1-D.
Economy (continued)
It would be worth the while to build still more deliberately
than I did, considering, for instance, what foundation a door, a window,
a cellar, a garret, have in the nature of man, and perchance never raising
any superstructure until we found a better reason for it than our temporal
necessities even. There is some of the same fitness in a man's building
his own house that there is in a bird's building its own nest. Who knows
but if men constructed their dwellings with their own hands, and provided
food for themselves and families simply and honestly enough, the poetic
faculty would be universally developed, as birds universally sing when
they are so engaged? But alas! we do like cowbirds and cuckoos, which lay
their eggs in nests which other birds have built, and cheer no traveller
with their chattering and unmusical notes. Shall we forever resign the
pleasure of construction to the carpenter? What does architecture amount
to in the experience of the mass of men? I never in all my walks came across
a man engaged in so simple and natural an occupation as building his house.
We belong to the community. It is not the tailor alone who is the ninth
part of a man; it is as much the preacher, and the merchant, and the farmer.
Where is this division of labor to end? and what object does it finally
serve? No doubt another may also think for me; but it is not therefore
desirable that he should do so to the exclusion of my thinking for myself.
True, there are architects so called in this country,
and I have heard of one at least possessed with the idea of making architectural
ornaments have a core of truth, a necessity, and hence a beauty, as if
it were a revelation to him. All very well perhaps from his point of view,
but only a little better than the common dilettantism. A sentimental reformer
in architecture, he began at the cornice, not at the foundation. It was
only how to put a core of truth within the ornaments, that every sugarplum,
in fact, might have an almond or caraway seed in it--though I hold that
almonds are most wholesome without the sugar--and not how the inhabitant,
the indweller, might build truly within and without, and let the ornaments
take care of themselves. What reasonable man ever supposed that ornaments
were something outward and in the skin merely--that the tortoise got his
spotted shell, or the shell-fish its mother-o'-pearl tints, by such a contract
as the inhabitants of Broadway their Trinity Church? But a man has no more
to do with the style of architecture of his house than a tortoise with
that of its shell: nor need the soldier be so idle as to try to paint the
precise color of his virtue on his standard. The enemy will find
it out. He may turn pale when the trial comes. This man seemed to me to
lean over the cornice, and timidly whisper his half truth to the rude occupants
who really knew it better than he. What of architectural beauty I now see,
I know has gradually grown from within outward, out of the necessities
and character of the indweller, who is the only builder-out of some unconscious
truthfulness, and nobleness, without ever a thought for the appearance
and whatever additional beauty of this kind is destined to be produced
will be preceded by a like unconscious beauty of life. The most interesting
dwellings in this country, as the painter knows, are the most unpretending,
humble log huts and cottages of the poor commonly; it is the life of the
inhabitants whose shells they are, and not any peculiarity in their surfaces
merely, which makes them picturesque; and equally interesting will
be the citizen's suburban box, when his life shall be as simple and as
agreeable to the imagination, and there is as little straining after effect
in the style of his dwelling. A great proportion of architectural ornaments
are literally hollow, and a September gale would strip them off, like borrowed
plumes, without injury to the substantials. They can do without architecture
who have no olives nor wines in the cellar. What if an equal ado were made
about the ornaments of style in literature, and the architects of our bibles
spent as much time about their cornices as the architects of our churches
do? So are made the belles-lettres
(1) and the beaux-arts
(2) and their professors.
Much it concerns a man, forsooth, how a few sticks are slanted over him
or under him, and what colors are daubed upon his box. It would signify
somewhat, if, in any earnest sense, he slanted them and daubed it;
but the spirit having departed out of the tenant, it is of a piece with
constructing his own coffin--the architecture of the grave--and "carpenter"
is but another name for "coffin-maker." One man says, in his despair or
indifference to life, take up a handful of the earth at your feet, and
paint your house that color. Is he thinking of his last and narrow house?
Toss up a copper for it as well. What an abundance of leisure he must have!
Why do you take up a handful of dirt? Better paint your house your own
complexion; let it turn pale or blush for you. An enterprise to improve
the style of cottage architecture! When you have got my ornaments ready,
I will wear them.
Before winter I built a chimney, and shingled the
sides of my house, which were already impervious to rain, with imperfect
and sappy shingles made of the first slice of the log, whose edges I was
obliged to straighten with a plane.
