the Thoreau Log.
23 May 1841. Concord, Mass.

Thoreau writes in his journal: 

  Books are to be attended to as new sounds merely. Most would be put to a sore trial if the reader should assume the attitude of a listener. They are but a new note in the forest. To our lonely, sober thought the earth is a wild unexplored. Wildness as of the jay and muskrat reigns over the great part of nature. The oven-bird and plover are heard in the horizon. Here is a new book of heroes, come to me like the note of the chewink from over the fen, only over a deeper and wider fen. The pines are unrelenting sifters of thought; nothing petty leaks through them. Let me put my car close, and hear the sough of this book, that I may know if any inspiration yet haunts it. There is always a later edition of every book than the printer roots of, no matter how recently it was published. All nature is a new impression every instant.
(Journal, 1:260)

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