George Orwell: Some Thoughts on the Common Toad
Novelist and essayist Eric Arthur Blair, pen name George Orwell, is 
perhaps best known for his prescient depictions of creeping 
totalitarianism and social injustice as captured in 1984 and Down and 
Out in Paris and London. Blair is also recognized as an avowed 
appreciator of the living world who intuitively understood nature's role
 in transforming the human spirit in the aftermath of war: "I think that
 by retaining one's childhood love of such things as trees, fishes, 
butterflies and to return to my first instance toads, one makes a 
peaceful and decent future a little more probable..." In his 
thought-provoking essay, Isaac Yuen explores the remarkable capacity for
 wonder and compassion that exemplifies Blair's writing in "Some 
Thoughts on the Common Toad," an ode to one of Earth's most humble 
inhabitants.
https://ekostories.com/2013/09/12/george-orwell-loves-toads/
https://ekostories.com/2013/09/12/george-orwell-loves-toads/