"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."
"When you are starting away, leaving your more familiar fields, for a little adventure like a walk, you look at every object with a traveler's, or at least with historical, eyes; you pause on the first bridge, where an ordinary walk hardly commences, and begin to observe and moralize like a traveler. It is worth the while to see your native village thus sometimes, as if you were a traveler passing through it, commenting on your neighbors as strangers."
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Source: Henry David Thoreau (1962). “The journal of Henry D. Thoreau”
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