In studying Nature, the important
thing is not so much what we see as how we interpret
what we see. Do we get at the true meaning of
the facts? Do we draw the right inference?
The fossils in the rocks were long observed before
men drew the right inference from them. So with
a hundred other things in nature and life.
During May and a part of June of 1903,
a drouth of unusual severity prevailed throughout
the land. The pools and marshes nearly all dried
up. Late in June the rains came again and filled
them up. Then an unusual thing happened:
suddenly, for two or three days and nights, the marshes
about me were again vocal with the many voices of the
hyla, the “peepers” of early spring.
That is the fact. Now, what is the interpretation?
With me the peepers become silent in early May, and,
I suppose, leave the marshes for their life in the
woods. Did the drouth destroy all their eggs
and young, and did they know this and so come back
to try again? How else shall one explain their
second appearance in the marshes? But how did
they know of the destruction of their young, and how
can we account for their concerted action? These
are difficulties not easily overcome. A more rational
explanation to me is this, namely, that the extreme
dryness of the woods nearly two months
without rain drove the little frogs to seek
for moisture in their spring haunts, where in places
a little water would be pretty certain to be found.
Here they were holding out, probably hibernating again,
as such creatures do in the tropics during the dry
season, when the rains came, and here again they sent
up their spring chorus of voices, and, for aught I
know, once more deposited their eggs. This to
me is much more like the ways of Nature with her creatures
than is the theory of the frogs’ voluntary return
to the swamps and pools to start the season over again.
The birds at least show little or
no wit when a new problem is presented to them.
They have no power of initiative. Instinct runs
in a groove, and cannot take a step outside of it.
One May day we started a meadowlark from her nest.
There were three just hatched young in the nest, and
one egg lying on the ground about two inches from the
nest. I suspected that this egg was infertile
and that the bird had had the sense to throw it out,
but on examination it was found to contain a nearly
grown bird. The inference was, then, that the
egg had been accidentally carried out of the nest
some time when the sitting bird had taken a sudden
flight, and that she did not have the sense to roll
or carry it back to its place.
There is another view of the case
which no doubt the sentimental “School of Nature
Study” would eagerly adopt: A very severe
drouth reigned throughout the land; food was probably
scarce, and was becoming scarcer; the bird foresaw
her inability to care for four young ones, and so
reduced the possible number by ejecting one of the
eggs from the nest. This sounds pretty and plausible,
and so credits the bird with the wisdom that the public
is so fond of believing it possesses. Something
like this wisdom often occurs among the hive bees
in seasons of scarcity; they will destroy the unhatched
queens. But birds have no such foresight, and
make no such calculations. In cold, backward
seasons, I think, birds lay fewer eggs than when the
season is early and warm, but that is not a matter
of calculation on their part; it is the result of
outward conditions.
A great many observers and nature
students at the present time are possessed of the
notion that the birds and beasts instruct their young,
train them and tutor them, much after the human manner.
In the familiar sight of a pair of crows foraging
with their young about a field in summer, one of our
nature writers sees the old birds giving their young
a lesson in flying. She says that the most important
thing that the elders had to do was to teach the youngsters
how to fly. This they did by circling about the
pasture, giving a peculiar call while they were followed
by their flock all but one. This was
a bobtailed crow, and he did not obey the word of
command. His mother took note of his disobedience
and proceeded to discipline him. He stood upon
a big stone, and she came down upon him and knocked
him off his perch. “He squawked and fluttered
his wings to keep from falling, but the blow came
so suddenly that he had not time to save himself,
and he fell flat on the ground. In a minute he
clambered back upon his stone, and I watched him closely.
The next time the call came to fly he did not linger,
but went with the rest, and so long as I could watch
him he never disobeyed again.” I should
interpret this fact of the old and young crows flying
about a field in summer quite differently. The
young are fully fledged, and are already strong flyers,
when this occurs. They do not leave the nest until
they can fly well and need no tutoring. What
the writer really saw was what any one may see on
the farm in June and July: she saw the parent
crows foraging with their young in a field The old
birds flew about, followed by their brood, clamorous
for the food which their parents found. The bobtailed
bird, which had probably met with some accident, did
not follow, and the mother returned to feed it; the
young crow lifted its wings and flapped them, and
in its eagerness probably fell off its perch; then
when its parent flew away, it followed.
