To Peattie, nature was the miracle

To Peattie, nature was the miracle

The fruiting bodies of Lycogala epidendrum • Photo by Benny Mazur (CC BY 2.0)

Originally published 31 October 2000

Don­ald Cul­ross Peat­tie was a dif­fer­ent sort of nature writer.

His An Almanac for Mod­erns was pub­lished in 1935, in the depths of the Depres­sion. He lived in rur­al Illi­nois at the time of writ­ing, and the dev­as­ta­tion of the Dust Bowl was not far away. The Great War was still fresh in mem­o­ry, with its shat­tered land­scapes and poi­soned air. It was not a time in which it was easy to be optimistic.

The lofty mor­al­iz­ing of ear­li­er nature writ­ers like John Bur­roughs and John Muir no longer res­onat­ed with a gen­er­a­tion who had seen “the trees blast­ed by the great guns and the bird’s feed­ing on men’s eyes.” Peat­tie, like Loren Eise­ley and Lewis Thomas after him, looked skep­ti­cal­ly at nature, not expect­ing ser­mons in leaf and stone, but rather a chas­ten­ing exis­ten­tial silence.

And yet he wrest­ed from nature the will to go on, to affirm a point to life, to get up in the morn­ing and earn his keep. W. H. Auden said of Eise­ley that he was “a man unusu­al­ly well trained in the habit of prayer, by which I mean the habit of lis­ten­ing.” Peat­tie, too, knew how to lis­ten. Lis­ten­ing — as these writ­ers lis­tened — required courage and the will to change, to sur­ren­der the sim­ple pieties of the past and embark upon an immense jour­ney into the lone­ly spaces between the galax­ies and the atoms.

From his close­ly observed acre of land in Illi­nois, Peat­tie lis­tened and watched as the year passed, and turned his “habit of prayer” into a col­lec­tion of 365 ele­gant essays that wres­tled with the mean­ing of it all. The mean­ing he found had some­thing to do with beau­ty; some­thing to do with the gor­geous, prodi­gious throb and thrust of life; some­thing to do with being part of a con­ti­nu­ity that is greater than himself.

I say that it touch­es a man that his blood is sea water and his tears are salt, that the seed of his loins is scarce­ly dif­fer­ent from the same cells in a sea­weed, and that the stuff of his bones are coral made,” he wrote. He was immersed up to his neck — nay, to the top of his head — in the “essen­tial and pre­cious some­thing that just divides the lowli­est microor­gan­ism from the dust,” the inex­plic­a­ble essence of life. He rev­eled in it, turn­ing his expe­ri­ence into poetry.

Peat­tie did not look for an incor­rupt­ible heav­en beyond the stars. Nature itself is the mir­a­cle, he wrote, with all its imperfections.

I’ve been think­ing about Peat­tie late­ly, because I’ve been read­ing An Almanac for Mod­erns, but also because it’s that sea­son of the year when it’s easy to feel part of the con­ti­nu­ity that Peat­tie chronicled.

It’s the Eve of All Hal­lows, Hal­loween, and tomor­row and the fol­low­ing day are All Saints Day and All Souls Day — the Mex­i­can Días de los Muer­tos, Days of the Dead — death time, spook time, haunt­ed by dis­em­bod­ied spir­its. The roots of these feasts are undoubt­ed­ly deep in pagan rite, and before that in the cycle of seasons.

A few weeks ago we watched the last of our New Eng­land monarch but­ter­flies take wing, head­ing south. Now they are arriv­ing in the moun­tains of cen­tral Mex­i­co, bear­ing, accord­ing to Mex­i­can tra­di­tion, the souls of the depart­ed. Here in the north flow­ers fade, green things with­er, juices run dry. Nature’s grave rob­bers come to the fore, prey­ing on the dead, the fun­gi espe­cial­ly, with their hob­gob­lin names — Destroy­ing Angel, Witch’s But­ter, Death Cap, Dead Men’s Fingers.

On a rot­ting log by the side of the path, I find a clus­ter of tiny coral globes, each the size of the tip of my lit­tle fin­ger. I squeeze one and it pops, spurt­ing a liq­uid of the most atro­cious col­or — ecto­plas­mic orange; Wolf’s Milk, this goo is called by old tra­di­tion. These things look like lit­tle puff­ball mush­rooms, but they are the fruit­ing stage of a slime mold colony. Slime molds live out most of their lives as a net­work of naked pro­to­plasm, spread­ing amoe­ba-like in moist dark places, surg­ing and retreat­ing, feed­ing on bac­te­ria. When their food sup­ply runs low, the “cells” stream togeth­er and build these tiny balls, which when mature rup­ture to release gray-col­ored spores on the wind.

This is what Peat­tie called the “most unut­ter­able thing” in evo­lu­tion, “the ter­ri­ble con­ti­nu­ity and flu­id­i­ty of pro­to­plasm, the inex­press­ible forces of repro­duc­tion — not mys­ti­cal human love, but the cold batra­chi­an jel­ly by which we ver­te­brates are linked to things that creep and writhe and are blind yet breed and have being.”

It can be a lit­tle fright­en­ing to attend to our kin­ship to the slime, but to do oth­er­wise is to ignore the thing that anchors our lives in mean­ing — the indi­vid­ual and the col­lec­tiv­i­ty, birth and death, gen­er­a­tion and decay, beau­ty and terror.

What is this thing, Peat­tie asks, but life itself.

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