fabre, poet of science-第23节
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The great historiographer of instinct has thrown a wonderful light; by his
beautiful experiments relating to the nidification of the mason…bee; upon
the indissoluble succession of its different phases; the lineal
concatenation; the inevitable and necessary order which presides over each
of these nervous discharges of which the total series constitutes; properly
speaking; a mode of action。
The mason…bee continues to build upon the ready…completed nest presented to
her。 She obstinately insists upon provisioning a cell already duly filled
with the quantity of honey required by the larva; because; in this case as
in the other; the impulse which incites her to build or to provision the
nest has not yet been exhausted。
On the other hand; if we empty the little cup of its contents when she has
filled it she will not recommence her labours。 〃The process of provisioning
being complete; the secret impulse which urged her to collect her honey is
no longer active。 The insect therefore ceases to store her honey; and; in
spite of this accident; lays her egg in the empty cell; thus leaving the
future nursling without nourishment。〃 (8/6。)
In the case of the Pelopaeus; Fabre calls our attention to one of the most
instructive physiological spectacles that can be imagined。
While the mason…bee does not notice that her cell has been emptied; the
Pelopaeus cannot perceive that the tricks of the experimenter have resulted
in the disappearance of her progeny; and she 〃continues to store away
spiders for a germ that no longer exists; she perseveres untiringly in her
useless hunting; as though the future of her larva depended on it; she
amasses provisions which will feed no one; more; she pushes aberration to
the extent of plastering even the place where her nest was if we remove it;
giving the last strokes of the trowel to an imaginary building; and putting
her seals upon empty nothing。〃 (8/7。)
》From these facts; and others; no less celebrated; which show 〃the inability
of insects to escape from the routine of their customs and their habitual
labours;〃 Fabre derives so many proofs of their lack of intelligence。
The Epe?ra fasciata is incapable of replacing a single radial thread in the
geometrical structure of its web; when broken; it recommences the entire
web every evening; and weaves it at one stretch with the most beautiful
mastery; as though merely amusing itself。
The caterpillar of the Greater Peacock moth teaches us the same lesson;
when occupied in weaving its cocoon it does not know how to repair an
artificial rent; and 〃in spite of the certainty of its death; or rather
that of the future butterfly; it quietly continues to spin; without
troubling to cover the rent; devoting itself to a superfluous task; and
ignoring the treacherous breach; which leaves the cocoon and its inhabitant
at the mercy of the first thief that finds it。〃 (8/8。)
Thus 〃because one action has just been performed; another must inevitably
be performed to complete the first; what is done is done; and is never
repeated。 Like the watercourse; which cannot climb the hills and return to
its source; the insect does not retrace its steps or repeat its actions;
which follow one another invariably; and are inevitably connected in a
necessary order; like a series of echoes; one of which awakens
another。。。The insect knows nothing of its marvellous talents; just as the
stomach knows nothing of its cunning chemistry。 It builds like a
bricklayer; weaves; hunts; stabs; and paralyses; as it secretes the venom
of its weapons; the silk of its cocoon; the wax of its comb; or the threads
of its web; always without the slightest knowledge of the means and the
end。〃 (8/9。)
Thus instinct is one thing and intelligence is another; and for Fabre there
is no transition which can transform the one into the other。
But how profound and abundant; how infinite is the source from which this
manifold activity derives; distributed as it is throughout the entire
animal kingdom; and which in ourselves commands the profoundest part of our
nature; unconscious; or even in opposition to our wonderful intelligence;
which it often silences or altogether overwhelms。
Although the insect 〃has no need of lessons from its elders〃 in order to
accomplish its beautiful masterpieces; the comprehensive concept of the
genius which rises spontaneously and at a single step to the loftiest
conceptions is not always a product of pure reason。
Compare the sublime logic of animal maternity; the impeccable dictates of
instinct; with the hesitations; the gropings; the uncertainties; the errors
and tragic failures of human maternity; when it seeks to replace the
unerring commands of instinct by the clumsy efforts of the intelligence!
