12694 lines
708 KiB
Plaintext
12694 lines
708 KiB
Plaintext
350 BC
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HISTORY OF ANIMALS
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by Aristotle
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translated by D'Arcy Wentworth Thompson
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Book I
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1
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OF the parts of animals some are simple: to wit, all such as
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divide into parts uniform with themselves, as flesh into flesh; others
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are composite, such as divide into parts not uniform with
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themselves, as, for instance, the hand does not divide into hands
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nor the face into faces.
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And of such as these, some are called not parts merely, but limbs
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or members. Such are those parts that, while entire in themselves,
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have within themselves other diverse parts: as for instance, the head,
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foot, hand, the arm as a whole, the chest; for these are all in
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themselves entire parts, and there are other diverse parts belonging
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to them.
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All those parts that do not subdivide into parts uniform with
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themselves are composed of parts that do so subdivide, for instance,
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hand is composed of flesh, sinews, and bones. Of animals, some
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resemble one another in all their parts, while others have parts
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wherein they differ. Sometimes the parts are identical in form or
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species, as, for instance, one man's nose or eye resembles another
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man's nose or eye, flesh flesh, and bone bone; and in like manner with
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a horse, and with all other animals which we reckon to be of one and
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the same species: for as the whole is to the whole, so each to each
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are the parts severally. In other cases the parts are identical,
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save only for a difference in the way of excess or defect, as is the
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case in such animals as are of one and the same genus. By 'genus' I
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mean, for instance, Bird or Fish, for each of these is subject to
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difference in respect of its genus, and there are many species of
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fishes and of birds.
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Within the limits of genera, most of the parts as a rule
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exhibit differences through contrast of the property or accident, such
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as colour and shape, to which they are subject: in that some are
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more and some in a less degree the subject of the same property or
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accident; and also in the way of multitude or fewness, magnitude or
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parvitude, in short in the way of excess or defect. Thus in some the
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texture of the flesh is soft, in others firm; some have a long bill,
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others a short one; some have abundance of feathers, others have
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only a small quantity. It happens further that some have parts that
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others have not: for instance, some have spurs and others not, some
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have crests and others not; but as a general rule, most parts and
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those that go to make up the bulk of the body are either identical
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with one another, or differ from one another in the way of contrast
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and of excess and defect. For 'the more' and 'the less' may be
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represented as 'excess' or 'defect'.
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Once again, we may have to do with animals whose parts are
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neither identical in form nor yet identical save for differences in
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the way of excess or defect: but they are the same only in the way
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of analogy, as, for instance, bone is only analogous to fish-bone,
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nail to hoof, hand to claw, and scale to feather; for what the feather
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is in a bird, the scale is in a fish.
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The parts, then, which animals severally possess are diverse
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from, or identical with, one another in the fashion above described.
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And they are so furthermore in the way of local disposition: for
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many animals have identical organs that differ in position; for
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instance, some have teats in the breast, others close to the thighs.
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Of the substances that are composed of parts uniform (or
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homogeneous) with themselves, some are soft and moist, others are
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dry and solid. The soft and moist are such either absolutely or so
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long as they are in their natural conditions, as, for instance, blood,
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serum, lard, suet, marrow, sperm, gall, milk in such as have it
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flesh and the like; and also, in a different way, the superfluities,
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as phlegm and the excretions of the belly and the bladder. The dry and
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solid are such as sinew, skin, vein, hair, bone, gristle, nail, horn
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(a term which as applied to the part involves an ambiguity, since
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the whole also by virtue of its form is designated horn), and such
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parts as present an analogy to these.
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Animals differ from one another in their modes of subsistence,
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in their actions, in their habits, and in their parts. Concerning
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these differences we shall first speak in broad and general terms, and
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subsequently we shall treat of the same with close reference to each
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particular genus.
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Differences are manifested in modes of subsistence, in habits, in
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actions performed. For instance, some animals live in water and others
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on land. And of those that live in water some do so in one way, and
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some in another: that is to say, some live and feed in the water, take
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in and emit water, and cannot live if deprived of water, as is the
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case with the great majority of fishes; others get their food and
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spend their days in the water, but do not take in water but air, nor
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do they bring forth in the water. Many of these creatures are
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furnished with feet, as the otter, the beaver, and the crocodile; some
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are furnished with wings, as the diver and the grebe; some are
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destitute of feet, as the water-snake. Some creatures get their living
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in the water and cannot exist outside it: but for all that do not take
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in either air or water, as, for instance, the sea-nettle and the
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oyster. And of creatures that live in the water some live in the
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sea, some in rivers, some in lakes, and some in marshes, as the frog
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and the newt.
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Of animals that live on dry land some take in air and emit it,
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which phenomena are termed 'inhalation' and 'exhalation'; as, for
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instance, man and all such land animals as are furnished with lungs.
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Others, again, do not inhale air, yet live and find their sustenance
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on dry land; as, for instance, the wasp, the bee, and all other
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insects. And by 'insects' I mean such creatures as have nicks or
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notches on their bodies, either on their bellies or on both backs
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and bellies.
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And of land animals many, as has been said, derive their
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subsistence from the water; but of creatures that live in and inhale
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water not a single one derives its subsistence from dry land.
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Some animals at first live in water, and by and by change their
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shape and live out of water, as is the case with river worms, for
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out of these the gadfly develops.
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Furthermore, some animals are stationary, and some are erratic.
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Stationary animals are found in water, but no such creature is found
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on dry land. In the water are many creatures that live in close
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adhesion to an external object, as is the case with several kinds of
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oyster. And, by the way, the sponge appears to be endowed with a
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certain sensibility: as a proof of which it is alleged that the
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difficulty in detaching it from its moorings is increased if the
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movement to detach it be not covertly applied.
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Other creatures adhere at one time to an object and detach
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themselves from it at other times, as is the case with a species of
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the so-called sea-nettle; for some of these creatures seek their
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food in the night-time loose and unattached.
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Many creatures are unattached but motionless, as is the case with
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oysters and the so-called holothuria. Some can swim, as, for instance,
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fishes, molluscs, and crustaceans, such as the crawfish. But some of
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these last move by walking, as the crab, for it is the nature of the
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creature, though it lives in water, to move by walking.
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Of land animals some are furnished with wings, such as birds
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and bees, and these are so furnished in different ways one from
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another; others are furnished with feet. Of the animals that are
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furnished with feet some walk, some creep, and some wriggle. But no
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creature is able only to move by flying, as the fish is able only to
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swim, for the animals with leathern wings can walk; the bat has feet
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and the seal has imperfect feet.
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Some birds have feet of little power, and are therefore called
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Apodes. This little bird is powerful on the wing; and, as a rule,
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birds that resemble it are weak-footed and strong winged, such as
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the swallow and the drepanis or (?) Alpine swift; for all these
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birds resemble one another in their habits and in their plumage, and
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may easily be mistaken one for another. (The apus is to be seen at all
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seasons, but the drepanis only after rainy weather in summer; for this
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is the time when it is seen and captured, though, as a general rule,
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it is a rare bird.)
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Again, some animals move by walking on the ground as well as by
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swimming in water.
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Furthermore, the following differences are manifest in their
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modes of living and in their actions. Some are gregarious, some are
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solitary, whether they be furnished with feet or wings or be fitted
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for a life in the water; and some partake of both characters, the
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solitary and the gregarious. And of the gregarious, some are
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disposed to combine for social purposes, others to live each for its
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own self.
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Gregarious creatures are, among birds, such as the pigeon, the
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crane, and the swan; and, by the way, no bird furnished with crooked
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talons is gregarious. Of creatures that live in water many kinds of
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fishes are gregarious, such as the so-called migrants, the tunny,
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the pelamys, and the bonito.
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Man, by the way, presents a mixture of the two characters, the
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gregarious and the solitary.
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Social creatures are such as have some one common object in view;
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and this property is not common to all creatures that are
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gregarious. Such social creatures are man, the bee, the wasp, the ant,
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and the crane.
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Again, of these social creatures some submit to a ruler, others
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are subject to no governance: as, for instance, the crane and the
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several sorts of bee submit to a ruler, whereas ants and numerous
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other creatures are every one his own master.
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And again, both of gregarious and of solitary animals, some are
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attached to a fixed home and others are erratic or nomad.
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Also, some are carnivorous, some graminivorous, some omnivorous:
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whilst some feed on a peculiar diet, as for instance the bees and
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the spiders, for the bee lives on honey and certain other sweets,
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and the spider lives by catching flies; and some creatures live on
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fish. Again, some creatures catch their food, others treasure it up;
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whereas others do not so.
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Some creatures provide themselves with a dwelling, others go
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without one: of the former kind are the mole, the mouse, the ant,
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the bee; of the latter kind are many insects and quadrupeds.
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Further, in respect to locality of dwelling place, some creatures
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dwell under ground, as the lizard and the snake; others live on the
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surface of the ground, as the horse and the dog. make to themselves
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holes, others do not
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Some are nocturnal, as the owl and the bat; others live in the
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daylight.
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Moreover, some creatures are tame and some are wild: some are
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at all times tame, as man and the mule; others are at all times
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savage, as the leopard and the wolf; and some creatures can be rapidly
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tamed, as the elephant.
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Again, we may regard animals in another light. For, whenever a
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race of animals is found domesticated, the same is always to be
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found in a wild condition; as we find to be the case with horses,
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kine, swine, (men), sheep, goats, and dogs.
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Further, some animals emit sound while others are mute, and
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some are endowed with voice: of these latter some have articulate
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speech, while others are inarticulate; some are given to continual
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chirping and twittering some are prone to silence; some are musical,
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and some unmusical; but all animals without exception exercise their
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power of singing or chattering chiefly in connexion with the
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intercourse of the sexes.
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Again, some creatures live in the fields, as the cushat; some
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on the mountains, as the hoopoe; some frequent the abodes of men, as
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the pigeon.
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Some, again, are peculiarly salacious, as the partridge, the
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barn-door cock and their congeners; others are inclined to chastity,
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as the whole tribe of crows, for birds of this kind indulge but rarely
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in sexual intercourse.
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Of marine animals, again, some live in the open seas, some near
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the shore, some on rocks.
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Furthermore, some are combative under offence; others are
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provident for defence. Of the former kind are such as act as
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aggressors upon others or retaliate when subjected to ill usage, and
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of the latter kind are such as merely have some means of guarding
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themselves against attack.
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Animals also differ from one another in regard to character in
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the following respects. Some are good-tempered, sluggish, and little
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prone to ferocity, as the ox; others are quick tempered, ferocious and
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unteachable, as the wild boar; some are intelligent and timid, as
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the stag and the hare; others are mean and treacherous, as the
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snake; others are noble and courageous and high-bred, as the lion;
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others are thorough-bred and wild and treacherous, as the wolf: for,
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by the way, an animal is highbred if it come from a noble stock, and
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an animal is thorough-bred if it does not deflect from its racial
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characteristics.
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Further, some are crafty and mischievous, as the fox; some are
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spirited and affectionate and fawning, as the dog; others are
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easy-tempered and easily domesticated, as the elephant; others are
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cautious and watchful, as the goose; others are jealous and
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self-conceited, as the peacock. But of all animals man alone is
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capable of deliberation.
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Many animals have memory, and are capable of instruction; but no
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other creature except man can recall the past at will.
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With regard to the several genera of animals, particulars as to
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their habits of life and modes of existence will be discussed more
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fully by and by.
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2
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Common to all animals are the organs whereby they take food and
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the organs where into they take it; and these are either identical
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with one another, or are diverse in the ways above specified: to
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wit, either identical in form, or varying in respect of excess or
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defect, or resembling one another analogically, or differing in
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position.
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Furthermore, the great majority of animals have other organs
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besides these in common, whereby they discharge the residuum of
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their food: I say, the great majority, for this statement does not
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apply to all. And, by the way, the organ whereby food is taken in is
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called the mouth, and the organ whereinto it is taken, the belly;
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the remainder of the alimentary system has a great variety of names.
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Now the residuum of food is twofold in kind, wet and dry, and
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such creatures as have organs receptive of wet residuum are invariably
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found with organs receptive of dry residuum; but such as have organs
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receptive of dry residuum need not possess organs receptive of wet
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residuum. In other words, an animal has a bowel or intestine if it
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have a bladder; but an animal may have a bowel and be without a
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bladder. And, by the way, I may here remark that the organ receptive
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of wet residuum is termed 'bladder', and the organ receptive of dry
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residuum 'intestine or 'bowel'.
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3
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Of animals otherwise, a great many have, besides the organs
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above-mentioned, an organ for excretion of the sperm: and of animals
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capable of generation one secretes into another, and the other into
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itself. The latter is termed 'female', and the former 'male'; but some
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animals have neither male nor female. Consequently, the organs
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connected with this function differ in form, for some animals have a
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womb and others an organ analogous thereto.
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The above-mentioned organs, then, are the most indispensable parts
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of animals; and with some of them all animals without exception, and
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with others animals for the most part, must needs be provided.
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One sense, and one alone, is common to all animals-the sense of
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touch. Consequently, there is no special name for the organ in which
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it has its seat; for in some groups of animals the organ is identical,
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in others it is only analogous.
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4
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Every animal is supplied with moisture, and, if the animal be
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deprived of the same by natural causes or artificial means, death
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ensues: further, every animal has another part in which the moisture
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is contained. These parts are blood and vein, and in other animals
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there is something to correspond; but in these latter the parts are
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imperfect, being merely fibre and serum or lymph.
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Touch has its seat in a part uniform and homogeneous, as in the
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flesh or something of the kind, and generally, with animals supplied
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with blood, in the parts charged with blood. In other animals it has
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its seat in parts analogous to the parts charged with blood; but in
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all cases it is seated in parts that in their texture are homogeneous.
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The active faculties, on the contrary, are seated in the parts
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that are heterogeneous: as, for instance, the business of preparing
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the food is seated in the mouth, and the office of locomotion in the
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feet, the wings, or in organs to correspond.
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Again, some animals are supplied with blood, as man, the horse,
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and all such animals as are, when full-grown, either destitute of
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feet, or two-footed, or four-footed; other animals are bloodless, such
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as the bee and the wasp, and, of marine animals, the cuttle-fish,
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the crawfish, and all such animals as have more than four feet.
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5
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Again, some animals are viviparous, others oviparous, others
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vermiparous or 'grub-bearing'. Some are viviparous, such as man, the
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horse, the seal, and all other animals that are hair-coated, and, of
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marine animals, the cetaceans, as the dolphin, and the so-called
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Selachia. (Of these latter animals, some have a tubular air-passage
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and no gills, as the dolphin and the whale: the dolphin with the
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air-passage going through its back, the whale with the air-passage
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in its forehead; others have uncovered gills, as the Selachia, the
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sharks and rays.)
