{"id":109,"date":"2011-06-07T20:03:56","date_gmt":"2011-06-07T20:03:56","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/blogs.dickinson.edu\/romnat\/?p=109"},"modified":"2011-07-26T15:11:33","modified_gmt":"2011-07-26T15:11:33","slug":"the-loves-of-plants-and-animals-romantic-science-and-the-pleasures-of-nature","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/blogs.dickinson.edu\/romnat\/2011\/06\/07\/the-loves-of-plants-and-animals-romantic-science-and-the-pleasures-of-nature\/","title":{"rendered":"The Loves of Plants and Animals: Romantic Science and the Pleasures of Nature"},"content":{"rendered":"<p style=\"text-align: center\">[first published in <a href=\"http:\/\/www.rc.umd.edu\/praxis\/ecology\/nichols\/nichols.html\" target=\"_blank\">&#8220;Romanticism and Ecology,&#8221;<\/a> <em>Romantic Circles Praxis Series<\/em> <a href=\"http:\/\/www.rc.umd.edu\/praxis\/ecology\/index.html\" target=\"_blank\">(November 2001)<\/a><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: center\">[O]ur intellectual sympathies [rest] with . . . the miseries, or with the joys, of our fellow creatures.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: right\">&#8211; Erasmus Darwin, <em>Zoonomia<\/em> (1794)<\/p>\n<p>When Wordsworth notes his faith that &#8220;every flower \/ Enjoys the air it  breathes,&#8221; or when Keats describes an unseen nightingale pouring forth  its &#8220;soul abroad \/ In such an ecstasy,&#8221; we may be inclined to classify  these lyrical claims as Romantic hyperbole, rhetorically suspect forms  of anthropomorphism, overly sentimental and poetically overblown.  Likewise, when Wordsworth&#8217;s heart fills &#8220;with pleasure&#8221; at the sight of  daffodils, or when Blake says &#8220;How do you know but ev&#8217;ry Bird that cuts  the airy way, \/ Is an immense world of delight,&#8221; we may think that the  poet is protesting too little or offering too much credit to the natural  world for what is, in fact, a strictly &#8220;human&#8221; emotion. In this essay I  will examine Romantic claims about pleasure in the natural world and  pleasure derived from the natural world in terms of the &#8220;science&#8221; of the  century before Darwin&#8217;s <em>On the Origin of Species<\/em>, particularly  the science of animate nature, the belief that all living things (and  perhaps even &#8220;nonliving&#8221; things) were connected by a force that could be  described, at least partly, in terms of the natural ability to please  or to be pleased. I will conclude with a reflection on connections  between the method of observational science in the Romantic period, the  writing of poetry, and the sources of pleasure.<\/p>\n<p>Pleasure in the natural world is a concept that links Romantic poetry  and Romantic science in significant ways. Pleasure located in the  nonhuman world and pleasure taken by humans in the natural world are  concepts that co-mingle in a whole range of Romantic metaphors and  rhetorical practices, anthropocentric and otherwise. In fact, the  apparent anthropocentrism of much eighteenth- and early  nineteenth-century scientific and poetic thinking turns out to be much  more centered in the nonhuman world than we might think. This essay will  link discussions of plant and animal &#8220;pleasure&#8221; in the works of Erasmus  Darwin, and in Georges Louis Leclerc, Comte de Buffon (often by way of  Oliver Goldsmith, who introduced many of Buffon&#8217;s ideas to a British  audience) with the use of &#8220;pleasure&#8221; in poems by Wordsworth, Coleridge,  Shelley, and Keats. This link between the poetic and the scientific in <a href=\"http:\/\/blogs.dickinson.edu\/romnat\/\">Romantic natural history<\/a> also reveals aspects of our current cultural sense of the interrelatedness of human and nonhuman nature.<\/p>\n<p>Where does Romantic talk about the heart filling with pleasure like  dancing daffodils or a bird being described as a &#8220;world of delight&#8221; come  from? It comes, to cite one obvious source, from an otherwise  hard-nosed medical practitioner and experimental scientist like <a title=\"Erasmus Darwin\" href=\"http:\/\/blogs.dickinson.edu\/romnat\/2011\/06\/07\/erasmus-darwin\/\">Erasmus Darwin<\/a>. Here is Darwin, in one of his characteristic (and often controversial) descriptions of the love life of plants:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>Hence on green leaves the sexual Pleasures dwell,<br \/>\nAnd Loves and Beauties crowd the blossom&#8217;s bell;<br \/>\nThe wakeful Anther in his silken bed<br \/>\nO&#8217;er the pleas&#8217;d Stigma bows his waxen head;<br \/>\nWith meeting lips, and mingling smiles, they sup<br \/>\nAmbrosial dew-drops from the nectar&#8217;d cup;<br \/>\nOr buoy&#8217;d in air the plumy Lover springs,<br \/>\nAnd seeks his panting bride on Hymen-wings.<br \/>\n(<em>Temple of Nature<\/em>, II, 263-70)<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>Darwin was roundly criticized, as had been <a title=\"Carolus Linnaeus\" href=\"http:\/\/blogs.dickinson.edu\/romnat\/2011\/06\/07\/carolus-linnaeus\/\">Linnaeus<\/a> before him, for this tendency to sexualize the life of plants.<span><sup><a href=\"openFootnote('nichols_notes.html#1')\">1<\/a><\/sup><\/span> For Darwin, however, these erotic descriptions of plant love (and even  plant lust) were an analogue for human sexuality and an accurate  description of the way flowers actually worked. Indeed, almost all of  Darwin&#8217;s claims about plant sexuality were based on direct observation.  He often expanded his poetic rhapsodies on the sex life of plants with  prose footnotes that also ascribe a wide range of intentionality and  emotion to the plant kingdom: &#8220;The vegetable passion of love is  agreeably seen in the flower of the parnassia, in which the males  alternately approach and recede from the female; and in the flower of  nigella, or devil in the bush, in which the tall females bend down to  their dwarf husbands. But I was this morning surprised to observe . . .  the manifest adultery of several females of the plant Collinsonia, who  had bent themselves into contact with the males of other flowers of the  same plant in their vicinity, neglectful of their own&#8221; (&#8220;Economy of  Vegetation,&#8221; IV, p. 121 n.). Claims like these about plant life  consistently suggest that willfulness, intention, and pleasure all  extend &#8211; albeit in diminished forms &#8211; from humans to animals to plants,  and even beyond.