After the discussion carried on in
the foregoing chapters touching the general subject
of animal life and instinct, we are prepared, I think,
to ask with more confidence, What do animals know?
The animals unite such ignorance with
such apparent knowledge, such stupidity with such
cleverness, that in our estimate of them we are likely
to rate their wit either too high or too low.
With them, knowledge does not fade into ignorance,
as it does in man; the contrast is like that between
night and day, with no twilight between. So keen
one moment, so blind the next!
Think of the ignorance of the horse
after all his long association with man; of the trifling
things along the street at which he will take fright,
till he rushes off in a wild panic of fear, endangering
his own neck and the neck of his driver. One would
think that if he had a particle of sense he would
know that an old hat or a bit of paper was harmless.
But fear is deeply implanted in his nature; it has
saved the lives of his ancestors countless times, and
it is still one of his ruling passions.
I have known a cow to put her head
between two trees in the woods a kind of
natural stanchion and not have wit enough
to get it out again, though she could have done so
at once by lifting her head to a horizontal position.
But the best instance I know of the grotesque ignorance
of a cow is given by Hamerton in his “Chapters
on Animals.” The cow would not “give
down” her milk unless she had her calf before
her. But her calf had died, so the herdsman took
the skin of the calf, stuffed it with hay, and stood
it up before the inconsolable mother. Instantly
she proceeded to lick it and to yield her milk.
One day, in licking it, she ripped open the seams,
and out rolled the hay. This the mother at once
proceeded to eat, without any look of surprise or
alarm. She liked hay herself, her acquaintance
with it was of long standing, and what more natural
to her than that her calf should turn out to be made
of hay! Yet this very cow that did not know her
calf from a bale of hay would have defended her young
against the attack of a bear or a wolf in the most
skillful and heroic manner; and the horse that was
nearly frightened out of its skin by a white stone,
or by the flutter of a piece of newspaper by the roadside,
would find its way back home over a long stretch of
country, or find its way to water in the desert, with
a certainty you or I could not approach.
The hen-hawk that the farm-boy finds
so difficult to approach with his gun will yet alight
upon his steel trap fastened to the top of a pole
in the fields. The rabbit that can be so easily
caught in a snare or in a box-trap will yet conceal
its nest and young in the most ingenious manner.
Where instinct or inherited knowledge can come into
play, the animals are very wise, but new conditions,
new problems, bring out their ignorance.
A college girl told me an incident
of a red squirrel she had observed at her home in
Iowa that illustrates how shallow the wit of a squirrel
is when confronted by new conditions. This squirrel
carried nuts all day and stored them in the end of
a drainpipe that discharged the rain-water upon the
pavement below. The nuts obeyed the same law that
the rain-water did, and all rolled through the pipe
and fell upon the sidewalk. In the squirrel’s
experience, and in that of his forbears, all holes
upon the ground were stopped at the far end, or they
were like pockets, and if nuts were put in them they
stayed there. A hollow tube open at both ends,
that would not hold nuts this was too much
for the wit of the squirrel. But how wise he is
about the nuts themselves!
Among the lower animals the ignorance
of one is the ignorance of all, and the knowledge
of one is the knowledge of all, in a sense in which
the same is not true among men. Of course some
are more stupid than others of the same species, but
probably, on the one hand, there are no idiots among
them, and, on the other, none is preeminent in wit.
Animals take the first step in knowledge they
perceive things and discriminate between them; but
they do not take the second step combine
them, analyze them, and form concepts and judgments.
So that, whether animals know much
or little, I think we are safe in saying that what
they know in the human way, that is, from a process
of reasoning, is very slight.
The animals all have in varying degrees
perceptive intelligence. They know what they
see, hear, smell, feel, so far as it concerns them
to know it. They know their kind, their mates,
their enemies, their food, heat from cold, hard from
soft, and a thousand other things that it is important
that they should know, and they know these things just
as we know them, through their perceptive powers.
We may ascribe intelligence to the
animals in the same sense in which we ascribe it to
a child, as the perception of the differences or of
the likenesses and the relations of things that
is, perceptive intelligence, but not reasoning intelligence.
When the child begins to “notice things,”
to know its mother, to fear strangers, to be attracted
by certain objects, we say it begins to show intelligence.
Development in this direction goes on for a long time
before it can form any proper judgment about things
or take the step of reason.