If all is darkness to the animal; apart from its habitual paths; how feeble
and hesitating; how faltering and unequal is reason when it seeks to oppose
its laborious inductions to the infallible wisdom of the unconscious!
It is; in fact; to this concatenation of actions; narrowly connected by a
mutual dependence; that we owe this inexhaustible series of cunning
industries and wonderful arts。 To Fabre they are so many feats of a learned
unconsciousness。
〃See the nest; the accustomed masterpiece of mothers; it is more often than
otherwise an animal fruit; a coffer full of germs; containing eggs in place
of seeds。〃
The satin bag of the Epe?ra fasciata; in which her eggs are enclosed;
〃breaks at the caress of the sun; like the skin of an over…ripe
pomegranate。〃
The Dorthesia; the louse inhabiting the euphorbia; 〃trebles the length of
her body; prolonging its hinder part into a pouch; comparable to that of
the opossum; into which the eggs are dropped; and in which the young are
hatched; to leave it afterwards at will。〃 (8/10。)
The Chermes of the ilex 〃hardens into a rampart of ebony; whence an
innumerable legion of vermin bursts forth one day without changing their
place。〃
The capsule of gold…beater's skin; in which the grubs of the Cione are
enclosed; divides itself; at the moment of liberation; into two hemispheres
〃of a regularity so perfect that they recall exactly the bursting of the
pyxidium when the seed is distributed。〃 (8/11。)
Here and there; however; we catch a glimpse of a rudiment of what we
understand by consciousness; in the shape of a 〃vague discrimination。〃
Each plant has its lover; drawn to it by a kind of elective affinity and
invariable tendency。 The Larra makes for the thistle; the Vanessa for the
nettle; the Clytus for the ilex; and the Crioceris for the lily。 〃The
weevil knows nothing but its peas and beans; the golden Rhynchites only the
sloe; and the Balaninus only the nut or acorn。〃
But the Pieris; which haunts the cabbage; frequents the nasturtium also;
and the golden rose…beetle; which 〃intoxicates itself at the clusters of
the hawthorn;〃 is no less addicted to the nectar of the rose。
The Xylocopa; which burrows in the trunks of trees and old rafters; forming
little round corridors in which to lodge her offspring; 〃will utilize
artificial galleries which she has not herself bored。〃
The Chalicodoma 〃also is aware of the economic advantages of an old
abandoned nest〃; the Anthophora is careful to establish her family 〃at the
least expense;〃 and profits on occasion by galleries which have been mined
by previous generations; adapting herself to these new conditions; she
repairs the tunnels which she did not construct 〃and economizes her
forces。〃 (8/12。)
It would seem; therefore; that these tiny minds are created and shaped by
means of experience; they recognize 〃that which is most fitting〃; they
learn; they compare; may we not also say that they judge?
Does not the Mason…bee; 〃which rakes the roads for a dry powdery dust and
mixes it with saliva to convert it into a hard cement;〃 foresee that this
mud will harden?
Is the Pelopaeus devoid of judgment when she seeks the interior of
dwelling…houses in order to shelter her nest of dried clay; which the least
drop of rain would reduce to its original state of mud?
Is it without knowledge of the effects that the sloe…weevil builds a
ventilating chimney to prevent the asphyxiation of her larva? that the
Scarabaeus sacer contrives a filter at the smaller end of its pear…shaped
ball; by means of which the grub is able to breathe? or that Arachne
labyrintha 〃introduces in her silk…work a rampart of compressed earth to
protect her eggs from the probe of the Ichneumon〃?
May we not also see a masterpiece of the highest logic in the house of the
trap…door spider; Arachne clotho; which is furnished with a door; a true
door 〃which she throws open with a push of the leg; and carefully bolts
behind her on returning by means of a little silk〃? (8/13。)
What a miracle of invention too is the prodigious nest of the Eumenes;
〃with its egg suspended by a thread f