The Importance of Self-Reliance
Four years before Thoreau embarked on his Walden project, his
great teacher and role model Ralph Waldo Emerson wrote an enormously
influential essay entitled “Self-Reliance.” It can be seen as a statement of
the philosophical ideals that Thoreau’s experiment is meant to put into
practice. Certainly self-reliance is economic and social in Walden Pond: it is the principle that in matters of
financial and interpersonal relations, independence is more valuable than neediness.
Thus Thoreau dwells on the contentment of his solitude, on his finding
entertainment in the laugh of the loon and the march of the ants rather than in
balls, marketplaces, or salons. He does not disdain human companionship; in
fact he values it highly when it comes on his own terms, as when his
philosopher or poet friends come to call. He simply refuses to need human
society. Similarly, in economic affairs he is almost obsessed with the idea
that he can support himself through his own labor, producing more than he
consumes, and working to produce a profit. Thoreau does not simply report on
the results of his accounting, but gives us a detailed list of expenditures and
income. How much money he spent on salt from 1845 to 1847 may seem trivial, but for him it is not. Rather it is proof that,
when everything is added up, he is a giver rather than a taker in the economic
game of life.
As Emerson’s essay details, self-reliance can be
spiritual as well as economic, and Thoreau follows Emerson in exploring the
higher dimensions of individualism. In Transcendentalist thought the self is
the absolute center of reality; everything external is an emanation of the self
that takes its reality from our inner selves. Self-reliance thus refers not
just to paying one’s own bills, but also more philosophically to the way the
natural world and humankind rely on the self to exist. This duality explains
the connection between Thoreau the accountant and Thoreau the poet, and shows
why the man who is so interested in pinching pennies is the same man who exults
lyrically over a partridge or a winter sky. They are both products of
self-reliance, since the economizing that allows Thoreau to live on Walden Pond
also allows him to feel one with nature, to feel as though it is part of his
own soul.
The Value of Simplicity
Simplicity is more than a mode of life for
Thoreau; it is a philosophical ideal as well. In his “Economy” chapter, Thoreau
asserts that a feeling of dissatisfaction with one’s possessions can be
resolved in two ways: one may acquire more, or reduce one’s desires. Thoreau
looks around at his fellow Concord residents and finds them taking the first
path, devoting their energies to making mortgage payments and buying the latest
fashions. He prefers to take the second path of radically minimizing his
consumer activity. Thoreau patches his clothes instead of buying new ones and
dispenses with all accessories he finds unnecessary. For Thoreau, anything more
than what is useful is not just an extravagance, but a real impediment and
disadvantage. He builds his own shack instead of getting a bank loan to buy
one, and enjoys the leisure time that he can afford by renouncing larger
expenditures. Ironically, he points out, those who pursue more impressive
possessions actually have fewer possessions than he does, since he owns his
house outright, while theirs are technically held by mortgage companies. He
argues that the simplification of one’s lifestyle does not hinder such
pleasures as owning one’s residence, but on the contrary, facilitates them.
Another irony of Thoreau’s simplification campaign is that his
literary style, while concise, is far from simple. It contains witticisms,
double meanings, and puns that are not at all the kind of New England deadpan
literalism that might pass for literary simplicity. Despite its minimalist
message, Walden is an elevated text that
would have been much more accessible to educated city-dwellers than to the
predominantly uneducated country-dwellers.
The Illusion of Progress
Living in a culture fascinated by the idea of
progress represented by technological, economic, and territorial advances,
Thoreau is stubbornly skeptical of the idea that any outward improvement of
life can bring the inner peace and contentment he craves. In an era of enormous
capitalist expansion, Thoreau is doggedly anti-consumption, and in a time of
pioneer migrations he lauds the pleasures of staying put. In a century
notorious for its smugness toward all that preceded it, Thoreau points out the
stifling conventionality and constraining labor conditions that made
nineteenth-century progress possible.
One clear illustration of Thoreau’s resistance
to progress is his criticism of the train, which throughout Europe and America
was a symbol of the wonders and advantages of technological progress. Although
he enjoys imagining the local Fitchburg train as a mythical roaring beast in
the chapter entitled “Sounds,” he generally seems peeved by the encroachment of
the railway upon the rustic calm of Walden Pond. Like Tolstoy in Russia,
Thoreau in the United States dissents from his society’s enthusiasm for this
innovation in transportation, seeing it rather as a false idol of social
progress. It moves people from one point to another faster, but Thoreau has
little use for travel anyway, asking the reason for going off “to count the
cats in Zanzibar.” It is far better for him to go vegetate in a little corner
of the woods for two years than to commute from place to place unreflectively.