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What we term an egg is a certain completed result of conception
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out of which the animal that is to be develops, and in such a way that
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in respect to its primitive germ it comes from part only of the egg,
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while the rest serves for food as the germ develops. A 'grub' on the
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other hand is a thing out of which in its entirety the animal in its
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entirety develops, by differentiation and growth of the embryo.
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Of viviparous animals, some hatch eggs in their own interior,
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as creatures of the shark kind; others engender in their interior a
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live foetus, as man and the horse. When the result of conception is
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perfected, with some animals a living creature is brought forth,
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with others an egg is brought to light, with others a grub. Of the
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eggs, some have egg-shells and are of two different colours within,
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such as birds' eggs; others are soft-skinned and of uniform colour, as
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the eggs of animals of the shark kind. Of the grubs, some are from the
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first capable of movement, others are motionless. However, with regard
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to these phenomena we shall speak precisely hereafter when we come
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to treat of Generation.
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Furthermore, some animals have feet and some are destitute
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thereof. Of such as have feet some animals have two, as is the case
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with men and birds, and with men and birds only; some have four, as
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the lizard and the dog; some have more, as the centipede and the
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bee; but allsoever that have feet have an even number of them.
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Of swimming creatures that are destitute of feet, some have
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winglets or fins, as fishes: and of these some have four fins, two
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above on the back, two below on the belly, as the gilthead and the
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basse; some have two only,-to wit, such as are exceedingly long and
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smooth, as the eel and the conger; some have none at all, as the
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muraena, but use the sea just as snakes use dry ground-and by the way,
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snakes swim in water in just the same way. Of the shark-kind some have
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no fins, such as those that are flat and long-tailed, as the ray and
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the sting-ray, but these fishes swim actually by the undulatory motion
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of their flat bodies; the fishing frog, however, has fins, and so
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likewise have all such fishes as have not their flat surfaces
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thinned off to a sharp edge.
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Of those swimming creatures that appear to have feet, as is the
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case with the molluscs, these creatures swim by the aid of their
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feet and their fins as well, and they swim most rapidly backwards in
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the direction of the trunk, as is the case with the cuttle-fish or
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sepia and the calamary; and, by the way, neither of these latter can
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walk as the poulpe or octopus can.
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The hard-skinned or crustaceous animals, like the crawfish,
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swim by the instrumentality of their tail-parts; and they swim most
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rapidly tail foremost, by the aid of the fins developed upon that
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member. The newt swims by means of its feet and tail; and its tail
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resembles that of the sheatfish, to compare little with great.
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Of animals that can fly some are furnished with feathered wings,
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as the eagle and the hawk; some are furnished with membranous wings,
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as the bee and the cockchafer; others are furnished with leathern
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wings, as the flying fox and the bat. All flying creatures possessed
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of blood have feathered wings or leathern wings; the bloodless
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creatures have membranous wings, as insects. The creatures that have
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feathered wings or leathern wings have either two feet or no feet at
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all: for there are said to be certain flying serpents in Ethiopia that
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are destitute of feet.
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Creatures that have feathered wings are classed as a genus
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under the name of 'bird'; the other two genera, the leathern-winged
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and membrane-winged, are as yet without a generic title.
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Of creatures that can fly and are bloodless some are coleopterous
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or sheath-winged, for they have their wings in a sheath or shard, like
|
|
the cockchafer and the dung-beetle; others are sheathless, and of
|
|
these latter some are dipterous and some tetrapterous: tetrapterous,
|
|
such as are comparatively large or have their stings in the tail,
|
|
dipterous, such as are comparatively small or have their stings in
|
|
front. The coleoptera are, without exception, devoid of stings; the
|
|
diptera have the sting in front, as the fly, the horsefly, the gadfly,
|
|
and the gnat.
|
|
|
|
Bloodless animals as a general rule are inferior in point of size
|
|
to blooded animals; though, by the way, there are found in the sea
|
|
some few bloodless creatures of abnormal size, as in the case of
|
|
certain molluscs. And of these bloodless genera, those are the largest
|
|
that dwell in milder climates, and those that inhabit the sea are
|
|
larger than those living on dry land or in fresh water.
|
|
|
|
All creatures that are capable of motion move with four or more
|
|
points of motion; the blooded animals with four only: as, for
|
|
instance, man with two hands and two feet, birds with two wings and
|
|
two feet, quadrupeds and fishes severally with four feet and four
|
|
fins. Creatures that have two winglets or fins, or that have none at
|
|
all like serpents, move all the same with not less than four points of
|
|
motion; for there are four bends in their bodies as they move, or
|
|
two bends together with their fins. Bloodless and many footed animals,
|
|
whether furnished with wings or feet, move with more than four
|
|
points of motion; as, for instance, the dayfly moves with four feet
|
|
and four wings: and, I may observe in passing, this creature is
|
|
exceptional not only in regard to the duration of its existence,
|
|
whence it receives its name, but also because though a quadruped it
|
|
has wings also.
|
|
|
|
All animals move alike, four-footed and many-footed; in other
|
|
words, they all move cross-corner-wise. And animals in general have
|
|
two feet in advance; the crab alone has four.
|
|
|
|
6
|
|
|
|
Very extensive genera of animals, into which other subdivisions
|
|
fall, are the following: one, of birds; one, of fishes; and another,
|
|
of cetaceans. Now all these creatures are blooded.
|
|
|
|
There is another genus of the hard-shell kind, which is called
|
|
oyster; another of the soft-shell kind, not as yet designated by a
|
|
single term, such as the spiny crawfish and the various kinds of crabs
|
|
and lobsters; and another of molluscs, as the two kinds of calamary
|
|
and the cuttle-fish; that of insects is different. All these latter
|
|
creatures are bloodless, and such of them as have feet have a goodly
|
|
number of them; and of the insects some have wings as well as feet.
|
|
|
|
Of the other animals the genera are not extensive. For in them
|
|
one species does not comprehend many species; but in one case, as man,
|
|
the species is simple, admitting of no differentiation, while other
|
|
cases admit of differentiation, but the forms lack particular
|
|
designations.
|
|
|
|
So, for instance, creatures that are qudapedal and unprovided
|
|
with wings are blooded without exception, but some of them are
|
|
viviparous, and some oviparous. Such as are viviparous are
|
|
hair-coated, and such as are oviparous are covered with a kind of
|
|
tessellated hard substance; and the tessellated bits of this substance
|
|
are, as it were, similar in regard to position to a scale.
|
|
|
|
An animal that is blooded and capable of movement on dry land,
|
|
but is naturally unprovided with feet, belongs to the serpent genus;
|
|
and animals of this genus are coated with the tessellated horny
|
|
substance. Serpents in general are oviparous; the adder, an
|
|
exceptional case, is viviparous: for not all viviparous animals are
|
|
hair-coated, and some fishes also are viviparous.
|
|
|
|
All animals, however, that are hair-coated are viviparous. For,
|
|
by the way, one must regard as a kind of hair such prickly hairs as
|
|
hedgehogs and porcupines carry; for these spines perform the office of
|
|
hair, and not of feet as is the case with similar parts of
|
|
sea-urchins.
|
|
|
|
In the genus that combines all viviparous quadrupeds are many
|
|
species, but under no common appellation. They are only named as it
|
|
were one by one, as we say man, lion, stag, horse, dog, and so on;
|
|
though, by the way, there is a sort of genus that embraces all
|
|
creatures that have bushy manes and bushy tails, such as the horse,
|
|
the ass, the mule, the jennet, and the animals that are called Hemioni
|
|
in Syria,-from their externally resembling mules, though they are
|
|
not strictly of the same species. And that they are not so is proved
|
|
by the fact that they mate with and breed from one another. For all
|
|
these reasons, we must take animals species by species, and discuss
|
|
their peculiarities severally'
|
|
|
|
These preceding statements, then, have been put forward thus in a
|
|
general way, as a kind of foretaste of the number of subjects and of
|
|
the properties that we have to consider in order that we may first get
|
|
a clear notion of distinctive character and common properties. By
|
|
and by we shall discuss these matters with greater minuteness.
|
|
|
|
After this we shall pass on to the discussion of causes. For to do
|
|
this when the investigation of the details is complete is the proper
|
|
and natural method, and that whereby the subjects and the premisses of
|
|
our argument will afterwards be rendered plain.
|
|
|
|
In the first place we must look to the constituent parts of
|
|
animals. For it is in a way relative to these parts, first and
|
|
foremost, that animals in their entirety differ from one another:
|
|
either in the fact that some have this or that, while they have not
|
|
that or this; or by peculiarities of position or of arrangement; or by
|
|
the differences that have been previously mentioned, depending upon
|
|
diversity of form, or excess or defect in this or that particular,
|
|
on analogy, or on contrasts of the accidental qualities.
|
|
|
|
To begin with, we must take into consideration the parts of
|
|
Man. For, just as each nation is wont to reckon by that monetary
|
|
standard with which it is most familiar, so must we do in other
|
|
matters. And, of course, man is the animal with which we are all of us
|
|
the most familiar.
|
|
|
|
Now the parts are obvious enough to physical perception. However,
|
|
with the view of observing due order and sequence and of combining
|
|
rational notions with physical perception, we shall proceed to
|
|
enumerate the parts: firstly, the organic, and afterwards the simple
|
|
or non-composite.
|
|
|
|
7
|
|
|
|
The chief parts into which the body as a whole is subdivided,
|
|
are the head, the neck, the trunk (extending from the neck to the
|
|
privy parts), which is called the thorax, two arms and two legs.
|
|
|
|
Of the parts of which the head is composed the hair-covered
|
|
portion is called the 'skull'. The front portion of it is termed
|
|
'bregma' or 'sinciput', developed after birth-for it is the last of
|
|
all the bones in the body to acquire solidity,-the hinder part is
|
|
termed the 'occiput', and the part intervening between the sinciput
|
|
and the occiput is the 'crown'. The brain lies underneath the
|
|
sinciput; the occiput is hollow. The skull consists entirely of thin
|
|
bone, rounded in shape, and contained within a wrapper of fleshless
|
|
skin.
|
|
|
|
The skull has sutures: one, of circular form, in the case of
|
|
women; in the case of men, as a general rule, three meeting at a
|
|
point. Instances have been known of a man's skull devoid of suture
|
|
altogether. In the skull the middle line, where the hair parts, is
|
|
called the crown or vertex. In some cases the parting is double;
|
|
that is to say, some men are double crowned, not in regard to the bony
|
|
skull, but in consequence of the double fall or set of the hair.
|
|
|
|
8
|
|
|
|
The part that lies under the skull is called the 'face': but in
|
|
the case of man only, for the term is not applied to a fish or to an
|
|
ox. In the face the part below the sinciput and between the eyes is
|
|
termed the forehead. When men have large foreheads, they are slow to
|
|
move; when they have small ones, they are fickle; when they have broad
|
|
ones, they are apt to be distraught; when they have foreheads
|
|
rounded or bulging out, they are quick-tempered.
|
|
|
|
9
|
|
|
|
Underneath the forehead are two eyebrows. Straight eyebrows are
|
|
a sign of softness of disposition; such as curve in towards the
|
|
nose, of harshness; such as curve out towards the temples, of humour
|
|
and dissimulation; such as are drawn in towards one another, of
|
|
jealousy.
|
|
|
|
Under the eyebrows come the eyes. These are naturally two in
|
|
number. Each of them has an upper and a lower eyelid, and the hairs on
|
|
the edges of these are termed 'eyelashes'. The central part of the eye
|
|
includes the moist part whereby vision is effected, termed the
|
|
'pupil', and the part surrounding it called the 'black'; the part
|
|
outside this is the 'white'. A part common to the upper and lower
|
|
eyelid is a pair of nicks or corners, one in the direction of the
|
|
nose, and the other in the direction of the temples. When these are
|
|
long they are a sign of bad disposition; if the side toward the
|
|
nostril be fleshy and comb-like, they are a sign of dishonesty.
|
|
|
|
All animals, as a general rule, are provided with eyes, excepting
|
|
the ostracoderms and other imperfect creatures; at all events, all
|
|
viviparous animals have eyes, with the exception of the mole. And
|
|
yet one might assert that, though the mole has not eyes in the full
|
|
sense, yet it has eyes in a kind of a way. For in point of absolute
|
|
fact it cannot see, and has no eyes visible externally; but when the
|
|
outer skin is removed, it is found to have the place where eyes are
|
|
usually situated, and the black parts of the eyes rightly situated,
|
|
and all the place that is usually devoted on the outside to eyes:
|
|
showing that the parts are stunted in development, and the skin
|
|
allowed to grow over.
|
|
|
|
10
|
|
|
|
Of the eye the white is pretty much the same in all creatures; but
|
|
what is called the black differs in various animals. Some have the rim
|
|
black, some distinctly blue, some greyish-blue, some greenish; and
|
|
this last colour is the sign of an excellent disposition, and is
|
|
particularly well adapted for sharpness of vision. Man is the only, or
|
|
nearly the only, creature, that has eyes of diverse colours.
|
|
Animals, as a rule, have eyes of one colour only. Some horses have
|
|
blue eyes.
|
|
|
|
Of eyes, some are large, some small, some medium-sized; of these,
|
|
the medium-sized are the best. Moreover, eyes sometimes protrude,
|
|
sometimes recede, sometimes are neither protruding nor receding. Of
|
|
these, the receding eye is in all animals the most acute; but the last
|
|
kind are the sign of the best disposition. Again, eyes are sometimes
|
|
inclined to wink under observation, sometimes to remain open and
|
|
staring, and sometimes are disposed neither to wink nor stare. The
|
|
last kind are the sign of the best nature, and of the others, the
|
|
latter kind indicates impudence, and the former indecision.
|
|
|
|
11
|
|
|
|
Furthermore, there is a portion of the head, whereby an animal
|
|
hears, a part incapable of breathing, the 'ear'. I say 'incapable of
|
|
breathing', for Alcmaeon is mistaken when he says that goats inspire
|
|
through their ears. Of the ear one part is unnamed, the other part
|
|
is called the 'lobe'; and it is entirely composed of gristle and
|
|
flesh. The ear is constructed internally like the trumpet-shell, and
|
|
the innermost bone is like the ear itself, and into it at the end
|
|
the sound makes its way, as into the bottom of a jar. This
|
|
receptacle does not communicate by any passage with the brain, but
|
|
does so with the palate, and a vein extends from the brain towards it.
|
|
The eyes also are connected with the brain, and each of them lies at
|
|
the end of a little vein. Of animals possessed of ears man is the only
|
|
one that cannot move this organ. Of creatures possessed of hearing,
|
|
some have ears, whilst others have none, but merely have the
|
|
passages for ears visible, as, for example, feathered animals or
|
|
animals coated with horny tessellates.