<\/p>\n<p>More important for my argument than Darwin&#8217;s specific descriptions of  the sexual life of plants are his views, most clearly summarized in the  poetry and footnotes of <em>The Temple of Nature<\/em> (1803) about natural  pleasures. In this work, Darwin clearly describes pleasure in any one  part of animate creation as an aspect of pleasure extending through the  whole of the terrestrial biosphere: &#8220;From the innumerable births of the  larger insects, and the spontaneous productions of the microscopic ones,  every part of organic matter from the recrements of dead vegetable or  animal bodies, on or near the surface of the earth, becomes again  presently re-animated;  which by increasing the number and quantity of living organisms, though  many of them exist but for a short time, adds to the sum total of  terrestrial happiness&#8221; (<em>Temple<\/em>, 189 n.). Pleasure in the entire  biotic realm is increased not only by the prolific reproduction of  &#8220;insects&#8221; (the word means &#8220;small creatures&#8221; to Darwin) and microscopic  organisms but by the death and organic regeneration of larger creatures:  &#8220;The sum total of the happiness of organized nature is probably  increased rather than diminished, when one large old animal dies, and is  converted into many thousand young ones; which are produced or  supported with their numerous progeny by the same organic matter&#8221; (<em>Temple<\/em>,  190-91 n.). Darwin also notes that the Pythagorean belief in the  transmigration of souls derives merely from the organic and &#8220;perpetual  transmigration of matter from one body to another, of all vegetables and  animals, during their lives, as well as after their deaths&#8221; (191 n.).  This chemical and organic movement of elements through the bodies of  living creatures leads, over eons, to a unified and complete &#8220;system of  morality and benevolence, as all creatures thus became related to each  other&#8221; (192 n.) in terms of the matter that composes them. What Darwin  calls the &#8220;felicity of organic life,&#8221; is a function of the &#8220;happiness  and misery of [all] organic beings&#8221;; this felicity, he says, depends  ultimately, on &#8220;the actions of the organs of sense&#8221; and on &#8220;the fibres  which perform locomotion&#8221; (194 n.). Every living thing, Darwin  concludes, is subject to &#8220;immediate sources&#8221; of &#8220;pains and pleasures,&#8221;  the encouragement or avoidance of which might &#8220;increase the sum total of  organic happiness&#8221; (194-95 n.). Pain and pleasure, he goes on to argue,  are a function of the expansion and contraction of nerve and muscles  fibers of sensation, organic elements which exist in all living things,  albeit in a variety of forms and intensities. All emotional responses &#8211;  pleasure, pain, happiness, sadness &#8211; are thus based solely on the motion  of material parts of each life form.<\/p>\n<p>Finally, and perhaps most dramatically, Darwin&#8217;s understanding of  geology leads him to conclude that the planet itself is a record of the  pleasures of earlier ages of animate beings: &#8220;Not only the vast  calcerous provinces . . . and also whatever rests upon them . . . clay,  marl, sand, and coal . . . gave the pleasure of life to the animals and  vegetables, which formed them; and thus constitute monuments of the past  happiness of these organized beings. But as those remains of former  life are not again totally decomposed . . . they supply more copious  food to the successions of new animal or vegetable beings on their  surface . . . . and hence the quantity or number of organized bodies,  and their improvement in size, as well as their happiness, has been  continually increasing, along with the solid parts of the globe&#8221; (<em>Temple<\/em>,  195-96 n.). More dry land over eons, more living things century upon  century, more happiness produced from millennium to millennium. At this  point, Darwin breaks down the boundary between organic and inorganic as  part of his wider economy of nature, what we might now call his  &#8220;ecology.&#8221; Material processes, compounds, and elements\u2014which he always  describes in fundamentally chemical terms (clay, sand, coal, heat,  oxygen, hydrogen, carbon, phosphorus)\u2014compose, decompose, and  re-compose, first into inorganic, then into organic, and ultimately into  animate creatures, including human beings.<\/p>\n<p>Darwin also argues that the plant and animal kingdoms are connected by the possibility of sensation. In <em>Zoonomia<\/em>,  he describes &#8220;Vegetable Animation&#8221;: &#8220;The fibres of the vegetable world,  as well as those of the animal, are excitable into a variety of motions  by irritations of external objects. This appears particularly in the <a title=\"Mimosa\" href=\"http:\/\/blogs.dickinson.edu\/romnat\/2011\/06\/10\/mimosa\/\">mimosa or sensitive plant<\/a>, whose leaves contract on the slightest injury &#8221; (I, 73).<span><sup><a href=\"openFootnote('nichols_notes.html#2')\">2<\/a><\/sup><\/span> But the &#8220;fibres&#8221; responsible for sensation are also related to pleasure:  &#8220;when pleasure or pain affect the animal system, many of its motions  both muscular and sensual are brought into action . . . The general  tendency of these motion is to arrest [i.e. stabilize] and to possess  the pleasure, or to dislodge or avoid the pain&#8221; (I, 31). The conclusion  Darwin draws is obvious: &#8220;the individuals of the vegetable world may be  considered as inferior or less perfect animals&#8221; (I, 73).<\/p>\n<p>The belief that sensation might spread through all of animate creation  was widely discussed in Europe and America throughout the eighteenth  century by natural scientists, natural theologians, and poets, among  others. As Christoph Irmscher has written recently, this was an age  &#8220;that ascribed sensitivity, even souls, to plants&#8221; (31). But as Erasmus  Darwin suggested, the point was not merely that plants might have souls,  but that &#8220;souls&#8221; might turn out to be nothing more than complex  combinations of material (i.e. muscular, nervous, electro-chemical)  motions. John Bartram, writing to <a title=\"Benjamin Rush\" href=\"http:\/\/blogs.dickinson.edu\/romnat\/2011\/06\/07\/benjamin-rush\/\">Benjamin Rush<\/a>,  noted that there was much to be learned about &#8220;sensation&#8221; in plants,  even though many animals were already known to be &#8220;endowed with most of  our [that is, human] faculties &amp; pashions &amp; . . . intelect&#8221;  [sic] (690).<\/p>\n<p>Georges Louis Leclerc, <a title=\"George-Louis Buffon\" href=\"http:\/\/blogs.dickinson.edu\/romnat\/2011\/06\/07\/george-louis-buffon\/\">Comte de Buffon<\/a>,  describes many of the animals he catalogues in terms of human passions  and intellect. Buffon&#8217;s marmot &#8220;delights in the regions of ice and snow&#8221;  (121). His elephant is &#8220;susceptible of gratitude, and capable of strong  attachment&#8221; (152) and &#8220;loves the society of his equals&#8221; (153). If  &#8220;vindictive,&#8221; the pachyderm &#8220;is no less grateful&#8221; (159). Numerous  writers were willing to extend pleasure even into the realm of lower  life forms. A 1792 compilation by several natural historians of insects  includes comments such as the following: each insect, no matter how  small or seemingly insignificant, is &#8220;adapted for procuring its  particular pleasures&#8221; (2); indeed, every insect, like every creature,  &#8220;was formed for itself, and each allowed to seize as great a quantity of  happiness from the universal stock . . . each was formed to make the  happiness of each&#8221; (6). &#8220;The butterfly, to enjoy life, needs no other  food but the dews of heaven&#8221; (75) and &#8220;it is impossible to express the  fond attachment which the working ants shew to their rising progeny&#8221;  (125). Animals, of course, had been connected to humans sensation and  emotional response since <a title=\"Backgrounds: From Aristotle to Erasmus Darwin\" href=\"http:\/\/blogs.dickinson.edu\/romnat\/2011\/06\/07\/backgrounds-from-aristotle-to-erasmus-darwin\/\">ancient history<\/a>:  loyal dogs, sagacious elephants, wily foxes, diligent ants. What was  new by 1790 was the sense that these were not just rhetorical  comparisons of behavior between human and animal realms, but that such  observationally supported comparisons reflected a deeper &#8211; and organic &#8211;  unity of all living things.