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“We don’t give a damn to the insects on our Earth, but if we could find even a single insect on Mars, the whole world would cherish it like crazy!”
Mehmet Murat ildan“Some big insect flew in and began walking on the table. I don’t know what insect it was, but it was brown, shining, and rich in structures. In the city the big universal chain of insects gets thin, but where there’s a leaf or two it’ll be represented.”
Saul Bellow, The Adventures of Augie March“The mortal enemies of man are not his fellows of another continent or race; they are the aspects of the physical world which limit or challenge his control, the disease germs that attack him and his domesticated plants and animals, and the insects that carry many of these germs as well as working notable direct injury. This is not the age of man, however great his superiority in size and intelligence; it is literally the age of insects.”
Warder C. Allee, The Social Life Of Animals“I love insects. They are amazing.”
Andrea Arnold“Yes, this man had the persistence of an insect.”
Patrick Modiano, So You Don't Get Lost in the Neighborhood“To a good approximation, all species are insects.”
Robert May“And all the insects ceased in honor of the moon.”
Jack Kerouac, Lonesome Traveler“In summer the empire of insects spreads.”
Adam Zagajewski“The fundamental principle of morality which we seek as a necessity for thought is not, however, a matter only of arranging and deepening current views of good and evil, but also of expanding and extending these. A man is really ethical only when he obeys the constraint laid on him to help all life which he is able to succour, and when he goes out of his way to avoid injuring anything living. He does not ask how far this or that life deserves sympathy as valuable in itself, nor how far it is capable of feeling. To him life as such is sacred. He shatters no ice crystal that sparkles in the sun, tears no leaf from its tree, breaks off no flower, and is careful not to crush any insect as he walks. If he works by lamplight on a summer evening, he prefers to keep the window shut and to breathe stifling air, rather than to see insect after insect fall on his table with singed and sinking wings.”
Albert Schweitzer, The Animal World of Albert Schweitzer“There's this shop in New York I go to it has bones and fossils and insects that are like works of art. I have a few on my wall.”
Eva Green