If we were to subtract from the sum
of the intelligence of an animal that which it owes
to nature or inherited knowledge, the amount left,
representing its own power of thought, would be very
small. Darwin tells of a pike in an aquarium
separated by plate-glass from fish which were its
proper food, and that the pike, in trying to capture
the fish, would often dash with such violence against
the glass as to be completely stunned. This the
pike did for three months before it learned caution.
After the glass was removed, the pike would not attack
those particular fishes, but would devour others that
were introduced. It did not yet understand the
situation, but merely associated the punishment it
had received with a particular kind of fish.
During the mating season the males
of some of our birds may often be seen dashing themselves
against a window, and pecking and fluttering against
the pane for hours at a time, day after day. They
take their own images reflected in the glass to be
rival birds, and are bent upon demolishing them.
They never comprehend the mystery of the glass, because
glass is not found in nature, and neither they nor
their ancestors have had any experience with it.
Contrast these incidents with those
which Darwin relates of the American monkeys.
When the monkeys had cut themselves once with any
sharp tool, they would not touch it again, or else
would handle it with the greatest caution. They
evinced the simpler forms of reason, of which monkeys
are no doubt capable.
Animals are wise as Nature is wise;
they partake, each in its own measure, of that universal
intelligence, or mind-stuff, that is operative in
all things in the vegetable as well as in
the animal world. Does the body, or the life
that fills it, reason when it tries to get rid of,
or to neutralize the effects of, a foreign substance,
like a bullet, by encysting it? or when it thickens
the skin on the hand or on any other part of the body,
even forming special pads called callosities, as a
result of the increased wear or friction? This
may be called physiological intelligence.
But how blind this intelligence is
at times, or how wanting in judgment, may be seen
when it tries to develop a callosity upon the foot
as a result of the friction of the shoe, and overdoes
the matter and produces the corn. The corn is
a physiological blunder. Or see an unexpected
manifestation of this intelligence when we cut off
the central and leading shoot of a spruce or of a
pine tree, and straightway one of the lateral and
horizontal branches rises up, takes the place of the
lost leader, and carries the tree upward; or in the
roots of a tree working their way through the ground
much like molten metal, parting and uniting, taking
the form of whatever object they touch, shaping themselves
to the rock, flowing into its seams, the better to
get a grip upon the earth and thus maintain an upright
position.
In the animal world this foresight
becomes psychic intelligence, developing in man the
highest form of all, reasoned intelligence. When
an animal solves a new problem or meets a new condition
as effectually as the tree or the body does in the
cases I have just cited, we are wont to ascribe to
it powers of reason. Reason we may call it, but
it is reason not its own.
This universal or cosmic intelligence
makes up by far the greater part of what animals know.
The domestic animals, such as the dog, that have long
been under the tutelage of man, of course show more
independent power of thought than the uneducated beasts
of the fields and woods.
The plant is wise in all ways to reproduce
and perpetuate itself; see the many ingenious devices
for scattering seed. In the animal world this
intelligence is most keen and active in the same direction.
The wit of the animal comes out most clearly in looking
out for its food and safety. We are often ready
to ascribe reason to it in feats shown in these directions.
In man alone does this universal intelligence
or mind-stuff reach out beyond these primary needs
and become aware of itself. What the plant or
the animal does without thought or rule, man takes
thought about. He considers his ways, I noticed
that the scallops in the shallow water on the beach
had the power to anchor themselves to stones or to
some other object, by putting out a little tough but
elastic cable from near the hinge, and that they did
so when the water was rough; but I could not look
upon It as an act of conscious or individual intelligence
on the part of the bivalve. It was as much an
act of the general intelligence to which I refer as
was its hinge or its form. But when the sailor
anchors his ship, that is another matter. He
thinks about it, he reasons from cause to effect, he
sees the storm coming, he has a fund of experience,
and his act is a special individual act.
The muskrat builds its house instinctively,
and all muskrats build alike. Man builds his
house from reason and forethought. Savages build
as nearly alike as the animals, but civilized man shows
an endless variety. The higher the intelligence,
the greater the diversity.
The sitting bird that is so solicitous
to keep its eggs warm, or to feed and defend its young,
probably shows no more independent and individual
intelligence than the plant that strives so hard to
mature and scatter its seed. A plant will grow
toward the light; a tree will try to get from under
another tree that overshadows it; a willow will run
its roots toward the water: but these acts are
the results of external stimuli alone.
