The New Yorkerのインスタグラム(newyorkermag) - 8月11日 00時01分
In “Butterflies,” an essay published in 1948, Vladimir Nabokov traces his lifelong interest in lepidopterology, the study of butterflies and moths. “I discovered in nature,” he writes, “the nonutilitarian delights that I sought in art. Both were a form of magic, both were a game of intricate enchantment and deception.” At the link in our bio, Nabokov considers the frailty of both the natural world and of memory. #NewYorkerArchive Photograph by Carl Mydans / The LIFE Premium Collection / Getty.
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richard_duncanx
I'm no expert in trading but have made $7,000 with $1,000 investment I had good guidance with @educator_john_steffen and his team it is beyond eye opening, with these teachings and trading skill, l've had nothing but continued success.
claudestren
The “non utilitarian” is what interests me. We were talking about doctors and their useful work. Art exists elsewhere!
Thank you sweetie!♥️
kristywhite74
@thebloggess Based in your videos yesterday, may be an interesting read.😀
acgacademic
The imagery in this article is nothing short of magic. @cayleigh.air
stuntmisanthrope
Utilitarianism rules. 🎟💡🦋#johnlocke #baruchspinoza #schmetterling
ktbbrgr
If you ever need to change fields @_rachelcourtney (@jessiecourtney)
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