Summary Of Henry David Thoreau's Civil Disobedience

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“Rather than love, than money, than fame, give me truth.” (Thoreau, Walden 246). Henry David Thoreau possessed the mind and spirit of a true individual. Whether writing about nature, government, or the precedents put into place by society, he was unafraid to speak what he felt was the truth. One of his well-known ideas, “out with the old, in with the new, ” held true during most of his life, making him a person who was constantly experiencing the “new” and acquiring insight to various things he felt were important. Even though Thoreau often felt that old ideas should be put to rest, many of his nineteenth century ideas still hold true to this day; these relevant ideas are ubiquitous throughout all of his works. In Walden, Thoreau discusses how without nature, man has no connection to himself. In “Civil Disobedience, ” Thoreau rises up, using the tone of a man who has seen tremendous injustice and blames not the government, but …show more content…

Working without passion leads individuals down a path of living a long boring life that will never have an impact on the rest of society, just like the extent of a machine’s legacy. “Do not hire a man who does your work for money, but him who does it for love of it” (“Life Without” Thoreau 9). Thoreau does not say that all men should or should not be millionaires who live in ways that others envy. Rather, he suggests that every man should do what makes him happy because a life without principle is not a life that anyone could truthfully enjoy living; even if it meant becoming a millionaire. Thoreau believed that everyone had different kinds of potential, and that everyone should strive to meet their respective

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