|
|
|
|
Viviparous animals, with the exception of the seal, the dolphin,
|
|
and those others which after a similar fashion to these are cetaceans,
|
|
are all provided with ears; for, by the way, the shark-kind are also
|
|
viviparous. Now, the seal has the passages visible whereby it hears;
|
|
but the dolphin can hear, but has no ears, nor yet any passages
|
|
visible. But man alone is unable to move his ears, and all other
|
|
animals can move them. And the ears lie, with man, in the same
|
|
horizontal plane with the eyes, and not in a plane above them as is
|
|
the case with some quadrupeds. Of ears, some are fine, some are
|
|
coarse, and some are of medium texture; the last kind are best for
|
|
hearing, but they serve in no way to indicate character. Some ears are
|
|
large, some small, some medium-sized; again, some stand out far,
|
|
some lie in close and tight, and some take up a medium position; of
|
|
these such as are of medium size and of medium position are
|
|
indications of the best disposition, while the large and outstanding
|
|
ones indicate a tendency to irrelevant talk or chattering. The part
|
|
intercepted between the eye, the ear, and the crown is termed the
|
|
'temple'. Again, there is a part of the countenance that serves as a
|
|
passage for the breath, the 'nose'. For a man inhales and exhales by
|
|
this organ, and sneezing is effected by its means: which last is an
|
|
outward rush of collected breath, and is the only mode of breath
|
|
used as an omen and regarded as supernatural. Both inhalation and
|
|
exhalation go right on from the nose towards the chest; and with the
|
|
nostrils alone and separately it is impossible to inhale or exhale,
|
|
owing to the fact that the inspiration and respiration take place from
|
|
the chest along the windpipe, and not by any portion connected with
|
|
the head; and indeed it is possible for a creature to live without
|
|
using this process of nasal respiration.
|
|
|
|
Again, smelling takes place by means of the nose,-smelling, or the
|
|
sensible discrimination of odour. And the nostril admits of easy
|
|
motion, and is not, like the ear, intrinsically immovable. A part of
|
|
it, composed of gristle, constitutes, a septum or partition, and
|
|
part is an open passage; for the nostril consists of two separate
|
|
channels. The nostril (or nose) of the elephant is long and strong,
|
|
and the animal uses it like a hand; for by means of this organ it
|
|
draws objects towards it, and takes hold of them, and introduces its
|
|
food into its mouth, whether liquid or dry food, and it is the only
|
|
living creature that does so.
|
|
|
|
Furthermore, there are two jaws; the front part of them
|
|
constitutes the chin, and the hinder part the cheek. All animals
|
|
move the lower jaw, with the exception of the river crocodile; this
|
|
creature moves the upper jaw only.
|
|
|
|
Next after the nose come two lips, composed of flesh, and
|
|
facile of motion. The mouth lies inside the jaws and lips. Parts of
|
|
the mouth are the roof or palate and the pharynx.
|
|
|
|
The part that is sensible of taste is the tongue. The sensation
|
|
has its seat at the tip of the tongue; if the object to be tasted be
|
|
placed on the flat surface of the organ, the taste is less sensibly
|
|
experienced. The tongue is sensitive in all other ways wherein flesh
|
|
in general is so: that is, it can appreciate hardness, or warmth and
|
|
cold, in any part of it, just as it can appreciate taste. The tongue
|
|
is sometimes broad, sometimes narrow, and sometimes of medium width;
|
|
the last kind is the best and the clearest in its discrimination of
|
|
taste. Moreover, the tongue is sometimes loosely hung, and sometimes
|
|
fastened: as in the case of those who mumble and who lisp.
|
|
|
|
The tongue consists of flesh, soft and spongy, and the so-called
|
|
'epiglottis' is a part of this organ.
|
|
|
|
That part of the mouth that splits into two bits is called the
|
|
'tonsils'; that part that splits into many bits, the 'gums'. Both
|
|
the tonsils and the gums are composed of flesh. In the gums are teeth,
|
|
composed of bone.
|
|
|
|
Inside the mouth is another part, shaped like a bunch of
|
|
grapes, a pillar streaked with veins. If this pillar gets relaxed
|
|
and inflamed it is called 'uvula' or 'bunch of grapes', and it then
|
|
has a tendency to bring about suffocation.
|
|
|
|
12
|
|
|
|
The neck is the part between the face and the trunk. Of this the
|
|
front part is the larynx land the back part the ur The front part,
|
|
composed of gristle, through which respiration and speech is effected,
|
|
is termed the 'windpipe'; the part that is fleshy is the oesophagus,
|
|
inside just in front of the chine. The part to the back of the neck is
|
|
the epomis, or 'shoulder-point'.
|
|
|
|
These then are the parts to be met with before you come to the
|
|
thorax.
|
|
|
|
To the trunk there is a front part and a back part. Next after
|
|
the neck in the front part is the chest, with a pair of breasts. To
|
|
each of the breasts is attached a teat or nipple, through which in the
|
|
case of females the milk percolates; and the breast is of a spongy
|
|
texture. Milk, by the way, is found at times in the male; but with the
|
|
male the flesh of the breast is tough, with the female it is soft
|
|
and porous.
|
|
|
|
13
|
|
|
|
Next after the thorax and in front comes the 'belly', and its root
|
|
the 'navel'. Underneath this root the bilateral part is the 'flank':
|
|
the undivided part below the navel, the 'abdomen', the extremity of
|
|
which is the region of the 'pubes'; above the navel the
|
|
'hypochondrium'; the cavity common to the hypochondrium and the
|
|
flank is the gut-cavity.
|
|
|
|
Serving as a brace girdle to the hinder parts is the pelvis,
|
|
and hence it gets its name (osphus), for it is symmetrical
|
|
(isophues) in appearance; of the fundament the part for resting on
|
|
is termed the 'rump', and the part whereon the thigh pivots is
|
|
termed the 'socket' (or acetabulum).
|
|
|
|
The 'womb' is a part peculiar to the female; and the 'penis' is
|
|
peculiar to the male. This latter organ is external and situated at
|
|
the extremity of the trunk; it is composed of two separate parts: of
|
|
which the extreme part is fleshy, does not alter in size, and is
|
|
called the glans; and round about it is a skin devoid of any
|
|
specific title, which integument if it be cut asunder never grows
|
|
together again, any more than does the jaw or the eyelid. And the
|
|
connexion between the latter and the glans is called the frenum. The
|
|
remaining part of the penis is composed of gristle; it is easily
|
|
susceptible of enlargement; and it protrudes and recedes in the
|
|
reverse directions to what is observable in the identical organ in
|
|
cats. Underneath the penis are two 'testicles', and the integument
|
|
of these is a skin that is termed the 'scrotum'.
|
|
|
|
Testicles are not identical with flesh, and are not altogether
|
|
diverse from it. But by and by we shall treat in an exhaustive way
|
|
regarding all such parts.
|
|
|
|
14
|
|
|
|
The privy part of the female is in character opposite to that of
|
|
the male. In other words, the part under the pubes is hollow or
|
|
receding, and not, like the male organ, protruding. Further, there
|
|
is an 'urethra' outside the womb; which organ serves as a passage
|
|
for the sperm of the male, and as an outlet for liquid excretion to
|
|
both sexes).
|
|
|
|
The part common to the neck and chest is the 'throat'; the
|
|
'armpit' is common to side, arm, and shoulder; and the 'groin' is
|
|
common to thigh and abdomen. The part inside the thigh and buttocks is
|
|
the 'perineum', and the part outside the thigh and buttocks is the
|
|
'hypoglutis'.
|
|
|
|
The front parts of the trunk have now been enumerated.
|
|
|
|
The part behind the chest is termed the 'back'.
|
|
|
|
15
|
|
|
|
Parts of the back are a pair of 'shoulderblades', the
|
|
'back-bone', and, underneath on a level with the belly in the trunk,
|
|
the 'loins'. Common to the upper and lower part of the trunk are the
|
|
'ribs', eight on either side, for as to the so-called seven-ribbed
|
|
Ligyans we have not received any trustworthy evidence.
|
|
|
|
Man, then, has an upper and a lower part, a front and a back
|
|
part, a right and a left side. Now the right and the left side are
|
|
pretty well alike in their parts and identical throughout, except that
|
|
the left side is the weaker of the two; but the back parts do not
|
|
resemble the front ones, neither do the lower ones the upper: only
|
|
that these upper and lower parts may be said to resemble one another
|
|
thus far, that, if the face be plump or meagre, the abdomen is plump
|
|
or meagre to correspond; and that the legs correspond to the arms, and
|
|
where the upper arm is short the thigh is usually short also, and
|
|
where the feet are small the hands are small correspondingly.
|
|
|
|
Of the limbs, one set, forming a pair, is 'arms'. To the arm
|
|
belong the 'shoulder', 'upper-arm', 'elbow', 'fore-arm', and 'hand'.
|
|
To the hand belong the 'palm', and the five 'fingers'. The part of the
|
|
finger that bends is termed 'knuckle', the part that is inflexible
|
|
is termed the 'phalanx'. The big finger or thumb is single-jointed,
|
|
the other fingers are double jointed. The bending both of the arm
|
|
and of the finger takes place from without inwards in all cases; and
|
|
the arm bends at the elbow. The inner part of the hand is termed the
|
|
palm', and is fleshy and divided by joints or lines: in the case of
|
|
long-lived people by one or two extending right across, in the case of
|
|
the short-lived by two, not so extending. The joint between hand and
|
|
arm is termed the 'wrist'. The outside or back of the hand is
|
|
sinewy, and has no specific designation.
|
|
|
|
There is another duplicate limb, the 'leg'. Of this limb the
|
|
double-knobbed part is termed the 'thigh-bone', the sliding part of
|
|
the 'kneecap', the double-boned part the 'leg'; the front part of this
|
|
latter is termed the 'shin', and the part behind it the 'calf',
|
|
wherein the flesh is sinewy and venous, in some cases drawn upwards
|
|
towards the hollow behind the knee, as in the case of people with
|
|
large hips, and in other cases drawn downwards. The lower extremity of
|
|
the shin is the 'ankle', duplicate in either leg. The part of the limb
|
|
that contains a multiplicity of bones is the 'foot'. The hinder part
|
|
of the foot is the 'heel'; at the front of it the divided part
|
|
consists of 'toes', five in number; the fleshy part underneath is
|
|
the 'ball'; the upper part or back of the foot is sinewy and has no
|
|
particular appellation; of the toe, one portion is the 'nail' and
|
|
another the 'joint', and the nail is in all cases at the extremity;
|
|
and toes are without exception single jointed. Men that have the
|
|
inside or sole of the foot clumsy and not arched, that is, that walk
|
|
resting on the entire under-surface of their feet, are prone to
|
|
roguery. The joint common to thigh and shin is the 'knee'.
|
|
|
|
These, then, are the parts common to the male and the female sex.
|
|
The relative position of the parts as to up and down, or to front
|
|
and back, or to right and left, all this as regards externals might
|
|
safely be left to mere ordinary perception. But for all that, we
|
|
must treat of them for the same reason as the one previously brought
|
|
forward; that is to say, we must refer to them in order that a due and
|
|
regular sequence may be observed in our exposition, and in order
|
|
that by the enumeration of these obvious facts due attention may be
|
|
subsequently given to those parts in men and other animals that are
|
|
diverse in any way from one another.
|
|
|
|
In man, above all other animals, the terms 'upper' and 'lower'
|
|
are used in harmony with their natural positions; for in him, upper
|
|
and lower have the same meaning as when they are applied to the
|
|
universe as a whole. In like manner the terms, 'in front', 'behind',
|
|
'right' and 'left', are used in accordance with their natural sense.
|
|
But in regard to other animals, in some cases these distinctions do
|
|
not exist, and in others they do so, but in a vague way. For instance,
|
|
the head with all animals is up and above in respect to their
|
|
bodies; but man alone, as has been said, has, in maturity, this part
|
|
uppermost in respect to the material universe.
|
|
|
|
Next after the head comes the neck, and then the chest and the
|
|
back: the one in front and the other behind. Next after these come the
|
|
belly, the loins, the sexual parts, and the haunches; then the thigh
|
|
and shin; and, lastly, the feet.
|
|
|
|
The legs bend frontwards, in the direction of actual progression,
|
|
and frontwards also lies that part of the foot which is the most
|
|
effective of motion, and the flexure of that part; but the heel lies
|
|
at the back, and the anklebones lie laterally, earwise. The arms are
|
|
situated to right and left, and bend inwards: so that the
|
|
convexities formed by bent arms and legs are practically face to
|
|
face with one another in the case of man.
|
|
|
|
As for the senses and for the organs of sensation, the eyes,
|
|
the nostrils, and the tongue, all alike are situated frontwards; the
|
|
sense of hearing, and the organ of hearing, the ear, is situated
|
|
sideways, on the same horizontal plane with the eyes. The eyes in
|
|
man are, in proportion to his size, nearer to one another than in
|
|
any other animal.
|
|
|
|
Of the senses man has the sense of touch more refined than any
|
|
animal, and so also, but in less degree, the sense of taste; in the
|
|
development of the other senses he is surpassed by a great number of
|
|
animals.
|
|
|
|
16
|
|
|
|
The parts, then, that are externally visible are arranged in the
|
|
way above stated, and as a rule have their special designations, and
|
|
from use and wont are known familiarly to all; but this is not the
|
|
case with the inner parts. For the fact is that the inner parts of man
|
|
are to a very great extent unknown, and the consequence is that we
|
|
must have recourse to an examination of the inner parts of other
|
|
animals whose nature in any way resembles that of man.
|
|
|
|
In the first place then, the brain lies in the front part of the
|
|
head. And this holds alike with all animals possessed of a brain;
|
|
and all blooded animals are possessed thereof, and, by the way,
|
|
molluscs as well. But, taking size for size of animal, the largest
|
|
brain, and the moistest, is that of man. Two membranes enclose it: the
|
|
stronger one near the bone of the skull; the inner one, round the
|
|
brain itself, is finer. The brain in all cases is bilateral. Behind
|
|
this, right at the back, comes what is termed the 'cerebellum',
|
|
differing in form from the brain as we may both feel and see.
|
|
|
|
The back of the head is with all animals empty and hollow,
|
|
whatever be its size in the different animals. For some creatures have
|
|
big heads while the face below is small in proportion, as is the
|
|
case with round-faced animals; some have little heads and long jaws,
|
|
as is the case, without exception, among animals of the
|
|
mane-and-tail species.
|
|
|
|
The brain in all animals is bloodless, devoid of veins, and
|
|
naturally cold to the touch; in the great majority of animals it has a
|
|
small hollow in its centre. The brain-caul around it is reticulated
|
|
with veins; and this brain-caul is that skin-like membrane which
|
|
closely surrounds the brain. Above the brain is the thinnest and
|
|
weakest bone of the head, which is termed or 'sinciput'.
