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“So it is with blackberries. If you pull too hard, you may get the berry but you will lose the sweetness of it. On the other hand, if you leave it, it may be gone the next time you come by. Each person must find this point of equilibrium for himself.”
― Death of a Hornet and Other Cape Cod Essays
― Death of a Hornet and Other Cape Cod Essays
“I learned . . . to read and interpret the country: the ground underfoot, the coming and going of creatures, the arrival and departure of birds, the seasonal flowering and fading of plant life. These things — the physical evidence of them — constitute a language, a grammar , and a syntax; they represent in some way the original perception we may have acquired of a fundamental order in things, in their relationships and significant connections. Ad by this I mean (among other things) story, narrative, the thread of sequence and consequence [John Haines, "The Creative Spirit in Art and Literature", The Norton Book of Nature Writing, Robert Finch, editor].”
― Norton Book of Nature Writing
― Norton Book of Nature Writing
“All we have is our humanity and affinities, and the hope that these may be enough in this world ["Saving the Whales"].”
― Norton Book of Nature Writing
― Norton Book of Nature Writing
“epresentative”
― The Outer Beach: A Thousand-Mile Walk on Cape Cod's Atlantic Shore
― The Outer Beach: A Thousand-Mile Walk on Cape Cod's Atlantic Shore





