Sunday, April 13, 2008

 

Creatures of a Day

Donald Culross Peattie, An Almanac for Moderns (May 10):
Was it worth while for a mayfly to have been born, to have been a worm for weeks and a bride or a bridegroom for one day, only to perish? Such is not a question to which Nature will give the human mind an answer. She thrusts us all into life, and with her hand propels us like childen through the rôle she has allotted us. You may weep about it or you may smile; that matters only to yourself. The trees that live five hundred years, or five thousand, see us human mayflies grow and mate and die while they are adding a foot to their girth. Well might they ask themselves if it be not a slavish and ephemeral soft thing to be born a man.
Albert Bierstadt, Giant Redwood Trees of California



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