|
|
|
|
From the eye there go three ducts to the brain: the largest and
|
|
the medium-sized to the cerebellum, the least to the brain itself; and
|
|
the least is the one situated nearest to the nostril. The two
|
|
largest ones, then, run side by side and do not meet; the medium-sized
|
|
ones meet-and this is particularly visible in fishes,-for they lie
|
|
nearer than the large ones to the brain; the smallest pair are the
|
|
most widely separate from one another, and do not meet.
|
|
|
|
Inside the neck is what is termed the oesophagus (whose other
|
|
name is derived oesophagus from its length and narrowness), and the
|
|
windpipe. The windpipe is situated in front of the oesophagus in all
|
|
animals that have a windpipe, and all animals have one that are
|
|
furnished with lungs. The windpipe is made up of gristle, is sparingly
|
|
supplied with blood, and is streaked all round with numerous minute
|
|
veins; it is situated, in its upper part, near the mouth, below the
|
|
aperture formed by the nostrils into the mouth-an aperture through
|
|
which, when men, in drinking, inhale any of the liquid, this liquid
|
|
finds its way out through the nostrils. In betwixt the two openings
|
|
comes the so-called epiglottis, an organ capable of being drawn over
|
|
and covering the orifice of the windpipe communicating with the mouth;
|
|
the end of the tongue is attached to the epiglottis. In the other
|
|
direction the windpipe extends to the interval between the lungs,
|
|
and hereupon bifurcates into each of the two divisions of the lung;
|
|
for the lung in all animals possessed of the organ has a tendency to
|
|
be double. In viviparous animals, however, the duplication is not so
|
|
plainly discernible as in other species, and the duplication is
|
|
least discernible in man. And in man the organ is not split into
|
|
many parts, as is the case with some vivipara, neither is it smooth,
|
|
but its surface is uneven.
|
|
|
|
In the case of the ovipara, such as birds and oviparous
|
|
quadrupeds, the two parts of the organ are separated to a distance
|
|
from one another, so that the creatures appear to be furnished with
|
|
a pair of lungs; and from the windpipe, itself single, there branch
|
|
off two separate parts extending to each of the two divisions of the
|
|
lung. It is attached also to the great vein and to what is
|
|
designated the 'aorta'. When the windpipe is charged with air, the air
|
|
passes on to the hollow parts of the lung. These parts have divisions,
|
|
composed of gristle, which meet at an acute angle; from the
|
|
divisions run passages through the entire lung, giving off smaller and
|
|
smaller ramifications. The heart also is attached to the windpipe,
|
|
by connexions of fat, gristle, and sinew; and at the point of juncture
|
|
there is a hollow. When the windpipe is charged with air, the entrance
|
|
of the air into the heart, though imperceptible in some animals, is
|
|
perceptible enough in the larger ones. Such are the properties of
|
|
the windpipe, and it takes in and throws out air only, and takes in
|
|
nothing else either dry or liquid, or else it causes you pain until
|
|
you shall have coughed up whatever may have gone down.
|
|
|
|
The oesophagus communicates at the top with the mouth, close to
|
|
the windpipe, and is attached to the backbone and the windpipe by
|
|
membranous ligaments, and at last finds its way through the midriff
|
|
into the belly. It is composed of flesh-like substance, and is elastic
|
|
both lengthways and breadthways.
|
|
|
|
The stomach of man resembles that of a dog; for it is not much
|
|
bigger than the bowel, but is somewhat like a bowel of more than usual
|
|
width; then comes the bowel, single, convoluted, moderately wide.
|
|
The lower part of the gut is like that of a pig; for it is broad,
|
|
and the part from it to the buttocks is thick and short. The caul,
|
|
or great omentum, is attached to the middle of the stomach, and
|
|
consists of a fatty membrane, as is the case with all other animals
|
|
whose stomachs are single and which have teeth in both jaws.
|
|
|
|
The mesentery is over the bowels; this also is membranous and
|
|
broad, and turns to fat. It is attached to the great vein and the
|
|
aorta, and there run through it a number of veins closely packed
|
|
together, extending towards the region of the bowels, beginning
|
|
above and ending below.
|
|
|
|
So much for the properties of the oesophagus, the windpipe, and
|
|
the stomach.
|
|
|
|
17
|
|
|
|
The heart has three cavities, and is situated above the lung at
|
|
the division of the windpipe, and is provided with a fatty and thick
|
|
membrane where it fastens on to the great vein and the aorta. It
|
|
lies with its tapering portion upon the aorta, and this portion is
|
|
similarly situated in relation to the chest in all animals that have a
|
|
chest. In all animals alike, in those that have a chest and in those
|
|
that have none, the apex of the heart points forwards, although this
|
|
fact might possibly escape notice by a change of position under
|
|
dissection. The rounded end of the heart is at the top. The apex is to
|
|
a great extent fleshy and close in texture, and in the cavities of the
|
|
heart are sinews. As a rule the heart is situated in the middle of the
|
|
chest in animals that have a chest, and in man it is situated a little
|
|
to the left-hand side, leaning a little way from the division of the
|
|
breasts towards the left breast in the upper part of the chest.
|
|
|
|
The heart is not large, and in its general shape it is not
|
|
elongated; in fact, it is somewhat round in form: only, be it
|
|
remembered, it is sharp-pointed at the bottom. It has three
|
|
cavities, as has been said: the right-hand one the largest of the
|
|
three, the left-hand one the least, and the middle one intermediate in
|
|
size. All these cavities, even the two small ones, are connected by
|
|
passages with the lung, and this fact is rendered quite plain in one
|
|
of the cavities. And below, at the point of attachment, in the largest
|
|
cavity there is a connexion with the great vein (near which the
|
|
mesentery lies); and in the middle one there is a connexion with the
|
|
aorta.
|
|
|
|
Canals lead from the heart into the lung, and branch off just
|
|
as the windpipe does, running all over the lung parallel with the
|
|
passages from the windpipe. The canals from the heart are uppermost;
|
|
and there is no common passage, but the passages through their
|
|
having a common wall receive the breath and pass it on to the heart;
|
|
and one of the passages conveys it to the right cavity, and the
|
|
other to the left.
|
|
|
|
With regard to the great vein and the aorta we shall, by and
|
|
by, treat of them together in a discussion devoted to them and to them
|
|
alone. In all animals that are furnished with a lung, and that are
|
|
both internally and externally viviparous, the lung is of all organs
|
|
the most richly supplied with blood; for the lung is throughout spongy
|
|
in texture, and along by every single pore in it go branches from
|
|
the great vein. Those who imagine it to be empty are altogether
|
|
mistaken; and they are led into their error by their observation of
|
|
lungs removed from animals under dissection, out of which organs the
|
|
blood had all escaped immediately after death.
|
|
|
|
Of the other internal organs the heart alone contains blood.
|
|
And the lung has blood not in itself but in its veins, but the heart
|
|
has blood in itself; for in each of its three cavities it has blood,
|
|
but the thinnest blood is what it has in its central cavity.
|
|
|
|
Under the lung comes the thoracic diaphragm or midriff,
|
|
attached to the ribs, the hypochondria and the backbone, with a thin
|
|
membrane in the middle of it. It has veins running through it; and the
|
|
diaphragm in the case of man is thicker in proportion to the size of
|
|
his frame than in other animals.
|
|
|
|
Under the diaphragm on the right-hand side lies the 'liver',
|
|
and on the left-hand side the 'spleen', alike in all animals that
|
|
are provided with these organs in an ordinary and not preternatural
|
|
way; for, be it observed, in some quadrupeds these organs have been
|
|
found in a transposed position. These organs are connected with the
|
|
stomach by the caul.
|
|
|
|
To outward view the spleen of man is narrow and long,
|
|
resembling the self-same organ in the pig. The liver in the great
|
|
majority of animals is not provided with a 'gall-bladder'; but the
|
|
latter is present in some. The liver of a man is round-shaped, and
|
|
resembles the same organ in the ox. And, by the way, the absence above
|
|
referred to of a gall-bladder is at times met with in the practice
|
|
of augury. For instance, in a certain district of the Chalcidic
|
|
settlement in Euboea the sheep are devoid of gall-bladders; and in
|
|
Naxos nearly all the quadrupeds have one so large that foreigners when
|
|
they offer sacrifice with such victims are bewildered with fright,
|
|
under the impression that the phenomenon is not due to natural causes,
|
|
but bodes some mischief to the individual offerers of the sacrifice.
|
|
|
|
Again, the liver is attached to the great vein, but it has no
|
|
communication with the aorta; for the vein that goes off from the
|
|
great vein goes right through the liver, at a point where are the
|
|
so-called 'portals' of the liver. The spleen also is connected only
|
|
with the great vein, for a vein extends to the spleen off from it.
|
|
|
|
After these organs come the 'kidneys', and these are placed close
|
|
to the backbone, and resemble in character the same organ in kine.
|
|
In all animals that are provided with this organ, the right kidney
|
|
is situated higher up than the other. It has also less fatty substance
|
|
than the left-hand one and is less moist. And this phenomenon also
|
|
is observable in all the other animals alike.
|
|
|
|
Furthermore, passages or ducts lead into the kidneys both from
|
|
the great vein and from the aorta, only not into the cavity. For, by
|
|
the way, there is a cavity in the middle of the kidney, bigger in some
|
|
creatures and less in others; but there is none in the case of the
|
|
seal. This latter animal has kidneys resembling in shape the identical
|
|
organ in kine, but in its case the organs are more solid than in any
|
|
other known creature. The ducts that lead into the kidneys lose
|
|
themselves in the substance of the kidneys themselves; and the proof
|
|
that they extend no farther rests on the fact that they contain no
|
|
blood, nor is any clot found therein. The kidneys, however, have, as
|
|
has been said, a small cavity. From this cavity in the kidney there
|
|
lead two considerable ducts or ureters into the bladder; and others
|
|
spring from the aorta, strong and continuous. And to the middle of
|
|
each of the two kidneys is attached a hollow sinewy vein, stretching
|
|
right along the spine through the narrows; by and by these veins are
|
|
lost in either loin, and again become visible extending to the
|
|
flank. And these off-branchings of the veins terminate in the bladder.
|
|
For the bladder lies at the extremity, and is held in position by
|
|
the ducts stretching from the kidneys, along the stalk that extends to
|
|
the urethra; and pretty well all round it is fastened by fine sinewy
|
|
membranes, that resemble to some extent the thoracic diaphragm. The
|
|
bladder in man is, proportionately to his size, tolerably large.
|
|
|
|
To the stalk of the bladder the private part is attached, the
|
|
external orifices coalescing; but a little lower down, one of the
|
|
openings communicates with the testicles and the other with the
|
|
bladder. The penis is gristly and sinewy in its texture. With it are
|
|
connected the testicles in male animals, and the properties of these
|
|
organs we shall discuss in our general account of the said organ.
|
|
|
|
All these organs are similar in the female; for there is no
|
|
difference in regard to the internal organs, except in respect to
|
|
the womb, and with reference to the appearance of this organ I must
|
|
refer the reader to diagrams in my 'Anatomy'. The womb, however, is
|
|
situated over the bowel, and the bladder lies over the womb. But we
|
|
must treat by and by in our pages of the womb of all female animals
|
|
viewed generally. For the wombs of all female animals are not
|
|
identical, neither do their local dispositions coincide.
|
|
|
|
These are the organs, internal and external, of man, and such
|
|
is their nature and such their local disposition.
|
|
|
|
Book II
|
|
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
With regard to animals in general, some parts or organs are
|
|
common to all, as has been said, and some are common only to
|
|
particular genera; the parts, moreover, are identical with or
|
|
different from one another on the lines already repeatedly laid
|
|
down. For as a general rule all animals that are generically
|
|
distinct have the majority of their parts or organs different in
|
|
form or species; and some of them they have only analogically
|
|
similar and diverse in kind or genus, while they have others that
|
|
are alike in kind but specifically diverse; and many parts or organs
|
|
exist in some animals, but not in others.
|
|
|
|
For instance, viviparous quadrupeds have all a head and a neck,
|
|
and all the parts or organs of the head, but they differ each from
|
|
other in the shapes of the parts. The lion has its neck composed of
|
|
one single bone instead of vertebrae; but, when dissected, the
|
|
animal is found in all internal characters to resemble the dog.
|
|
|
|
The quadrupedal vivipara instead of arms have forelegs. This is
|
|
true of all quadrupeds, but such of them as have toes have,
|
|
practically speaking, organs analogous to hands; at all events, they
|
|
use these fore-limbs for many purposes as hands. And they have the
|
|
limbs on the left-hand side less distinct from those on the right than
|
|
man.
|
|
|
|
The fore-limbs then serve more or less the purpose of hands in
|
|
quadrupeds, with the exception of the elephant. This latter animal has
|
|
its toes somewhat indistinctly defined, and its front legs are much
|
|
bigger than its hinder ones; it is five-toed, and has short ankles
|
|
to its hind feet. But it has a nose such in properties and such in
|
|
size as to allow of its using the same for a hand. For it eats and
|
|
drinks by lifting up its food with the aid of this organ into its
|
|
mouth, and with the same organ it lifts up articles to the driver on
|
|
its back; with this organ it can pluck up trees by the roots, and when
|
|
walking through water it spouts the water up by means of it; and
|
|
this organ is capable of being crooked or coiled at the tip, but not
|
|
of flexing like a joint, for it is composed of gristle.
|
|
|
|
Of all animals man alone can learn to make equal use of both
|
|
hands.
|
|
|
|
All animals have a part analogous to the chest in man, but not
|
|
similar to his; for the chest in man is broad, but that of all other
|
|
animals is narrow. Moreover, no other animal but man has breasts in
|
|
front; the elephant, certainly, has two breasts, not however in the
|
|
chest, but near it.
|
|
|
|
Moreover, also, animals have the flexions of their fore and
|
|
hind limbs in directions opposite to one another, and in directions
|
|
the reverse of those observed in the arms and legs of man; with the
|
|
exception of the elephant. In other words, with the viviparous
|
|
quadrupeds the front legs bend forwards and the hind ones backwards,
|
|
and the concavities of the two pairs of limbs thus face one another.
|
|
|
|
The elephant does not sleep standing, as some were wont to
|
|
assert, but it bends its legs and settles down; only that in
|
|
consequence of its weight it cannot bend its leg on both sides
|
|
simultaneously, but falls into a recumbent position on one side or the
|
|
other, and in this position it goes to sleep. And it bends its hind
|
|
legs just as a man bends his legs.
