(April 2, 1805 – August 4, 1875)
“But to live is not enough,” declared the butterfly.
“One must have sunshine, freedom, and a little flower.”
From The Butterfly,
first published in 1861.
![]() |
tanakawho |
![]() |
(Photo by jmadjedi / CC BY-NC 2.0) |
1 It's mid-September, and in the Magic Wing Butterfly Conservancy in Deerfield, Massachusetts, the woman at the register is ringing up the items of a small girl and her mother. There are pencils and postcards and a paperweight-- all with butterflies--and, chilly but alive, three monarch caterpillars--in small white boxes with cellophane tops, and holes punched in their sides. The girl keeps rearranging them like a shell game while the cashier chats with her mother: "They have to feed on milkweed--you can buy it in the nursery outside." "We've got a field behind our house," the mother answers. The cashier smiles to show she didn't need the sale: "And in no time, they'll be on their way to Brazil or Argentina-- or wherever they go--" ("to Mexico," says the girl, though she's ignored) "and you can watch them do their thing till they're ready to fly."- See more at: http://www.poets.org/viewmedia.php/prmMID/16237#sthash.6Eqs0Y07.dpuf
1 It's mid-September, and in the Magic Wing Butterfly Conservancy in Deerfield, Massachusetts, the woman at the register is ringing up the items of a small girl and her mother. There are pencils and postcards and a paperweight-- all with butterflies--and, chilly but alive, three monarch caterpillars--in small white boxes with cellophane tops, and holes punched in their sides. The girl keeps rearranging them like a shell game while the cashier chats with her mother: "They have to feed on milkweed--you can buy it in the nursery outside." "We've got a field behind our house," the mother answers. The cashier smiles to show she didn't need the sale: "And in no time, they'll be on their way to Brazil or Argentina-- or wherever they go--" ("to Mexico," says the girl, though she's ignored) "and you can watch them do their thing till they're ready to fly."- See more at: http://www.poets.org/viewmedia.php/prmMID/16237#sthash.6Eqs0Y07.dpuf
1 It's mid-September, and in the Magic Wing Butterfly Conservancy in Deerfield, Massachusetts, the woman at the register is ringing up the items of a small girl and her mother. There are pencils and postcards and a paperweight-- all with butterflies--and, chilly but alive, three monarch caterpillars--in small white boxes with cellophane tops, and holes punched in their sides. The girl keeps rearranging them like a shell game while the cashier chats with her mother: "They have to feed on milkweed--you can buy it in the nursery outside." "We've got a field behind our house," the mother answers. The cashier smiles to show she didn't need the sale: "And in no time, they'll be on their way to Brazil or Argentina-- or wherever they go--" ("to Mexico," says the girl, though she's ignored) "and you can watch them do their thing till they're ready to fly."- See more at: http://www.poets.org/viewmedia.php/prmMID/16237#sthash.6Eqs0Y07.dpuf
Birdfeeders in the snow. Photo by George A. Heidenrich |
![]() |
The Nature In Us |
![]() |
faeryhearts |