When I go to pass the winter in a
warmer climate, the act is the result of calculation
and of weighing pros and cons. I can go, of I
can refrain from going. Not so with the migrating
birds. Nature plans and thinks for them; it is
not an individual act on the part of each; it is a
race instinct: they must go; the life of the race
demands it. Or when the old goose covers up her
nest, or the rabbit covers her young with a blanket
of hair and grass of her own weaving, I do not look
upon these things as independent acts of intelligence:
it is the cunning of nature; it is a race instinct.
Animals, on the whole, know what is
necessary for them to know what the conditions
of life have taught their ancestors through countless
generations. It is very important, for instance,
that amphibians shall have some sense that shall guide
them to the water; and they have such a sense.
It is said that young turtles and crocodiles put down
anywhere will turn instantly toward the nearest water.
It is certain that the beasts of the field have such
a sense much more fully developed than has man.
It is of vital importance that birds should know how
to fly, how to build their nests, how to find their
proper food, and when and where to migrate, without
instruction or example, otherwise the race might become
extinct.
Richard Jefferies says that most birds’-nests
need a structure around them like a cage to keep the
young from falling out or from leaving the nest prematurely.
Now, if such a structure were needed, either the race
of birds would have failed, or the structure would
have been added. Since neither has happened,
we are safe in concluding it is not needed.
We are not warranted in attributing
to any wild, untrained animal a degree of intelligence
that its forbears could not have possessed. The
animals for the most part act upon inherited knowledge,
that is, knowledge that does not depend upon instruction
or experience. For instance, the red squirrels
near me seem to know that chestnut-burs will open
if cut from the tree and allowed to lie upon the ground.
At least, they act upon this theory. I do not
suppose this fact or knowledge lies in the squirrel’s
mind as it would in that of a man as a
deduction from facts of experience or of observation.
The squirrel cuts off the chestnuts because he is
hungry for them, and because his ancestors for long
generations have cut them off in the same way.
That the air or sun will cause the burs to open is
a bit of knowledge that I do not suppose he possesses
in the sense in which we possess it: he is in
a hurry for the nuts, and does not by any means always
wait for the burs to open; he frequently chips them
up and eats the pale nuts.
The same squirrel will bite into the
limbs of a maple tree in spring and suck the sap.
What does he know about maple trees and the spring
flow of sap? Nothing as a mental concept, as a
bit of concrete knowledge. He often finds the
sap flowing from a crack or other wound in the limbs
of a maple, and he sips it and likes it. Then
he sinks his teeth into the limb, as his forbears
undoubtedly did.
When I was a boy and saw, as I often
did on my way to school, where a squirrel had stopped
on his course through the woods and dug down through
two or three feet of snow, bringing up a beech-nut
or an acorn, I used to wonder how he knew the nut
was there. I am now convinced that he smelled
it.
Why should he not? It stands
the squirrel in hand to smell nuts; they are his life.
He knows a false nut from a good one without biting
into it. Try the experiment upon your tame chipmunk
or caged gray squirrel, and see if this is not so.
The false or dead nut is lighter, and most persons
think this fact guides the squirrel. But this,
it seems to me, implies an association of ideas beyond
the reach of instinct. A young squirrel will
reject a worthless nut as promptly as an old one will.
Again the sense of smell is the guide; the sound-meated
nut has an odor which the other has not. All
animals are keen and wise in relation to their food
and to their natural enemies. A red squirrel
will chip up green apples and pears for the seeds at
the core: can he know, on general principles,
that these fruits contain seeds? Does not some
clue to them reach his senses?
I have known gray squirrels to go
many hundred yards in winter across fields to a barn
that contained grain in the sheaf. They could
have had no other guide to the grain than the sense
of smell. Watch a chipmunk or any squirrel near
at hand: as a friend of mine observed, he seems
to be smelling with his whole body; his abdomen fairly
palpitates with the effort.
The coon knows when the corn is in
the milk, gaining that knowledge, no doubt, through
his nose. At times he seems to know enough, too,
to cut off his foot when caught in a trap, especially
if the foot becomes frozen; but if you tell me he
will treat his wound by smearing it with pitch or
anything else, or in any way except by licking it,
I shall discredit you. The practice of the art
of healing by the application of external or foreign
substances is a conception entirely beyond the capacity
of any of the lower animals. If such a practice
had been necessary for the continuance of the species,
it would probably have been used. The knowledge
it implies could not be inherited; it must needs come
by experience. When a fowl eats gravel or sand,
is it probable that the fowl knows what the practice
is for, or has any notion at all about the matter?