<\/p>\n<p>Eighteenth-century talk about emotion and sensation in &#8220;lower&#8221; life  forms was also related to an underlying philosophical monism, well  articulated by Goethe. In &#8220;the Experiment as Mediator between Subject  and Object&#8221; (1792) Goethe offers a holistic critique of &#8220;living Nature&#8221;  that was designed to counter the fragmentary quality of empirical  science: &#8220;Nothing happens in living Nature that does not bear some  relation to the whole. The empirical evidence may seem quite isolated,  we may view our experiments as mere isolated facts, but this is not to  say that they are, in fact, isolated. The question is: how can we find  the connection between these phenomena, these events&#8221; (80). Likewise,  Goethe is willing to include &#8220;joy and pain&#8221; among the categories that  are applicable to any &#8220;organism&#8221;: &#8220;Basic characteristics of an  individual organism: to divide, to unite, to merge into the universal,  to abide in the particular, to transform itself, to define itself, and,  as living things tend to appear under a thousand conditions, to arise  and vanish, to solidify and melt, to freeze and flow, to expand and  contract . . . . Genesis and decay, creation and destruction, birth and  death, joy and pain, all are interwoven with equal effect and weight;  thus even the most isolated event always presents itself as an image and  metaphor for the most universal&#8221; (52). So while observational science  is suggesting that expansion, contraction, attraction and repulsion of  tiny particles are physical properties of all living (and perhaps  nonliving) things, the metaphysic of Romantic science argues that  characteristics found in one part of nature are likely to exist  throughout the entire natural system, albeit in differing &#8211; reduced or  expanded &#8211; forms.<\/p>\n<p><a title=\"Oliver Goldsmith\" href=\"http:\/\/blogs.dickinson.edu\/romnat\/2011\/06\/07\/oliver-goldsmith\/\">Oliver Goldsmith<\/a>, whose <em>A History of the Earth and Animated Nature<\/em> was drawn largely from Buffon and other European naturalists, restrains  himself from extending sensation into the realm of the inorganic, but  he too indicates how widespread was the belief in common elements  pervading the germ plasm, a unity behind the dazzling variety that  characterized the animate world. He says that the prevalence of  invisible living creatures, animals and plants too small to see, has led  &#8220;some late philosophers into an opinion, that all nature was animated,  that every, even the most inert mass of matter, was endued with life and  sensation, but wanted organs to make those sensations perceptible to  the observer.&#8221; (IV, 322). The link between human and animal pleasure  thus reaches well into the plant kingdom by the 1790s, producing a view  well summarized by Buffon himself: &#8220;it is impossible to finish our short  review of nature [over 30 volumes!] without observing the wonderful  harmony and connection that subsists between all the different branches&#8221;  (178). Pleasure described in one part of nature reflects the  possibility, indeed the likelihood, of pleasure spread throughout all of  nature.<\/p>\n<p>Now let us consider a poet like <a title=\"Percy Bysshe Shelley\" href=\"http:\/\/blogs.dickinson.edu\/romnat\/2011\/06\/07\/percy-bysshe-shelley\/\">Percy Shelley<\/a>,  who can load every rift of his imagery with ore derived from the  natural science of his age, often in ways that precisely link human and  nonhuman &#8220;feelings.&#8221; In one of the best known examples of this tendency &#8211;  taken from &#8220;Ode to the West Wind&#8221; &#8211; Shelley imagines plants beneath the  sea in sympathy with plants on land: &#8220;The sea-blooms and the oozy woods  which wear \/ The sapless foliage of the ocean, know \/ Thy voice [the  wind&#8217;s], and suddenly grow gray with fear, \/ And tremble and despoil  themselves&#8221; (ll. 39-42). Shelley adds a footnote to these lines that  sounds as though it could have come directly from Erasmus Darwin: &#8220;the  phenomenon alluded to . . . is well known to naturalists. The vegetation  at the bottom of the sea, of rivers, and of lakes, sympathizes with  that of the land in the change of seasons&#8221; (577). Shelley&#8217;s science here  may be wrong, but his imaginative insight links with the emerging  science of his own time to produce an idea that is surely correct:  organic activity beneath the waves has important &#8211; Shelley says  &#8220;sympathetic&#8221;; we might now say &#8220;ecological&#8221; &#8211; connections to events on  the land.<\/p>\n<p>Similarly, Shelley&#8217;s sky-lark sings with &#8220;shrill delight&#8221; (l. 20)  while his sensitive plant (mimosa) is described as having once &#8220;trembled  and panted with bliss&#8221; (l. 9). Shelley&#8217;s sensitive plant derives  directly from Erasmus Darwin&#8217;s reflections on the mimosa as a strange  bridge between the plant and animal kingdoms. Yet Shelley goes beyond  the mere ascription of sensation to the plant, suggesting a direct  connection between this plant and certain sorts of human emotion (of  course, his real subject in the poem is clearly a &#8220;sensitive&#8221; poet like  himself). The affinity of plants for other plants, and the image of  plants as analogous to forms of attraction throughout the material  universe, reaches an apotheosis in lines from Shelley&#8217;s botanical poem.  These flowers<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>Shone smiling to Heaven, and every one<br \/>\nShared joy in the light of the gentle sun;<br \/>\nFor each one was interpenetrated<br \/>\nWith the light and the odour its neighbor shed<br \/>\nLike young lovers whom youth and love make dear<br \/>\nWrapped and filled by their mutual atmosphere.<br \/>\n(ll. 64-69)<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>Of course, the suggestion that aspects of the entirety of nature might  be analogous to human nature is as old as poetry itself. What is new in a  poet like Shelley is the sense of how an emotion like pleasure can  organically link humans with the nonhuman world. In a rarely discussed  poem entitled &#8220;The Birth of Pleasure,&#8221; Shelley is explicit about the  central role of pleasure, even at the dawn of creation: &#8220;At the creation  of the Earth \/ Pleasure, that divinest birth, \/ From the soil of heaven  did rise, \/ Wrapped in sweet wild melodies&#8221; (584).