Contemporary Notices
and Reviews of
Walden; or, Life in
the Woods
_______
"A
Massachusetts Philosopher"
Oneida Circular (1 August 1854): pp. 410-11.
A
very curious book is in press, entitled 'Life in the Woods,' by H. D.
Thoreau; from which the Tribune prints a few extracts in advance. It is a narrative of the author's experience and mode of life
during a two years' solitary hermitage in the woods, by the shore of
Walden Pond, in Concord, Mass. The
writer, being of a philosophical turn, and much given to Homer, and
similar antique models, seems to have proposed to himself to reduce his
mode of life to the standard nearest to primitive nature.
So he took an axe, and went into the woods, to a pleasant hill-side
overlooking the pond, and built himself a cabin. Of his furniture, and his views on the subject of furniture
in general, he gives the following account:
[excerpts from "Economy"]
There is evident spice of truth in
this. We like Communism particularly for its effect in relieving folks from the
great mass of furniture—useless exuvić
as Thoreau says,—that accumulates about them and seems necessary, in
isolation. The Communist
moves freely without being tied to any such trap.
He goes from one home to another, without care for what he leaves
or carrying anything with him and finds all needed furnishing in the
Commune where he sits down. This
is better we think than our hermit's method of getting rid of incumbrance.
Here follows his agricultural experience:
[excerpts from "Economy"]
Bating the solitude, we think
Thoreau's plan of agriculture is worth consideration. There is a simplicity and independence about it, that is
rather fascinating, and if practicable in single solitude it would be
certainly no less so in Association.
In fact our method at Oneida and the other agricultural
Associations in confining ourselves mostly to thorough garden-tillage, is
substantially carrying things out to a similar result.
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