Thoreau is skeptical, as well, of the change in popular mindset
brought by train travel. “Have not men improved somewhat in punctuality since
the railroad was invented?” he asks with scarcely concealed irony, as if
punctuality were the greatest virtue progress can offer. People “talk and think
faster in the depot” than they did earlier in stagecoach offices, but here
again, speedy talk and quick thinking are hardly preferable to thoughtful
speech and deep thinking. Trains, like all technological “improvements” give
people an illusion of heightened freedom, but in fact represent a new
servitude, since one must always be subservient to fixed train schedules and
routes. For Thoreau, the train has given us a new illusion of a controlling
destiny: “We have constructed a fate, a new Atropos, that never turns aside.” As the Greek goddess Atropos worked—she
determined the length of human lives and could never be swayed (her name means
“unswerving”)—so too does the train chug along on its fixed path and make us
believe that our lives must too.
Motifs
Motifs are recurring
structures, contrasts, or literary devices that can help to develop and inform
the text’s major themes.
The Seasonal Cycle
The narrative of Walden, which at first seems
haphazard and unplanned, is actually quite consciously put together to mirror
the cycle of the seasons. The compression of Thoreau’s two actual years (1845 to 1847) into one narrative year shows how relatively
unimportant the documentary or logbook aspect of his writing is. He cares less
for the real calendar time taken up by his project than for the symbolic time
he projects onto it. One full year, from springtime to springtime, echoes the
Christian idea of rebirth, moving from one beginning to a new one. (We can
imagine how very different Waldenmight be if it went from
December to December, for example.) Thus each season inevitably carries with it
not just its usual calendar attributes, but a spiritual resonance as well. The
story begins in the spring of 1845, as Thoreau begins construction on his cabin.
He moves in, fittingly and probably quite intentionally, on Independence Day,
July 4—making his symbolic declaration of independence from society, and
drawing closer to the true sources of his being. The summer is a time of
physical activity, as he narrates in great detail his various construction
projects and domestic management solutions. He also begins his cultivation of
the bean-fields, following the natural cycle of the seasons like any farmer,
but also echoing the biblical phrase from Ecclesiastes, “a time to reap, a time
to sow.” It may be more than the actual beans he harvests, and his produce may
be for the soul as well as for the marketplace. Winter is a time of reflection
and inwardness, as he mostly communes with himself indoors and has only a few
choice visitors. It is in winter that he undertakes the measuring of the pond,
which becomes a symbol of plumbing his own spiritual depths in solitude. Then
in spring come echoes of Judgment Day, with the crash of melting ice and the
trumpeting of the geese; Thoreau feels all sins forgiven. The cycle of seasons
is thus a cycle of moral and spiritual regeneration made possible by a
communion with nature and with oneself.
Poetry
The moral directness and hardheaded practical bookkeeping matters
with which Thoreau inaugurates Walden do not prepare us for
the lyrical outbursts that occur quite frequently and regularly in the work.
Factual and detail-minded, Thoreau is capable of some extraordinary imaginary
visions, which he intersperses within economic matters in a highly unexpected
way. In his chapter “The Bean-Field,” for example, Thoreau tells us that he
spent fifty-four cents on a hoe, and then soon after quotes a verse about wings
spreading and closing in preparation for flight. The down-to-earth hoe and the
winged flight of fancy are closely juxtaposed in a way typical of the whole
work.
Occasionally the lyricism is a quotation of other people’s poems,
as when Thoreau quotes a Homeric epic in introducing the noble figure of Alex
Therien. At other times, as in the beautiful “Ponds” chapter, Thoreau allows
his prose to become lyrical, as when he describes the mystical blue ice of
Walden Pond. The intermittent lyricism of Walden is more than just a pleasant decorative addition or stylistic
curiosity. It delivers the powerful philosophical message that there is higher
meaning and transcendent value in even the most humble stay in a simple hut by
a pond. Hoeing beans, which some might consider the antithesis of poetry, is
actually a deeply lyrical and meaningful experience when seen in the right way.
Imaginary People
Thoreau mentions several actual people in Walden, but curiously, he also devotes considerable
attention to describing nonexistent or imaginary people. At the beginning of
the chapter “Former Inhabitants,” Thoreau frankly acknowledges that in his
winter isolation he was forced to invent imaginary company for himself. This
conjuring is the work of his imagination, but it is also historically accurate,
since the people he conjures are based on memories of old-timers who remember
earlier neighbors now long gone. Thoreau’s imaginary companions are thus
somewhere between fact and fiction, reality and fantasy. When Thoreau describes
these former inhabitants in vivid detail, we can easily forget that they are
now dead: they seem too real.
Thoreau also manages to make actual people seem imaginary. He never uses proper names when referring
to friends and associates in Walden,rendering them mythical.
After Thoreau describes Alex Therien as a Homeric hero, we cannot help seeing
him in a somewhat poetic and unreal way, despite all the realism of Thoreau’s
introduction. He doesn’t name even his great spiritual teacher, Emerson, but
obliquely calls him the “Old Immortal.” The culmination of this continual
transformation of people into myths or ideas is Thoreau’s expectation of “the
Visitor who never comes,” which he borrows from the Vedas, a Hindu sacred text.
