1、Afterreadingthesectionofsolitudewhen I finished reading this section, there are two sentences impressed me most. One is “A man is rich in proportion to the number of things which he can afford to let alone.” The other is “As long as possible, live free and uncommitted. It makes but little dif
2、ference whether you are committed to a farm or the country jail.” What the two sentences reflect also can be seen from the section. The author Henry David Thoreau showed us a peaceful scene, in which human beings and the nature areperfectly stumbled. The author expects to find a forever new a
3、nd unprofaned part of the universe to live. What’s more, he also pursues a free and uncommitted life both at a physical level and at a spiritual level.Just as the author mentioned in the passage “The Independence Day, the Fourth of July, 1845 is the day on which he began to stay in word.”By s
4、howing the beginning of his uncommitted life, the author also implies that people in the world should leave their regular local region to another new one in order to experience the other style of life. A life which will not be restricted with secular, utility and ambition, but only a relaxing
5、 enjoyable, free heart going nearer and nearer to the nature. This is just what the second sentence wants to tell us. The sentence: “a man is rich in proportion to the number of things which he can afford to let alone” tells that a man should not think a lot of what he gains and what he losse
6、s. If he gains, be happy. If he losses, let it gone. Then he may find everything he gains turn out to be God’s gifts and much more precious than before. A man who is always worrying about losing something owned nothing at last, because he regards everything as his own, then it’s not enough fo
7、r him even he owns the whole world.Above all. It’s not necessary to do everything following some so called avant-gardes, or just in order to object to the mainstream. What we should do, also the most difficult thing is being and persists in b