11 November 2024

"Flying Crooked"

"The butterfly, the cabbage white,
(His honest idiocy of flight)
Will never now, it is too late,
Master the art of flying straight,
Yet has — who knows so well as I? —
A just sense of how not to fly:
He lurches here and here by guess
And God and hope and hopelessness.
Even the aerobatic swift
Has not his flying-crooked gift."
"Flying Crooked," by Robert Graves, is often presented as being a mockery of ineptitude.  The cabbage white does have an erratic zig-zagging flight, but I think modern opinion favors this pattern as enhancing evasion of avian predators.  Photo by me.

3 comments:

  1. Nice photo! How many seconds did you have to take that before that one took off?

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  2. I dare say that if our military planes and helicopters could so navigate, far fewer, if any, would ever get shot down.

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  3. Given their impact on anything in the Brassica family, I used to see these "moths" mainly as pests in the vegetable garden. But, as the biosphere collapses and I see them ever more rarely (here in northern California), I'm more inclined to think of them as ambassadors, carrying a vestigial message of hope.

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