century's combative public sphere and its appetite for grievance.

The final line, "related to the earliest times, and to the latest", is the real flex. Thoreau frames music as a kind of secular transcendence: not escape from history, but access to it, a medium that makes one feel both ancient and futuristic at once. In a life devoted to stripping experience down to essentials, music becomes the cleanest proof that the human spirit can still exceed its circumstances without leaving the room.

Quote Details

TopicMusic
Source
Verified source: Winter (from Thoreau’s posthumous writings) (Henry David Thoreau, 1888)
Text match: 100.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
When I hear music, I fear no danger. I am invulnerable. I see no foe. I am related to the earliest times, and to the latest. (Chapter: “Winter” (exact page varies by edition)). This passage appears in the chapter “Winter” in an 1888 posthumous Thoreau volume (a compilation drawn from his Journal). However, this is not the FIRST appearance of the words in print: the sentence originates in Thoreau’s own Journal entry dated January 13, 1857 (written in Concord, Massachusetts). A reliable secondary-excerpt page (Walden Woods Project) identifies that date and cites it to Thoreau’s Journal (vol. 9 in the Torrey/Allen Houghton Mifflin edition). ([en.wikisource.org](https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Winter_%281888%29_Thoreau/Winter?utm_source=openai))
Other candidates (1)
The Writings of Henry David Thoreau (Henry David Thoreau, 1887) compilation96.2%
... When I hear music , I fear no danger . I am invulnerable . I see no foe . I am related to the earliest times , an...
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Thoreau, Henry David. (2026, February 9). When I hear music, I fear no danger. I am invulnerable. I see no foe. I am related to the earliest times, and to the latest. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/when-i-hear-music-i-fear-no-danger-i-am-28800/

Chicago Style
Thoreau, Henry David. "When I hear music, I fear no danger. I am invulnerable. I see no foe. I am related to the earliest times, and to the latest." FixQuotes. February 9, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/when-i-hear-music-i-fear-no-danger-i-am-28800/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"When I hear music, I fear no danger. I am invulnerable. I see no foe. I am related to the earliest times, and to the latest." FixQuotes, 9 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/when-i-hear-music-i-fear-no-danger-i-am-28800/. Accessed 19 Feb. 2026.

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About the Author

Henry David Thoreau

Henry David Thoreau (July 12, 1817 - May 6, 1862) was a Author from USA.

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