I think it highly probable that the
sense or faculty by which animals find their way home
over long stretches of country, and which keeps them
from ever being lost as man so often is, is a faculty
entirely unlike anything man now possesses. The
same may be said of the faculty that guides the birds
back a thousand miles or more to their old breeding-haunts.
In caged or housed animals I fancy this faculty soon
becomes blunted. President Roosevelt tells in
his “Ranch Life” of a horse he owned that
ran away two hundred miles across the plains, swimming
rivers on the way to its old home. It is very
certain, I think, that this homing feat is not accomplished
by the aid of either sight or scent, for usually the
returning animal seems to follow a comparatively straight
line. It is, or seems to be, a consciousness of
direction that is as unerring as the magnetic needle.
Reason, calculation, and judgment err, but these primary
instincts of the animal seem almost infallible.
In Bronx Park in New York a grebe
and a loon lived together in an inclosure in which
was a large pool of water. The two birds became
much attached to each other and were never long separated.
One winter day on which the pool was frozen over,
except a small opening in one end of it, the grebe
dived under the ice and made its way to the far end
of the pool, where it remained swimming about aimlessly
for some moments. Presently the loon missed its
companion, and with an apparent look of concern dived
under the ice and joined it at the closed end of the
pool. The grebe seemed to be in distress for want
of air. Then the loon settled upon the bottom,
and with lifted beak sprang up with much force against
the ice, piercing it with its dagger-like bill, but
not breaking it. Down to the bottom it went again,
and again hurled itself up against the ice, this time
shattering it and rising to the surface, where the
grebe was quick to follow. Now it looked as if
the loon had gone under the ice to rescue its friend
from a dangerous situation, for had not the grebe
soon found the air, it must have perished, and persons
who witnessed the incident interpreted it in this way.
It is in such cases that we are so apt to read our
human motives and emotions into the acts of the lower
animals. I do not suppose the loon realized the
danger of its companion, nor went under the ice to
rescue it. It followed the grebe because it wanted
to be with it, or to share in any food that might
be detaining it there, and then, finding no air-hole,
it proceeded to make one, as it and its ancestors must
often have done before. All our northern divers
must be more or less acquainted with ice, and must
know how to break it. The grebe itself could
doubtless have broken the ice had it desired to.
The birds and the beasts often show much intelligence,
or what looks like intelligence, but, as Hamerton
says, “the moment we think of them as human,
we are lost.”
A farmer had a yearling that sucked
the cows. To prevent this, he put on the yearling
a muzzle set full of sharpened nails. These of
course pricked the cows, and they would not stand
to be drained of their milk. The next day the
farmer saw the yearling rubbing the nails against
a rock in order, as he thought, to dull them so they
would not prick the cows! How much easier to
believe that the beast was simply trying to get rid
of the awkward incumbrance upon its nose. What
can a calf or a cow know about sharpened nails, and
the use of a rock to dull them? This is a kind
of outside knowledge outside of their needs
and experiences that they could not possess.
An Arizona friend of mine lately told
me this interesting incident about the gophers that
infested his cabin when he was a miner. The gophers
ate up his bread. He could not hide it from them
or put it beyond their reach. Finally, he bethought
him to stick his loaf on the end of a long iron poker
that he had, and then stand up the poker in the middle
of his floor. Still, when he came back to his
cabin, he would find his loaf eaten full of holes.
One day, having nothing to do, he concluded to watch
and see how the gophers reached the bread, and this
was what he saw: The animals climbed up the side
of his log cabin, ran along one of the logs to a point
opposite the bread, and then sprang out sidewise toward
the loaf, which each one struck, but upon which only
one seemed able to effect a lodgment. Then this
one would cling to the loaf and act as a stop to his
fellows when they tried a second time, his body affording
them the barrier they required. My friend felt
sure that this leader deliberately and consciously
aided the others in securing a footing on the loaf.
But I read the incident differently. This successful
jumper aided his fellows without designing it.
The exigencies of the situation compelled him to the
course he pursued. Having effected a lodgment
upon the impaled loaf, he would of course cling to
it when the others jumped so as not to be dislodged,
thereby, willy nilly, helping them to secure a foothold.
The cooperation was inevitable, and not the result
of design.
The power to see straight is the rarest
of gifts; to see no more and no less than is actually
before you; to be able to detach yourself and see
the thing as it actually is, uncolored or unmodified
by your own sentiments or prepossessions. In
short, to see with your reason as well as with your
perceptions, that is to be an observer and to read
the book of nature aright.