American Idyll

yes, the river knows

Tuesday, December 05, 2006

My Themes Shall Not Be Far-Fetched



From the journals of Henry David Thoreau:

December 5, 1856/

My themes shall not be far-fetched. I will tell of homely every-day phenomena and adventures. Friends! Society! It seems to be that I have an abundance of it, there is so much that I rejoice and sympathize with that I never speak to but only know and think of. What you call bareness and poverty is to me simplicity. I love the winter, with its imprisonment and its cold, for it compells the prisoner to try new fields and resources. I love to have the river closed up for the season and a pause put to my boating, to be obliged to get my boat in. I shall launch it again in the spring with so much more pleasure. This is an advantage in point of abstinence and moderation compared with the seaside boating, where the boat ever lies on the shore. I love best to have each thing in its season only, and enjoy doing without it at all other times. It is the greatest of all advantages to enjoy no advantage at all. I find it invariably true, the poorer I am, the richer I am. What you consider my disadvantage, I consider my advantage. While you are pleased to get knowledge and culture in many ways, I am delighted to think that I am getting rid of them. I have never got over my surprise that I should have been born into the most estimable place in all the world, and in the very nick of time, too.

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