Walden Pond

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    not remembering a single thing. You’re digging at the past, but the past doesn’t want to be exposed. “Hank”, is a lost boy who woke up in Penn station knowing nothing. Not his name, where he’s from, why he’s where is is. Nothing. All he has is a “walden” book as his guide and the memory of a tragic accident that happened with him and his little sister Rosie. Along the way from running, he runs into these two other teenagers. Nessa and Jack. They work for Magpie who is a drug distributor. Their…

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    living a good and moral life. Thoreau thought that people and society was turning into a modern world with mindless detail and he thought that the only way to stop it was leaving everything behind that he thought wasn't necessary and then moved to Walden Pond, where he would be self-reliant, connect with nature and have only what he needed, the essentials. Like most transcendentalists Thoreau believed that there was a direct connection to god thought nature and if there person were to understand…

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    transcendentalism. Emerson was the most well known transcendentalist as well as an author and poet. Along with this, Emerson was a close friend of Thoreau and was one of his few human contacts during Thoreau’s time at Walden pond. If anyone was to understand the mind of Thoreau and his life in Walden, it would be Ralph Waldo Emerson. 1. Non-Christians Developing a connection between man, nature, and God is the basis of transcendentalism. To accomplish this, one must believe in God. Thoreau…

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    Swifts And Walden

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    Mother Nature has in store. In Henry David Thoreau’s story, from Walden, he realizes there is a lot more than what meets the eye between nature and humanity. He decides to find out all he can by living on Walden’s pond for a full year. In another story, Gulliver’s Travels by Jonathan Swift, he makes an accidental discovery in nature that totally reveals his thoughts on humanity, including his own wife and children. While both Thoreau’s Walden and Swift’s Gulliver’s Travels help readers find some…

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    non-conformity, self-reliance, free thought, confidence and importance of nature. The essays Self-reliance and Walden are examples of self-reliance. Self-reliance was written by Ralph Waldo Emerson and he urges his readers to follow their individual will instead of conforming to others. He encourages his readers to be honest in their relationships with others, and to follow one’s own voice. The essay Walden was written by Henry David Thoreau and is about his life living in the woods and…

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    different periods of time, both men shared similar beliefs about the world and its path to fulfillment. Thoreau and McCandless believed that nature was the remedy for a soul, and spent much time in nature embracing its beauty. While Thoreau lived by Walden Pond in a cabin with much comfort and the tools needed to survive, McCandless journeyed place to place carelessly with little supplies throughout his trip to the Alaskan Frontier. This crucial difference between the two expeditions is why…

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    Using personification, forthright and cynical diction, and rhetorical questions, Thoreau criticizes the American government, and certain aspects of society in “Civil Disobedience” and the inability of individuals to reach their true potential in “Walden”. Ultimately, Thoreau aims to…

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    Thoreau’s Walden, he uses key points Emerson shows in Self-Reliance. The two men carry a great influential impact on society showing ideas of non-conformity, infancy, identity, the meaning of self-reliance, and an overall connection to nature. Emerson and Thoreau teach what purpose nature has to several aspects widely known in society. What specific connections does Thoreau’s Walden transcendental essay share with Emerson’s Self-Reliance? The idea of self-reliance is expressed in Walden…

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    Thoreau was Emerson’s protege, and lived his life to see if the ideas of transcendentalism are practical. Most famous of his exploits was his two year period living in a self- built log cabin at Walden Pond. There he wrote his journal accounting his experiences. On the subject of living so simply Thoreau writes, “Simplicity, simplicity, simplicity! I say, let your affairs be as two or three, and not a hundred or a thousand...simplicity of life and…

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    idea of the value of simplicity and its exceptional greatness. It was a shallow afternoon and the sun was hanging deeply in the sky, and because of my blissful ignorance, I wandered off into a place where peacefulness was a foundation of life. Walden Pond was the name, and a generous breeze devoured my body as night fell. I then, stumbled upon a man with an empowering presence. He introduced himself as Henry David Thoreau, a writer, a philosopher and better known as naturalist. Everything about…

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