the lesson of the moth by archy
Oct. 7th, 2009 07:37 amI absolutely love this poem, by archy the cockroach, a.k.a. Don Marquis. The language is beautiful and it presents a lovely view of something that we usually dismiss, a moth being attracted to light.
  the lesson of the moth
  By Don Marquis, in "archy and mehitabel," 1927
i was talking to a moth
 the other evening
 he was trying to break into
 an electric light bulb
 and fry himself on the wires
why do you fellows
 pull this stunt i asked him
 because it is the conventional
 thing for moths or why
 if that had been an uncovered
 candle instead of an electric
 light bulb you would
 now be a small unsightly cinder
 have you no sense
plenty of it he answered
 but at times we get tired
 of using it
 we get bored with the routine
 and crave beauty
 and excitement
 fire is beautiful
 and we know that if we get
 too close it will kill us
 but what does that matter
 it is better to be happy
 for a moment
 and be burned up with beauty
 than to live a long time
 and be bored all the while
 so we wad all our life up
 into one little roll
 and then we shoot the roll
 that is what life is for
 it is better to be a part of beauty
 for one instant and then cease to
 exist than to exist forever
 and never be a part of beauty
 our attitude toward life
 is come easy go easy
 we are like human beings
 used to be before they became
 too civilized to enjoy themselves
and before i could argue him
 out of his philosophy
 he went and immolated himself
 on a patent cigar lighter
 i do not agree with him
 myself i would rather have
 half the happiness and twice
 the longevity
but at the same time i wish
 there was something i wanted
 as badly as he wanted to fry himself
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)



