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Comments Tagged ‘architecture’

  • House-Warming 1-9 (1 comment)

    • Comment by Paul Schacht on March 26, 2026

      I agree that this is interesting, @skyriedell! Not only because, as you point out, it’s another expression of Thoreau’s preference for simplicity over unnecessary luxuries, but also because his description of this imaginary house prefigures an entire architectural movement, the evidence of which is still very much with us. In nineteenth-century England, writers like John Ruskin and, later, William Morris, compared the (in their view) over-elaborate style of much Victorian architecture to the openness, simplicity, and transparency of earlier architectural forms. In the twentieth century, probably the most famous and influential architect inspired by their writings was Frank Lloyd Wright, who designed houses that were intended to appear as though they emerged directly, naturally, and organically out of their surroundings. Compare Thoreau’s “a house as open and manifest as a bird’s nest”. When you go into a building today that has exposed beams or an open kitchen, you’re seeing the same influence. Compare Thoreau’s “where you can see so necessary a thing as a barrel or a ladder, so convenient a thing as a cupboard, and hear the pot boil, and pay your respects to the fire that cooks your dinner and the oven that bakes your bread . . .” Another mark of this architectural style is to identify beauty with utility and make “form follow function.” Compare Thoreau’s “where you can see all the treasures of the house at one view, and every thing hangs upon its peg, that a man should use.”

Source: https://commons.digitalthoreau.org/walden/comments/tags/architecture/