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fabre, poet of science-第21部分

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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 from the roof; like a pendulum;

oscillating at the lightest breath in order to save it from contact with

the caterpillars; which; incompletely paralysed; are wriggling and writhing

below〃! Later; when the egg is hatched; 〃the filament is transformed into a

tube; a place of refuge; up which the grub clambers backwards。 At the least

sign of danger from the mass of caterpillars the larva retreats into its

sheath and ascends to the roof; where the wriggling swarm cannot reach it。〃

(8/14。)



Let us refer also to the remarkable history of the Copris。 We cannot deny

that the valiant dung…beetle is capable of 〃evading the accidental〃 (which

to Fabre constitutes one of the distinctive characteristics of the

intelligence); since it immediately intervenes if with the point of a

penknife we open the roof of its nest and lay bare its egg。 〃The fragments

raised by the knife are immediately brought together and soldered; so that

no trace is left of the injury; and all is once more in order。〃 We may read

also with what incredible address the mother Copris was able to use and to

profit by the ready…made pellets of cow…dung which it occurred to Fabre to

offer her。 (8/15。)



But their scope is limited; and encroaches very little; in the eyes of the

great observer; on the domain of intelligence。 This he demonstrates to

satiety; and his astonishing Necrophori; which adapt themselves so

admirably to circumstances and triumph over the experimental difficulties

to which he subjects them; seem scarcely to exceed the limits of those

actions which at bottom are merely unconscious。 (8/16。)



With the spawning of the Osmia; Fabre throws a fresh and unexpected light

on the intuitive knowledge of instinct。



We are still groping our way among the causes which rule the determination

of the sexes。 Biology has only been able to throw a few scattered lights on

the subject; and we possess only a few approximate data; which nevertheless

are turned to account by the breeders of insects。 We are still in the

region of illusion and imperfect prognostics。



But the Osmia knows what we do not。 She is deeply versed in all

physiological and anatomical knowledge; and in the faculty of creating

children of either sex at will。



These pretty bees; 〃with coppery skin and fleece of ruddy velvet;〃 which

establish their progeny in the hollow of a bramble stump; the cavity of a

reed; or the winding staircase of an empty snail…shell; know the fixed and

immutable genetic laws which we can only guess at; and are never mistaken。



This marvellous prerogative the Osmia shares with a host of apiaries; in

which the unequal development of the males and females requires an unequal

provision of space and of nourishment for the future larvae。 For the

females; who exceed in point of size; huge cells and abundant provision;

for the more puny males; narrow cells and a smaller ration of pollen and

honey。



Now the circumstances which are encountered by the Osmia; when; pressed by

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