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THOREAU’S DEMAND
UPON NATURE “I WISH to
speak a
word for Nature, for absolute freedom and wildness.” So Thoreau began
an
article in “The Atlantic Monthly” forty-four years ago. He wished to
make an
extreme statement, he declared, in hope of making an emphatic one. Like
idealists in general, — like Jesus in particular, — he believed in
omitting qualifications
and exceptions. Those were matters certain to be sufficiently insisted
upon by
the orthodox and the conservative, the minister and the school
committee. In an
attempt at an
extreme statement, Thoreau was very unlikely to fail. Thanks to an
inherited
aptitude and years of practice, there have been few to excel him with
the high
lights. In his hands exaggeration becomes one of the fine arts. We will
not
call it the finest art; his own best work would teach us better than
that; but
such as it is, with him to hold the brush, it would be difficult to
imagine
anything more effective. When he praises a quaking swamp as the most
desirable
of dooryards, or has visions of a people so enlightened as to burn all
their
fences and leave all the forests to grow, who shall contend with him?
And yet
the sympathetic reader — the only reader — knows what is meant, and
what is not
meant, and finds it good; as he finds it good when he is bidden to
resist not a
thief, or to hate his father and mother. Thoreau’s
love for
the wild — not to be confounded with a liking for natural history or an
appreciation of scenery — was as natural and unaffected as a child’s
love of
sweets. It belonged to no one part of his life. It finds utterance in
all his
books, but is best expressed, most feelingly and simply, and therefore
most
convincingly, in his journal, especially in such an entry as that of
January 7,
1857, a bitterly cold, windy day, with snow blowing, — one of the days
when
“all animate things are reduced to their lowest terms.” Thoreau has
been out,
nevertheless, for his afternoon walk, “through the woods toward the
cliffs
along the side of the Well Meadow field.” Contact with Nature, even in
this her
severest mood, has given a quickening yet restraining grace to his pen.
Now,
there is no question of “emphasis,” no plotting for an “extreme
statement,” no
thought of dull readers, for whom the truth must be shown large, as it
were, by
some magic-lantern process. How differently he speaks! “Might I aspire
to
praise the moderate nymph Nature,” he says, “I must be like her,
moderate.” The
passage is too
long for quotation in full. “There is nothing so sanative, so poetic,”
he
writes, “as a walk in the woods and fields even now, when I meet none
abroad
for pleasure. Nothing so inspires me, and excites such serene and
profitable
thought. . . . Alone in distant woods or fields, in unpretending
sprout-lands
or pastures tracked by rabbits, even in a bleak and, to most, cheerless
day
like this, when a villager would be thinking of his inn, I come to
myself, I
once more feel myself grandly related. This cold and solitude are
friends of
mine. . . . I get away a mile or two from the town, into the stillness
and
solitude of nature, with rocks, trees, weeds, snow about me. I enter
some glade
in the woods, perchance, where a few weeds and dry leaves alone lift
themselves
above the surface of the snow, and it is as if I had come to an open
window. I
see out and around myself. . . . This stillness, solitude, wildness of
nature
is a kind of thoroughwort or boneset to my intellect. This is what I go
out to
seek. It is as if I always met in those places some grand, serene,
immortal,
infinitely encouraging, though invisible companion, and walked with
him.” Four days
later,
dwelling still upon his “success in solitary and distant woodland
walking
outside the town,” he says: “I do not go there to get my dinner, but to
get
that sustenance which dinners only preserve me to enjoy, without which
dinners
are a vain repetition. . . . I never chanced to meet with any man so
cheering
and elevating and encouraging, so infinitely suggestive, as the
stillness and