|
|
|
|
In the case of the ovipara, as the crocodile and the lizard and
|
|
the like, both pairs of legs, fore and hind, bend forwards, with a
|
|
slight swerve on one side. The flexion is similar in the case of the
|
|
multipeds; only that the legs in between the extreme ends always
|
|
move in a manner intermediate between that of those in front and those
|
|
behind, and accordingly bend sideways rather than backwards or
|
|
forwards. But man bends his arms and his legs towards the same
|
|
point, and therefore in opposite ways: that is to say, he bends his
|
|
arms backwards, with just a slight inclination inwards, and his legs
|
|
frontwards. No animal bends both its fore-limbs and hind-limbs
|
|
backwards; but in the case of all animals the flexion of the shoulders
|
|
is in the opposite direction to that of the elbows or the joints of
|
|
the forelegs, and the flexure in the hips to that of the knees of
|
|
the hind-legs: so that since man differs from other animals in
|
|
flexion, those animals that possess such parts as these move them
|
|
contrariwise to man.
|
|
|
|
Birds have the flexions of their limbs like those of the
|
|
quadrupeds; for, although bipeds, they bend their legs backwards,
|
|
and instead of arms or front legs have wings which bend frontwards.
|
|
|
|
The seal is a kind of imperfect or crippled quadruped; for just
|
|
behind the shoulder-blade its front feet are placed, resembling hands,
|
|
like the front paws of the bear; for they are furnished with five
|
|
toes, and each of the toes has three flexions and a nail of
|
|
inconsiderable size. The hind feet are also furnished with five
|
|
toes; in their flexions and nails they resemble the front feet, and in
|
|
shape they resemble a fish's tail.
|
|
|
|
The movements of animals, quadruped and multiped, are crosswise,
|
|
or in diagonals, and their equilibrium in standing posture is
|
|
maintained crosswise; and it is always the limb on the right-hand side
|
|
that is the first to move. The lion, however, and the two species of
|
|
camels, both the Bactrian and the Arabian, progress by an amble; and
|
|
the action so called is when the animal never overpasses the right
|
|
with the left, but always follows close upon it.
|
|
|
|
Whatever parts men have in front, these parts quadrupeds have
|
|
below, in or on the belly; and whatever parts men have behind, these
|
|
parts quadrupeds have above on their backs. Most quadrupeds have a
|
|
tail; for even the seal has a tiny one resembling that of the stag.
|
|
Regarding the tails of the pithecoids we must give their distinctive
|
|
properties by and by animal
|
|
|
|
All viviparous quadrupeds are hair-coated, whereas man has only a
|
|
few short hairs excepting on the head, but, so far as the head is
|
|
concerned, he is hairier than any other animal. Further, of
|
|
hair-coated animals, the back is hairier than the belly, which
|
|
latter is either comparatively void of hair or smooth and void of hair
|
|
altogether. With man the reverse is the case.
|
|
|
|
Man also has upper and lower eyelashes, and hair under the
|
|
armpits and on the pubes. No other animal has hair in either of
|
|
these localities, or has an under eyelash; though in the case of
|
|
some animals a few straggling hairs grow under the eyelid.
|
|
|
|
Of hair-coated quadrupeds some are hairy all over the body, as
|
|
the pig, the bear, and the dog; others are especially hairy on the
|
|
neck and all round about it, as is the case with animals that have a
|
|
shaggy mane, such as the lion; others again are especially hairy on
|
|
the upper surface of the neck from the head as far as the withers,
|
|
namely, such as have a crested mane, as in the case with the horse,
|
|
the mule, and, among the undomesticated horned animals, the bison.
|
|
|
|
The so-called hippelaphus also has a mane on its withers, and the
|
|
animal called pardion, in either case a thin mane extending from the
|
|
head to the withers; the hippelaphus has, exceptionally, a beard by
|
|
the larynx. Both these animals have horns and are cloven-footed; the
|
|
female, however, of the hippelaphus has no horns. This latter animal
|
|
resembles the stag in size; it is found in the territory of the
|
|
Arachotae, where the wild cattle also are found. Wild cattle differ
|
|
from their domesticated congeners just as the wild boar differs from
|
|
the domesticated one. That is to say they are black, strong looking,
|
|
with a hook-nosed muzzle, and with horns lying more over the back. The
|
|
horns of the hippelaphus resemble those of the gazelle.
|
|
|
|
The elephant, by the way, is the least hairy of all quadrupeds.
|
|
With animals, as a general rule, the tail corresponds with the body as
|
|
regards thickness or thinness of hair-coating; that is, with animals
|
|
that have long tails, for some creatures have tails of altogether
|
|
insignificant size.
|
|
|
|
Camels have an exceptional organ wherein they differ from all
|
|
other animals, and that is the so-called 'hump' on their back. The
|
|
Bactrian camel differs from the Arabian; for the former has two
|
|
humps and the latter only one, though it has, by the way, a kind of
|
|
a hump below like the one above, on which, when it kneels, the
|
|
weight of the whole body rests. The camel has four teats like the cow,
|
|
a tail like that of an ass, and the privy parts of the male are
|
|
directed backwards. It has one knee in each leg, and the flexures of
|
|
the limb are not manifold, as some say, although they appear to be
|
|
so from the constricted shape of the region of the belly. It has a
|
|
huckle-bone like that of kine, but meagre and small in proportion to
|
|
its bulk. It is cloven-footed, and has not got teeth in both jaws; and
|
|
it is cloven footed in the following way: at the back there is a
|
|
slight cleft extending as far up as the second joint of the toes;
|
|
and in front there are small hooves on the tip of the first joint of
|
|
the toes; and a sort of web passes across the cleft, as in geese.
|
|
The foot is fleshy underneath, like that of the bear; so that, when
|
|
the animal goes to war, they protect its feet, when they get sore,
|
|
with sandals.
|
|
|
|
The legs of all quadrupeds are bony, sinewy, and fleshless; and
|
|
in point of fact such is the case with all animals that are
|
|
furnished with feet, with the exception of man. They are also
|
|
unfurnished with buttocks; and this last point is plain in an especial
|
|
degree in birds. It is the reverse with man; for there is scarcely any
|
|
part of the body in which man is so fleshy as in the buttock, the
|
|
thigh, and the calf; for the part of the leg called gastroenemia or is
|
|
fleshy.
|
|
|
|
Of blooded and viviparous quadrupeds some have the foot cloven
|
|
into many parts, as is the case with the hands and feet of man (for
|
|
some animals, by the way, are many-toed, as the lion, the dog, and the
|
|
pard); others have feet cloven in twain, and instead of nails have
|
|
hooves, as the sheep, the goat, the deer, and the hippopotamus; others
|
|
are uncloven of foot, such for instance as the solid-hooved animals,
|
|
the horse and the mule. Swine are either cloven-footed or
|
|
uncloven-footed; for there are in Illyria and in Paeonia and elsewhere
|
|
solid-hooved swine. The cloven-footed animals have two clefts
|
|
behind; in the solid-hooved this part is continuous and undivided.
|
|
|
|
Furthermore, of animals some are horned, and some are not so.
|
|
The great majority of the horned animals are cloven-footed, as the ox,
|
|
the stag, the goat; and a solid-hooved animal with a pair of horns has
|
|
never yet been met with. But a few animals are known to be
|
|
singled-horned and single-hooved, as the Indian ass; and one, to wit
|
|
the oryx, is single horned and cloven-hooved.
|
|
|
|
Of all solid-hooved animals the Indian ass alone has an astragalus
|
|
or huckle-bone; for the pig, as was said above, is either solid-hooved
|
|
or cloven-footed, and consequently has no well-formed huckle-bone.
|
|
Of the cloven footed many are provided with a huckle-bone. Of the
|
|
many-fingered or many-toed, no single one has been observed to have
|
|
a huckle-bone, none of the others any more than man. The lynx,
|
|
however, has something like a hemiastragal, and the lion something
|
|
resembling the sculptor's 'labyrinth'. All the animals that have a
|
|
huckle-bone have it in the hinder legs. They have also the bone placed
|
|
straight up in the joint; the upper part, outside; the lower part,
|
|
inside; the sides called Coa turned towards one another, the sides
|
|
called Chia outside, and the keraiae or 'horns' on the top. This,
|
|
then, is the position of the hucklebone in the case of all animals
|
|
provided with the part.
|
|
|
|
Some animals are, at one and the same time, furnished with a mane
|
|
and furnished also with a pair of horns bent in towards one another,
|
|
as is the bison (or aurochs), which is found in Paeonia and Maedica.
|
|
But all animals that are horned are quadrupedal, except in cases where
|
|
a creature is said metaphorically, or by a figure of speech, to have
|
|
horns; just as the Egyptians describe the serpents found in the
|
|
neighbourhood of Thebes, while in point of fact the creatures have
|
|
merely protuberances on the head sufficiently large to suggest such an
|
|
epithet.
|
|
|
|
Of horned animals the deer alone has a horn, or antler, hard
|
|
and solid throughout. The horns of other animals are hollow for a
|
|
certain distance, and solid towards the extremity. The hollow part
|
|
is derived from the skin, but the core round which this is wrapped-the
|
|
hard part-is derived from the bones; as is the case with the horns
|
|
of oxen. The deer is the only animal that sheds its horns, and it does
|
|
so annually, after reaching the age of two years, and again renews
|
|
them. All other animals retain their horns permanently, unless the
|
|
horns be damaged by accident.
|
|
|
|
Again, with regard to the breasts and the generative organs,
|
|
animals differ widely from one another and from man. For instance, the
|
|
breasts of some animals are situated in front, either in the chest
|
|
or near to it, and there are in such cases two breasts and two
|
|
teats, as is the case with man and the elephant, as previously stated.
|
|
For the elephant has two breasts in the region of the axillae; and the
|
|
female elephant has two breasts insignificant in size and in no way
|
|
proportionate to the bulk of the entire frame, in fact, so
|
|
insignificant as to be invisible in a sideways view; the males also
|
|
have breasts, like the females, exceedingly small. The she-bear has
|
|
four breasts. Some animals have two breasts, but situated near the
|
|
thighs, and teats, likewise two in number, as the sheep; others have
|
|
four teats, as the cow. Some have breasts neither in the chest nor
|
|
at the thighs, but in the belly, as the dog and pig; and they have a
|
|
considerable number of breasts or dugs, but not all of equal size.
|
|
Thus the shepard has four dugs in the belly, the lioness two, and
|
|
others more. The she-camel, also, has two dugs and four teats, like
|
|
the cow. Of solid-hooved animals the males have no dugs, excepting
|
|
in the case of males that take after the mother, which phenomenon is
|
|
observable in horses.
|
|
|
|
Of male animals the genitals of some are external, as is the case
|
|
with man, the horse, and most other creatures; some are internal, as
|
|
with the dolphin. With those that have the organ externally placed,
|
|
the organ in some cases is situated in front, as in the cases
|
|
already mentioned, and of these some have the organ detached, both
|
|
penis and testicles, as man; others have penis and testicles closely
|
|
attached to the belly, some more closely, some less; for this organ is
|
|
not detached in the wild boar nor in the horse.
|
|
|
|
The penis of the elephant resembles that of the horse; compared
|
|
with the size of the animal it is disproportionately small; the
|
|
testicles are not visible, but are concealed inside in the vicinity of
|
|
the kidneys; and for this reason the male speedily gives over in the
|
|
act of intercourse. The genitals of the female are situated where
|
|
the udder is in sheep; when she is in heat, she draws the organ back
|
|
and exposes it externally, to facilitate the act of intercourse for
|
|
the male; and the organ opens out to a considerable extent.
|
|
|
|
With most animals the genitals have the position above
|
|
assigned; but some animals discharge their urine backwards, as the
|
|
lynx, the lion, the camel, and the hare. Male animals differ from
|
|
one another, as has been said, in this particular, but all female
|
|
animals are retromingent: even the female elephant like other animals,
|
|
though she has the privy part below the thighs.
|
|
|
|
In the male organ itself there is a great diversity. For in some
|
|
cases the organ is composed of flesh and gristle, as in man; in such
|
|
cases, the fleshy part does not become inflated, but the gristly
|
|
part is subject to enlargement. In other cases, the organ is
|
|
composed of fibrous tissue, as with the camel and the deer; in other
|
|
cases it is bony, as with the fox, the wolf, the marten, and the
|
|
weasel; for this organ in the weasel has a bone.
|
|
|
|
When man has arrived at maturity, his upper part is smaller
|
|
than the lower one, but with all other blooded animals the reverse
|
|
holds good. By the 'upper' part we mean all extending from the head
|
|
down to the parts used for excretion of residuum, and by the 'lower'
|
|
part else. With animals that have feet the hind legs are to be rated
|
|
as the lower part in our comparison of magnitudes, and with animals
|
|
devoid of feet, the tail, and the like.
|
|
|
|
When animals arrive at maturity, their properties are as above
|
|
stated; but they differ greatly from one another in their growth
|
|
towards maturity. For instance, man, when young, has his upper part
|
|
larger than the lower, but in course of growth he comes to reverse
|
|
this condition; and it is owing to this circumstance that-an
|
|
exceptional instance, by the way-he does not progress in early life as
|
|
he does at maturity, but in infancy creeps on all fours; but some
|
|
animals, in growth, retain the relative proportion of the parts, as
|
|
the dog. Some animals at first have the upper part smaller and the
|
|
lower part larger, and in course of growth the upper part gets to be
|
|
the larger, as is the case with the bushy-tailed animals such as the
|
|
horse; for in their case there is never, subsequently to birth, any
|
|
increase in the part extending from the hoof to the haunch.
|
|
|
|
Again, in respect to the teeth, animals differ greatly both
|
|
from one another and from man. All animals that are quadrupedal,
|
|
blooded and viviparous, are furnished with teeth; but, to begin
|
|
with, some are double-toothed (or fully furnished with teeth in both
|
|
jaws), and some are not. For instance, horned quadrupeds are not
|
|
double-toothed; for they have not got the front teeth in the upper
|
|
jaw; and some hornless animals, also, are not double toothed, as the
|
|
camel. Some animals have tusks, like the boar, and some have not.
|
|
Further, some animals are saw-toothed, such as the lion, the pard, and
|
|
the dog; and some have teeth that do not interlock but have flat
|
|
opposing crowns, as the horse and the ox; and by 'saw-toothed' we mean
|
|
such animals as interlock the sharp-pointed teeth in one jaw between
|
|
the sharp-pointed ones in the other. No animal is there that possesses
|
|
both tusks and horns, nor yet do either of these structures exist in
|
|
any animal possessed of 'saw-teeth'. The front teeth are usually
|
|
sharp, and the back ones blunt. The seal is saw-toothed throughout,
|
|
inasmuch as he is a sort of link with the class of fishes; for
|
|
fishes are almost all saw-toothed.
