Nature allows every child to play tricks with her; every
fool to have judgment upon her; thousands to walk stupidly over her and
see nothing; and takes her pleasure and finds her account in them all.
-- Goethe
The wealth of the soul exists in
images. I speak in images. With nothing else can I express the words
from the depths.
-- attributed to Jung
This post relates to
Rereading: The Book of Imaginary Beings online at
The Guardian. Short descriptions of a few imaginary creatures which Borges never knew can be found
here.
In an essay published in 1971 the physician Lewis Thomas
argued that a bestiary for our time would have to be a microbestiary,
featuring the likes of
Myxotricha paradoxa,
Blepharisma and
plant-animal combinations that mostly exist in the sea. Their meaning, he
suggested, would be "basically the same as the meaning of a medieval
bestiary. There is a tendency for living things to join up, establish
linkages,
live inside each other, return to earlier arrangements, get
along, wherever possible."
The Book of Barely Imagined Beings was partly inspired by Thomas's claim. I looked for real animals, stranger than imaginary ones, that could help me better understand the nature of being and beings.
See also
Nature Beyond Our Wildest Imaginings.
images: the Ornate Ghost Pipefish,
Solenostomus paradoxus, and the Rosey-lipped batfish,
Ogcocephalus darwini.