It has a craving for the gravel, that is all.
Nature is wise for it.
The ostrich is described by those
who know it intimately as the most stupid and witless
of birds, and yet before leaving its eggs exposed
to the hot African sun, the parent bird knows enough
to put a large pinch of sand on the top of each of
them, in order, it is said, to shade and protect the
germ, which always rises to the highest point of the
egg. This act certainly cannot be the result of
knowledge, as we use the term; the young ostrich does
it as well as the old. It is the inherited wisdom
of the race, or instinct.
A sitting bird or fowl turns its eggs
at regular intervals, which has the effect of keeping
the yolk from sticking to the shell. Is this act
the result of knowledge or of experience? It is
again the result of that untaught knowledge called
instinct. Some kinds of eggs hatch in two weeks,
some in three, others in four. The mother bird
has no knowledge of this period. It is not important
that she should have. If the eggs are addled
or sterile, she will often continue to sit beyond
the normal period. If the continuance of the species
depended upon her knowing the exact time required
to hatch her eggs, as it depends upon her having the
incubating fever, of course she would know exactly,
and would never sit beyond the required period.
But what shall we say of Mrs. Annie
Martin’s story, in her “Home Life on an
Ostrich Farm,” of the white-necked African crow
that, in order to feast upon the eggs of the ostrich,
carries a stone high in the air above them and breaks
them by letting it fall? This looks like reason,
a knowledge of the relation of cause and effect.
Mrs. Martin says the crows break tortoise-shells in
the same way, and have I not heard of our own crows
and gulls carrying clams and crabs into the air and
dropping them upon the rocks?
If Mrs. Martin’s statements
are literally true, if she has not the
failing, so common among women observers, of letting
her feeling and her fancies color her observations, then
her story shows how the pressure of hunger will develop
the wit of a crow.
But the story goes one step beyond
my credence. It virtually makes the crow a tool-using
animal, and Darwin knew of but two animals, the man-like
ape and the elephant, that used anything like a tool
or weapon to attain their ends. How could the
crow gain the knowledge or the experience which this
trick implies? What could induce it to make the
first experiment of breaking an egg with a falling
stone but an acquaintance with physical laws such
as man alone possesses? The first step in this
chain of causation it is easy to conceive of any animal
taking; namely, the direct application of its own powers
or weapons to the breaking of the shell. But
the second step, the making use of a foreign
substance or object in the way described, that
is what staggers one.
Our own crow has great cunning, but
it is only cunning. He is suspicious of everything
that looks like design, that suggests a trap, even
a harmless string stretched around a corn-field.
As a natural philosopher he makes a poor show, and
the egg or the shell that he cannot open with his
own beak he leaves behind. Yet even his alleged
method of dropping clams upon the rocks to break the
shells does not seem incredible. He might easily
drop a clam by accident, and then, finding the shell
broken, repeat the experiment. He is still only
taking the first step in the sequence of causations.
A recent English nature-writer, on
the whole, I think, a good observer and truthful reporter,
Mr. Richard Kearton, tells of an osprey that did this
incredible thing: to prevent its eggs from being
harmed by an enforced exposure to the sun, the bird
plunged into the lake, then rose, and shook its dripping
plumage over the nest. The writer apparently
reports this story at second-hand. It is incredible
to me, because it implies a knowledge that the hawk
could not possibly possess.
Such an emergency could hardly arise
once in a lifetime to it or its forbears. Hence
the act could not have been the result of inherited
habit, or instinct, and as an original act on the part
of the osprey it is not credible. The bird probably
plunged into the lake for a fish, and then by accident
shook itself above the eggs. In any case, the
amount of water that would fall upon the eggs under
such circumstances would be too slight to temper appreciably
the heat.
There is little doubt that among certain
of our common birds the male, during periods of excessive
heat, has been known to shade the female with his
outstretched wings, and the mother bird to shade her
young in the same way. But this is a different
matter. This emergency must have occurred for
ages, and it, again, called only for the first step
from cause to effect, and called for the use of no
intermediate agent. If the robin were to hold
a leaf or a branch above his mate at such times, that
would imply reflection.