solitude of the Well Meadow field.” Language
like this,
though all may perceive the beauty and feel the sincerity of it, is to
be
understood only by those who are of the speaker’s kin. It describes a
country
which no man knows unless he has been there. It expresses life, not
theory, and
calls for life on the part of the hearer. And if the
appeal
be made to this tribunal, the language used here and so often
elsewhere, by
Thoreau, touching the relative inferiority of human society will
neither give
offense nor seem in any wise extravagant or morbid. Thoreau knew
Emerson; he
had lived in the same house with him; but even Emerson’s companionship
was less
stimulating to him than Nature’s own. Well, and how is it with
ourselves, who
have the best of Emerson in his books? Much as these may have done for
us, have
we never had seasons of communion with the life of the universe itself
when
even Emerson’s words would have seemed an intrusion? Is not the voice
of the
world, when we can hear it, better than the voice of any man
interpreting the
world? Is it not better to hear for ourselves than to be told what
another has
heard? When the forest speaks things ineffable, and the soul hears what
even to
itself it can never utter, — for such an hour there is no book, there
never
will be. And if we wish not a book, no more do we wish the author of a
book. We
are in better company. In such hours, — too few, alas! — though we be
the
plainest of plain people, our own emotions are of more value than any
talk. We
know, in our measure, what Thoreau — “An early
unconverted Saint” — was
seeking words
for when he said, “I feel my Maker blessing me.” To him, as
to many
another man, visitations of this kind came oftenest in wild and
solitary
places. Small wonder, then, that he loved to go thither. Small wonder
that he
found the pleasures of society unsatisfying in the comparison. There he
communed, not with himself nor with his fellow, but with the “Wisdom
and Spirit
of the Universe.” And when it is objected that this ought not to have
been
true, that he ought to have found the presence of men more elevating
and
stimulating than the presence of “inanimate” nature, we must take the
liberty
to believe that the critic speaks of that whereof he knows nothing. To
revert
to our own figure, he has never lived in Thoreau’s country. Thoreau
was wedded
to Nature not so much for her beauty as for delight in her high
companionableness. There was more of Wordsworth than of Keats or Ruskin
in him.
He was more philosopher than poet, perhaps we may say. He loved spirit
rather
than form and color, though for these also his eye was better than
most. Being
a stoic, a born economist, a child of the pinched and frozen North, he
felt
most at home with Nature in her dull seasons. His delight in a wintry
day was
typical. He loved his mistress best when she was most like himself; as
he said
of human friendships, “I love that one with whom I sympathize, be she
‘beautiful’
or otherwise, of excellent mind or not.” The swamp, the desert, the
wilderness,
these he especially celebrated. He began by thinking that nothing could
be too
wild for him; and even in his later years, notably in the “Atlantic”
essay
above quoted, he sometimes blew the same heroic strain. By this time,
however,
he knew and confessed, to himself at least, that there was another side
to the
story; that there was a dreariness beyond even his ready appreciation.
More
than once we find in his diary expressions like this, in late November:
“Now a
man will eat his heart, if ever, now while the earth is bare, barren,
and
cheerless, and we have the coldness of winter without the variety of
ice and
snow.” And what
was true
of seasons was, in the long run, equally true of places. Let them be
wild, by
all means, yet not too wild. When he returned from the Maine woods, he
had
seen, for the time being, enough of the wilderness. It was a relief to
get back
to the smooth but still varied landscape of eastern Massachusetts.
That, for a
permanent residence, seemed to him incomparably better than an unbroken
forest.