I have thus a tight shingled and plastered house,
ten feet wide by fifteen long, and eight-feet posts, with a garret and
a closet, a large window on each side, two trap doors, one door at the
end, and a brick fireplace opposite. The exact cost of my house, paying
the usual price for such materials as I used, but not counting the work,
all of which was done by myself, was as follows; and I give the details
because very few are able to tell exactly what their houses cost, and fewer
still, if any, the separate cost of the various materials which compose
them:--
Boards, ..........................$8.03½, mostly shanty
boards.
Refuse shingles for roof
and sides, ..................... 4.00
Laths, ........................... 1.25
Two second-hand windows
with glass, .................... 2.43
One thousand old brick, .......... 4.00
Two casks of lime, ............... 2.40 That was high.
Hair, ............................ 0.31 More than I needed.
Mantle-tree iron, ................ 0.15
Nails, ........................... 3.90
Hinges and screws, ............... 0.14
Latch, ........................... 0.10
Chalk, ........................... 0.01
Transportation, .................. 1.40 I carried a good
part on my back.
In all, ................... $28.12½
These are all the materials, excepting the timber,
stones, and sand, which I claimed by squatter's right. I have also a small
woodshed adjoining, made chiefly of the stuff which was left after building
the house.
I intend to build me a house which will surpass any
on the main street in Concord in grandeur and luxury, as soon as it pleases
me as much and will cost me no more than my present one.
I thus found that the student who wishes for a shelter
can obtain one for a lifetime at an expense not greater than the rent which
he now pays annually. If I seem to boast more than is becoming, my excuse
is that I brag for humanity rather than for myself; and my shortcomings
and inconsistencies do not affect the truth of my statement. Notwithstanding
much cant and hypocrisy--chaff which I find it difficult to separate from
my wheat, but for which I am as sorry as any man--I will breathe freely
and stretch myself in this respect, it is such a relief to both the moral
and physical system; and I am resolved that I will not through humility
become the devil's attorney. I will endeavor to speak a good word for the
truth. At Cambridge College (3)
the mere rent of a student's room, which is only a little larger than my
own, is thirty dollars each year, though the corporation had the advantage
of building thirty-two side by side and under one roof, and the occupant
suffers the inconvenience of many and noisy neighbors, and perhaps a residence
in the fourth story. I cannot but think that if we had more true wisdom
in these respects, not only less education would be needed, because, forsooth,
more would already have been acquired, but the pecuniary expense of getting
an education would in a great measure vanish. Those conveniences which
the student requires at Cambridge or elsewhere cost him or somebody else
ten times as great a sacrifice of life as they would with proper management
on both sides. Those things for which the most money is demanded are never
the things which the student most wants. Tuition, for instance, is an important
item in the term bill, while for the far more valuable education which
he gets by associating with the most cultivated of his contemporaries no
charge is made. The mode of founding a college is, commonly, to get up
a subscription of dollars and cents, and then, following blindly the principles
of a division of labor to its extreme--a principle which should never be
followed but with circumspection--to call in a contractor who makes this
a subject of speculation, and he employs Irishmen or other operatives actually
to lay the foundations, while the students that are to be are said to be
fitting themselves for it; and for these oversights successive generations
have to pay. I think that it would be better than this, for the
students, or those who desire to be benefited by it, even to lay the foundation
themselves. The student who secures his coveted leisure and retirement
by systematically shirking any labor necessary to man obtains but an ignoble
and unprofitable leisure, defrauding himself of the experience which alone
can make leisure fruitful. "But," says one, "you do not mean that the students
should go to work with their hands instead of their heads?" I do not mean
that exactly, but I mean something which he might think a good deal like
that; I mean that they should not play life, or study it
merely, while the community supports them at this expensive game, but earnestly
live
it from beginning to end. How could youths better learn to live than by
at once trying the experiment of living? Methinks this would exercise their
minds as much as mathematics. If I wished a boy to know something about
the arts and sciences, for instance, I would not pursue the common course,
which is merely to send him into the neighborhood of some professor, where
anything is professed and practised but the art of life;--to survey the
world through a telescope or a microscope, and never with his natural eye;
to study chemistry, and not learn how his bread is made, or mechanics,
and not learn how it is earned; to discover new satellites to Neptune,
and not detect the motes in his eyes, or to what vagabond he is a satellite
himself; or to be devoured by the monsters that swarm all around him, while
contemplating the monsters in a drop of vinegar. Which would have advanced
the most at the end of a month--the boy who had made his own jackknife
from the ore which he had dug and smelted, reading as much as would be
necessary for this--or the boy who had attended the lectures on metallurgy
at the Institute in the meanwhile, and had received a Rodgers' penknife
from his father? Which would be most likely to cut his fingers?... To my
astonishment I was informed on leaving college that I had studied navigation!--why,
if I had taken one turn down the harbor I should have known more about
it. Even the poor student studies and is taught only political
economy, while that economy of living which is synonymous with philosophy
is not even sincerely professed in our colleges. The
consequence is, that while he is reading Adam Smith,(4)
Ricardo,(5) and Say,(6)
he runs his father in debt irretrievably.
