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Comments Tagged ‘Romanticism’

  • Where I Lived, And What I Lived For 1-12 (2 comments)

    • Comment by Paul Schacht on February 17, 2026

      @jaidyn Your excellent point about subjectivity in human experience made me think of the quotation from Thoreau’s Journal that I’ve included in the second blog post assignment for our class, due in April.

      “Leaving my boat, I walk through the low wood west of Dove Rock, toward the scarlet oak. The very sunlight on the pale-brown bleached fields is an interesting object these cold days. I naturally look toward [it] as to a wood-fire. Not only different objects are presented to our attention at different seasons of the year, but we are in a frame of body and of mind to appreciate different objects at different seasons. I see one thing when it is cold and another when it is warm.” (Journal, November 17, 1858.)

      Thoreau here seems to highlight subjectivity’s influence not on how we perceive so much as what we perceive—that is, what objects come to our attention—but these two aspects of subjectivity are closely related.

      One thing that makes Thoreau’s focus on subjectivity in perception interesting is that it’s a lifelong project for him to square this subjectivity with his commitment to scientific inquiry, which demands that we seek to establish “facts.”

      Another thing that makes it interesting is that it’s one example of how Thoreau’s outlook on the world is shaped by the Romantic movement in poetry, the arts, and philosophy that was at its height from the last decades of the 18th century through the first few decades of Thoreau’s own. That the mind plays an active role in shaping how we see the world was a central feature of this movement.

      Comment by Paul Schacht on February 17, 2026

      @averyw See my reply to the comment on this passage from @jaidyn. In Thoreau’s reference to mythology, and to the way his imagination shapes his perception of his unfinished house, we get additional glimpses of how Romanticism shaped his outlook.

      How do you understand his assertion that “the poem of creation is uninterrupted; but few are the ears that hear it”?

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