It is said that elephants in India
will besmear themselves with mud as a protection against
insects, and that they will break branches from the
trees and use them to brush away the flies. If
this is true, it shows, I think, something beyond
instinct in the elephant; it shows reflection.
All birds are secretive about their
nests, and display great cunning in hiding them; but
whether they know the value of adaptive material,
such as moss, lichens, and dried grass, in helping
to conceal them, admits of doubt, because they so
often use the results of our own arts, as paper, rags,
strings, tinsel, in such a reckless way. In a
perfectly wild state they use natural material because
it is the handiest and there is really no other.
The phoebe uses the moss on or near the rocks where
she builds; the sparrows, the bobolinks, and the meadowlarks
use the dry grass of the bank or of the meadow bottom
where the nest is placed.
The English writer to whom I have
referred says that the wren builds the outside of
its nest of old hay straws when placing it in the side
of a rick, of green moss when it is situated in a mossy
bank, and of dead leaves when in a hedge-row or a
bramble-bush, in each case thus rendering the nest
very difficult of detection because it harmonizes
so perfectly with its surroundings, and the writer
wonders if this harmony is the result of accident
or of design. He is inclined to think that it
is unpremeditated, as I myself do. The bird uses
the material nearest to hand.
Another case, which this same writer
gives at second-hand, of a bird recognizing the value
of protective coloration, is not credible. A
friend of his told him that he had once visited a colony
of terns “on an island where the natural breeding
accommodation was so limited that many of them had
conveyed patches of pebbles on to the grass and laid
their eggs thereon.”
Here is the same difficulty we have
encountered before one more step of reasoning
than the bird is capable of. As a deduction from
observed facts, a bird, of course, knows nothing about
protective coloring; its wisdom in this respect is
the wisdom of Nature, and Nature in animal life never
acts with this kind of foresight. A bird may exercise
some choice about the background of its nest, but
it will not make both nest and background.
Nature learns by endless experiment.
Through a long and expensive process of natural selection
she seems to have brought the color of certain animals
and the color of their environment pretty close together,
the better to hide the animals from their enemies and
from their prey, as we are told; but the animals themselves
do not know this, though they may act as if they did.
Young terns and gulls instinctively squat upon the
beach, where their colors so harmonize with the sand
and pebbles that the birds are virtually invisible.
Young partridges do the same in the woods, where the
eye cannot tell the reddish tuft of down from the
dry leaves. How many gulls and terns and partridges
were sacrificed before Nature learned this trick!
I regard the lower animals as incapable
of taking the step from the fact to the principle.
They have perceptions, but not conceptions. They
may recognize a certain fact, but any deduction from
that fact to be applied to a different case, or to
meet new conditions, is beyond them. Wolves and
foxes soon learn to be afraid of poisoned meat:
just what gives them the hint it would be hard to
say, as the survivors could not know the poison’s
deadly effect from experience; their fear of it probably
comes from seeing their fellows suffer and die after
eating it, or maybe through that mysterious means of
communication between animals to which I have referred
in a previous article. The poison probably changes
the odor of the meat, and this strange smell would
naturally put them on their guard.
We do not expect rats to succeed in
putting a bell on the cat, but if they were capable
of conceiving such a thing, that would establish their
claim to be regarded as reasonable beings. I should
as soon expect a fox or a wolf to make use of a trap
to capture its prey as to make use of poison in any
way. Why does not the fox take a stick and spring
the trap he is so afraid of? Simply because the
act would involve a mental process beyond him.
He has not yet learned to use even the simplest implement
to attain his end. Then he would probably be
just as afraid of the trap after it was sprung as before.
He in some way associates it with his arch-enemy,
man.
Such stories, too, as a chained fox
or a coyote getting possession of corn or other grain
and baiting the chickens with it feigning
sleep till the chicken gets within reach, and then
seizing it are of the same class, incredible
because transcending the inherited knowledge of those
animals. I can believe that a fox might walk in
a shallow creek to elude the hound, because he may
inherit this kind of cunning, and in his own experience
he may have come to associate loss of scent with water.
Animals stalk their prey, or lie in wait for it, instinctively,
not from a process of calculation, as man does.
If a fox would bait poultry with corn, why should
he not, in his wild state, bait mice and squirrels
with nuts and seeds? Has a cat ever been known
to bait a rat with a piece of cheese?
