Mr. Morgan doesnt want you looking your answers up lol
Mr. Morgan doesnt want you looking your answers up lol
Thoreau learned from his experience living in nature at Walden Pond the importance of simplicity, self-reliance, and connection with the natural world. He believed in the value of living deliberately and thoughtfully, and his time at Walden influenced his belief in civil disobedience and environmental stewardship.
Thoreau learned all that there was to learn from living his lifestyle of simplicity in nature. although he thoroughly enjoyed his time there, he had reaped all of the benefits, and so he left, stating that he has "other lives to live".
Thoreau learned all that there was to learn from living his lifestyle of simplicity in nature. although he thoroughly enjoyed his time there, he had reaped all of the benefits, and so he left, stating that he has "other lives to live". Also, he had fallen into a cycle of living, which he was trying to avoid. He followed a routine, and that was one of the reasons he left to go to the woods in the first place. So he left for those two reasons.
To learn truths about the world and his own mind -Apex
he could do what he wanted that he was in power even though he was a prisoner
Thoreau supports the idea of simplifying one's life, living deliberately, and connecting with nature to find true contentment and fulfillment. He promotes self-reliance, individualism, and nonconformity against societal pressures and expectations.
Go to school, get an education, and learn how to spell and use punctuation.
Practice alone, or learn solo pieces.
Practice alone, or learn solo pieces.
Who Said It: Henry David Thoreau When: 1854 The Story behind It: American philosopher and naturalist Thoreau isolated himself at Walden Pond in Massachusetts from 1845 to 1847. His experiences during that time were published in Walden (1854), which Thornton Wilder called "a manual of self-reliance." In a well-known passage, Thoreau stated his purpose: "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. I did not wish to live what was not life, living is so dear; nor did I wish to practice resignation..." In the first essay, "Economy," Thoreau comments that most men are slaves to their work and enslaved to those for whom they work. He concludes: "The mass of men lead lives of quiet desperation. What is called resignation is confirmed desperation...."
they reproduce