This remark lets us see how spiritual all of Thoreau’s imaginary people are.
The real person, for him, is not the villager with a name, but rather the
transcendent soul behind that external social persona.
Symbols
Symbols are objects,
characters, figures, or colors used to represent abstract ideas or concepts.
Walden Pond
The meanings of Walden Pond are various, and by
the end of the work this small body of water comes to symbolize almost
everything Thoreau holds dear spiritually, philosophically, and personally.
Certainly it symbolizes the alternative to, and withdrawal from, social
conventions and obligations. But it also symbolizes the vitality and
tranquility of nature. A clue to the symbolic meaning of the pond lies in two
of its aspects that fascinate Thoreau: its depth, rumored to be infinite, and
its pure and reflective quality. Thoreau is so intrigued by the question of how
deep Walden Pond is that he devises a new method of plumbing depths to measure
it himself, finding it no more than a hundred feet deep. Wondering why people
rumor that the pond is bottomless, Thoreau offers a spiritual explanation:
humans need to believe in infinity. He suggests that the pond is not just a
natural phenomenon, but also a metaphor for spiritual belief. When he later
describes the pond reflecting heaven and making the swimmer’s body pure white,
we feel that Thoreau too is turning the water (as in the Christian sacrament of
baptism by holy water) into a symbol of heavenly purity available to humankind
on earth. When Thoreau concludes his chapter on “The Ponds” with the memorable
line, “Talk of heaven! ye disgrace earth,” we see him unwilling to subordinate
earth to heaven. Thoreau finds heaven within himself, and it is symbolized by
the pond, “looking into which the beholder measures the depth of his own
nature.” By the end of the “Ponds” chapter, the water hardly seems like a
physical part of the external landscape at all anymore; it has become one with
the heavenly soul of humankind.
Animals
As Thoreau’s chief companions after he moves to Walden Pond,
animals inevitably symbolize his retreat from human society and closer intimacy
with the natural world. Thoreau devotes much attention in his narrative to the
behavior patterns of woodchucks, partridges, loons, and mice, among others. Yet
his animal writing does not sound like the notes of a naturalist; there is
nothing truly scientific or zoological in Walden, for Thoreau personalizes nature too much. He does not record
animals neutrally, but instead emphasizes their human characteristics, turning
them into short vignettes of human behavior somewhat in the fashion of Aesop’s
fables. For example, Thoreau’s observation of the partridge and its young
walking along his windowsill elicits a meditation on motherhood and the
maternal urge to protect one’s offspring. Similarly, when Thoreau watches two
armies of ants wage war with all the “ferocity and carnage of a human battle,”
Thoreau’s attention is not that of an entomologist describing their behavior
objectively, but rather that of a philosopher thinking about the universal urge
to destroy.
The resemblance between animals and humans also works in the other
direction, as when Thoreau describes the townsmen he sees on a trip to Concord
as resembling prairie dogs. Ironically, the humans Thoreau describes often seem
more “brutish” (like the authorities who imprison him in Concord) than the
actual brutes in the woods do. Furthermore, Thoreau’s intimacy with animals in Walden shows that solitude for him is not really, and
not meant to be, total isolation. His very personal relationship with animals
demonstrates that in his solitary stay at the pond, he is making more
connections, not fewer, with other beings around him.
Ice
Since ice is the only product of Walden Pond that is useful, it
becomes a symbol of the social use and social importance of nature, and of the
exploitation of natural resources. Thoreau’s fascination with the ice industry
is acute. He describes in great detail the Irish icemen who arrive from
Cambridge in the winter of 1846 to cut, block, and haul away 10,000 tons of ice for use in city homes and fancy
hotels. The ice-cutters are the only group of people ever said to arrive at
Walden Pond en masse, and so they inevitably represent society in miniature,
with all the calculating exploitations and injustices that Thoreau sees in the
world at large. Consequently, the labor of the icemen on Walden becomes a
symbolic microcosm of the confrontation of society and nature. At first glance
it would appear that society gets the upper hand, as the frozen pond is chopped
up, disfigured, and robbed of ten thousand tons of its contents. But nature
triumphs in the end, since less than twenty-five percent of the ice ever
reaches its destination, the rest melting and evaporating en route—and making
its way back to Walden Pond. With this analysis, Thoreau suggests that
humankind’s efforts to exploit nature are in vain, since nature regenerates
itself on a far grander scale than humans could ever hope to affect, much less
threaten. The icemen’s exploitation of Walden contrasts sharply with Thoreau’s
less economic, more poetical use of it. In describing the rare mystical blue of
Walden’s water when frozen, he makes ice into a lyrical subject rather than a
commodity, and makes us reflect on the question of the value, both market and
spiritual, of nature in general.
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