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Merwin On Ecology Essay Research Paper

Merwin On Ecology Essay, Research Paper


From "Ecology, or the Art of Survival" (1958). This


excerpt is taken from a review of Ludlow Griscom and Alexander Sprunt, Jr., eds., The


Warblers of America and Guy Mountfort, Wild Paradise, in Nation, 187


(Nov. 15, 1958).


When I say that as I perused these two books the question of survival


kept up a dull continuo in my head, intruding itself on my pleasure at intervals like the


sound of a faucet left running somewhere, I do not mean to comment adversely on the books.


Nor am I perversely stretching their scope in the interest of a needless topicality. I am


talking about survival of human beings as well as of birds, and I am using the word


survival in its familiar contemporary sense-as distinguished from the perennial objective


which impels flocks of Magnolia Warblers to migrate over vast distances at night at the


risk of crashing headlong into obstacles and perishing by thousands, and which has taught


the marvelously camouflaged Stone Curlew, in southern Spain, to keep as still as the


ground it nests on and the eggs it broods. In its natural sense, of course, the question


of survival has been with us since we were amoebas, or whatever we were. We may have


developed ears, at first, to listen to it, and minds primarily to be haunted by it. For


Homo sapiens it has a peculiar meaning: one of the essential things that separate us from


the other animals is our awareness of our mortality; not a day passes, in the life of an


ordinary man, when he is not reminded of his eventual death.


In our time, however, the question has developed a special sense.


Nearly as close and insistent as the old "how long will I survive," we keep


hearing "how long will anything survive?" We have this all to ourselves too; the


other animals are not aware that tomorrow they may be blasted to nothing, or deprived of


the necessities of their existence.


But there are important differences between the two questions: the old


one, for example, is posed by the nature of existence, and there is, finally, nothing that


can be done about it; the more recent one is a reverberation set up by human action, and


the inference is that human responsibility might be effective in controlling it. I am not


talking just about the Bomb. I go on the assumption, which I cannot avoid, that there is


some link between a society’s threat to destroy itself with its own s inventions, and that


same society’s possibly ungovernable commitment to industrial expansion and population


increase, which in our own country remove a million acres from the wild every year, and


which threaten more and more of the wild life of the globe.


I am told that this is a rash assumption; alas, the subject at times


has led me to entertain notions which were even crankier. A bird of prey–or warbler for


that matter–requires such-and-such an area to range over in order to survive; I have


wondered whether a society in which there were not a given minimal area of wild land for


every human being, whether or not he cared about it, knew about it, or ever laid eyes on


it–any more than he ever sees the fields his potatoes come from–might not also be on the


way out. The bird ceases to exist through starvation, or because his breeding conditions


disappear, or through encroachment and slaughter. As for a society, when it possesses the


means of its own destruction, and grows daily more crowded, restless, tense, unhappy, and


disoriented, in situations without precedent, what is likely to happen to it? If it


survives might it not do so only under circumstances so artificial, restricted and


neurotic as to resemble captivity? I am reminded that man is, after all, a civilized


animal, and not a bird nor in most senses comparable with one. And I hurry to state that I


am not proposing a return to some Never-Never Land in the past–indeed I am not nearly as


long on proposals as I would wish. However, I am addicted to both birds and men, and that


faucet keeps running somewhere.


Neither ecology (which in Mountfort’s Wild Paradise is described


as "studying the relations of animals and plants to their environment and to each


other") nor man’s usually disastrous influence upon it, is the main subject of these


books. But for one thing we are confronted, as in so much contemporary writing about


noncivilized animals, with a more or less overt feeling that a sentence has been passed


and is gradually being executed; undoubtedly this will continue to be usual at least as


long as the words "wild" and "waste" are practically interchangeable


when referring to land. For another thing, the detailed evidence of how well most species


have adap

ted to their different environments, with their various perils and intruders, is


inevitably contrasted with the bafflement, diminution, and defeat of a growing number of


species in the presence of man. So the Chestnut-Sided Warbler, in whose nest the parasitic


cowbird often deposits an egg, "sometimes responds by covering the intruding egg with


an additional nest flooring," and vultures are able to gather out of an apparently


clear sky because with their extremely long-range eyesight they "watch each other and


the smaller scavengers as they patrol the skies; a downward movement is the signal awaited


and this is instantly passed on for miles around, as one after the other follows


suit." On the other hand kites, which in Shakespeare’s London were "well


protected and became so confident that they would take crusts from the hands of children


on London Bridge," have dwindled until in all of Great Britain "only about


twenty- five pairs of our kites survive, in a closely guarded hill area in Wales."


The "Demoiselle Crane and Black Stork used to nest on the Coto; given continued


protection they may yet do so again," though when a pair nested north of the Coto in


1952 the nest was robbed by egg-collectors. Still, not all species are vanishing; some of


them, particularly some of the smaller insectivorous ones, including certain warblers, are


actually on the increase. And not all ornithologists are specially anxious: indeed Ludlow


Griscom, in an introductory essay to The Warblers of America, waxes grumpy over the


fact that "sentimentality" and protection threaten to make bird-nesting and


egg-collecting lost arts.


From "On the Bestial Floor"(1965). This excerpt is taken


from a Review of C. P. Idyll, The Abyss, Colin Betram, In Search of Mermaids;


George B. Schaller, The Year of the Gorilla; and Ruth Harrison,


Animal Machines, in Nation, 200 (Mar. 22, 1965).


These are four books about man, the same who once heard his deity


exhort him to "Be fruitful and multiply, and replenish the earth, and subdue it; and


have dominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over every


living thing that moveth upon the earth." Together these recent publications


illustrate a curious development in the later days of the species, which has come to


devote to the aforementioned command a zealous, and what sometimes appears to be a


slavish, observance long after the author of it has fallen silent and been given up for


dead. In the new silence, man’s superiority to the rest of creation and his right to hold


over it the powers of life and death, evolution and extinction, are questioned scarcely


more often or more seriously than they were when he boasted a soul as is excuse. Now in


the rare instances where his convenience alone is not taken as ample justification for his


manipulations and erasures of other species, it is his intelligence, or some aspect of it,


that is held up most regularly as the great exoneration. This, according to the myth, was


the property which gave him the edge on the other creatures; and in the process it became


endowed, in his eyes, with a spontaneous moral splendor which now constitutes between him


and the rest of nature not a relative but an absolute difference, like the one which


separates him from the silence. Indeed, by now, this difference and its exigencies are


normally deferred to like the great necessities themselves, as though they were not only


ordained but everlasting. It is true that this justification of man to man is voluntarily


accepted only by man. To the beasts there must often appear to be little essential


distinction between the force of human intelligence and other kinds of force. It is not a


relevant view, of course. And the animals will not have appreciated, either, that it is


this same faculty of intelligence that has recently given man the power of life and death


over his own species, thus relegating him to a position which until now he and his gods


had reserved for beasts devoid of reason. At the same time as he was preparing this coup


his restless intellect was already perfecting a system of promoting living creatures which


he had never made to the status of mechanical objects expressly contrived for his


advantage. And yet as man’s power over other living things has become, if not more


perfect, at least more pervasive, his dominion over himself, however conceived, seems here


and there to be escaping him despite analyses and institutions, and taking, it may be, the


route of the departed divinity.


Both Selections from Regions of Memory: Uncollected Prose, 1949-1982.


Ed. Cary Nelson and Ed Folsom. Copyright ? 1987 by W.S. Merwin.

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