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Opinion | What Thoreau Heard in the Song of the Crickets
  + stars: | 2023-09-23 | by ( Lewis Hyde | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +3 min
It all seems quite hurried, the way each season must fall forward into the next until the final freeze. “Walden” opens with him asking his neighbors whether their condition “cannot be improved” and follows up with considerable advice. Spring, summer, fall and winter — our seasons are spun into being by the earth circling the sun; the earth herself, however, is not seasonal. Taking that larger view allows Thoreau, in the second part of his fable, to reframe the cricket’s song as an “earth song,” a reminder not of life’s brevity but of eternal return. Of having no “trivial and hurried pursuits.” Of having “your engagements so few, your attention so free, your existence so mundane” that you can always hear their song.
Persons: Thoreau, , “ Walden ”, ” Thoreau, , Kouroo, Time Locations: Maine, England
Fully quit of school and finally in love, I had been offered a cabin in West Virginia for the summer. Within the month I had restocked my childhood armory — net, killing jar, spreading board, pins, display cases — and was again out roaming the fields. Watching a documentary recently about the old men of Italy’s Piedmont who hunt for truffles, I noticed that sometimes when they explain themselves all talk of truffles drops away. The one thing I have not yet discarded is the butterfly net. I don’t know if the same is true for birders with their binoculars or deer hunters with their rifles, but for me, walking with the butterfly net alters my perceptions.
Persons: he’s Organizations: Italy’s Locations: Connecticut, Pittsburgh, West Virginia
Total: 2