As with our colleges, so with a hundred "modern improvements";
there is an illusion about them; there is not always a positive advance.
The devil goes on exacting compound interest to the last for his early
share and numerous succeeding investments in them. Our inventions are wont
to be pretty toys, which distract our attention from serious things. They
are but improved means to an unimproved end, an end which it was already
but too easy to arrive at; as railroads lead to Boston or New York. We
are in great haste to construct a magnetic telegraph from Maine to Texas;
but Maine and Texas, it may be, have nothing important to communicate.
Either is in such a predicament as the man who was earnest to be introduced
to a distinguished deaf woman, but when he was presented, and one end of
her ear trumpet was put into his hand, had nothing to say. As if the main
object were to talk fast and not to talk sensibly. We are eager to tunnel
under the Atlantic and bring the Old World some weeks nearer to the New;
but perchance the first news that will leak through into the broad, flapping
American ear will be that the Princess Adelaide has the whooping cough.
After all, the man whose horse trots a mile in a minute does not carry
the most important messages; he is not an evangelist,
nor does he come round eating locusts and wild honey. I doubt if Flying
Childers (7) ever carried a peck
of corn to mill.
One says to me, "I wonder that you do not lay up
money; you love to travel; you might take the cars and go
to Fitchburg today and see the country." But I am wiser than that.
I have learned that the swiftest traveller is he that goes afoot. I say
to my friend, Suppose we try who will get there first. The distance is
thirty miles; the fare ninety cents. That is almost a day's wages. I remember
when wages were sixty cents a day for laborers on this very road. Well,
I start now on foot, and get there before night; I have travelled at that
rate by the week together. You will in the meanwhile have earned your fare,
and arrive there some time tomorrow, or possibly this evening, if you are
lucky enough
to get a job in season. Instead of going to Fitchburg, you
will be working here the greater part of the day. And so, if the railroad
reached round the world, I think that I should keep ahead of you; and as
for seeing the country and getting experience of that kind, I should have
to cut your acquaintance altogether.
Such is the universal law, which no man can ever
outwit, and with regard to the railroad even we may say it is as broad
as it is long. To make a railroad round the world available to all mankind
is equivalent to grading the whole surface of the planet. Men have an indistinct
notion that if they keep up this activity of joint stocks and spades long
enough all will at length ride somewhere, in next to no time, and for nothing;
but though a crowd rushes to the depot, and the conductor shouts "All aboard!"
when the smoke is blown away and the vapor condensed, it will be perceived
that a few are riding, but the rest are run over--and it will be called,
and will be, "A melancholy accident." No doubt they can ride at last who
shall have earned their fare, that is, if they survive so long, but they
will probably have lost their elasticity and desire to travel by that time.
This spending of the best part of one's life earning money in order to
enjoy a questionable liberty during the least valuable part of it reminds
me of the Englishman who went to India to make a fortune first, in order
that he might return to England and live the life of a poet. He should
have gone up garret at once. "What!" exclaim a million Irishmen starting
up from all the shanties in the land, "is not this railroad which we have
built a good thing?" Yes, I answer, comparatively good, that is,
you might have done worse; but I wish, as you are brothers of mine, that
you could have spent your time better than digging in this dirt.