<\/p>\n<p>Consider, from this perspective, Shelley&#8217;s cloud, whose nourishing water  offers sustenance to &#8220;thirsting flowers&#8221; and provides shade for  delicate leaves in their &#8220;noonday dreams&#8221; (ll. 1,4). In this  proto-ecological vision of the hydrological cycle (&#8220;I pass through the  pores of the oceans and shores; \/ I change, but I cannot die&#8221; [ll.  74-75]), Shelley elaborates electrical attractions between ground and  clouds &#8211; only recently described by Benjamin Franklin and by Shelley&#8217;s  own science teacher Adam Walker (from Syon House Academy and Eton) &#8211; as a  kind of &#8220;love&#8221; between earth and sky. He also says that the &#8220;moist  Earth&#8221; is &#8220;laughing below&#8221; (l. 72) as the cloud brings various forms of  pleasure to each part of this natural cycle. Even a satiric and  imaginative flight of fancy like &#8220;The Witch of Atlas&#8221; is shot through  with precise details drawn from the natural science of Shelley&#8217;s time,  and linked to powerful &#8220;sympathy&#8221; between the natural and the human  realms: &#8220;Vipers kill, though dead&#8221; (l. 2), &#8220;a young kitten&#8221; may &#8220;leap  and play as grown cats do, \/ Till its claws come&#8221; (ll. 6-7) and Mary  Shelley&#8217;s gentle hand would not &#8220;crush the silken wing\u00e8d fly&#8221; (l. 9).  The may-fly dies almost before it is born, and even the swan&#8217;s song in  the sun evokes a smile as serene as Mary&#8217;s (stanza ii).<\/p>\n<p><a title=\"William Wordsworth\" href=\"http:\/\/blogs.dickinson.edu\/romnat\/2011\/06\/07\/william-wordsworth\/\">Wordsworth<\/a>, in a famous passage from <em>The Prelude<\/em>,  links a similarly &#8220;scientific&#8221; form of observation to a pleasure that  is essential to the very definition of the poetic. Wordsworth, however,  sees this link in much more psychological terms than Shelley: &#8220;To  unorganic natures I transferred \/ My own enjoyments, or, the power of  truth \/ Coming in revelation, I conversed \/ With things that really are&#8221;  (1805, II, 410-13).Wordsworth sees this interaction as more than merely  a symbolic representation of his inner states in the outer world.  Rather, he links feelings of pleasure in himself directly to emotions  that he ascribes to the rest of the world: &#8220;From Nature and her  overflowing soul \/ I had received so much that all my thoughts \/ Were  steeped in feeling&#8221; (II, 416-18). This is not, however, just watered  down, Wordsworthian pantheism: his 1805 description of the unity of  natural process owe as much to the natural science of the era as it does  to his own emerging &#8220;theology&#8221;:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>I felt the sentiment of being spread<br \/>\nO&#8217;er all that moves . . .<br \/>\nO&#8217;er all that leaps, and runs, and shouts, and sings,<br \/>\nOr beats the gladsome air, o&#8217;er all that glides<br \/>\nBeneath the wave, yea, in the wave itself<\/p>\n<p>. . . in all things<br \/>\nI saw one life, and felt that it was joy.<br \/>\n(II, 420-21, 425-27, 429-30)<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>A passage like this reflects the natural history of Wordsworth&#8217;s time  while also connecting his emotional (and poetic) power to similar powers  that he attributes to the plants and animals around him. His daffodils  are only the most famous example of this recurrent tendency: &#8220;A Poet  could not but be gay \/ In such a laughing company&#8221; (ll. 9-10) leading  to, &#8220;And then my heart with pleasure fills \/ And dances with the  Daffodils&#8221; (ll. 17-18).<\/p>\n<p>We should recall that Wordsworth&#8217;s image derives not only from his own observation, but also from <a title=\"Dorothy Wordsworth\" href=\"http:\/\/blogs.dickinson.edu\/romnat\/2011\/06\/10\/dorothy-wordsworth-1751-1855\/\">Dorothy Wordsworth<\/a>&#8216;s  journal text. Dorothy&#8217;s recollection sounds initially like that of a  natural historian: &#8220;The hawthorns are black and green, the birches here  and there greenish but there is yet more of purple to be seen on the  twigs . . . a few primroses by the roadside, wood-sorrel flower, the  anemone, scentless violets, strawberries, and that starry yellow flower  which Mrs. C. calls pile wort. When we were in the woods beyond  Gowbarrow park we saw a few daffodils close to the water side&#8221; (109).  Then, in an important transitional sentence, Dorothy reveals her &#8220;fancy&#8221;  going to work on these objects of nature: &#8220;We fancied that the lake had  floated the seeds ashore and that the little colony had so sprung up.  But as we went along there were more and yet more and at last under the  boughs of the trees, we saw that there was a long belt of them [the end  we did not see (erased)] along the shore, about the breadth of a country  turnpike road&#8221; (109). Only at this moment does Dorothy launch into the  poetic possibility that these flowers can be more closely linked to  human emotions than we might think, even as she gives up on formal  grammar and syntax: &#8220;I never saw daffodils so beautiful they grew among  the mossy stones about and about them, some rested their heads upon  these stones as on a pillow for weariness and the rest tossed and reeled  and danced and seemed as if they verily laughed with the wind that blew  upon them over the lake, they looked so gay ever glancing ever  changing&#8221; (109, 15 April 1802).<\/p>\n<p>An earlier passage from Dorothy&#8217;s journal reveals a similar  connection of wind-caused motion, animation, and the link between human  emotion and the natural world. The scene takes place during a winter  wind on Grasmere Lake. I quote the passage in its entirely because it so  clearly reveals the rhetorical movement from inanimate images (wind on  the water), to animate images (&#8220;peacock&#8217;s tail,&#8221; &#8220;they made it all  alive&#8221;), to humanized emotion applied to a flower (&#8220;let it live if it  can&#8221;):<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>We amused ourselves for a long time in watching the  Breezes some as if they came from the bottom of the lake spread in a  circle, brushing along the surface of the water, and growing more  delicate, as it were thinner and of a <em>paler<\/em> colour till they died  away. Others spread out like a peacock&#8217;s tail, and some went right  forward this way and that in all directions. The lake was still where  these breezes were not, but they made it all alive. I found a strawberry  blossom in a rock. The little slender flower had more courage than the  green leaves, for <em>they<\/em> were but half expanded and half grown, but  the blossom was spread full out. I uprooted it rashly, and I felt as if  I had been committing an outrage, so I planted it again. It will have  but a stormy life of it, but let it live if it can&#8221; (82-3, 31 January  1802).