Article 6R44E A butterfly: ‘elbowing each other with the joints on their legs, pushing and shoving to get at the liquid’

A butterfly: ‘elbowing each other with the joints on their legs, pushing and shoving to get at the liquid’

by
Helen Sullivan
from on (#6R44E)

We learn about butterflies when we are small because it is foreshadowing: you too will change. But they are an imperfect metaphor for what it feels like to live

The very funny naturalist and writer Redmond O'Hanlon was on a sandbank on the edge of a river in Borneo when hundreds of butterflies started to fly towards him and his travel companion and landed on their boots, trousers, and shirts, and sucked the sweat from our arms."

He watched them for a while - there were Whites, Yellows and Blues, Swallow-tails, black, banded, or spotted with blue-greens" - and then stood up and brushed them off gently.

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