Before I finished my house, wishing to earn ten or
twelve dollars by some honest and agreeable method, in order to meet my
unusual expenses, I planted about two acres and a half of light and sandy
soil near it chiefly with beans, but also a small part with potatoes, corn,
peas, and turnips. The whole lot contains eleven acres, mostly growing
up to pines and hickories, and was sold the preceding season for eight
dollars and eight cents an acre. One farmer said that it was "good for
nothing but to raise cheeping squirrels on." I put no manure whatever on
this land, not being the owner, but merely a squatter, and not expecting
to cultivate so much again, and I did not quite hoe it all once. I got
out several cords of stumps in plowing, which supplied me with fuel for
a long time, and left small circles of virgin mould, easily distinguishable
through the summer by the greater luxuriance of the beans there. The dead
and for the most part unmerchantable wood behind my house, and the driftwood
from the pond, have supplied the remainder of my fuel. I was obliged to
hire a team and a man for the plowing, though I held the plow myself. My
farm outgoes for the first season were, for implements, seed, work, etc.,
$14.72½. The seed corn was given me. This never costs anything to
speak of, unless you plant more than enough. I got twelve bushels of beans,
and eighteen bushels of potatoes, beside some peas and sweet corn. The
yellow corn and turnips were too late to come to anything. My whole income
from the farm was
$23.44
Deducting the outgoes ............ 14.72½
___________
There are left,................... $8.71½,
beside produce consumed and on hand at the time this estimate was made
of the value of $4.50--the amount on hand much more than balancing a little
grass which I did not raise. All things considered, that is, considering
the importance of a man's soul and of today, notwithstanding the short
time occupied by my experiment, nay, partly even because of its transient
character, I believe that that was doing better than any farmer in Concord
did that year.
The next year I did better still, for I spaded up
all the land which I required, about a third of an acre, and I learned
from the experience of both years, not being in the least awed by many celebrated
works on husbandry, Arthur Young (8)
among the rest, that if one would live simply and eat only the crop which
he raised, and raise no more than he ate, and not exchange it for an insufficient
quantity of more luxurious and expensive things, he would need to cultivate
only a few rods of ground, and that it would be cheaper to spade up that
than to use oxen to plow it, and to select a fresh spot from time to time
than to manure the old, and he could do all his necessary farm work as
it were with his left hand at odd hours in the summer; and thus he would
not be tied to an ox, or horse, or cow, or pig, as at present. I desire
to speak impartially on this point, and as one not interested in the success
or failure of the present economical and social arrangements. I was more
independent than any farmer in Concord, for I was not anchored to a house
or farm, but could follow the bent of my genius, which is a very crooked
one, every moment. Beside being better off than they already, if my house
had been burned or my crops had failed, I should have been nearly as well
off as before.
I am wont to think that men are not so much the keepers
of herds as herds are the keepers of men, the former are so much the freer.
Men and oxen exchange work; but if we consider necessary work only, the
oxen will be seen to have greatly the advantage, their farm is so much
the larger. Man does some of his part of the exchange work in his six weeks
of haying, and it is no boy's play. Certainly no nation that lived simply
in all respects, that is, no nation of philosophers, would commit so great
a blunder as to use the labor of animals. True, there never was and is
not likely soon to be a nation of philosophers, nor am I certain it is
desirable that there should be. However, I should never have broken
a horse or bull and taken him to board for any work he might do for me,
for fear I should become a horseman or a herdsman merely; and if society
seems to be the gainer by so doing, are we certain that what is one man's
gain is not another's loss, and that the stable-boy has equal cause with
his master to be satisfied? Granted that some public works would not have
been constructed without this aid, and let man share the glory of such
with the ox and horse; does it follow that he could not have accomplished
works yet more worthy of himself in that case? When men begin to do, not
merely unnecessary or artistic, but luxurious and idle work, with their
assistance, it is inevitable that a few do all the exchange work with the
oxen, or, in other words, become the slaves of the strongest. Man thus
not only works for the animal within him, but, for a symbol of this, he
works for the animal without him. Though we have many substantial houses
of brick or stone, the prosperity of the farmer is still measured by the
degree to which the barn overshadows the house. This town is said to have
the largest houses for oxen, cows, and horses hereabouts, and it is not
behindhand in its public buildings; but there are very few halls for free
worship or free speech in this county. It should not be by their architecture,
but why not even by their power of abstract thought, that nations should
seek to commemorate themselves? How much more admirable
the Bhagvat-Geeta (9) than all
the ruins of the East! Towers and temples are the luxury of princes. A
simple and independent mind does not toil at the bidding of any prince.