|
|
|
|
No animal of these genera is provided with double rows of
|
|
teeth. There is, however, an animal of the sort, if we are to
|
|
believe Ctesias. He assures us that the Indian wild beast called the
|
|
'martichoras' has a triple row of teeth in both upper and lower jaw;
|
|
that it is as big as a lion and equally hairy, and that its feet
|
|
resemble those of the lion; that it resembles man in its face and
|
|
ears; that its eyes are blue, and its colour vermilion; that its
|
|
tail is like that of the land-scorpion; that it has a sting in the
|
|
tail, and has the faculty of shooting off arrow-wise the spines that
|
|
are attached to the tail; that the sound of its voice is a something
|
|
between the sound of a pan-pipe and that of a trumpet; that it can run
|
|
as swiftly as deer, and that it is savage and a man-eater.
|
|
|
|
Man sheds his teeth, and so do other animals, as the horse, the
|
|
mule, and the ass. And man sheds his front teeth; but there is no
|
|
instance of an animal that sheds its molars. The pig sheds none of its
|
|
teeth at all.
|
|
|
|
2
|
|
|
|
With regard to dogs some doubts are entertained, as some contend
|
|
that they shed no teeth whatever, and others that they shed the
|
|
canines, but those alone; the fact being, that they do shed their
|
|
teeth like man, but that the circumstance escapes observation, owing
|
|
to the fact that they never shed them until equivalent teeth have
|
|
grown within the gums to take the place of the shed ones. We shall
|
|
be justified in supposing that the case is similar with wild beasts in
|
|
general; for they are said to shed their canines only. Dogs can be
|
|
distinguished from one another, the young from the old, by their
|
|
teeth; for the teeth in young dogs are white and sharp-pointed; in old
|
|
dogs, black and blunt.
|
|
|
|
3
|
|
|
|
In this particular, the horse differs entirely from animals in
|
|
general: for, generally speaking, as animals grow older their teeth
|
|
get blacker, but the horse's teeth grow whiter with age.
|
|
|
|
The so-called 'canines' come in between the sharp teeth and the
|
|
broad or blunt ones, partaking of the form of both kinds; for they are
|
|
broad at the base and sharp at the tip.
|
|
|
|
Males have more teeth than females in the case of men, sheep,
|
|
goats, and swine; in the case of other animals observations have not
|
|
yet been made: but the more teeth they have the more long-lived are
|
|
they, as a rule, while those are short-lived in proportion that have
|
|
teeth fewer in number and thinly set.
|
|
|
|
4
|
|
|
|
The last teeth to come in man are molars called 'wisdom-teeth',
|
|
which come at the age of twenty years, in the case of both sexes.
|
|
Cases have been known in women upwards. of eighty years old where at
|
|
the very close of life the wisdom-teeth have come up, causing great
|
|
pain in their coming; and cases have been known of the like phenomenon
|
|
in men too. This happens, when it does happen, in the case of people
|
|
where the wisdom-teeth have not come up in early years.
|
|
|
|
5
|
|
|
|
The elephant has four teeth on either side, by which it munches
|
|
its food, grinding it like so much barley-meal, and, quite apart
|
|
from these, it has its great teeth, or tusks, two in number. In the
|
|
male these tusks are comparatively large and curved upwards; in the
|
|
female, they are comparatively small and point in the opposite
|
|
direction; that is, they look downwards towards the ground. The
|
|
elephant is furnished with teeth at birth, but the tusks are not
|
|
then visible.
|
|
|
|
6
|
|
|
|
The tongue of the elephant is exceedingly small, and situated
|
|
far back in the mouth, so that it is difficult to get a sight of it.
|
|
|
|
7
|
|
|
|
Furthermore, animals differ from one another in the relative size
|
|
of their mouths. In some animals the mouth opens wide, as is the
|
|
case with the dog, the lion, and with all the saw-toothed animals;
|
|
other animals have small mouths, as man; and others have mouths of
|
|
medium capacity, as the pig and his congeners.
|
|
|
|
(The Egyptian hippopotamus has a mane like a horse, is
|
|
cloven-footed like an ox, and is snub-nosed. It has a huckle-bone like
|
|
cloven-footed animals, and tusks just visible; it has the tail of a
|
|
pig, the neigh of a horse, and the dimensions of an ass. The hide is
|
|
so thick that spears are made out of it. In its internal organs it
|
|
resembles the horse and the ass.)
|
|
|
|
8
|
|
|
|
Some animals share the properties of man and the quadrupeds, as
|
|
the ape, the monkey, and the baboon. The monkey is a tailed ape. The
|
|
baboon resembles the ape in form, only that it is bigger and stronger,
|
|
more like a dog in face, and is more savage in its habits, and its
|
|
teeth are more dog-like and more powerful.
|
|
|
|
Apes are hairy on the back in keeping with their quadrupedal
|
|
nature, and hairy on the belly in keeping with their human form-for,
|
|
as was said above, this characteristic is reversed in man and the
|
|
quadruped-only that the hair is coarse, so that the ape is thickly
|
|
coated both on the belly and on the back. Its face resembles that of
|
|
man in many respects; in other words, it has similar nostrils and
|
|
ears, and teeth like those of man, both front teeth and molars.
|
|
Further, whereas quadrupeds in general are not furnished with lashes
|
|
on one of the two eyelids, this creature has them on both, only very
|
|
thinly set, especially the under ones; in fact they are very
|
|
insignificant indeed. And we must bear in mind that all other
|
|
quadrupeds have no under eyelash at all.
|
|
|
|
The ape has also in its chest two teats upon poorly developed
|
|
breasts. It has also arms like man, only covered with hair, and it
|
|
bends these legs like man, with the convexities of both limbs facing
|
|
one another. In addition, it has hands and fingers and nails like man,
|
|
only that all these parts are somewhat more beast-like in
|
|
appearance. Its feet are exceptional in kind. That is, they are like
|
|
large hands, and the toes are like fingers, with the middle one the
|
|
longest of all, and the under part of the foot is like a hand except
|
|
for its length, and stretches out towards the extremities like the
|
|
palm of the hand; and this palm at the after end is unusually hard,
|
|
and in a clumsy obscure kind of way resembles a heel. The creature
|
|
uses its feet either as hands or feet, and doubles them up as one
|
|
doubles a fist. Its upper-arm and thigh are short in proportion to the
|
|
forearm and the shin. It has no projecting navel, but only a
|
|
hardness in the ordinary locality of the navel. Its upper part is much
|
|
larger than its lower part, as is the case with quadrupeds; in fact,
|
|
the proportion of the former to the latter is about as five to
|
|
three. Owing to this circumstance and to the fact that its feet
|
|
resemble hands and are composed in a manner of hand and of foot: of
|
|
foot in the heel extremity, of the hand in all else-for even the
|
|
toes have what is called a 'palm':-for these reasons the animal is
|
|
oftener to be found on all fours than upright. It has neither hips,
|
|
inasmuch as it is a quadruped, nor yet a tail, inasmuch as it is a
|
|
biped, except nor yet a tal by the way that it has a tail as small
|
|
as small can be, just a sort of indication of a tail. The genitals
|
|
of the female resemble those of the female in the human species; those
|
|
of the male are more like those of a dog than are those of a man.
|
|
|
|
9
|
|
|
|
The monkey, as has been observed, is furnished with a tail. In
|
|
all such creatures the internal organs are found under dissection to
|
|
correspond to those of man.
|
|
|
|
So much then for the properties of the organs of such animals
|
|
as bring forth their young into the world alive.
|
|
|
|
10
|
|
|
|
Oviparous and blooded quadrupeds-and, by the way, no terrestrial
|
|
blooded animal is oviparous unless it is quadrupedal or is devoid of
|
|
feet altogether-are furnished with a head, a neck, a back, upper and
|
|
under parts, the front legs and hind legs, and the part analogous to
|
|
the chest, all as in the case of viviparous quadrupeds, and with a
|
|
tail, usually large, in exceptional cases small. And all these
|
|
creatures are many-toed, and the several toes are cloven apart.
|
|
Furthermore, they all have the ordinary organs of sensation, including
|
|
a tongue, with the exception of the Egyptian crocodile.
|
|
|
|
This latter animal, by the way, resembles certain fishes. For, as
|
|
a general rule, fishes have a prickly tongue, not free in its
|
|
movements; though there are some fishes that present a smooth
|
|
undifferentiated surface where the tongue should be, until you open
|
|
their mouths wide and make a close inspection.
|
|
|
|
Again, oviparous blooded quadrupeds are unprovided with ears, but
|
|
possess only the passage for hearing; neither have they breasts, nor a
|
|
copulatory organ, nor external testicles, but internal ones only;
|
|
neither are they hair coated, but are in all cases covered with
|
|
scaly plates. Moreover, they are without exception saw-toothed.
|
|
|
|
River crocodiles have pigs' eyes, large teeth and tusks, and
|
|
strong nails, and an impenetrable skin composed of scaly plates.
|
|
They see but poorly under water, but above the surface of it with
|
|
remarkable acuteness. As a rule, they pass the day-time on land and
|
|
the nighttime in the water; for the temperature of the water is at
|
|
night-time more genial than that of the open air.
|
|
|
|
11
|
|
|
|
The chameleon resembles the lizard in the general configuration of
|
|
its body, but the ribs stretch downwards and meet together under the
|
|
belly as is the case with fishes, and the spine sticks up as with
|
|
the fish. Its face resembles that of the baboon. Its tail is
|
|
exceedingly long, terminates in a sharp point, and is for the most
|
|
part coiled up, like a strap of leather. It stands higher off the
|
|
ground than the lizard, but the flexure of the legs is the same in
|
|
both creatures. Each of its feet is divided into two parts, which bear
|
|
the same relation to one another that the thumb and the rest of the
|
|
hand bear to one another in man. Each of these parts is for a short
|
|
distance divided after a fashion into toes; on the front feet the
|
|
inside part is divided into three and the outside into two, on the
|
|
hind feet the inside part into two and the outside into three; it
|
|
has claws also on these parts resembling those of birds of prey. Its
|
|
body is rough all over, like that of the crocodile. Its eyes are
|
|
situated in a hollow recess, and are very large and round, and are
|
|
enveloped in a skin resembling that which covers the entire body;
|
|
and in the middle a slight aperture is left for vision, through
|
|
which the animal sees, for it never covers up this aperture with the
|
|
cutaneous envelope. It keeps twisting its eyes round and shifting
|
|
its line of vision in every direction, and thus contrives to get a
|
|
sight of any object that it wants to see. The change in its colour
|
|
takes place when it is inflated with air; it is then black, not unlike
|
|
the crocodile, or green like the lizard but black-spotted like the
|
|
pard. This change of colour takes place over the whole body alike, for
|
|
the eyes and the tail come alike under its influence. In its movements
|
|
it is very sluggish, like the tortoise. It assumes a greenish hue in
|
|
dying, and retains this hue after death. It resembles the lizard in
|
|
the position of the oesophagus and the windpipe. It has no flesh
|
|
anywhere except a few scraps of flesh on the head and on the jaws
|
|
and near to the root of the tail. It has blood only round about the
|
|
heart, the eyes, the region above the heart, and in all the veins
|
|
extending from these parts; and in all these there is but little blood
|
|
after all. The brain is situated a little above the eyes, but
|
|
connected with them. When the outer skin is drawn aside from off the
|
|
eye, a something is found surrounding the eye, that gleams through
|
|
like a thin ring of copper. Membranes extend well nigh over its entire
|
|
frame, numerous and strong, and surpassing in respect of number and
|
|
relative strength those found in any other animal. After being cut
|
|
open along its entire length it continues to breathe for a
|
|
considerable time; a very slight motion goes on in the region of the
|
|
heart, and, while contraction is especially manifested in the
|
|
neighbourhood of the ribs, a similar motion is more or less
|
|
discernible over the whole body. It has no spleen visible. It
|
|
hibernates, like the lizard.
|
|
|
|
12
|
|
|
|
Birds also in some parts resemble the above mentioned animals;
|
|
that is to say, they have in all cases a head, a neck, a back, a
|
|
belly, and what is analogous to the chest. The bird is remarkable
|
|
among animals as having two feet, like man; only, by the way, it bends
|
|
them backwards as quadrupeds bend their hind legs, as was noticed
|
|
previously. It has neither hands nor front feet, but wings-an
|
|
exceptional structure as compared with other animals. Its
|
|
haunch-bone is long, like a thigh, and is attached to the body as
|
|
far as the middle of the belly; so like to a thigh is it that when
|
|
viewed separately it looks like a real one, while the real thigh is
|
|
a separate structure betwixt it and the shin. Of all birds those
|
|
that have crooked talons have the biggest thighs and the strongest
|
|
breasts. All birds are furnished with many claws, and all have the
|
|
toes separated more or less asunder; that is to say, in the greater
|
|
part the toes are clearly distinct from one another, for even the
|
|
swimming birds, although they are web-footed, have still their claws
|
|
fully articulated and distinctly differentiated from one another.
|
|
Birds that fly high in air are in all cases four-toed: that is, the
|
|
greater part have three toes in front and one behind in place of a
|
|
heel; some few have two in front and two behind, as the wryneck.
|
|
|
|
This latter bird is somewhat bigger than the chaffinch, and is
|
|
mottled in appearance. It is peculiar in the arrangement of its
|
|
toes, and resembles the snake in the structure of its tongue; for
|
|
the creature can protrude its tongue to the extent of four
|
|
finger-breadths, and then draw it back again. Moreover, it can twist
|
|
its head backwards while keeping all the rest of its body still,
|
|
like the serpent. It has big claws, somewhat resembling those of the
|
|
woodpecker. Its note is a shrill chirp.
|
|
|
|
Birds are furnished with a mouth, but with an exceptional one,
|
|
for they have neither lips nor teeth, but a beak. Neither have they
|
|
ears nor a nose, but only passages for the sensations connected with
|
|
these organs: that for the nostrils in the beak, and that for
|
|
hearing in the head. Like all other animals they all have two eyes,
|
|
and these are devoid of lashes. The heavy-bodied (or gallinaceous)
|
|
birds close the eye by means of the lower lid, and all birds blink
|
|
by means of a skin extending over the eye from the inner corner; the
|
|
owl and its congeners also close the eye by means of the upper lid.
|
|
The same phenomenon is observable in the animals that are protected by
|
|
horny scutes, as in the lizard and its congeners; for they all without
|
|
exception close the eye with the lower lid, but they do not blink like
|
|
birds. Further, birds have neither scutes nor hair, but feathers;
|
|
and the feathers are invariably furnished with quills. They have no
|
|
tail, but a rump with tail-feathers, short in such as are
|
|
long-legged and web-footed, large in others. These latter kinds of
|
|
birds fly with their feet tucked up close to the belly; but the
|
|
small rumped or short-tailed birds fly with their legs stretched out
|
|
at full length. All are furnished with a tongue, but the organ is
|
|
variable, being long in some birds and broad in others. Certain
|
|
species of birds above all other animals, and next after man,
|
|
possess the faculty of uttering articulate sounds; and this faculty is
|
|
chiefly developed in broad-tongued birds. No oviparous creature has an
|
|
epiglottis over the windpipe, but these animals so manage the
|
|
opening and shutting of the windpipe as not to allow any solid
|
|
substance to get down into the lung.
