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Fatherhood Quote by John James Audubon

"A true conservationist is a man who knows that the world is not given by his fathers, but borrowed from his children"

About this Quote

Audubon’s line flips the usual inheritance story into a moral IOU, and that inversion is the whole engine. In the 19th century, “progress” meant clearing forests, draining wetlands, laying track, and turning living systems into commodities. By saying the world is “borrowed from his children,” Audubon smuggles a radical idea into a sentence that sounds folksy: ownership is the wrong frame. The land isn’t a prize passed down through patriarchs; it’s a temporary custody arrangement, with the powerless future positioned as the real stakeholder.

The phrasing matters. “True conservationist” draws a bright line between aesthetic nature-lovers and people willing to accept limits. It’s also a quiet rebuke to the era’s gentleman naturalist who could collect, shoot, and catalog endlessly while still claiming reverence. Audubon himself embodies that tension: a pioneering observer of American birds, yes, but also a prolific killer of specimens. The quote reads partly as self-justification, partly as a plea for restraint from someone who understood how easily curiosity turns extractive.

“Fathers” evokes tradition, entitlement, and property law; “children” evokes obligation, vulnerability, and time. The sentence makes conservation less about sentiment and more about debt. It’s persuasive because it recruits a basic social instinct - responsibility to descendants - while side-stepping partisan language. You don’t have to love wilderness to understand borrowing: if you return it damaged, you’ve committed a theft that can’t be prosecuted, only lived with.

Quote Details

TopicNature
Source
Later attribution: Conservation (Anne E. Maczulak, 2009) modern compilationISBN: 9781438126326 · ID: d0_p11zuF3kC
Text match: 96.14%   Provider: Google Books
Evidence:
... John James Audubon remarked about conservation, “A true conservationist is a man who knows that the world is not given by his fathers but borrowed from his children.” Yet industry and government leaders have often held a view that ...
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Audubon, John James. (2026, March 15). A true conservationist is a man who knows that the world is not given by his fathers, but borrowed from his children. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/a-true-conservationist-is-a-man-who-knows-that-125167/

Chicago Style
Audubon, John James. "A true conservationist is a man who knows that the world is not given by his fathers, but borrowed from his children." FixQuotes. March 15, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/a-true-conservationist-is-a-man-who-knows-that-125167/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"A true conservationist is a man who knows that the world is not given by his fathers, but borrowed from his children." FixQuotes, 15 Mar. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/a-true-conservationist-is-a-man-who-knows-that-125167/. Accessed 4 Apr. 2026.

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About the Author

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John James Audubon (April 26, 1785 - January 27, 1851) was a Scientist from USA.

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