Walden, Chapter 3: Reading
Henry David Thoreau
Thoreau's advice comes from a life stripped bare of distractions, captured in his retreat to Walden Pond. In an era when books were precious and few, he insists on prioritizing the essential. The metaphor extends beyond literature; it's a call to focus on the invaluable, lest the trivial squander our finite attention. Like his pared-down furnishings, Thoreau's reading list is deliberate and discerning, a defense against life's clutter.