|
|
|
|
Some species of birds are furnished additionally with spurs,
|
|
but no bird with crooked talons is found so provided. The birds with
|
|
talons are among those that fly well, but those that have spurs are
|
|
among the heavy-bodied.
|
|
|
|
Again, some birds have a crest. As a general rule the crest sticks
|
|
up, and is composed of feathers only; but the crest of the barn-door
|
|
cock is exceptional in kind, for, whereas it is not just exactly
|
|
flesh, at the same time it is not easy to say what else it is.
|
|
|
|
13
|
|
|
|
Of water animals the genus of fishes constitutes a single group
|
|
apart from the rest, and including many diverse forms.
|
|
|
|
In the first place, the fish has a head, a back, a belly, in the
|
|
neighbourhood of which last are placed the stomach and viscera; and
|
|
behind it has a tail of continuous, undivided shape, but not, by the
|
|
way, in all cases alike. No fish has a neck, or any limb, or testicles
|
|
at all, within or without, or breasts. But, by the way this absence of
|
|
breasts may predicated of all non-viviparous animals; and in point
|
|
of fact viviparous animals are not in all cases provided with the
|
|
organ, excepting such as are directly viviparous without being first
|
|
oviparous. Thus the dolphin is directly viviparous, and accordingly we
|
|
find it furnished with two breasts, not situated high up, but in the
|
|
neighbourhood of the genitals. And this creature is not provided, like
|
|
quadrupeds, with visible teats, but has two vents, one on each
|
|
flank, from which the milk flows; and its young have to follow after
|
|
it to get suckled, and this phenomenon has been actually witnessed.
|
|
|
|
Fishes, then, as has been observed, have no breasts and no
|
|
passage for the genitals visible externally. But they have an
|
|
exceptional organ in the gills, whereby, after taking the water in the
|
|
mouth, they discharge it again; and in the fins, of which the
|
|
greater part have four, and the lanky ones two, as, for instance,
|
|
the eel, and these two situated near to the gills. In like manner
|
|
the grey mullet-as, for instance, the mullet found in the lake at
|
|
Siphae-have only two fins; and the same is the case with the fish
|
|
called Ribbon-fish. Some of the lanky fishes have no fins at all, such
|
|
as the muraena, nor gills articulated like those of other fish.
|
|
|
|
And of those fish that are provided with gills, some have
|
|
coverings for this organ, whereas all the selachians have the organ
|
|
unprotected by a cover. And those fishes that have coverings or
|
|
opercula for the gills have in all cases their gills placed
|
|
sideways; whereas, among selachians, the broad ones have the gills
|
|
down below on the belly, as the torpedo and the ray, while the lanky
|
|
ones have the organ placed sideways, as is the case in all the
|
|
dog-fish.
|
|
|
|
The fishing-frog has gills placed sideways, and covered not
|
|
with a spiny operculum, as in all but the selachian fishes, but with
|
|
one of skin.
|
|
|
|
Morever, with fishes furnished with gills, the gills in some
|
|
cases are simple in others duplicate; and the last gill in the
|
|
direction of the body is always simple. And, again, some fishes have
|
|
few gills, and others have a great number; but all alike have the same
|
|
number on both sides. Those that have the least number have one gill
|
|
on either side, and this one duplicate, like the boar-fish; others
|
|
have two on either side, one simple and the other duplicate, like
|
|
the conger and the scarus; others have four on either side, simple, as
|
|
the elops, the synagris, the muraena, and the eel; others have four,
|
|
all, with the exception of the hindmost one, in double rows, as the
|
|
wrasse, the perch, the sheat-fish, and the carp. The dog-fish have all
|
|
their gills double, five on a side; and the sword-fish has eight
|
|
double gills. So much for the number of gills as found in fishes.
|
|
|
|
Again, fishes differ from other animals in more ways than as
|
|
regards the gills. For they are not covered with hairs as are
|
|
viviparous land animals, nor, as is the case with certain oviparous
|
|
quadrupeds, with tessellated scutes, nor, like birds, with feathers;
|
|
but for the most part they are covered with scales. Some few are
|
|
rough-skinned, while the smooth-skinned are very few indeed. Of the
|
|
Selachia some are rough-skinned and some smooth-skinned; and among the
|
|
smooth-skinned fishes are included the conger, the eel, and the tunny.
|
|
|
|
All fishes are saw-toothed excepting the scarus; and the teeth in
|
|
all cases are sharp and set in many rows, and in some cases are placed
|
|
on the tongue. The tongue is hard and spiny, and so firmly attached
|
|
that fishes in many instances seem to be devoid of the organ
|
|
altogether. The mouth in some cases is wide-stretched, as it is with
|
|
some viviparous quadrupeds....
|
|
|
|
With regard to organs of sense, all save eyes, fishes possess
|
|
none of them, neither the organs nor their passages, neither ears
|
|
nor nostrils; but all fishes are furnished with eyes, and the eyes
|
|
devoid of lids, though the eyes are not hard; with regard to the
|
|
organs connected with the other senses, hearing and smell, they are
|
|
devoid alike of the organs themselves and of passages indicative of
|
|
them.
|
|
|
|
Fishes without exception are supplied with blood. Some of them are
|
|
oviparous, and some viviparous; scaly fish are invariably oviparous,
|
|
but cartilaginous fishes are all viviparous, with the single exception
|
|
of the fishing-frog.
|
|
|
|
14
|
|
|
|
Of blooded animals there now remains the serpent genus. This genus
|
|
is common to both elements, for, while most species comprehended
|
|
therein are land animals, a small minority, to wit the aquatic
|
|
species, pass their lives in fresh water. There are also sea-serpents,
|
|
in shape to a great extent resembling their congeners of the land,
|
|
with this exception that the head in their case is somewhat like the
|
|
head of the conger; and there are several kinds of sea-serpent, and
|
|
the different kinds differ in colour; these animals are not found in
|
|
very deep water. Serpents, like fish, are devoid of feet.
|
|
|
|
There are also sea-scolopendras, resembling in shape their land
|
|
congeners, but somewhat less in regard to magnitude. These creatures
|
|
are found in the neighbourhood of rocks; as compared with their land
|
|
congeners they are redder in colour, are furnished with feet in
|
|
greater numbers and with legs of more delicate structure. And the same
|
|
remark applies to them as to the sea-serpents, that they are not found
|
|
in very deep water.
|
|
|
|
Of fishes whose habitat is in the vicinity of rocks there is a
|
|
tiny one, which some call the Echeneis, or 'ship-holder', and which is
|
|
by some people used as a charm to bring luck in affairs of law and
|
|
love. The creature is unfit for eating. Some people assert that it has
|
|
feet, but this is not the case: it appears, however, to be furnished
|
|
with feet from the fact that its fins resemble those organs.
|
|
|
|
So much, then, for the external parts of blooded animals, as
|
|
regards their numbers, their properties, and their relative
|
|
diversities.
|
|
|
|
15
|
|
|
|
As for the properties of the internal organs, these we must first
|
|
discuss in the case of the animals that are supplied with blood. For
|
|
the principal genera differ from the rest of animals, in that the
|
|
former are supplied with blood and the latter are not; and the
|
|
former include man, viviparous and oviparous quadrupeds, birds,
|
|
fishes, cetaceans, and all the others that come under no general
|
|
designation by reason of their not forming genera, but groups of which
|
|
simply the specific name is predicable, as when we say 'the
|
|
serpent,' the 'crocodile'.
|
|
|
|
All viviparous quadrupeds, then, are furnished with an oesophagus
|
|
and a windpipe, situated as in man; the same statement is applicable
|
|
to oviparous quadrupeds and to birds, only that the latter present
|
|
diversities in the shapes of these organs. As a general rule, all
|
|
animals that take up air and breathe it in and out are furnished
|
|
with a lung, a windpipe, and an oesophagus, with the windpipe and
|
|
oesophagus not admitting of diversity in situation but admitting of
|
|
diversity in properties, and with the lung admitting of diversity in
|
|
both these respects. Further, all blooded animals have a heart and a
|
|
diaphragm or midriff; but in small animals the existence of the latter
|
|
organ is not so obvious owing to its delicacy and minute size.
|
|
|
|
In regard to the heart there is an exceptional phenomenon
|
|
observable in oxen. In other words, there is one species of ox
|
|
where, though not in all cases, a bone is found inside the heart. And,
|
|
by the way, the horse's heart also has a bone inside it.
|
|
|
|
The genera referred to above are not in all cases furnished
|
|
with a lung: for instance, the fish is devoid of the organ, as is also
|
|
every animal furnished with gills. All blooded animals are furnished
|
|
with a liver. As a general rule blooded animals are furnished with a
|
|
spleen; but with the great majority of non-viviparous but oviparous
|
|
animals the spleen is so small as all but to escape observation; and
|
|
this is the case with almost all birds, as with the pigeon, the
|
|
kite, the falcon, the owl: in point of fact, the aegocephalus is
|
|
devoid of the organ altogether. With oviparous quadrupeds the case
|
|
is much the same as with the viviparous; that is to say, they also
|
|
have the spleen exceedingly minute, as the tortoise, the freshwater
|
|
tortoise, the toad, the lizard, the crocodile, and the frog.
|
|
|
|
Some animals have a gall-bladder close to the liver, and others
|
|
have not. Of viviparous quadrupeds the deer is without the organ, as
|
|
also the roe, the horse, the mule, the ass, the seal, and some kinds
|
|
of pigs. Of deer those that are called Achainae appear to have gall in
|
|
their tail, but what is so called does resemble gall in colour, though
|
|
it is not so completely fluid, and the organ internally resembles a
|
|
spleen.
|
|
|
|
However, without any exception, stags are found to have maggots
|
|
living inside the head, and the habitat of these creatures is in the
|
|
hollow underneath the root of the tongue and in the neighbourhood of
|
|
the vertebra to which the head is attached. These creatures are as
|
|
large as the largest grubs; they grow all together in a cluster, and
|
|
they are usually about twenty in number.
|
|
|
|
Deer then, as has been observed, are without a gall-bladder;
|
|
their gut, however, is so bitter that even hounds refuse to eat it
|
|
unless the animal is exceptionally fat. With the elephant also the
|
|
liver is unfurnished with a gall-bladder, but when the animal is cut
|
|
in the region where the organ is found in animals furnished with it,
|
|
there oozes out a fluid resembling gall, in greater or less
|
|
quantities. Of animals that take in sea-water and are furnished with a
|
|
lung, the dolphin is unprovided with a gall-bladder. Birds and
|
|
fishes all have the organ, as also oviparous quadrupeds, all to a
|
|
greater or a lesser extent. But of fishes some have the organ close to
|
|
the liver, as the dogfishes, the sheat-fish, the rhine or
|
|
angel-fish, the smooth skate, the torpedo, and, of the lanky fishes,
|
|
the eel, the pipe-fish, and the hammer-headed shark. The
|
|
callionymus, also, has the gall-bladder close to the liver, and in
|
|
no other fish does the organ attain so great a relative size. Other
|
|
fishes have the organ close to the gut, attached to the liver by
|
|
certain extremely fine ducts. The bonito has the gall-bladder
|
|
stretched alongside the gut and equalling it in length, and often a
|
|
double fold of it. others have the organ in the region of the gut;
|
|
in some cases far off, in others near; as the fishing-frog, the elops,
|
|
the synagris, the muraena, and the sword-fish. Often animals of the
|
|
same species show this diversity of position; as, for instance, some
|
|
congers are found with the organ attached close to the liver, and
|
|
others with it detached from and below it. The case is much the same
|
|
with birds: that is, some have the gall-bladder close to the
|
|
stomach, and others close to the gut, as the pigeon, the raven, the
|
|
quail, the swallow, and the sparrow; some have it near at once to
|
|
the liver and to the stomach as the aegocephalus; others have it
|
|
near at once to the liver and the gut, as the falcon and the kite.
|
|
|
|
16
|
|
|
|
Again, all viviparous quadrupeds are furnished with kidneys and
|
|
a bladder. Of the ovipara that are not quadrupedal there is no
|
|
instance known of an animal, whether fish or bird, provided with these
|
|
organs. Of the ovipara that are quadrupedal, the turtle alone is
|
|
provided with these organs of a magnitude to correspond with the other
|
|
organs of the animal. In the turtle the kidney resembles the same
|
|
organ in the ox; that is to say, it looks one single organ composed of
|
|
a number of small ones. (The bison also resembles the ox in all its
|
|
internal parts).
|
|
|
|
17
|
|
|
|
With all animals that are furnished with these parts, the parts
|
|
are similarly situated, and with the exception of man, the heart is in
|
|
the middle; in man, however, as has been observed, the heart is placed
|
|
a little to the left-hand side. In all animals the pointed end of
|
|
the heart turns frontwards; only in fish it would at first sight
|
|
seem otherwise, for the pointed end is turned not towards the
|
|
breast, but towards the head and the mouth. And (in fish) the apex
|
|
is attached to a tube just where the right and left gills meet
|
|
together. There are other ducts extending from the heart to each of
|
|
the gills, greater in the greater fish, lesser in the lesser; but in
|
|
the large fishes the duct at the pointed end of the heart is a tube,
|
|
white-coloured and exceedingly thick. Fishes in some few cases have an
|
|
oesophagus, as the conger and the eel; and in these the organ is
|
|
small.
|
|
|
|
In fishes that are furnished with an undivided liver, the organ
|
|
lies entirely on the right side; where the liver is cloven from the
|
|
root, the larger half of the organ is on the right side: for in some
|
|
fishes the two parts are detached from one another, without any
|
|
coalescence at the root, as is the case with the dogfish. And there is
|
|
also a species of hare in what is named the Fig district, near Lake
|
|
Bolbe, and elsewhere, which animal might be taken to have two livers
|
|
owing to the length of the connecting ducts, similar to the
|
|
structure in the lung of birds.
|
|
|
|
The spleen in all cases, when normally placed, is on the
|
|
left-hand side, and the kidneys also lie in the same position in all
|
|
creatures that possess them. There have been known instances of
|
|
quadrupeds under dissection, where the spleen was on the right hand
|
|
and the liver on the left; but all such cases are regarded as
|
|
supernatural.
|
|
|
|
In all animals the wind-pipe extends to the lung, and the
|
|
manner how, we shall discuss hereafter; and the oesophagus, in all
|
|
that have the organ, extends through the midriff into the stomach.