Genius is not a retainer to any emperor, nor is its material silver, or
gold, or marble, except to a trifling extent. To
what end, pray, is so much stone hammered? In Arcadia,(10)
when I was there, I did not see any hammering stone. Nations are possessed
with an insane ambition to perpetuate the memory of themselves by the amount
of hammered stone they leave. What if equal pains were taken to smooth
and polish their manners? One piece of good sense would be more memorable
than a monument as high as the moon. I love better to see stones in place. The
grandeur of Thebes (11) was a
vulgar grandeur. More sensible is a rod of stone wall that bounds an honest
man's field than a hundred-gated Thebes that has wandered farther from
the true end of life. The religion and civilization which are barbaric
and heathenish build splendid temples; but what you might call Christianity
does not. Most of the stone a nation hammers goes toward its tomb only.
It buries itself alive. As for the Pyramids, there is nothing to wonder
at in them so much as the fact that so many men could be found degraded
enough to spend their lives constructing a tomb for some ambitious booby,
whom it would have been wiser and manlier to have drowned in the Nile,
and then given his body to the dogs. I might possibly invent some excuse
for them and him, but I have no time for it. As for the religion and love
of art of the builders, it is much the same all the world over, whether
the building be an Egyptian temple or the United States Bank. It costs
more than it comes to. The mainspring is vanity, assisted by the love of
garlic and bread and butter. Mr. Balcom, a promising
young architect, designs it on the back of his Vitruvius,(12)
with hard pencil and ruler, and the job is let out to Dobson & Sons,
stonecutters. When the thirty centuries begin to look down on it, mankind
begin to look up at it. As for your high towers and monuments, there was
a crazy fellow once in this town who undertook to dig through to China,
and he got so far that, as he said, he heard the Chinese pots and kettles
rattle; but I think that I shall not go out of my way to admire the hole
which he made. Many are concerned about the monuments of the West and the
East--to know who built them. For my part, I should like to know who in
those days did not build them--who were above such trifling. But to proceed
with my statistics.
By surveying, carpentry, and day-labor of various
other kinds in the village in the meanwhile, for I have as many trades
as fingers, I had earned $13.34. The expense of food for eight months,
namely, from July 4th to March 1st, the time when these estimates were
made, though I lived there more than two years--not counting potatoes,
a little green corn, and some peas, which I had raised, nor considering
the value of what was on hand at the last date--was
Rice ................ $1.73½
Molasses ............. 1.73 Cheapest form of the saccharine.
Rye meal ............. 1.04¾
Indian meal .......... 0.99¾
Cheaper than rye.
Pork ................. 0.22
All experiments which failed:
Flour ................ 0.88 Costs more than Indian meal,
both money and trouble.
Sugar ................ 0.80
Lard ................. 0.65
Apples ............... 0.25
Dried apple .......... 0.22
Sweet potatoes ....... 0.10
One pumpkin .......... 0.06
One watermelon ....... 0.02
Salt ................. 0.03
Yes, I did eat $8.74, all told; but I should not
thus unblushingly publish my guilt, if I did not know that most of my readers
were equally guilty with myself, and that their deeds would look no better
in print. The next year I sometimes caught a mess of fish for my dinner,
and once I went so far as to slaughter a woodchuck which ravaged my bean-field--effect
his transmigration, as a Tartar would say--and devour him, partly for experiment's
sake; but though it afforded me a momentary enjoyment, notwithstanding
a musky flavor, I saw that the longest use would not make that a good practice,
however it might seem to have your woodchucks ready dressed by the village
butcher.
Clothing and some incidental expenses within the
same dates, though little can be inferred from this item, amounted to
$8.40¾
Oil and some household utensils .......
