The Environmental Debate, Third Edition

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92 The Environmental Debate


shall proceed within definitely fixed lines. If it be
a proper exercise of the police power to relegate
industrial establishments to localities separated
from residential sections, it is not easy to find a
sufficient reason for denying the power because
the effect of its exercise is to divert an industrial
flow from the course which it would follow, to
the injury of the residential public if left alone,
to another course where such injury will be obvi-
ated. It is not meant by this, however, to exclude
the possibility of cases where the general public
interest would so far outweigh the interest of the
municipality that the municipality would not be
allowed to stand in the way.

Source: United States Reports, Vol. 272 (Washington, D.C.:
Government Printing Office, 1927), pp. 367, 386-90.

and in some degree extended into the village
and, in the obvious course of things, will soon
absorb the entire area for industrial enterprises;
that the effect of the ordinance is to divert this
natural development elsewhere with the conse-
quent loss of increased values to the owners of
the lands within the village borders. But the vil-
lage, though physically a suburb of Cleveland,
is politically a separate municipality, with pow-
ers of its own and authority to govern itself as
it sees fit within the limits of the organic law
of its creation and the State and Federal Con-
stitutions. Its governing authorities, presum-
ably representing a majority of its inhabitants
and voicing their will, have determined, not that
industrial development shall cease at its bound-
aries, but that the course of such development


Document 76: Henry Beston on the Human Relationship with Nature (1928)


Henry Beston, like Henry Thoreau and John Muir before him, sought isolation and nearness to nature. Having
bought fifty acres and built a two-room cottage among the dunes of Nauset Beach on the eastern shore of Cape
Cod, facing the open Atlantic, he planned to spend two weeks there in the fall of 1926, but captivated by “the
beauty and mystery of this earth and outer sea,”^2 he stayed for a year and wrote The Outermost House. In the
book, which tells about his year on the beach, Beston proposed that humans need to develop a new relationship
with their environment. Rachel Carson [see Document 100] cited The Outermost House as the book that most
profoundly influenced her writing, and federal officials noted the book’s role in inspiring the creation of the
Cape Cod National Seashore.

We need another and a wiser and perhaps a
more mystical concept of animals. Remote from
universal nature, and living by complicated arti-
fice, man in civilization surveys the creatures
through the glass of his knowledge and sees
thereby a feather magnified and the whole image
in distortion. We patronize them for their incom-
pleteness, for their tragic fate of having taken
form so far below ourselves. And therein we err,
and greatly err. For the animal shall not be meas-
ured by man. In a world older and more complete
than ours they move finished and complete, gifted
with extensions of the senses we have lost or never
attained, living by voices we shall never hear. They


are not brethren, they are not underlings; they are
other nations, caught with ourselves in the net of
life and time, fellow prisoners of the splendour
and travail of the earth.

...
As well expect Nature to answer to your
human values as to come into your house and sit
in a chair. The economy of nature, its checks and
balances, its measurements of competing life—
all this is this is a great marvel and has an ethic
of its own.
Source: Henry Beston, The Outermost House (New York:
Henry Holt, 1992), p. 25, 217.

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