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Comparing Emerson And Thoreau

Decent Essays

Author and philosopher Ralph Waldo Emerson’s work, “Self-Reliance” set the guideline for what it meant to live a life dictated by transcendental ideals. His colleague Henry David Thoreau in his book, “Where I Lived and What I Lived For”, took Emerson’s vision and put them to use in his own life, recording his findings in his book. The two major thematic overtones that they share include nature and simplicity, which Thoreau lived through during his time with Emerson on Walden Pond. Thus, by extracting excerpts about both nature and simplicity, while relating it to Thoreau’s life on Walden Pond, it becomes apparent that Thoreau, by living on Walden Pond, vicariously lived Emerson’s philosophy of simplicity and nature. The first of which is shown through his actions on Independence Day, and the latter through his interactions with the property he had purchased.
Simplicity, as a means of living, is an idea that Emerson goes over thoroughly in his essay “Self …show more content…

To him distractions served nothing more than to bog down the mind. A simple life, in essence, was the key to becoming an enlightened individual. Emerson goes so far as to implore his readers to “let our simplicity judge them, and our docility to our own law demonstrate the poverty of nature and fortune beside our native riches” (Emerson). It is to be our own simplicity that governs our judgments, letting an inner latent richness inside ourselves dictates how to live. Thoreau, during his time on his property, captures the sentiment of Emerson’s message in his book with an anecdote set on Independence Day. When he first took abode in the woods Thoreau comments that, “my house was not finished for winter, but was merely a defense against the rain, without plastering or chimney, the walls being of

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