Thoreau was wedded to Nature not so much for her beauty as for delight in her high companionableness. |
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Henry David Thoreau took this to heart when he sequestered himself at Walden Pond and wrote Walden as a response to his experiences. |
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Thoreau thought he was an exceptional man, a philosopher of great faith, and an optimist. |
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But what Thoreau was least good at was deciding how best to live within the complicated entanglements of other individual people. |
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Because Thoreau, the railroad, and woodcutters have encroached on Walden, White Pond is the gem of all these. |
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When they go boldly into the wilderness, they ought to carry in their backpacks Thoreau, London, and Tolstoy. |
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In this metaphysical conceit Thoreau reads India as a timeless place, defined by its sacred books. |
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History paints a vivid picture of disparity and dissimilarity between Emerson, Thoreau and Whitman. |
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Thoreau discovered that the level of the pond fluctuates by about five feet over a period of 25 years. |
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Thoreau is refreshed by hearing the whip-poor-will, brown-thrasher, veery, wood-pewee, chewink, and other birds at the beginning of May. |
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In addition, Thoreau notices circular heaps of stones about six feet in diameter that sit on the pond bottom. |
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What Thoreau did not overlook was his neighbors' reluctance to put their antislavery sentiments into action. |
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The first three pieces are an Alamo hall chair, a Thoreau writing desk, and a Robert E. Lee school desk. |
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We know he was interested in American literature, for he wrote an essay each on Whitman and Thoreau. |
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Thoreau lists Goose Pond, which is an inlet in the Concord River, and White Pond. |
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Thoreau maintained a close relationship with his brother up until the latter's death of lockjaw following a freak accident. |
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If Thoreau were alive today, he would be shocked at the environmental changes facing us. |
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Thoreau went graping in October to harvest delicious concord grapes. |
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Even a saunterer, Thoreau says, would not tolerate a saunterer's apple at a kitchen table. |
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Though I'm not a rugged individualist in the Thoreau mold, I'd want to head off the grid in the Via to a place I'd have all to myself. |
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Even Henry David Thoreau, sometimes extolled as an example of a man living alone, needed help. |
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Your book incorporates a number of literary quotes, as well as references to artists and thinkers like Van Gogh and Thoreau. |
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Mr. Thoreau wanted to drive life into a corner, to live deep and suck out all the marrow. |
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Rousseau, Wordsworth, Thoreau were all recruited with customary flourish to his classical cause. |
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The foxes in winter remind Thoreau of rudimental, burrowing men. |
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Thoreau had been gone half a century when his doctrine of civil disobedience was applied by Mahatma Gandhi in India and South Africa. |
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Thoreau felt no need to go to the unexplored wilderness to find the lessons in life which nature has to teach. |
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Henry Thoreau rejected such pictures of a mechanized civilization, and stood out for simple living. |
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Take the pond that Thoreau made famous through his book Walden, or Life in the Woods. |
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For 26 months in the mid-1840s a man named Henry David Thoreau lived on the edge of a New England pond. |
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I still am in the stream of thought that started in this country with Emerson and Thoreau and Whitman. |
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A shy, quiet boy who loved the outdoors, Thoreau graduated from Harvard College in 1837, taught school intermittently until 1841, then turned to writing as a career. |
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Thoreau realized that the land had been cleared about 15 years previous to him moving there, and there were still a lot of stumps stuck in the ground. |
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His reclusiveness is clearly different in motive from the contemporary reclusions, in other parts of Massachusetts, of Thoreau and Emily Dickinson. |
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The difference between us and Thoreau is that he lived in the relatively simple world of 19th century New England, where he was able to get away from it all by going to live alone beside a pond. |
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To all appearances, Thoreau lived a life of bleak failure. |
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Like Thoreau, Woolf believed that it was silence that set the mind free to really contemplate and understand the world. |
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Thoreau or Hawthorne in their time were upset by the telegraph or the postal services, tools of destruction of what they called true communication or the harmony between man and nature. |
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And when Thoreau became determined to get away from it all in 1845, he retired to Walden Pond, a mere mile-and-a-half away from the nearest village. |
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A daughter of the transcendentalist Bronson Alcott, Louisa spent most of her life in Boston and Concord, Massachusetts, where she grew up in the company of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Theodore Parker, and Henry David Thoreau. |
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This film is a poetic portrayal of the American quest for meaning, an impulse echoed as long as a century ago in the writings of Thoreau and Whitman. |
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Historically, Iranian literature has inspired writers such as Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Henry David Thoreau, and Ralph Waldo Emerson. |
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Their reverence for America's natural beauty was shared with contemporary American writers such as Henry David Thoreau and Ralph Waldo Emerson. |
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The river is perhaps best known for the early American literary classic A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers by Henry David Thoreau. |
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Guests who came to speak that season included Emerson, Thoreau, Louis Agassiz, and Theodore Parker. |
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Resembling the moose he describes, Thoreau meandered through lexicons, munching etymologies like some great verbivorous animal. |
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In 1845, Emerson offered Thoreau the use of his newly purchased wood lot on Walden Pond to build his small cabin and live as a naturalist. |
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The personal journal was an important form among the Transcenentalists, but Thoreau must have been the most assiduous journalizer among them. |
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The movies are dickering for a recently published biograph of Thoreau. |
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For Thoreau, wild apples that grew untended by human hands, providing spicy fruit for the intrepid gleaner, were emblematic of our greatest independent thinkers. |
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His thoughts are reminiscent of the transcendentalist principles of Henry David Thoreau and Ralph Waldo Emerson, of whom he was a disciple, praising the spiritual, aesthetic and religious value of nature. |
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Another inspired riff is an attack on the sainted Henry David Thoreau for being a self-involved weirdo. |
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It means Paine, Thoreau, Emerson, Chesterton, Mencken, Orwell. |
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It seems increasingly doubtful that the wide-open spaces, vast as they are, can accommodate both motorheads and those clutching the works of Thoreau and a pair of binoculars. ORV-drivers already feel left out. |
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What is not clear is whether there will be enough left to satisfy the loggers, the deer-hunters, the hikers, the environmentalists and those who simply wish to see America as Thoreau saw it. |
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The transcendentalists, led by Thoreau and Ralph Waldo Emerson, established the first major American philosophical movement. |
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The main precedent was Henry David Thoreau who through his work Civil Disobedience influenced the advocacy of both Leo Tolstoy and Mohandas Gandhi for nonviolent resistance. |
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Writers such as Nathaniel Hawthorne, Edgar Allan Poe, and Henry David Thoreau established a distinctive American literary voice by the middle of the 19th century. |
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Their neighbors in Concord included Emerson and Henry David Thoreau. |
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Yet of course Thoreau left Walden after two years, and spent several more constructing the text that would record, amplify, reshape, and mythicize his experience there. |
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