Why Did David Thoreau Use With The Train Analysis

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The symbolism Thoreau uses with the train is that it is implemented to represent what Thoreau believes are the worst aspects of a modern society. As previously read, Thoreau did not believe in anything that was complex or unneeded. This is why he especially disliked the railroad because it would disrupt his quiet simplicity, and it was not essential for a person. He also was critical of it because it symbolizes greed and destructiveness within progressing technology. He believed that the train enslaved people because they became to reliant on it. Lastly, he criticized the train because he described it as bad for nature, which he likes very much. He wrote, “With such huge and lumbering civility the country hands a chair to the city. All the Indian huckleberry hills are stripped, all the cranberry meadows are raked into the city”(Thoreau 58) to describe how it was destroying nature. Lastly, he also warns the reader against the railroad …show more content…

For example, Thoreau found enjoyment within listening to the birds sing and thinking while the sun rose. He advises people to not find pleasure in things like the “cinema,” but rather within simplicity. He also mentions that he would enjoy doing housework such as cleaning the floors because it would provide him with amusement while allowing him to connect with his thoughts. Lastly, he says, “a man must find his occasions in himself, it is true. The natural day is very calm, and will hardly reprove his indolence”(Thoreau 56). This means that a person can find entertainment within themself, rather than within something else. He believes that the natural day will be enough to keep anyone entertained. Thoreau’s transcendentalist views are evident here because he writes that connecting with nature is better than attending a man made establishment such as the

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