Who Is Thoreau's Brute Neighbors?

500 Words1 Page

Is the species of man superior to every other creature of God? As humans, some, but not all, tend to have a mindset of being the superior race and the most potent force driving the world due to our seeming superiority to every other creature of nature. Even though man may assume that they are higher than most, accepting the thought that the human race weaved the beginning of all life, Chief Seattle’s quote “man did not weave the web of life, he is merely a strand in it” reinforces the fact that our lives are actually just intertwined with nature, and in the grand scheme of things the creatures we discredit are actually the basis of our survival. Humans, even if some might disagree, are actually frequently dependent on nature to survive. For example, we depend on nature for food like animals because “if all the beast are gone, man would die.” Nature provides all the necessary components for our survival as we rely on it for food by eating the fruit and animals inside …show more content…

In Henry Thoreau’s story “Brute Neighbors” it has a part in it where Thoreau recalls an ant battle he witnessed outside of his home. He seems to remember this fight quite vividly, and his explanation of the ant battle has an interesting parallel to several historic battles. Each ant, just like humans in battle, displayed “patriotism and heroism” seeing how passionately they fought one another. Basically “every ant was a Buttrick” in that ferocious battle. Reading how Thoreau describes the ant battle one would conclude that humans and ants are actually very similar in nature as “the more you think of it, the less difference,” there is between the two species. This further proves the point that other creatures, big or small, can be the basis of our survival as the ants showed strikingly similar actions to men in battle. Showing the same amount of “ferocity” as any other human in battle would look and act

Open Document