All Commentary
Saturday, December 1, 1956

The Calf-Path


Russian science is flourishing, reported a group of American physicists who visited the U.S.S.R. in the spring of 1956: In well-equipped and well-staffed laboratories work of such fundamental importance is being done, according to the report, that Moscow might well become the headquarters of the world so far as physics is concerned.

Against such reports of scientific progress in Russia may be plotted concurrent complaints of a shortage of scientists and engineers in the United states. What all this signifies to many a layman is that the United States is being outstripped in an armament race against the Soviet Union.

For untold centuries, nations of men have participated in such follow-the-leader games of destruction. This ancient yet current enigma calls to mind the poetic speculation about “The Calf-Path” by Sam Walter Foss.

 

One day through the primeval wood
      A calf walked home as good calves should;
      But made a trail all bent askew,
      A crooked trail as all calves do.
      Since then three hundred years have fled,
      And I infer the calf is dead.
 

But still he left behind his trail,
      And thereby hangs my moral tale.
      The trail was taken up next day
      By a lone dog that passed that way;
      And then a wise bell-wether sheep
      Pursued the trail o’er vale and steep,
      And drew the flock behind him, too,
      As good bell-wethers always do.
      And from that day, o’er hill and glade,
      Through those old woods a path was made.

 

And many men wound in and out,
      And dodged and turned and bent about,
      And uttered words of righteous wrath
      Because ‘twas such a crooked path;
      But still they followed—do not laugh—
      The first migrations of that calf,
      And through this winding wood-way stalked
      Because he wobbled when he walked.

 

This forest path became a lane
      That bent and turned and turned again;
      This crooked lane became a road,
      Where many a poor horse with his load
      Toiled on beneath the burning sun,
      And traveled some three miles in one.
      And thus a century and a half
      They trod the footsteps of that calf.

 

The years passed on in swiftness fleet,
      The road became a village street;
      And this, before men were aware,
      A city’s crowded thoroughfare.
      And soon the central street was this
      Of a renowned metropolis;
      And men two centuries and a half
      Trod in the footsteps of that calf.

 

Each day a hundred thousand rout
      Followed this zigzag calf about
      And o’er his crooked journey went
      The traffic of a continent.
      A hundred thousand men were led
      By one calf near three centuries dead.
      They followed still his crooked way,
      And lost one hundred years a day;
      For thus such reverence is lent
      To well-established precedent.

     

A moral lesson this might teach
      Were I ordained and called to preach;
      For men are prone to go it blind
      Along the calf-path of the mind,
      And work away from sun to sun
      To do what other men have done.
      They follow in the beaten track,
      And out and in, and forth and back,
      And still their devious course pursue,
      To keep the path that others do.
      They keep the path a sacred groove,
      Along which all their lives they move;
      But how the wise old wood-gods laugh,
      Who saw the first primeval calf.
      Ah, many things this tale might teach—
      But I am not ordained to preach.

Mr. Foes (1858-1911) was a New England editor, librarian, author, and poet. “The Calf-Path” appeared in his collection, Whiffs from Wild Meadows, published in 1895.


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