" POVERTY "
 
 Whether you will or no, you are poorer than I!  "What then do I lack?"  What you have not: Constancy of mind, such as Nature would have it be: Tranquillity. Patron or no patron, what care I? but you do care. I am richer than you: I am not racked with anxiety as to what Caesar may think of me; I flatter none on that account. This is what I have, instead of vessels of gold and silver! Your vessels may be of gold, but your reason, your principles, your accepted views, your inclinations, your desires are of earthenware.

There is some advantage in being the humblest, cheapest, least dignified man in the village, so that the very stable boys shall damn you.  Methinks I enjoy that advantage to an unusual extent. I am not above being used, aye, abused sometimes. Thoreau.

Just in proportion to the outward poverty, is the inward wealth.  In cold weather fire burns with a clearer flame. Thoreau.

If you mean by hard times, times, not when there is no bread, but when there is no cake, I have no sympathy with you. Thoreau.

Cultivate poverty like sage, like a garden herb.  My greatest skill has been but to want little. A man is rich in proportion to the number of things which he can afford to let alone.  By poverty, i.e. simplicity of life and fewness of incidents, I am solidified and crystallized as a vapor or liquid by cold.  It is a singular concentration of strength and energy and flavor.  Simplify, simplify!  Instead of three meals a day, if it be necessary eat but one; instead of a hundred dishes, five; and reduce other things in proportion.  I had but three chairs in my house, one for solitude, two for company, and three for social events. Thoreau.

As you simplify your life, the laws of the universe will be simpler. Thoreau

It is not what he has, that directly expresses the worth of a man, but what he is.

Only that traveling is good which reveals to me the value of home and enables me to enjoy it better.  That man is richest whose pleasures are the cheapest.

It is the greatest of all advantages to have no advantage at all. I find it invariably true, the poorer I am, the richer I am.  What you consider my disadvantage, I consider my advantage.  While you are pleased to get knowledge and culture in many ways, I am delighted to think I am getting rid of them.  What you call bareness and poverty is to me simplicity.  God could not be unkind to me if he should try. Thoreau.

How often you make a man richer in spirit in proportion as you rob him of earthy luxuries and comforts.  Yet men have come to such a pass that they frequently starve, not from want of necessaries, but from want of luxuries. Thoreau.

He who has little, has to spare, for he who has less

The mind should not be filled with desires.  The individual who is at one with the Tao is aware of the distinction  between that which is needed as a sufficiency, and that which is a desire, or merely wanted rather than needed.

The finger that points the way, belongs to the hand that will provide.

Let me see no other conflict but with prosperity.   Everything superfluous is hostile!

Those who desire the fewest things, are nearest to God.

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