Tampering with the natural order (Brands)

June 13th, 2007  |  Published in Ecology, History, Quotes

Tampering with the natural order was a hazardous business. Franklin told a story of how an excess of blackbirds in New England’s cornfields prompted the locals to pass laws encouraging the destruction of those pests. The blackbirds were duly diminished, but the New Englanders soon discovered their meadows engulfed in worms on which the blackbirds had fed. “Finding their loss in grass much greater than their saving in corn, they wished again for their black-birds.” Drawing the moral, Franklin cautioned, “Whenever we attempt to mend the scheme of Providence and to interfere with the government of the world, we had need be very circumspect lest we do more harm than good.”

–H.W. Brands, The First American: The Life and Times of Benjamin Franklin (2000), p. 220

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