2.00
So that all the pecuniary outgoes, excepting for washing and mending,
which for the most part were done out of the house, and their bills have
not yet been received--and these are all and more than all the ways by
which money necessarily goes out in this part of the world--were
House ................................ $28.12½
Farm one year ........................ 14.72½
Food eight months .................... 8.74
Clothing, etc., eight months ......... 8.40¾
Oil, etc., eight months .............. 2.00
In all ............................... $61.99¾
I address myself now to those of my readers who hae a living to get. And
to meet this I have for farm produce sold
$23.44
Earned by day-labor .................. 13.34
In all ........................... $36.78,
which subtracted from the sum of the outgoes leaves a balance of $25.21¾
on the one side--this being very nearly the means with which I started,
and the measure of expenses to be incurred--and on the other, beside the
leisure and independence and health thus secured, a comfortable house for
me as long as I choose to occupy it.
These statistics, however accidental and therefore
uninstructive they may appear, as they have a certain completeness, have
a certain value also. Nothing was given me of which I have not rendered
some account. It appears from the above estimate, that my food alone cost
me in money about twenty-seven cents a week. It was, for nearly two years
after this, rye and Indian meal without yeast, potatoes, rice, a very little
salt pork, molasses, and salt; and my drink, water. It was fit that I should
live on rice, mainly, who love so well the philosophy of India. To meet
the objections of some inveterate cavillers, I may as well state, that
if I dined out occasionally, as I always had done, and I trust shall have
opportunities to do again, it was frequently to the detriment of my domestic
arrangements. But the dining out, being, as I have stated, a constant element,
does not in the least affect a comparative statement like this.
I learned from my two years' experience that it would
cost incredibly little trouble to obtain one's necessary food, even in
this latitude; that a man may use as simple a diet as the animals, and
yet retain health and strength. I have made a satisfactory dinner, satisfactory
on several accounts, simply off a dish of purslane (Portulaca oleracea)
which I gathered in my cornfield, boiled and salted. I give the Latin on
account of the savoriness of the trivial name. And pray what more can a
reasonable man desire, in peaceful times, in ordinary noons, than a sufficient
number of ears of green sweet corn boiled, with the addition of salt? Even
the little variety which I used was a yielding to the demands of appetite,
and not of health. Yet men have come to such a pass that they frequently
starve, not for want of necessaries, but for want of luxuries; and I know
a good woman who thinks that her son lost his life because he took to drinking
water only.
The reader will perceive that I am treating the subject
rather from an economic than a dietetic point of view, and he will not
venture to put my abstemiousness to the test unless he has a well-stocked
larder.
Bread I at first made of pure Indian meal and salt,
genuine hoe-cakes, which I baked before my fire out of doors on a shingle
or the end of a stick of timber sawed off in building my house; but it
was wont to get smoked and to have a piny flavor, I tried flour also; but
have at last found a mixture of rye and Indian meal most convenient and
agreeable. In cold weather it was no little amusement to bake several small
loaves of this in succession, tending and turning them as carefully as
an Egyptian his hatching eggs. They were a real cereal fruit which I ripened,
and they had to my senses a fragrance like that of other noble fruits,
which I kept in as long as possible by wrapping them in cloths. I made
a study of the ancient and indispensable art of bread-making, consulting
such authorities as offered, going back to the primitive days and first
invention of the unleavened kind, when from the wildness of nuts and meats
men first reached the mildness and refinement of this diet, and travelling
gradually down in my studies through that accidental souring of the dough
which, it is supposed, taught the leavening process, and through the various
fermentations thereafter, till I came to "good, sweet, wholesome bread,"
the staff of life. Leaven, which some deem the soul of bread, the spiritus
which fills its cellular tissue, which is religiously preserved like the
vestal fire--some precious bottleful, I suppose, first brought over in
the Mayflower, did the business for America, and its influence is still
rising, swelling, spreading, in cerealian billows over the land--this seed
I regularly and faithfully procured from the village, till at length one
morning I forgot the rules, and scalded my yeast; by which accident I discovered
that even this was not indispensable--for my discoveries were not by the
synthetic but analytic process--and I have gladly omitted it since, though
most housewives earnestly assured me that safe and wholesome bread without
yeast might not be, and elderly people prophesied a speedy decay of the
vital forces. Yet I find it not to be an essential ingredient, and after
going without it for a year am still in the land of the living; and I am
glad to escape the trivialness of carrying a bottleful in my pocket, which
would sometimes pop and discharge its contents to my discomfiture. It is
simpler and more respectable to omit it. Man is an animal who more than
any other can adapt himself to all climates and circumstances. Neither
did I put any sal-soda, or other acid or alkali, into my bread. It would
seem that I made it according to therecipe which Marcus
Porcius Cato (13) gave about
two centuries before Christ. "Panem depsticium sic facito. Manus mortariumque
bene lavato. Farinam in mortarium indito, aquae paulatim addito, subigitoque
pulchre. Ubi bene subegeris, defingito, coquitoque sub testu." Which I
take to mean,--"Make kneaded bread thus. Wash your hands and trough well.