Animals seem to have a certain association
of ideas; one thing suggests another to them, as with
us. This fact is made use of by animal-trainers.
I can easily believe the story Charles St. John tells
of the fox he saw waylaying some hares, and which,
to screen himself the more completely from his quarry,
scraped a small hollow in the ground and threw up
the sand about it. But if St. John had said that
the fox brought weeds or brush to make himself a blind,
as the hunter often does, I should have discredited
him, just as I discredit the observation of a man
quoted by Romanes, who says that jackals, ambushing
deer at the latter’s watering-place, deliberately
wait till the deer have filled themselves with water,
knowing that in that state they are more easily run
down and captured!
President Roosevelt, in “The
Wilderness Hunter,” a book, by the
way, of even deeper interest to the naturalist than
to the sportsman, says that the moose has
to the hunter the “very provoking habit of making
a half or three-quarters circle before lying down,
and then crouching with its head so turned that it
can surely perceive any pursuer who may follow its
trail.” This is the cunning of the moose
developed through long generations of its hunted and
wolf-pursued ancestors, a cunning that
does not differ from that of a man under the same
circumstances, though, of course, it is not the result
of the same process of reasoning.
I have known a chipping sparrow to
build her nest on a grape-vine just beneath a bunch
of small green grapes. Soon the bunch grew and
lengthened and filled the nest, crowding out the bird.
If the bird could have foreseen the danger, she would
have shown something like human reason.
Birds that nest along streams, such
as the water-thrush and the water-ouzel, I suppose
are rarely ever brought to grief by high water.
They have learned through many generations to keep
at a safe distance. I have never known a woodpecker
to drill its nesting-cavity in a branch or limb that
was ready to fall. Not that woodpeckers look the
branch or tree over with a view to its stability, but
that they will cut into a tree only of a certain hardness;
it is a family instinct. Birds sometimes make
the mistake of building their nests on slender branches
that a summer tempest will turn over, thus causing
the eggs or the young to spill upon the ground.
Even instinct cannot always get ahead of the weather.
It is almost impossible for us not
to interpret the lives of the lower animals in the
terms of our own experience and our own psychology.
I entirely agree with Lloyd Morgan that we err when
we do so, when we attribute to them what we call sentiments
or any of the emotions that spring from our moral
and aesthetic natures, the sentiments of
justice, truth, beauty, altruism, goodness, duty, and
the like, because these sentiments are
the products of concepts and ideas to which the brute
natures are strangers. But all the emotions of
our animal nature fear, anger, curiosity,
local attachment, jealousy, and rivalry are
undoubtedly the same in the lower orders.
Though almost anything may be affirmed
of dogs, for they are nearly half human, yet I doubt
if even dogs experience the feeling of shame or guilt
or revenge that we so often ascribe to them. These
feelings are all complex and have a deep root.
When I was a youth, my father had a big churn-dog
that appeared one morning with a small bullet-hole
in his hip. Day after day the old dog treated
his wound with his tongue, after the manner of dogs,
until it healed, and the incident was nearly forgotten.
One day a man was going by on horseback, when the
old dog rushed out, sprang at the man, and came near
pulling him from the horse. It turned out that
this was the person who had shot the dog, and the
dog recognized him.
This looks like revenge, and it would
have been such in you or me, but in the dog it was
probably simple anger at the sight of the man who
had hurt him. The incident shows memory and the
association of impressions, but the complex feeling
of vengeance, as we know it, is another matter.
If animals do not share our higher
intellectual nature, we have no warrant for attributing
to them anything like our higher and more complex
emotional nature. Musical strains seem to give
them pain rather than pleasure, and it is quite evident
that perfumes have no attraction for them.
The stories, which seem to be well
authenticated, of sheep-killing dogs that have slipped
their collars in the night and indulged their passion
for live mutton, and then returned and thrust their
necks into their collars before their absence was
discovered, do not, to my mind, prove that the dogs
were trying to deceive their masters and conceal their
guilt, but rather show how obedient to the chain and
collar the dogs had become. They had long been
subject to such control and discipline, and they returned
to them again from the mere force of habit.
I do not believe even the dog to be
capable of a sense of guilt. Such a sense implies
a sense of duty, and this is a complex ethical sense
that the animals do not experience. What the dog
fears, and what makes him put on his look of guilt
and shame, is his master’s anger. A harsh
word or a severe look will make him assume the air
of a culprit whether he is one or not, and, on the
other hand, a kind word and a reassuring smile will
transform him into a happy beast, no matter if the
blood of his victim is fresh upon him.
