Tuesday, May 04, 2010
Without Any Ulterior Considerations
John Burroughs, "Emerson and His Journals," in The Last Harvest (Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1922), pp. 1-85 (at 54-55):
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For my own part I find the life-histories of the wild creatures about me, their ways of getting on in the world, their joys, their fears, their successes, their failures, their instincts, their intelligence, intensely interesting without any ulterior considerations. I am not looking for ethical or poetic values. I am looking for natural truths. I am less interested in the sermons in stones than I am in the life under the stones. The significance of the metamorphosis of the grub into the butterfly does not escape me, but I am more occupied with the way the caterpillar weaves her cocoon and hangs herself up for the winter than I am in this lesson. I had rather see a worm cast its skin than see a king crowned. I had rather see Phoebe building her mud nest than the preacher writing his sermon. I had rather see the big moth emerge from her cocoonfresh and untouched as a coin that moment from the diethan the most fashionable "coming out" that society ever knew. The first song sparrow or bluebird or robin in spring, or the first hepatica or arbutus or violet, or the first clover or pond-lily in summermust we demand some mystic password of them? Must we not love them for their own sake, ere they will seem worthy of our love?