<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>Dorothy&#8217;s sudden emotional response to a flower here reminds us of her  brother&#8217;s pantheistic reaction to his own impulsive destruction of  nature in &#8220;Nutting&#8221;: &#8220;I felt a sense of pain when I beheld \/ The silent  trees and the intruding sky &#8211; \/ Then, dearest Maiden . . . with gentle  hand \/ Touch, &#8211; for there is a Spirit in the woods&#8221; (ll. 50-52, 53-54).<\/p>\n<p>A manuscript text from 1798 reveals just how far William is willing  to go in linking his own sentiments about the nonhuman world to the  natural &#8220;science&#8221; of his time, a science that could associate all  animate and inanimate objects into a naturalistic unity:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>There is an active principle alive in all things;<br \/>\nIn all things, in all natures, in the flowers<br \/>\nAnd in the trees, in every pebbly stone<br \/>\nThat paves the brooks, the stationary rocks,<br \/>\nThe moving water and the invisible air.<br \/>\nAll beings have their properties which spread<br \/>\nBeyond themselves, a power by which they make<br \/>\nSome other being conscious of their life<br \/>\n(676).<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p><a title=\"Samuel Taylor Coleridge\" href=\"http:\/\/blogs.dickinson.edu\/romnat\/2011\/06\/07\/samuel-taylor-coleridge\/\">Coleridge<\/a> understands this connection between pleasure within the self and  pleasure taken from the external world, although he describes the link  more dispassionately and more ambiguously than even Wordsworth. We might  call Coleridge&#8217;s version of this phenomenon transference: that is, our  own emotions can be transferred onto nature for psychological reasons.  Here is Coleridge&#8217;s clearest example: &#8220;A child scolding a flower in the  words in which he had been himself scolded and whipped, is poetry &#8211;  passion past with pleasure&#8221; (<em>Animae Poetae<\/em> 10). The child  transfers his own enjoyments, and miseries, out onto the objects of  nature that surround him. For Coleridge, in &#8220;To Nature&#8221;: &#8220;It may indeed  be phantasy, when I \/ Essay to draw from all created things \/ Deep,  heartfelt, inward joy that closely clings&#8221; (ll.1-3). But we should  remember that this is the same poet who longs passionately for what we  might now call a unified ecosystem (&#8220;all of animated nature&#8221;), a unity  in &#8220;Nature&#8221; that he describes as a strange music of mind identified with  joy:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>O! the one Life within us and abroad,<br \/>\nWhich meets all motion and becomes its soul,<br \/>\nA light in sound, a sound-like power in light,<br \/>\nRhythm in all thought, and joyance every where.<br \/>\n(&#8220;The Eolian Harp,&#8221; ll. 26-29)<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>Coleridge connects romantic science to the pleasures of nature in  precisely the ways I have been describing. His wild goat looks at the  cataract &#8220;in awe&#8221; (&#8220;On a Cataract,&#8221; l.18). The ox in &#8220;Recantation&#8221; may  be described in Coleridge&#8217;s footnote as a symbol for the French  Revolution, but the animal is nevertheless presented in terms of its  naturalized emotions: &#8220;The ox was glad, as well he might, \/ Thought the  green meadow no bad sight \/ And frisk&#8217;d, &#8211; to shew his huge delight&#8221;  (ll. 9-11). Likewise, the sympathetic creature described fraternally in  &#8220;To a Young Ass&#8221; (&#8220;I hail thee <em>Brother<\/em>&#8221; [l.26]) has a &#8220;moping  head,&#8221; (ms. 1794), and the poet asks if its &#8220;sad heart thrill&#8217;d with  filial pain&#8221; (l. 13). Coleridge&#8217;s most famous image in this regard is  perhaps the transformed description of the sea-snakes in &#8220;The Rime of  the Ancient Mariner.&#8221; Within the space of fifty lines of this  nature-anthem, the &#8220;thousand thousand slimy things&#8221; (l. 238) crawling on  the surface of the ocean are re-imagined by the mariner as &#8220;O happy  living things!&#8221; (l. 282). Coleridge is also honest enough to admit,  however, in &#8220;The Nightingale,&#8221; that it is often merely the poet who  fills &#8220;all things with himself&#8221; and makes &#8220;all gentle sounds,&#8221; including  the song of the nightingale, &#8220;tell back the tale \/ Of his own sorrow&#8221;  (ll. 19-21). The &#8220;joy&#8221; we feel within ourselves often seems to be  reflected back on us by the natural world beyond us. Then again, as the  always ambivalent Coleridge might say, maybe not;  perhaps our feelings belong only to us.<\/p>\n<p>Notice how a poetic natural historian, the polymath Oliver Goldsmith,  links human pleasure to animal pleasure in ways comparable to Coleridge.  In the section of <a title=\"Oliver Goldsmith\u2019s History of the Earth and Animated Nature\" href=\"http:\/\/blogs.dickinson.edu\/romnat\/2011\/06\/10\/oliver-goldsmiths-history-of-the-earth-and-animated-nature\/\"><em>Animated Nature<\/em><\/a> devoted to birds, Goldsmith says: &#8220;we now come to a beautiful and  loquacious race of animals, that embellish our forests, amuse our walks,  and exclude solitude from out most shady retirements. From these man  has nothing to fear; their pleasures, their desires, and even their  animosities, only serve to enliven the general picture of Nature, and  give harmony to meditation&#8221; (III, 3). Within a few pages, when Goldsmith  claims that &#8220;the return of spring is the beginning of pleasure&#8221; (III,  14), he is similarly eliding the distinction between human and nonhuman  pleasures. But Goldsmith also reminds us that the pleasure provided by  nature is not always here for our benefit. In this vernal season filled  with pleasures, he continues, the &#8220;delightful concert of the grove,  which is much admired by man, is no way studied for his [human]  amusement: it is usually the call of the male to the female, his efforts  to soothe her during times of incubation; or it is a challenge between  two males for the affections of some common favourite&#8221; (III, 14). Lest  we mistake the birds as singing a song for our benefit, Goldsmith  reminds us that bird-song is about <em>bird<\/em> pleasure in mothering or in copulation, not about the desires of poetic or scientific humans.<\/p>\n<p>Finally, let us consider <a title=\"John Keats\" href=\"http:\/\/blogs.dickinson.edu\/romnat\/2011\/06\/07\/john-keats\/\">Keats<\/a>.  In &#8220;On the Grasshopper and Cricket,&#8221; Keats&#8217;s grasshopper is as full of  the pleasures of life as Goldsmith or Erasmus Darwin could have ever  imagined: &#8220;He takes the lead \/ In summer luxury; he has never done \/  With his delights, for when tired out with fun \/ He rests at ease  beneath some pleasant weed&#8221; (ll. 5-8). Or, from &#8220;Sleep and Poetry&#8221;:  &#8220;What is more soothing than the pretty hummer \/ That stays one moment in  an open flower \/ And buzzes cheerily from bower to bower?