Tuesday, July 8, 2008
true economy
“The mass of men lead lives of quiet desperation, said Henry David Thoreau, and if his book continues to attract us it is because we are desperate. In desperation, I turn to night as Thoreau turned to his pond. I measure those starry spaces with the same care of rods and chains that the naturalist of Concord used to measure Walden. Thoreau plumbed the depths of Walden Pond and marked them on his map. He surveyed the fish that lived in the waters of the pond, he catalogued its weeds, and during winter he recorded the thicknesses of the ice. It was a part of his balance book, an accounting of his riches, a reckoning of a fortune that was there for the taking. These, said Thoreau—the measures, the depths, the thicknesses—are a man’s true economy.”
- From 1985’s “Soul of the Night” by Chet Raymo (born in Chattanooga), retired physics professor, astronomer, naturalist. Just a wonderful, wonderful book
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Labels:
Chet Raymo,
Henry David Thoreau
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