A dog is to be broken of a bad habit,
if at all, not by an appeal to his conscience or to
his sense of duty, for he has neither, but by an appeal
to his susceptibility to pain.
Both Pliny and Plutarch tell the story
of an elephant which, having been beaten by its trainer
for its poor dancing, was afterward found all by itself
practicing its steps by the light of the moon.
This is just as credible as many of the animal stories
one hears nowadays.
Many of the actions of the lower animals
are as automatic as those of the tin rooster that
serves as a weather-vane. See how intelligently
the rooster acts, always pointing the direction of
the wind without a moment’s hesitation.
Or behold the vessel anchored in the harbor, how intelligently
it adjusts itself to the winds and the tides!
I have seen a log, caught in an eddy in a flooded
stream, apparently make such struggles to escape that
the thing became almost uncanny in its semblance to
life. Man himself often obeys just such unseen
currents of race or history when he thinks he is acting
upon his own initiative.
When I was in Alaska, I saw precipices
down which hundreds of horses had dashed themselves
in their mad and desperate efforts to escape from
the toil and suffering they underwent on the White
Pass trail. Shall we say these horses deliberately
committed suicide? Suicide it certainly was in
effect, but of course not in intention. What does
or can a horse know about death, or about self-destruction?
These animals were maddened by their hardships, and
blindly plunged down the rocks.
The tendency to humanize the animals
is more and more marked in all recent nature books
that aim at popularity. A recent British book
on animal life has a chapter entitled “Animal
Materia Medica.” The writer,
to make out his case, is forced to treat as medicine
the salt which the herbivorous animals eat, and the
sand and gravel which grain and nut-eating birds take
into their gizzards to act as millstones to grind
their grist. He might as well treat their food
as medicine and be done with it. So far as I
know, animals have no remedies whatever for their
ailments. Even savages have, for the most part,
only “fake” medicines.
A Frenchman has published a book,
which has been translated into English, on the “Industries
of Animals.” Some of these Frenchmen could
give points even to our “Modern School of Nature
Study.” It may be remembered that Michelet
said the bird floated, and that it could puff itself
up so that it was lighter than the air! Not a
little contemporary natural science can beat the bird
in this respect.
The serious student of nature can
have no interest in belittling or in exaggerating
the intelligence of animals. What he wants is
the truth about them, and this he will not get from
our natural history romancers, nor from the casual,
untrained observers, who are sure to interpret the
lives of the wood-folk in terms of their own motives
and experiences, nor from Indians, trappers, or backwoodsmen,
who give such free rein to their fancies and superstitions.
Such a book as Romanes’s “Animal
Intelligence” is not always a safe guide.
It is like a lawyer’s plea to the jury for his
client. Romanes was so intent upon making out
his case that he allowed himself to be imposed upon
by the tales of irresponsible observers. Many
of his stories of the intelligence of birds and beasts
are antecedently improbable. He evidently credits
the story of the Bishop of Carlisle, who thinks he
saw a jackdaw being tried by a jury of rooks for some
misdemeanor. Jack made a speech and the jury cawed
back at him, and after a time appeared to acquit Jack!
What a child’s fancy to be put in a serious
work on “Animal Intelligence”! The
dead birds we now and then find hanging from the nest,
or from the limb of a tree, with a string wound around
their necks are no doubt criminals upon whom their
fellows have inflicted capital punishment!
Most of the observations upon which
Romanes bases his conclusions are like the incident
which he quoted from Jesse, who tells of some swallows
that in the spirit of revenge tore down a nest from
which they had been ejected by the sparrows, in order
to destroy the young of their enemies a
feat impossible for swallows to do. Jesse does
not say he saw the swallows do it, but he “saw
the young sparrows dead upon the ground amid the ruins
of the nest,” and of course the nest could get
down in no other way!
Not to Romanes or Jesse or Michelet
must we go for the truth about animals, but to the
patient, honest Darwin, to such calm, keen, and philosophical
investigators as Lloyd Morgan, and to the books of
such sportsmen as Charles St. John, or to our own
candid, trained, and many-sided Theodore Roosevelt, men
capable of disinterested observation with no theories
about animals to uphold.