Put the meal into the trough, add water gradually, and knead it thoroughly.
When you have kneaded it well, mould it, and bake it under a cover," that
is, in a baking kettle. Not a word about leaven. But I did not always use
this staff of life. At one time, owing to the emptiness of my purse, I
saw none of it for more than a month.
Every New Englander might easily raise all his own
breadstuffs in this land of rye and Indian corn, and not depend on distant
and fluctuating markets for them. Yet so far are we from simplicity and
independence that, in Concord, fresh and sweet meal is rarely sold in the
shops, and hominy and corn in a still coarser form are hardly used by any.
For the most part the farmer gives to his cattle and hogs the grain of
his own producing, and buys flour, which is at least no more wholesome,
at a greater cost, at the store. I saw that I could easily raise my bushel
or two of rye and Indian corn, for the former will grow on the poorest
land, and the latter does not require the best, and grind them in a hand-mill,
and so do without rice and pork; and if I must have some concentrated sweet,
I found by experiment that I could make a very good molasses either of
pumpkins or beets, and I knew that I needed only to set out a few maples
to obtain it more easily still, and while these were growing I could use
various substitutes beside those which I have named. "For,"
as the Forefathers sang,--
"we can make liquor to sweeten our lips
Of pumpkins and parsnips and walnut-tree chips."(14)
Finally, as for salt, that grossest of groceries, to obtain this might
be a fit occasion for a visit to the seashore, or, if I did without it
altogether, I should probably drink the less water. I do not learn that
the Indians ever troubled themselves to go after it.
Thus I could avoid all trade and barter, so far as
my food was concerned, and having a shelter already, it would only remain
to get clothing and fuel. The pantaloons
(15) which I now wear were woven in a farmer's
family--thank Heaven there is so much virtue still in man; for I think
the fall from the farmer to the operative as great and memorable as that
from the man to the farmer;--and in a new country, fuel is an encumbrance. As
for a habitat, if I were not permitted still to squat,(16)
I might purchase one acre at the same price for which the land I cultivated
was sold--namely, eight dollars and eight cents. But as it was, I considered
that I enhanced the value of the land by squatting on it.
There is a certain class of unbelievers who sometimes
ask me such questions as, if I think that I can live on vegetable food
alone; and to strike at the root of the matter at once--for the root is
faith--I am accustomed to answer such, that I can live on board nails.
If they cannot understand that, they cannot understand much that I have
to say. For my part, I am glad to bear of experiments of this kind being
tried; as that a young man tried for a fortnight to live on hard, raw corn
on the ear, using his teeth for all mortar. The squirrel tribe tried the
same and succeeded. The human race is interested
in these experiments, though a few old women who are incapacitated for
them, or who own their thirds (17)
in mills, may be alarmed.
Notes
- more information
1. artistic literature, i.e. poetry,
drama, fiction - back
2. the fine arts - back
3. Harvard College, in Cambridge
MA - back
4. Adam Smith (1723-1790) Scottish
economist - back
5. David Ricardo (1772-1823) English
economist - back
6. Jean Baptiste Say (1772-1823)
French economist - back
7. English racehorse - back
8. Arthur Young - British agicultural
author - back
9. Bhagavad Gita - ancient Sanskrit
scriptures of India (with 18 chapters) - back
10. peaceful,
pastoral region of ancient Greece - back
11. ancient Egyptian city - back
12. Marcus Vitruvius Pollio (1st
cent. B.C.) Roman architect, engineer, author - back
13. Marcus Porcius Cato (234-149
B.C.) Roman agicultural author - back
14. anonymous - back
15. close fitting trousers worn
by men in the 19th century - back
16. The land belonged to Thoreau's
friend Ralph Waldo Emerson - back
17. widows portion of an an inherited
estate is often one third - back
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