"It's the beauty within us that makes it possible for us to recognize the beauty around us. The question is not what you look at but what you see."
"The poet's, commonly, is not a logger's path, but a woodman's. The logger and pioneer have preceded him, like John the Baptist; eaten the wild honey, it may be, but the locusts also; banished decaying wood and the spongy mosses which feed on it, and built hearths and humanized Nature for him."
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Source: Henry David Thoreau (1873). “The Maine Woods”, p.160
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