The poet must live open to the sky and the wind; his road must be
prepared for
him; and yet, “not only for strength, but for beauty, the poet must,
from time
to time, travel the logger’s path and the Indian’s trail, to drink at
some new
and more bracing fountain of the Muses.” In short, the poet should live
in
Concord, and only once in a while seek the inspirations of the outer
wilderness. What we
have called
Thoreau’s stoicism (knowing very well that lie was not a stoic, except
in some
partial, looser meaning of the word), his liking for plainness and low
expense,
is perhaps at the base of one of his rarest excellencies as a writer
upon
nature, — his reserve and moderation. In statement, it is true, he
could
extravagante like a master. He boasts, as well he may, of his prowess
in that
direction; but in tone and sentiment, when it came to dealing, not with
ethics
or philosophy, but with the mistress of his affections, he kept always
decently
within bounds. He had a very sprightly fancy, when he chose to give it
play;
but he had with it, and controlling it, a prevailing sobriety, the
tempering
grace of good sense. “The alder,” he says, “is one of the prettiest
trees and
shrubs in the winter. It is evidently so full of life, with its
conspicuously
pretty red catkins dangling from it on all sides. It seems to dread the
winter
less than other plants. It has a certain heyday and cheery look, less
stiff
than most, with more of the flexible grace of summer. With those
dangling
clusters of red catkins which it switches in the face of winter, it
brags for
all vegetation. It is not daunted by the cold, but still hangs
gracefully over
the frozen stream.” Most
admirable, thrown
in thus by the way, amid unaffected, matter-of-fact description and
every-day
sense, and with its homely “brags” and
“switches” to hold it true, — to save it
from a touch of foppery, a shade too much of prettiness. How
differently some
writers have dealt with similar themes: men so afraid of the
commonplace as to
be incapable of saying a thing in so many words, though it were only to
mention
the day of the week; men whose every other sentence must contain a
“felicity;”
whose pages are as full of floweriness and dainty conceits as a
milliner’s
window; who surfeit you with confections, till you think of bread and
water as
a feast. Whether Thoreau’s temperance is to be credited to
the restraints of
stoical philosophy or to plain good taste, it is a virtue to be
thankful for. With him
the study
of nature was not an amusement, nor even a more or less serious
occupation for
leisure hours, but the work of his life; a work to which he gave
himself from
year’s end to year’s end, as faithfully and laboriously, and with as
definite a
purpose, — a crop as truly in his eye, — as any Concord farmer gave
himself to
his farm. He was no amateur, no dilettante, no conscious hobbyist,
laughing
between times at his own absorption. His sense of a mission was as
unquestioning
as Wordsworth’s, though happily there went with it a sense of humor
that
preserved it in good measure from over-emphasis and damaging iteration.
In degree,
if not
in kind, this wholehearted, lifelong devotion was something new. It was
one of
Thoreau’s originalities. To what a pitch he carried it, how serious and
all-controlling it was, the pages of his journal bear continual
witness. His
was a Puritan conscience. He could never do his work well enough. After
a
eulogy of winter buds, “impregnable, vivacious willow catkins, but half
asleep
along the twigs” (there, again, is fancy of an uncloying type), he
breaks out:
“How healthy and vivacious must he be who would treat of these things.
You must
love the crust of the earth on which you dwell more than the sweet
crust of any
bread or cake; you must be able to extract nutriment out of a sand
heap.”
“Must” was a great word with Thoreau. In hard times, especially, he
braced
himself with it. “The winter, cold and bound out as it is, is thrown to
us like
a bone to a famishing dog, and we are expected to get the marrow out of
it.
While the milkmen in the outskirts are milking so many scores of cows
before
sunrise, these winter mornings, it is our task to milk the winter
itself. It is
true it is like a cow that is dry, and our fingers are numb, and there
is none
to wake us up. . . . But the winter was not given us for no purpose. We
must
thaw its cold with our genialness. We are tasked to find out and
appropriate
all the nutriment it yields. If it is a cold and hard season, its fruit
no
doubt is the more concentrated and nutty.” In these
winter
journalizings, we not only have example and proof of the earnestness
with which
Thoreau pursued his outdoor studies, but are shown their method and
their
sufficient object. He was to be a writer, and nature was to be his
theme, or,
more exactly, his medium of expression. He required, therefore, in the
way of
raw material, a considerable store of outward knowledge, — knowledge of
the
outside or aspect of things, — classified, for convenience, as botany,
ornithology, entomology, and the like; but after this, and infinitely
more than
this, he needed a living, deepening intimacy with the life of the world
itself.
For observation of the ways of plants and animals, of the phases of
earth and
sky, he had endless patience and all necessary sharpness of sense; work
of this
kind was easy, — he could do it in some good degree to his
satisfaction; the
vexatious thing about it was that it readily became too absorbing; but
his real
work, his hard work, the work
that was peculiarly his, that taxed his
capacities to the full, and even so was never accomplished, this work
was not
an amassing of relative knowledge, an accumulation of facts, a
familiarizing of
himself with appearances, but a perfecting of sympathy, the organ or
means of
that absolute knowledge which alone he found indispensable, which alone
he
cared greatly to communicate. There, except at rare moments, he was to
the last
below his ideal. His “task” was never done. His union with nature was
never
complete. The
measure of this
union was gauged, as we have seen already, by its spiritual and
emotional
effects, by the mental states it brought him into; as the religious
mystic
measures the success of his prayers. He walked in the old Carlisle
road, as the
saint goes to his knees, to “put off worldly thoughts.” The words are
his own.
