1. Don’t bother me. I’ve just been born. 2. The butterfly’s loping flight carries it through the country of the leaves delicately, and well enough to get it where it wants to go, wherever that is, stopping here and there to fuzzle the damp throats of flowers and the black mud; up and down it swings, frenzied and aimless; and sometimes for long delicious moments it is perfectly lazy, riding motionless in the breeze on the soft stalk of some ordinary flower. 3. The god of dirt came up to me many times and said so many wise and delectable things, I lay on the grass listening to his dog voice, crow voice, frog voice; now, he said, and now, and never once mentioned forever, 4. Which has nevertheless always been, like a sharp iron hoof, at the center of my mind. 5. One or two things are all you need to travel over the blue pond, over the deep roughage of the trees and through the stiff flowers of lightening—some deep memory of pleasure, some cutting knowledge of pain. 6. But to lift the hoof? for that you need an idea. 7. For years and years I struggled just to love my life. And then the butterfly rose, weightless, in the wind. “Don’t love your life too much,” it said, And vanished into the world.