My middle son and I spent two hours in the Morian Hall of Paleontology at the Houston Museum of Natural Science, looking at fossils of plants and animals. Dinosaurs occupy the same space but are less interesting and beautiful than the smaller fossilized flora and fauna. See, for instance, the crinoids, plant-like animals, cousins to today’s starfish. Crinoids belong to the class Crinoidea, rooted in the Greek for “lily-like.” In 1920, Janet Lewis published “Fossil, 1919”:
“I found a
little ancient fern
Closed in a
reddish shale concretion,
As neatly
and as charmingly set in
As my
grandmother’s face
In a round
apricot velvet case.”
In the
museum, the fossils are as clean and precise as a draftsman’s renderings. Something
about these ancient impressions, especially ones so life-like, is plangent,
like sepia prints of long-dead strangers. The fossils are artful and often look manmade, like jewelry or small sculptures. Half a century after the poem
above, Lewis wrote “Fossil, 1975”:
“Changed and
not changed. Three million years.
This sunlight-summoned
little fern
Closed in a
cenotaph of silt
Lies in my
hand, secret and safe.
In quiet
dark transformed to stone,
Cell after
cell to crystal grown,
The pattern
stays, the substance gone.
Changed and
not changed. Three million years
The Spirit,
ranging as it will,
In sun, in
darkness, lives in change.
Changed and
not changed. The spirit hears
In drifting
fern the morning air.”
Twice she
writes “Changed and not changed.” More elegantly, Lewis reformulates the process
of permineralization: “The pattern stays, the substance gone.” This is why
fossils appear so artfully crafted -- the persistence of pattern. Here is David Bentley Hart on Vladimir Nabokov, artist and scientist:
“[T]he
greater the complexity, subtlety, and grace of the patterns he perceived, the
more certain he was of the presence of creative intelligence in the fabric of
things, a dimension of intentional meaning at once communicating itself and yet
concealing itself from direct scrutiny. One might almost say that, for him,
there really was no ultimate formal distinction to be made between nature and
art: Practically everything is, if approached with a sufficiently responsive
sensibility, a poetic achievement.”
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