Thoreau Essay

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    Henry David Thoreau, a nineteenth century writer, philosopher, and abolitionist, establishes himself as an outsider, a passionate rebel against the status quo, in a passage from Walden. He writes to explain why he went into the woods to live and left behind what most people would consider civilization. Especially for an audience of contemporaries in the 1850s, before the Civil War, his choice to live in the woods would have been outrageous – even revolutionary. Even today, his choice to live in

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    Introduction Thoreau and Emerson were two of the most influential men from the transcendentalism era, they are even known as the Fathers of Transcendentalism. Two of their most famous quotes Quotes: “I think that we should be men first, and subjects afterward. It is not desirable to cultivate a respect for the law, so much as for the right. The only obligation which I have a right to assume is to do at any time what I think right” -(Thoreau, “Civil Disobedience”) “To believe your own thought,

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    because I wanted to live with purpose and know on the necessary facts to life, and try to decipher the meaning to life, and not die without having lived and learned.” The understandable English translation speaks for itself. However, I believe Thoreau had a much denser meaning behind it. I think the quote would look more like this: I no longer want to wander through this life which was created for me. I want to learn about self and life the only way one can: in solitude without any distractions

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    Everyone sees the world through their own eyes. Not two people can see something in the exact same way or interpret it the same way. They can each have their own opinion about the subject. In “Walden” by Henry David Thoreau, he has a very individualistic view on nature. In “Walden”, Thoreau goes out into the woods to try and live his life deliberately. Schneider states, “ In 1845, he received permission from Emerson to use a piece of land that Emerson owned on the shore of Walden Pond.” He stays there

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    Henry David Thoreau, was an American author, poet, philosopher, and made many other historic comments with things such as abolition and leading transcendentalist. He lived in the mid-nineteenth century during a rough time in America. Thoreau attracts diverse perspectives because the individual and collective life he lived. Thoreau is best known for his book “Walden”, a reflection upon simple living. As well, “Resistance to Civil Government” or “Civil Disobedience”, which was an argument for disobedience

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    In the play, "Night Thoreau Spent in Jail," Jerome Lawrence and Robert E. Lee, the play portrays the universal truth, or theme that people should do what they want to do even if it goes against the law. This theme connects to a maxim by Waldo Emerson. A maxim a short statement that expresses a general truth or rule of conduct. In Emerson's maxim, "Nothing is at last sacred but the integrity of your own mind," Emerson uses the word integrity as a means of doing the right thing. The maxim urges that

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    Henry David Thoreau Henry David Thoreau’s words that “disobedience is the true foundation of liberty” and that “the obedient must be slaves” is a political statement that never lost its topicality during the Romantic era. Thoreau is an important contributor to the philosophical and American literary movement known as New England Transcendentalism. Nature and the conduct of life are two central themes that are often weaved together in his essays and books that were published in the Romantic era

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    Transcendentalism is the view that basic truths of the universe lie beyond the knowledge one obtains from his senses. Throughout the excerpts written by Emerson who was the mentor and Thoreau as the experimentalist. Emerson expressed his thoughts to value nature, meanwhile Thoreau actually went out and learned through living the simplicity life. The transcendentalism movement was inspirational because it proved self-worth and celebrated life. Emerson's writing was so important because it preaches

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    Thoreau spent two years in the wild living off the land. Chris spent 114 days in the Alaskan wilderness. Each learning different things about themselves and developing different values and beliefs. Both Chris McCandless and Thoreau had many things that they did differently and in common with their treks into the wild. They both had similar reasons for leaving the wild, but they had different views on civilization and reasons for going into the wild. In Walden Henry David Thoreau went to the woods

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    I, Henry David Thoreau, have found myself aggrieved upon your article, Pond Scum, that questions my beliefs of nature and my way of life. You have proclaimed statements that do not fit me so, such as being sanctimonious, hypocritical, and misanthropic; for those reasons, you think I should not be as admired as I am today. However, I refuse to subject to those claims because my teachings and beliefs are all in the name of the divinity of nature. There is much more to this world than our materialistic

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