Most of my preoccupations lie elsewhere but I retain a casual interest in what used to be called field biology. That is, the non-molecular, outside-the-laboratory practice of observing plants and animals, even in the middle of Houston. The motives are pleasure, wonder and aesthetic satisfaction, untainted by politics or academic dullness. I’m strictly an amateur. It’s an interest I’ve had since I was a boy, when the fields, woods and creek behind our suburban home in Greater Cleveland served as a convenient paradise.
Early on I discovered the
writings of Jean-Henri Fabre (1823-1915), friend to Pasteur and John Stuart
Mill, of all people. Out of a lifelong love of insects, Fabre blurred the dubious
line separating amateur from professional. With Montaigne and Proust, he is my
favorite French writer, author of the ten-volume Souvenirs Entomologiques
(more than 2,500 pages, almost 850,000 words). Darwin called him an
“incomparable observer,” though Fabre never accepted the theory of evolution. Marianne
Moore nominated Fabre’s work for inclusion in Raymond Queneau’s Pour Une
Bibliothèque Idéale (1956). I’m browsing again in The Insect World of J.
Henri Fabre, the selection edited by Edwin Way Teale in 1949 I read as
a kid.
Fabre was an autodidact in
the age when enthusiasts with little or no formal training could do pioneering
work in science and elsewhere. He never attended a university. In his essays he
happily anthropomorphizes. His descriptions of field work sound like miniature
dramas. They’re reminiscent of the epic battle among the ants in Walden,
minus Thoreau’s portentousness. Fabre’s entomological equipment was laughably
primitive and served him well. In “Wasps of the Bois des Issarts” he writes of
his early insect studies (as translated by Alexander Teixeira de Mattos):
“A fig for Mariotte’s flak
and Toricelli’s tube! This is the thrice-blest period when I cease to be a
schoolmaster and become a schoolboy, the schoolboy in love with animals. Like a
madder-cutter off for his day’s work, I set out carrying over my shoulder a
solid digging-implement, the local luchet, and on my back my game-bag with
boxes, bottles, trowel, glass tubes, tweezers, lenses and other impedimenta. A
large umbrella saves me from sunstroke.”
Mark Amorose’s poem “Fabre” in the Spring 2013 issue of Modern Age sent me back to the French
entomologist. Amorose takes his epigraph from Fabre’s The Life of the Fly
(1879; trans. 1913):
“You rip up the animal and
I study it alive; . . . you subject cell and protoplasm to chemical tests, I
study instinct in its loftiest manifestations; you pry into death, I pry into
life.”
“On his harmas in
the valley of the Rhône—
his laboratory light,
florescent sky;
his microscope, his
unassisted eye—
a patient plotter watches
all alone.
In what swift ambuscade
does he lie prone?
upon what secret doings
does he spy?
into what minute mysteries
does he pry,
this sentinel of worker,
queen, and drone?
“All others lose the
forest for the trees—
how could they not who lay
whole forests low
only to squint at stumps
and count their rings,
as if one learns life’s
truths from lifeless things?
Blind analysts of death
will never know
what he knows who looks
into life and sees.”
Without citing John Keats
by name, the sonnet recalls to this reader the poet’s experience as a medical
student dissecting cadavers in Guy’s Hospital in London. Fabre shows up in
Richard Wilbur’s “Cicadas,” the first poem in his first collection, The
Beautiful Changes (1947):
“You know those windless
summer evenings, swollen to stasis
by too-substantial
melodies, rich as a
running-down record,
ground round
to full quiet. Even the
leaves
have thick tongues.
“And if the first crickets
quicken then,
other inhabitants, at
window or door
or rising from table, feel
in the lungs
a slim false-freshness, by
this
trick of the ear.
“Chanters of miracles took
for a simple sign
the Latin cicada, because
of his long waiting
and sweet change in
daylight, and his singing
all his life, pinched on
the ash leaf,
heedless of ants.
“Others made morals; all
were puzzled and joyed
by this gratuitous song.
Such a plain thing
morals could not surround,
nor listening:
not 'chirr’ nor 'cri-cri.’
There is no straight
way of approaching it.
“This thin uncomprehended
song it is
springs healing questions
into binding air.
Fabre, by firing all the
municipal cannon
under a piping tree, found
out
cicadas cannot hear.”
Wilbur is recalling the test performed by Fabre: Setting off cannon to see if cicadas can hear. Like true poets, they went on singing despite the boom. In his recent delightful book The Butterfly: Flights of Enchantment, in a chapter titled “The Mindful Present: Seeing and Being,” Nigel Andrew speaks for me and Fabre and all observers of the natural world: “To get involved in watching butterflies, is to enter a new world, one that is rich, vibrant, abundant with life and color and energy—and in which we figure only as marginal, fleeting presences, potential threats but of no other interest. This parallel world goes on, with or without us.”
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