&#8221; (ll. 2-5)  and, &#8220;a myrtle, fairer than \/ E&#8217;er grew in Paphos, from the bitter weeds  \/ Lifts its sweet head into the air&#8221; (ll. 248-50). By now we should  appreciate that these are not merely hyperbolic flights of imaginative  fancy. This is Keats describing the natural world as he understands it.  My suggestion is born out by an intertextual reference in Miriam  Allott&#8217;s note to the &#8220;wailful choir&#8221; of &#8220;small gnats&#8221; mourning in &#8220;To  Autumn.&#8221; The lines echo the 1817 entomology written by <a href=\"http:\/\/www.dickinson.edu\/%7Enicholsa\/Romnat\/biblio.htm#K\">William Kirby and William Spence<\/a>:  &#8220;tribes of Tipulidae (usually, but improperly called gnats) assemble . .  . and form themselves into choirs, that alternately rise and fall . . .  These little creatures may be seen at all seasons, amusing themselves  with their choral dances&#8221; (653).<\/p>\n<p>The naturalistic rigor of Keats&#8217;s own approach is confirmed in the  opening of his nightingale poem, when a pleasure so sweet as to be  painful derives from another organic being (a bird) and somehow echoes a  unity in life, past and present. The speaker&#8217;s heart aches. He is at  once drowsy and numb. He is drunk on an emotion as powerful as that  produced by a natural intoxicant (hemlock). We should think back at this  point to Erasmus Darwin, who describes a chemical affinity between us  and the opium poppy (&#8220;dull opiate&#8221; [l. 3]) that can transport us out of  our ordinary pleasure into pleasures of a different, but no less  powerful, kind (<em>Botanic Garden<\/em>, &#8220;Loves of the Plants,&#8221; II, 57  n.). How might these flowers produce such powerful emotional and  narcotic affects unless there was some organic sympathy &#8211; Darwin says a  chemical &#8220;affinity&#8221; &#8211; between us and these plants.<\/p>\n<p>Keats is happy in an almost excruciating way (&#8220;too happy in thine  happiness&#8221; [l.6]), but this intensity reveals a pleasure that is  ordinary for this bird. The bird&#8217;s happy lot makes the poet&#8217;s lot in  life seem somehow diminished. What would a human give, Keats implies, to  sing with such &#8220;full-throated ease&#8221; [l. 10]. Having heard this bird  singing, human mortality appears to be much less of a problem to the  observant poet. My point is that there is nothing sentimental here,  nothing overstated or hyperbolic. From such a naturalistic perspective,  there is also no death wish in this poem (&#8220;Now more than ever seems it  rich to die&#8221; [l. 55]). The poet&#8217;s final claim is simple. Having heard  such a song, and having felt organically connected to such a fellow  creature, physical death now seems like less of a curse. Death now feels  like part of something greater, even if that greater something is  organic and material, like a bird. The bird&#8217;s song dies away as the  poet&#8217;s voice will soon die away: literally. Organic life expressed  through song (a bird&#8217;s or a poet&#8217;s) is, we should add, the one thing  that most clearly distinguishes both this bird and this poet from the  &#8220;Cold pastoral&#8221; of the Grecian urn.<\/p>\n<p>Keats&#8217;s human pleasure taken from this bird reminds us that science  can also be linked to pleasure in a way that connects with the writing  of poetry. John Herschel, the nineteenth-century astronomer, described  the &#8220;great sources of delight&#8221; that might be derived from the study of  &#8220;natural&#8221; sciences (Richardson, <em>Emerson<\/em> 123). Likewise, Goldsmith  justified his &#8220;popularizing&#8221; version of natural history &#8211; first  published in 1774 and running to over twenty editions during the  nineteenth century &#8211; in terms of its ability to provide pleasure:  &#8220;Natural History, considered in its utmost extent, comprehends two  objects. First, that of discovering, ascertaining, and naming, all the  various productions of Nature. Secondly, that of describing the  properties, manners, and relations, which they bear to us, and to each  other. The first, which is the most difficult part of this science, is  systematical, dry, mechanical, and incomplete. The second is more  amusing, exhibits new pictures to the imagination, and improves our  relish for existence, by widening the prospect of nature around us.  Both, however, are necessary to those who would understand this pleasing  science in its utmost extent. . . From seeing and observing the thing  itself, he is most naturally led to speculate on its uses, its delights,  or its inconveniences&#8221; (I, iii). So science is pleasing to the observer  or to the participant, nature possesses its own delights, and the  elements of nature can provide delight to the natural scientist and to  his readers.<\/p>\n<p>A related analogy is offered by Ralph Waldo Emerson, another  poet-naturalist who often invokes connections like those I have been  tracing. Here is Emerson, in his <em>Notebooks<\/em>, describing how  language and nature, linked through metaphor, produce pleasure in the  observer&#8217;s imagination: &#8220;The metamorphosis of Nature shows itself in  nothing more than this, that there is no word in our language that  cannot become typical of Nature by giving it emphasis. The world is a  Dancer; it is a Rosary; it is a Torrent; it is a Boat; a Mist; a  Spider&#8217;s Snare; it is what you will;  and the metaphor will hold, and it will give the imagination keen  pleasure. Swifter than light the world converts itself into that thing  you name, and all things find their right place under this new and  capricious classification&#8221; (6:18). Classification, which Emerson links  with naming, is itself a metaphoric activity that can provide pleasure,  as many naturalists &#8211; poetic and otherwise &#8211; have argued. We classify  living things based on their body parts (mammalia), their legs (insects  have six), or their sex organs (usually stamens and pistils in the  eighteenth and nineteenth centuries), but the principle is always  metaphoric: what seems like something else, what looks like something  else, what reminds us of something, or someone, else. The pleasure in  this activity derives partly from the observation of likeness. I see  that my love is like a red, red rose, and my sudden sense of similarity  gives me pleasure. I see that a spider is like a lobster but not like a  jellyfish. I see that a lion is more like a lamb than it is like a  lammergeyer (bird). In all of these cases, the perception of similarity  leads the observer to be &#8220;attracted&#8221; by the objects being observed.  Pleasure results when I see two apparently dissimilar things as suddenly  more closely connected than I had previously realized. The result might  be science: oh look, that lobster reminds me of a spider. I should  describe this spider anatomically and physiologically. Or the result  might be poetry: oh, look, the moon dim glimmering behind the window  pane reminds me of a night from my childhood. I should write a poem.