of those hideous monkeys. One lowers one’s-self sufficiently when one looks at
them merely as animals, but it is really wicked to give way to the inclination to
“It is a sure mark of a certain obliquity, to take pleasure in caricatures and
monstrous faces, and pigmies. I have to thank our kind Assistant that I have
“Just now he acknowledged to me, that it was the same with him. ‘Of nature,’
he said, ‘we ought to know nothing except what is actually alive immediately
around us. With the trees which blossom and put out leaves and bear fruit in our
own neighborhood, with every shrub which we pass by, with every blade of
grass on which we tread, we stand in a real relation. They are our genuine
compatriots. The birds which hop up and down among our branches, which sing
among our leaves, belong to us; they speak to us from our childhood upward,
and we learn to understand their language. But let a man ask himself whether or
not every strange creature, torn out of its natural environment, does not at first
sight make a sort of painful impression upon him, which is only deadened by
custom. It is a mark of a motley, dissipated sort of life, to be able to endure
monkeys, and parrots, and black people, about one’s self.”
“Many times when a certain longing curiosity about these strange objects has
come over me, I have envied the traveler who sees such marvels in living,
everyday connection with other marvels. But he, too, must have become another
man. Palm-trees will not allow a man to wander among them with impunity; and
doubtless his tone of thinking becomes very different in a land where elephants
and tigers are at home.”
“The only inquirers into nature whom we care to respect, are such as know
how to describe and to represent to us the strange wonderful things which they
have seen in their proper locality, each in its own especial element. How I should
enjoy once hearing Humboldt talk!”
“A cabinet of natural curiosities we may regard like an Egyptian burying-
place, where the various plant gods and animal gods stand about embalmed. It
may be well enough for a priest-caste to busy itself with such things in a twilight
of mystery. But in general instruction, they have no place or business; and we
must beware of them all the more, because what is nearer to us, and more
valuable, may be so easily thrust aside by them.”
“A teacher who can arouse a feeling for one single good action, for one single
good poem, accomplishes more than he who fills our memory with rows on rows
of natural objects, classified with name and form. For what is the result of all
these, except what we know as well without them, that the human figure
preëminently and peculiarly is made in the image and likeness of God?”
“Individuals may be left to occupy themselves with whatever amuses them,
with whatever gives them pleasure, whatever they think useful; but ‘the proper
study of mankind is man.’“