РефератыИностранный языкThThoreau And Transendentalism Essay Research Paper The

Thoreau And Transendentalism Essay Research Paper The

Thoreau And Transendentalism Essay, Research Paper


The mid-eighteen hundreds, 1820 – 1850, witnessed the birth of modern America. In


what was called the New Order America underwent several changes, both as a nation and


as a society. The introduction of capitalism and industry transformed America into an


aggressive, expanding nation constantly in search of a profit. A competitive and


fast-paced society sprang up. Rooted in materialism and self-interest, Americans became


driven to posses as much as possible. Their lives evolved into a less personal, less


orderly, future oriented blur. All these rapid changes were at times hard for the individual


to accept. Soon, people searched for methods to cope with these drastic changes in their


culture. Transcendentalism emerged as a new way of thinking, moreover, a search for a


?higher? level of life. Henry David Thoreau, a student of Harvard University and later a


journalist, emerged a great transcendental man of this time period. While on a contract to


write a book, he went to Walden Woods in Concord, Massachusetts and lived in rebellion


from the confusion of this tumultuous society where individualism and thought were


slowly decaying. Although people have interpreted it in many different ways, Thoreau?s


experience at Walden was a definite attempt at a monastic lifestyle, providing him with


order, freedom, and simplicity.


While at Walden Thoreau witnessed the establishment of an order in his daily life


closely affiliated with nature. Each morning he awoke early and bathed in the pond. He


referred to this as a religious exercise, and one of the best things he did while at Walden


Pond. Early in the day, while the dew was still on the ground, Henry tended to his nearby


field of beans – pulling the weeds first and hoeing the beans later. He referred to this


practice of tending to his bean field as his attachment with the earth, his curious labor all


summer. After his work in the field was done for the day Henry would go into town and


visit with his friends and family. In the warm evenings he frequently sat in his boat


playing the flute and listening to the sounds of the encircling forest. As his thoughts


would drift he would hear a sound on the water or feel a vibration on his fishing pole that


would bring him out of his dreams and link him once again with nat

ure.


Henry?s involvement with nature played a very important role in his life at


Walden, giving him an immense sense of freedom. Henry says, ?I sat in my sunny


doorway from sunrise ?till noon…in undisturbed solitude and stillness.?(77) This is the


life he wished to live, not one of commitments and hassles. He believed that a man


should ?…as long as possible live free and uncommitted.? Society taught its people to


live their lives by greedy capitalistic principles, waking up in the morning and hurrying


off to work at the factory in order to acquire more possessions. This is what Thoreau was


escaping from, this is what he was freed of in the woods.


What Walden Woods did most for Thoreau was it granted him with a simplistic


lifestyle. ?Simplicity, simplicity, simplicity! I say let your affairs be as two or three, and


not a hundred or a thousand…? ?Why should we live with such hurry and waste of life?


We are determined to be starved before we are hungry.?(64,63) Henry was opposed to


the fast-paced lifestyle that emerged in society. Instead of being caught up in this


senseless drama he searched for a life free from all that which was not necessary. Henry


wanted to live a life with only the bare necessities so as to experience it in only its


essential elements. Being out in nature provided him with this sense. At Walden he had


a little world all to himself. He answered to no one, had no responsibilities, it was just his


shack, his bean field, his book and nature.


?I went to the woods because I wished to live deliberately, to front only the


essential facts of life, and see if I could not learn what it had to teach, and not, when I


came to die, discover that I had not lived.?(62) While in the woods at Walden Pond,


Thoreau truly did lead a monastic lifestyle. He had a life of order. He got up in the


morning and went swimming, he hoed beans in the afternoon, and he enjoyed the pond at


night. He had freedom from society. Living in the woods, he escaped the hassles of a


society taught to fill the shoes of capitalism. Also, he enjoyed a very simple lifestyle.


Living side-by-side with nature, he lived life down to its bare necessities, answering only


to himself. All these things gave him a new outlook on life, a new sense of direction, and


a new set of values – it?s almost as if he was a monk.

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