<\/p>\n<p>Coleridge, from whom I take my moon image, also understands that  &#8220;poetry gives most pleasure when only generally and not perfectly  understood&#8221; (<em>Anima Poetae<\/em> 5). This sentiment of Coleridge&#8217;s is also true for much of nature as described in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries;  it is only generally and not perfectly understood. But that may be a good thing for Romantic poetry and <a href=\"http:\/\/blogs.dickinson.edu\/romnat\/\">Romantic natural history<\/a>:  the less we understand the more fascinated we can be. In this regard  consider Emerson again: &#8220;The instincts of the ant are very unimportant  considered as the ant&#8217;s; but the moment a ray of relation is seen to  extend from it to man, and the little drudge is seen to be a monitor, a  little body with a mighty heart, then all its habits, even that said to  be recently observed, that it never sleeps, become sublime&#8221; (<em>Nature<\/em> 36). This sense of the value of things that are not understood helps to  explain the precipitous decline in nature poetry during the early  Modernist years of the twentieth century (Edward Thomas is the  exception), when science seemed for a time to have explained away the  mysteries of biological process. By the middle of the twentieth century,  however, when ecology and biochemistry were both being revealed to be  much more complex than had previously been imagined, a flurry of nature  poetry and nature writing began again.<\/p>\n<p>Onno Oerlemans has recently written that &#8220;Romantic depictions of  animals force us to acknowledge that animals are a kind of life in  nature that is at once much like our own, and which is yet different  from it, not capable of being reduced to merely human designs or  desires&#8221; (4). I would like to extend his argument beyond animals to all  of animate creation. Oerlemans criticizes anthropocentric forms of  criticism that produce only anthropocentric readings of Romantic  writers. He argues, instead, that Romantic representations of animals  make us &#8220;recognize the wider boundaries of life.&#8221; Such an argument is  not just politically correct eco-criticism. On the contrary, it suggests  that the Romantic writers can help us toward a sense of lives beyond  our own lives, a sense of other beings and other forms of life that we  did not culturally construct and that do not merely reflect our personal  points of view. I should add that we do not need a Judeo-Christian  concept of deity or ethics to make such a nonhuman world work. My  sympathy for living things can be based, as many eighteenth-century  thinkers would remind us, on my &#8220;internal constitution,&#8221; on my organic  relation to the innumerable forms of life around me.<span><sup><a href=\"openFootnote('nichols_notes.html#3')\">3 <\/a><\/sup><\/span><\/p>\n<p>Let me end with Erasmus Darwin, grandfather of the man who would put  all this talk about pleasure to rest for a century or so, but only  until we realized that pleasure, like love, might be a process of brains  and organic molecules rather than a process of &#8220;minds&#8221; or &#8220;souls.&#8221; Here  is Erasmus Darwin linking you and me intimately to ants (which he calls  &#8220;emmets&#8221;) and worms:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>With ceaseless change, how restless atoms pass,<br \/>\nFrom life to life, a transmigrating mass;<br \/>\nHow the same organs, which to day compose<br \/>\nThe poisonous henbane, or the fragrant rose,<br \/>\nMay, with to morrow&#8217;s sun, new forms compile,<br \/>\nFrown in the Hero, in the Beauty smile.<br \/>\nWhence drew the enlighten&#8217;d Sage, the moral plan,<br \/>\n[That] man should ever be the friend of man;<br \/>\nShould eye with tenderness all living forms,<br \/>\nHis brother-emmets, and his sister-worms.<br \/>\n(<em>Temple of Nature<\/em>, IV, 419-28)<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>A world full of animate creatures described in terms of their ability  to feel pleasure or bestow pleasure on other parts of nature. A world of  living things bound together by forces that act and react on all of  them in similar ways. A biological world shot through with the  possibility of pleasing or being pleased, at once interrelated and  interdependent. Not such a bad idea after all.<\/p>\n<h3><strong>Notes<\/strong><\/h3>\n<p><a name=\"1\"><\/a>1\u00a0\u00a0&#8220;Linnaeus&#8217;s  [sexual system of classification] amused some of his contemporaries but  scandalized others . . . &#8216;To tell you that nothing could equal the  gross prurience of Linnaeus&#8217;s mind is perfectly needless,&#8217; wrote the  Rev. Samuel Goodenough, late Bishop of Carlisle, to that devoted  Linnaean scholar J. E. Smith in January 1808: &#8216;A literal translation of  the first principles of Linnaean botany is enough to shock female  modesty'&#8221; (Stearn 245). As late as 1820, Goethe worried that women and  children should not be exposed to the &#8220;dogma of sexuality&#8221; in botanical  studies (Stern 245). See also Lindroth, who says of <a title=\"Carolus Linnaeus\" href=\"http:\/\/blogs.dickinson.edu\/romnat\/2011\/06\/07\/carolus-linnaeus\/\">Linnaeus<\/a>:  &#8220;How close he stands to traditional wedding poetry in the admired  opening to the dissertation on the nuptials of flowers . . . The same  applies to the actual message of the work, the description of  copulation, the nuptials of flowers in matchless bridal beds. With his  hot sensuousness the young Linnaeus was as though obsessed with love,  the mysterious drive that kept all living things in motion&#8221; (10).  <a href=\"http:\/\/www.rc.umd.edu\/praxis\/ecology\/nichols\/nichols_notes.html#\"><br \/>\n<\/a><\/p>\n<p><a name=\"2\"><\/a>2\u00a0\u00a0Darwin discusses <a title=\"The Venus Fly-trap and the Great Chain of Being\" href=\"http:\/\/blogs.dickinson.edu\/romnat\/2011\/06\/10\/the-venus-fly-trap-and-the-great-chain-of-being\/\">&#8220;sensitive&#8221; plants<\/a> at great length. He notes that &#8220;many vegetables, during the night, do  not seem to respire, but to sleep like the dormant animals and insects  in winter. This appears from the mimosa and many other plants closing  the upper sides of their leaves together in their sleep&#8221; (<em>Botanic Garden<\/em>,  &#8220;Economy of Vegetation,&#8221; IV, 127 n.). He also classifies the mimosa in  terms of its polygamous behavior: &#8220;Mimosa. The sensitive plant. Of the  class Polygamy, one house. Naturalists have not explained the immediate  cause of the collapsing of the sensitive plant&#8221; (<em>Botanic Garden<\/em>,  &#8220;Loves of the Plants,&#8221; I, 29 n.). He also comments on a recent plant  &#8220;lately brought over from the marshes of America&#8221; that is even more  remarkable: &#8220;In the Dionaea Muscipula there is a still more wonderful  contrivance to present the depredation of insects; the leaves are armed  with long teeth, like the antennae of insects, and lie spread upon the  ground round the stem; and are so irritable, that when the insect creeps  upon them, they fold up, and crush or pierce it to death&#8221; (&#8220;Loves of  the Plants,&#8221; I, 19 n.).  <a href=\"http:\/\/www.rc.umd.edu\/praxis\/ecology\/nichols\/nichols_notes.html#\"><br \/>\n<\/a><\/p>\n<p><a name=\"3\"><\/a>3\u00a0\u00a0  See Paul Feyerabend, who argues that &#8220;works of art are a product of  nature, no less than rocks and flowers&#8221; and, more importantly for my  argument, that &#8220;nature itself is an artifact, constructed by scientists  and artisans, throughout centuries, from a partly yielding, partly  resisting material of unknown properties&#8221; (223). Feyerabend&#8217;s point is  not that &#8220;nature&#8221; is a culturally constructed category, but that  anything we say about &#8220;nature,&#8221; any way we represent nature in science  or in art is limited by our own sign systems. In this view, he is  reminiscent of Goethe: &#8220;How difficult it is, though, to refrain from  replacing the thing with its sign, to keep the object alive before us  instead of killing it with a word&#8221; (33). See also <a title=\"William Blake\" href=\"http:\/\/blogs.dickinson.edu\/romnat\/2011\/06\/07\/william-blake\/\">Blake<\/a>:  &#8220;He who binds to himself a joy \/ Does the winged life destroy; \/ But he  who kisses the joy as it flies \/ Lives in eternity&#8217;s sun rise&#8221;  (&#8220;Eternity&#8221; 179). The view expounded by Feyerabend, Goethe, and Blake is  confirmed by current theoretical physicists who admit that we do not  know even now what &#8220;quarks&#8221; or &#8220;neutrinos&#8221; or &#8220;muons&#8221; really are.<\/p>\n<h3><strong>Works Cited<\/strong><\/h3>\n<p>Bartram, John. <em>The Correspondence of John Bartram, 1734-1777<\/em>. Ed. Edmund Berkeley and Dorothy S. Berkeley. Gainesville: U of Florida P, 1992.<\/p>\n<p>Blake, William. <em>Complete Writings<\/em>. Ed. Geoffrey Keynes. Oxford: Oxford UP, 1989 [1966].<\/p>\n<p>Buffon, Georges Louis Leclerc, Comte de. <em>The System of Natural History<\/em>. Ed. R.. Morison. Edinburgh, 1791.<\/p>\n<p>&#8212;. <em>The Natural History of Insects<\/em>, compiled from Swammerdam, Brookes, Goldsmith. 1792 [bound together with Buffon, System, 1791].<\/p>\n<p>Coleridge, Samuel Taylor. <em>Poetical Works<\/em>. Ed. E. H. Coleridge. Oxford: Oxford UP, 1973 [1912].<\/p>\n<p>&#8212;. <em>Anima Poetae<\/em>. Ed. E. H. Coleridge. London: Heinemann, 1895.<\/p>\n<p>Darwin, Erasmus. <em>The Botanic Garden; a  Poem, in Two Parts: Part I. The economy of vegetation. Part II. The  loves of the plants. With philosophical notes.<\/em> New York: T. &amp; J. Swords, 1807 [2nd American edition].<\/p>\n<p>&#8212;. <em>The Temple of Nature; or, The origin of society. A poem, with philosophical notes<\/em>. Baltimore: Bonsal &amp; Niles, 1804 [London, 1803].<\/p>\n<p>&#8212;. <em>Zoonomia ; or The laws of organic life<\/em>. 2 vols. Boston: Thomas and Andrews, 1809 [3rd American edition].<\/p>\n<p>Emerson, Ralph Waldo. <em>The Journals and Miscellaneous Notebooks<\/em>. Ed. William H. Gilman et al. 8 vols. Cambridge, Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 1960-70.<\/p>\n<p>&#8212;. <em>Nature<\/em>. Intro. Jaroslav  Pelican. Boston: Beacon P, 1985. Feyerabend, Paul. Conquest of  Abundance: A Tale of Abstraction versus the Richness of Being. Chicago: U  of Chicago P, 1999.<\/p>\n<p>Goethe, J. W. von. <em>Goethe on Science<\/em>. Ed. Jeremy Naydler. Edinburgh: Floris Books, 1996.<\/p>\n<p>Goldsmith, Oliver. <em>A History of the Earth and Animated Nature<\/em>. 4 vols. Philadelphia: Mathew Carey, 1795.<\/p>\n<p>Irmscher, Christoph. <em>The Poetics of Natural History: From John Bartram to William James<\/em>. New Brunswick: Rutgers UP, 1999.<\/p>\n<p>Keats, John. <em>The Complete Poems<\/em>. Ed. Miriam Allott. London: Longman, 1975. Lindroth, Sten. &#8220;The Two Faces of Linnaeus.&#8221; <em>Linnaeus: The Man and His Work<\/em>. Ed. Tore Frangsmyr. Berkeley: U of California P, 1983.<\/p>\n<p>Oerlemans, Onno Dag. &#8220;&#8216;The Meanest Thing that Feels&#8217;: Anthropomorphizing Animals in Romanticism,&#8221; <em>Mosaic<\/em> 27\/1, 1-32.<\/p>\n<p>Richardson, Robert. <em>Emerson: The Mind on Fire<\/em>. Berkeley : U of California P, 1995.<\/p>\n<p>Shelley, Percy Bysshe. <em>Poetical Works<\/em>. Ed. Thomas Hutchinson, corr. G. M Matthews. Oxford: Oxford UP, 1970.<\/p>\n<p>Stearn, William T. &#8220;Linnaean Classification, Nomenclature, and Method.&#8221; <em>The Compleat Naturalist: A Life of Linnaeus<\/em>. By Wilfrid Blunt. New York: Viking, 1971. Appendix.<\/p>\n<p>Wordsworth, Dorothy. <em>Journals of Dorothy Wordsworth<\/em>. Ed. Mary Moorman. Oxford: Oxford UP, 1971.<\/p>\n<p>Wordsworth, William. <em>The Oxford Authors<\/em>. Ed. Stephen Gill. Oxford: Oxford UP, 1984.<\/p>\n<p>&#8212;. <em>The Prelude: 1799, 1805, 1850<\/em>. Ed. Jonathan Wordsworth, M. H. Abrams, and Stephen Gill. New York: Norton, 1979.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>[first published in &#8220;Romanticism and Ecology,&#8221; Romantic Circles Praxis Series (November 2001) [O]ur intellectual sympathies [rest] with . . . the miseries, or with the joys, of our fellow creatures. &#8211; Erasmus Darwin, Zoonomia (1794) When Wordsworth notes his faith &hellip; <a href=\"https:\/\/blogs.dickinson.edu\/romnat\/2011\/06\/07\/the-loves-of-plants-and-animals-romantic-science-and-the-pleasures-of-nature\/\">Continue reading <span class=\"meta-nav\">&rarr;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":72,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[32524],"tags":[2745,2220,832,33130,2829],"class_list":["post-109","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-monograph","tag-animals","tag-plants","tag-poetry","tag-romanticism","tag-science"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/blogs.dickinson.edu\/romnat\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/109","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/blogs.dickinson.edu\/romnat\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/blogs.dickinson.edu\/romnat\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/blogs.dickinson.edu\/romnat\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/72"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/blogs.dickinson.edu\/romnat\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=109"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/blogs.dickinson.edu\/romnat\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/109\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/blogs.dickinson.edu\/romnat\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=109"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/blogs.dickinson.edu\/romnat\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=109"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/blogs.dickinson.edu\/romnat\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=109"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}