There, when the hour favored him, he “sauntered near to heaven’s gate.”
It must be
only too
evident that success of this transcendental quality is not to be
counted upon
as one counts upon finding specimens for a botanical box. There is no
comparison between scientific pursuits, so called, and this kind of
supernatural history. For this, as Thoreau says, “you must be in a
different
state from common.” “If it were required to know the position of the
fruit dots
or the character of the indusium, nothing could be easier than to
ascertain it;
but if it is required that you be affected by ferns, that they amount
to
anything, signify anything, to you, that they be another sacred
scripture and
revelation to you, helping to redeem your life, this end is not so
easily
accomplished.” This,
then, it was
for which Thoreau was ever on the alert; this was the prize set before
him;
this he required of ferns and clouds, of birds and swamps and deserted
roads, —
that they should stir him inwardly, that they should do something to
redeem his
life, or, as he said elsewhere, to affect the quality of the day. For
this he
cultivated the “fellowship of the seasons,” a fellowship on which no
man ever
made larger drafts. Even when nature seemed to be getting “thumbed like
an old
spelling-book,” even in the month that tempted him sometimes to “eat
his
heart,” he still “sat the bench with perfect contentment, unwilling to
exchange
the familiar vision that was to be unrolled for any treasure or heaven
that
could be imagined.” A new November was a novelty more tempting than any
voyage
to Europe or even to another world. “Young men have not learned the
phases of
nature:” so he comforted himself, when the fervors and inspirations of
youth
seemed at times to be waning: “I would know when in the year to expect
certain
thoughts and moods, as the sportsman knows when to look for plover.” Here, as
everywhere
with Thoreau, nature, in his ultimate conception of it, was nothing of
itself.
Everything is for man. This belief underlies all his writing upon
natural
themes, and, as well, all his personal dealings with the natural world.
His
idlest wanderings, whether in the Maine forests or in Well Meadow
field, were
made serious by it. To judge him by his own testimony, he seems to have
known
comparatively little of a careless, purposeless, childish delight in
nature for
its own sake. Nature was a better kind of book; and books were for
improvement.
In this respect he was sophisticated from his youth, like some model of
“early
piety.” Nature was not his playground, but his study, his Bible, his
closet,
his means of grace. As we have said, and as Channing long ago implied,
his was
a Puritan conscience. He must get at the heart of things, sparing no
pains nor
time, holding through thick and thin to the devotee’s faith: “To him
that
knocketh it shall be opened.” In this spirit he waited upon nature and
the
motions of his own genius. Patience, solitude, stillness, sincerity,
and a
quiet mind, — these were the instruments of his art. With them, not
with prying
sharp-sightedness, was the secret to be won. In his own phrase,
characteristic
in its homely expressiveness, if you would appreciate a phenomenon,
though it
be only a fern, you must “camp down beside it.” And you must invent no
distinctions of great and small. The humming of a gnat must be as
significant
as the music of the spheres. Was he too
serious
for his own good, whether as man or as writer? And did he sometimes
feel
himself so? Was he whipping his own fault when he spoke against
conscientious,
duty-ridden people, and praised
“simple laboring folk
Who love their work, Whose virtue is a song”? It is not
impossible, of course. But he, too, loved his work, — loved it so well
as
perhaps to need no playtime. Some have said that he made too much of
his
“thoughts and moods,” that he was unwholesomely beset with the idea of
self-improvement. Others have thought that he would have written better
books
had he stuck closer to science, and paid less court to poetry and
Buddhistic
philosophy. Such objections and speculations are futile. He did his
work, and
with it enriched the world. In the strictest sense it was his own work.
If his
ideal escaped him, he did better than most in that he still pursued it.
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