Sunday, September 26, 2010

oh henry

Henry David Thoreau, writing from his little shack in Walden Pond, can indeed be something of a crank. He looks back at the rest of the world, all of those people living in society (SOCIETY!), with a kind of superior sneer, as if he's the only one who got up early while the rest of the world decided to sleep in. And, yet, still ... if you read Thoreau carefully, he offers us some inspiring ideas. For instance, this: "To affect the quality of the day, that is the highest of arts." By the time you read this, we will have talked about it already in class, and if you are especially observant you may have noticed that this quotation is painted on a board on the back wall of my classroom. I draw a lot of inspiration from it. What he is trying to say, I think, is that the living is a kind of creative act, that how you go about living your life -- day to day, hour to hour, minute to minute -- is a form of artistic expression. The day is your canvas; how you behave is your creative tool. The way that you sit at the lunch table and change the conversation in funny way; a joke you tell that brings a few people together; the things you say and do during a class period; how you invent some game with your little brother during dinner. Thoreau is saying that these kinds of things are the equivalent of poems and paintings and sculptures. If you can affect the quality of the day regularly, you are the supreme artist. Personally, I like to think of life in these terms. Makes me feel like I'm creating something new every day.

In this entry, isolate a line from Thoreau and then write about why it makes sense to you. You can use the one I've quoted above -- or find an entirely different one.

12 comments:

  1. "As you simplify your life, the laws of the universe will be simpler; solitude will not be solitude, poverty will not be poverty, nor weakness weakness."
    -Henry David Thoreau

    Simplicity is a re-occurring theme throughout all of Thoreau's works. He is constantly referring to how beautiful things are when they are simple. As a parker student who's day to day life is planned out one step at a time, this idea of slowing things dow, breaking it up and just breaking life down does seem quite appealing. However, is that actually realistic nowadays? Unfortuanetely the answer is no. 150 years ago when HDT wrote Walden he was able to go into the woods, write about it, and live simply for two years then come back into society and preach about what he experienced. If one were to do that today they would be called a loon and when they attempted to merge back with society they would discover a whole new world filled with new technology and social systems. So although slowing things down once in a while and enjoying a nice swim or walk may be nice, today's society does not have room for experiments like living in the woods for two years.

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  2. "To affect the quality of the day, that is the highest of arts."
    Henry David Thoreau

    One can choose to live however he or she wants. You can choose to be hardworking, learned, or for that mater dumb. But Thoreau's day-to-day approach makes more sense to me. Wether shaping your self or trying to reshape a bad Monday into a more positive experience is one in the same. It takes a very strong willed, and smart person to release that your experience here on Earth is one that ultimately you can shape, and that is a quality that few posse. Take today for example it was ridiculously hot and I had a field trip to a wetland for my APES class. All we had to do was tally the plan species in a meter square but it was so hot doing nothing made us uncomfortably hot. So making light of the situation my self and some other class mates took the opportunity to role up out sleeves and if not cool off but get a tan, this made the situation a little more pleasant. This is the thinking that Thoreau would smile upon, making the best of a miserable situation and changing your mood for the better.

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  3. "To be awake is to be alive."
    Henry David Thoreau

    Throughout Thoreaus works like Walden, there is a theme of being "alive" or "awake". When saying this quote, Henry meant to live life to its fullest potential and to appreciate life for what it is. He wants people to truly be awake in the sense that he wants eveyone to shake off all the filters or the meaning less things in life and be awaken to what truly matters in life. When you do that does Threau truly thinks you have woken up to life. However, is it pissible to shake off all the meaning less things in life? Sadly, no it is not. There are so many little things in life that are always on your mind that you may find important. That can cause you to never shake off the meaning less things in life as Thearu would put it. Overall, the meaning of this quote is to live life to the fullest.

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  4. A truly good book teaches me better than to read it. I must soon lay it down, and commence living on its hint. What I began by reading, I must finish by acting.
    - Henry David Thoreau

    This quote by Thoreau displays the ideal that pushed him to lead his life deep in the woods away from society. After reading Emerson's works, Thoreau decided that he agreed with them to such a degree that he would alter the course of his life and actually lead the life that he read of. In a less extreme sense, the quote is saying "turn your words into action". I believe that if you really feel strongly about something, you should act on it. Having said that, Thoreau is an extreme example.

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  5. "Most men lead lives of quiet desperation and go to the grave with the song still in them." - Henry David Thoreau

    We all know that Henry David Thoreau is a man who speaks his mind through his works of art, and tries to get people to see how he thinks of the world. In this quote, he realizes that everyone is different, and that everyone has their own dreams. Ever since we were little, people think of dreams as something to could aspire to, and know in the future would come true. But according to Thoreau, most people do not live out their dreams. Most people in trying to do the right thing do not really follow their dreams. Maybe because people make excuses, or wait for a "better time." Maybe because they get caught up in the mundane and the everyday problems of living. Maybe because of intense pressure from others, or embarrassment. Whatever the case some people who do live lives of a quiet desperation sadly enough, die without realizing their inner dreams and aspirations.

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  6. "I had three pieces of limestone on my desk, but I was terrified to find that they required to be dusted daily, when the furniture of my mind was all undusted still, and threw them out the window in disgust."
    -Henry David Thoreau

    Thoreau believes that knowledge and understanding are the most valuable things in the world. Worldly possessions such as limestone are pointless to Thoreau and he has no need for them. In this quote he is saying that things can happen to possessions but you will always have your thoughts. By saying that he threw the limestone out of the window he is saying he would rather live a simple life with only necessities than to be rich. That is why Thoreau went to live in the woods for two years, because he wanted to be alone with his thoughts and be able to practice what Emerson taught him.

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  7. The quotation about men living lives of quiet desperation is one of Thoreau's most famous. His contention is that most people are timid and despairing and overly self-conscious. He is proposing the exact opposite: live each day like a kind of spartan warrior. I like the quotation Eric found, too, about the purpose of books. I would guess that this is what both he and Emerson hoped people would get out of their books and essays. A little hint that they could take back out into the world. Glad you got a tan in APES today, Grant! And regarding RB's claim that simplicity seems impossible these days, I would only say that when you reach a certain state in life, it becomes easier to achieve. As a young person it may very well be impossible. When you get older, and you are living instead of preparing to go to college, it becomes easier to add simplicity. Yes, you have more responsibilities, but at the same time you have fewer hoops to jump through and generally have more control of your life.

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  8. "I am too high-born to be propertied to be a secondary at control"
    Thoreau believes his life is too valuable to not have full control over it. He believes that the best way to behave towards the American government is to not be associated with it. Life is great, and if you are at secondary control of someone you are useless and selfish. I live by making my own choices enjoying life and having fun. I don’t believe that going to school and being constructed by a teacher or going to football practice and being coached is living at secondary control. This may be living at secondary control if you ask Thorea. I choose to attend school and practice because I have a desire to learn and become a better football player everyday. It will better me in the future and set me up for success.

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  9. "Time is but the stream I go a-fishing in."
    Henry David Thoreau

    Everything Thoreau relates to is about living simply, on your own terms, while in the moment. To say that time is something he merely fishes in shows that it while helpful, time is not a necessity. To in the moment, one mustn't focus on time, for they will get caught up in the past or future. If Thoreau caught a hypothetical fish, he could either keep it as sustenance or rather throw it back in the stream- he could do what he wanted to the fish. H.D. dabbled with time, just as someone could in a stream by isolating himself while at Walden, yet as the time of 2 years passed, he re-immersed himself in society. Wow, I keep seeing all these ironies about Thoreau, and I'm not quite sure how I feel about them.

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  10. "Renew thyself completely each day; do it again, and again and forever again"
    - Henry David Thoreau

    Just like Emerson, Thoreau is a major transcendentalist. He believes that everything should be simple and as natural as possible. He thinks that we should live in the moment because in the blink of an eye you can miss something so unique and so significant as life. I'm not really sure if i completely understand this quote but i feel like in a since he is talking about rebirth or being born multiple times. i don't think he means literally i think he means through the mind we should always be attentive to new ideas, yet be able to determine our own thoughts, opinions, and passions.I chose this quote because as i was re-reading it caught my attention and i became intrigued by what he truly means to.

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  11. "Why should we live with such hurry and waste of life?"-HDT
    I really like this quote by Henry David Thoreau. It asks why we constantly rush through things. Why does know one stop to smell the roses, so to speak. People (especially me) rush through things, we speed on the highway, rush through our homework in order to do something that seems more important to use at the time. In the words of Ricky Bobby "If you ain't first, you're last." He's got a point. When rushing from School to Sports to Home to Homework to the TV and then to bed, there is no time to reflect. Or to think about the moment, we are so focused on what will happen when we finish what we are doing, but sometimes we should focus on what's happening at the moment, because that's what's happening now!

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  12. “The millions are awake eough for physical labor; but only one in a million is aeake enough for effective intellectual exertion, only one in a hundred millions to a poetic or define life. To be awake is to be alive.”
    -Henry David Thoreau

    Throughout ‘Walden’ Thoreau often uses the metaphor of being in a slumber or being not fully awake to describe those who are blinded by society, much like Emersons reference to having gum in ones eye. This quote makes a good point that most people aren’t awake enough to do anything productive or important with their lives, we should all strive to become more awake.

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