|
|
For, by the way, as has been observed, most fishes have no oesophagus,
|
|
but the stomach is united directly with the mouth, so that in some
|
|
cases when big fish are pursuing little ones, the stomach tumbles
|
|
forward into the mouth.
|
|
|
|
All the afore-mentioned animals have a stomach, and one
|
|
similarly situated, that is to say, situated directly under the
|
|
midriff; and they have a gut connected therewith and closing at the
|
|
outlet of the residuum and at what is termed the 'rectum'. However,
|
|
animals present diversities in the structure of their stomachs. In the
|
|
first place, of the viviparous quadrupeds, such of the horned
|
|
animals as are not equally furnished with teeth in both jaws are
|
|
furnished with four such chambers. These animals, by the way, are
|
|
those that are said to chew the cud. In these animals the oesophagus
|
|
extends from the mouth downwards along the lung, from the midriff to
|
|
the big stomach (or paunch); and this stomach is rough inside and
|
|
semi-partitioned. And connected with it near to the entry of the
|
|
oesophagus is what from its appearance is termed the 'reticulum' (or
|
|
honeycomb bag); for outside it is like the stomach, but inside it
|
|
resembles a netted cap; and the reticulum is a great deal smaller than
|
|
the stomach. Connected with this is the 'echinus' (or many-plies),
|
|
rough inside and laminated, and of about the same size as the
|
|
reticulum. Next after this comes what is called the 'enystrum' (or
|
|
abomasum), larger an longer than the echinus, furnished inside with
|
|
numerous folds or ridges, large and smooth. After all this comes the
|
|
gut.
|
|
|
|
Such is the stomach of those quadrupeds that are horned and have
|
|
an unsymmetrical dentition; and these animals differ one from
|
|
another in the shape and size of the parts, and in the fact of the
|
|
oesophagus reaching the stomach centralwise in some cases and sideways
|
|
in others. Animals that are furnished equally with teeth in both
|
|
jaws have one stomach; as man, the pig, the dog, the bear, the lion,
|
|
the wolf. (The Thos, by the by, has all its internal organs similar to
|
|
the wolf's.)
|
|
|
|
All these, then have a single stomach, and after that the gut;
|
|
but the stomach in some is comparatively large, as in the pig and
|
|
bear, and the stomach of the pig has a few smooth folds or ridges;
|
|
others have a much smaller stomach, not much bigger than the gut, as
|
|
the lion, the dog, and man. In the other animals the shape of the
|
|
stomach varies in the direction of one or other of those already
|
|
mentioned; that is, the stomach in some animals resembles that of
|
|
the pig; in others that of the dog, alike with the larger animals
|
|
and the smaller ones. In all these animals diversities occur in regard
|
|
to the size, the shape, the thickness or the thinness of the
|
|
stomach, and also in regard to the place where the oesophagus opens
|
|
into it.
|
|
|
|
There is also a difference in structure in the gut of the two
|
|
groups of animals above mentioned (those with unsymmetrical and
|
|
those with symmetrical dentition) in size, in thickness, and in
|
|
foldings.
|
|
|
|
The intestines in those animals whose jaws are unequally
|
|
furnished with teeth are in all cases the larger, for the animals
|
|
themselves are larger than those in the other category; for very few
|
|
of them are small, and no single one of the horned animals is very
|
|
small. And some possess appendages (or caeca) to the gut, but no
|
|
animal that has not incisors in both jaws has a straight gut.
|
|
|
|
The elephant has a gut constricted into chambers, so constructed
|
|
that the animal appears to have four stomachs; in it the food is
|
|
found, but there is no distinct and separate receptacle. Its viscera
|
|
resemble those of the pig, only that the liver is four times the
|
|
size of that of the ox, and the other viscera in like proportion,
|
|
while the spleen is comparatively small.
|
|
|
|
Much the same may be predicated of the properties of the
|
|
stomach and the gut in oviparous quadrupeds, as in the land
|
|
tortoise, the turtle, the lizard, both crocodiles, and, in fact, in
|
|
all animals of the like kind; that is to say, their stomach is one and
|
|
simple, resembling in some cases that of the pig, and in other cases
|
|
that of the dog.
|
|
|
|
The serpent genus is similar and in almost all respects furnished
|
|
similarly to the saurians among land animals, if one could only
|
|
imagine these saurians to be increased in length and to be devoid of
|
|
legs. That is to say, the serpent is coated with tessellated scutes,
|
|
and resembles the saurian in its back and belly; only, by the way,
|
|
it has no testicles, but, like fishes, has two ducts converging into
|
|
one, and an ovary long and bifurcate. The rest of its internal
|
|
organs are identical with those of the saurians, except that, owing to
|
|
the narrowness and length of the animal, the viscera are
|
|
correspondingly narrow and elongated, so that they are apt to escape
|
|
recognition from the similarities in shape. Thus, the windpipe of
|
|
the creature is exceptionally long, and the oesophagus is longer
|
|
still, and the windpipe commences so close to the mouth that the
|
|
tongue appears to be underneath it; and the windpipe seems to
|
|
project over the tongue, owing to the fact that the tongue draws
|
|
back into a sheath and does not remain in its place as in other
|
|
animals. The tongue, moreover, is thin and long and black, and can
|
|
be protruded to a great distance. And both serpents and saurians
|
|
have this altogether exceptional property in the tongue, that it is
|
|
forked at the outer extremity, and this property is the more marked in
|
|
the serpent, for the tips of his tongue are as thin as hairs. The
|
|
seal, also, by the way, has a split tongue.
|
|
|
|
The stomach of the serpent is like a more spacious gut,
|
|
resembling the stomach of the dog; then comes the gut, long, narrow,
|
|
and single to the end. The heart is situated close to the pharynx,
|
|
small and kidney-shaped; and for this reason the organ might in some
|
|
cases appear not to have the pointed end turned towards the breast.
|
|
Then comes the lung, single, and articulated with a membranous
|
|
passage, very long, and quite detached from the heart. The liver is
|
|
long and simple; the spleen is short and round: as is the case in both
|
|
respects with the saurians. Its gall resembles that of the fish; the
|
|
water-snakes have it beside the liver, and the other snakes have it
|
|
usually beside the gut. These creatures are all saw-toothed. Their
|
|
ribs are as numerous as the days of the month; in other words, they
|
|
are thirty in number.
|
|
|
|
Some affirm that the same phenomenon is observable with
|
|
serpents as with swallow chicks; in other words, they say that if
|
|
you prick out a serpent's eyes they will grow again. And further,
|
|
the tails of saurians and of serpents, if they be cut off, will grow
|
|
again.
|
|
|
|
With fishes the properties of the gut and stomach are similar;
|
|
that is, they have a stomach single and simple, but variable in
|
|
shape according to species. For in some cases the stomach is
|
|
gut-shaped, as with the scarus, or parrot-fish; which fish, by the
|
|
way, appears to be the only fish that chews the cud. And the whole
|
|
length of the gut is simple, and if it have a reduplication or kink it
|
|
loosens out again into a simple form.
|
|
|
|
An exceptional property in fishes and in birds for the most
|
|
part is the being furnished with gut-appendages or caeca. Birds have
|
|
them low down and few in number. Fishes have them high up about the
|
|
stomach, and sometimes numerous, as in the goby, the galeos, the
|
|
perch, the scorpaena, the citharus, the red mullet, and the sparus;
|
|
the cestreus or grey mullet has several of them on one side of the
|
|
belly, and on the other side only one. Some fish possess these
|
|
appendages but only in small numbers, as the hepatus and the
|
|
glaucus; and, by the way, they are few also in the dorado. These
|
|
fishes differ also from one another within the same species, for in
|
|
the dorado one individual has many and another few. Some fishes are
|
|
entirely without the part, as the majority of the selachians. As for
|
|
all the rest, some of them have a few and some a great many. And in
|
|
all cases where the gut-appendages are found in fish, they are found
|
|
close up to the stomach.
|
|
|
|
In regard to their internal parts birds differ from other animals
|
|
and from one another. Some birds, for instance, have a crop in front
|
|
of the stomach, as the barn-door cock, the cushat, the pigeon, and the
|
|
partridge; and the crop consists of a large hollow skin, into which
|
|
the food first enters and where it lies ingested. Just where the
|
|
crop leaves the oesophagus it is somewhat narrow; by and by it
|
|
broadens out, but where it communicates with the stomach it narrows
|
|
down again. The stomach (or gizzard) in most birds is fleshy and hard,
|
|
and inside is a strong skin which comes away from the fleshy part.
|
|
Other birds have no crop, but instead of it an oesophagus wide and
|
|
roomy, either all the way or in the part leading to the stomach, as
|
|
with the daw, the raven, and the carrion-crow. The quail also has
|
|
the oesophagus widened out at the lower extremity, and in the
|
|
aegocephalus and the owl the organ is slightly broader at the bottom
|
|
than at the top. The duck, the goose, the gull, the catarrhactes,
|
|
and the great bustard have the oesophagus wide and roomy from one
|
|
end to the other, and the same applies to a great many other birds. In
|
|
some birds there is a portion of the stomach that resembles a crop, as
|
|
in the kestrel. In the case of small birds like the swallow and the
|
|
sparrow neither the oesophagus nor the crop is wide, but the stomach
|
|
is long. Some few have neither a crop nor a dilated oesophagus, but
|
|
the latter is exceedingly long, as in long necked birds, such as the
|
|
porphyrio, and, by the way, in the case of all these birds the
|
|
excrement is unusually moist. The quail is exceptional in regard to
|
|
these organs, as compared with other birds; in other words, it has a
|
|
crop, and at the same time its oesophagus is wide and spacious in
|
|
front of the stomach, and the crop is at some distance, relatively
|
|
to its size, from the oesophagus at that part.
|
|
|
|
Further, in most birds, the gut is thin, and simple when loosened
|
|
out. The gut-appendages or caeca in birds, as has been observed, are
|
|
few in number, and are not situated high up, as in fishes, but low
|
|
down towards the extremity of the gut. Birds, then, have caeca-not
|
|
all, but the greater part of them, such as the barn-door cock, the
|
|
partridge, the duck, the night-raven, (the localus,) the ascalaphus,
|
|
the goose, the swan, the great bustard, and the owl. Some of the
|
|
little birds also have these appendages; but the caeca in their case
|
|
are exceedingly minute, as in the sparrow.
|
|
|
|
Book III
|
|
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
Now that we have stated the magnitudes, the properties, and the
|
|
relative differences of the other internal organs, it remains for us
|
|
to treat of the organs that contribute to generation. These organs
|
|
in the female are in all cases internal; in the male they present
|
|
numerous diversities.
|
|
|
|
In the blooded animals some males are altogether devoid of
|
|
testicles, and some have the organ but situated internally; and of
|
|
those males that have the organ internally situated, some have it
|
|
close to the loin in the neighbourhood of the kidney and others
|
|
close to the belly. Other males have the organ situated externally. In
|
|
the case of these last, the penis is in some cases attached to the
|
|
belly, whilst in others it is loosely suspended, as is the case also
|
|
with the testicles; and, in the cases where the penis is attached to
|
|
the belly, the attachment varies accordingly as the animal is
|
|
emprosthuretic or opisthuretic.
|
|
|
|
No fish is furnished with testicles, nor any other creature
|
|
that has gills, nor any serpent whatever: nor, in short, any animal
|
|
devoid of feet, save such only as are viviparous within themselves.
|
|
Birds are furnished with testicles, but these are internally situated,
|
|
close to the loin. The case is similar with oviparous quadrupeds, such
|
|
as the lizard, the tortoise and the crocodile; and among the
|
|
viviparous animals this peculiarity is found in the hedgehog. Others
|
|
among those creatures that have the organ internally situated have
|
|
it close to the belly, as is the case with the dolphin amongst animals
|
|
devoid of feet, and with the elephant among viviparous quadrupeds.
|
|
In other cases these organs are externally conspicuous.
|
|
|
|
We have already alluded to the diversities observed in the
|
|
attachment of these organs to the belly and the adjacent region; in
|
|
other words, we have stated that in some cases the testicles are
|
|
tightly fastened back, as in the pig and its allies, and that in
|
|
others they are freely suspended, as in man.
|
|
|
|
Fishes, then, are devoid of testicles, as has been stated, and
|
|
serpents also. They are furnished, however, with two ducts connected
|
|
with the midriff and running on to either side of the backbone,
|
|
coalescing into a single duct above the outlet of the residuum, and by
|
|
'above' the outlet I mean the region near to the spine. These ducts in
|
|
the rutting season get filled with the genital fluid, and, if the
|
|
ducts be squeezed, the sperm oozes out white in colour. As to the
|
|
differences observed in male fishes of diverse species, the reader
|
|
should consult my treatise on Anatomy, and the subject will be
|
|
hereafter more fully discussed when we describe the specific character
|
|
in each case.
|
|
|
|
The males of oviparous animals, whether biped or quadruped, are
|
|
in all cases furnished with testicles close to the loin underneath the
|
|
midriff. With some animals the organ is whitish, in others somewhat of
|
|
a sallow hue; in all cases it is entirely enveloped with minute and
|
|
delicate veins. From each of the two testicles extends a duct, and, as
|
|
in the case of fishes, the two ducts coalesce into one above the
|
|
outlet of the residuum. This constitutes the penis, which organ in the
|
|
case of small ovipara is inconspicuous; but in the case of the
|
|
larger ovipara, as in the goose and the like, the organ becomes
|
|
quite visible just after copulation.
|
|
|
|
The ducts in the case of fishes and in biped and quadruped
|
|
ovipara are attached to the loin under the stomach and the gut, in
|
|
betwixt them and the great vein, from which ducts or blood-vessels
|
|
extend, one to each of the two testicles. And just as with fishes
|
|
the male sperm is found in the seminal ducts, and the ducts become
|
|
plainly visible at the rutting season and in some instances become
|
|
invisible after the season is passed, so also is it with the testicles
|
|
of birds; before the breeding season the organ is small in some
|
|
birds and quite invisible in others, but during the season the organ
|
|
in all cases is greatly enlarged. This phenomenon is remarkably
|
|
illustrated in the ring-dove and the partridge, so much so that some
|
|
people are actually of opinion that these birds are devoid of the
|
|
organ in the winter-time.
|
|
|
|
Of male animals that have their testicles placed frontwards, some
|
|
have them inside, close to the belly, as the dolphin; some have them
|
|
outside, exposed to view, close to the lower extremity of the belly.
|
|
These animals resemble one another thus far in respect to this
|
|
organ; but they differ from one another in this fact, that some of
|
|
them have their testicles situated separately by themselves, while
|
|
others, which have the organ situated externally, have them
|
|
enveloped in what is termed the scrotum.
|
|
|
|
Again, in all viviparous animals furnished with feet the
|
|
following properties are observed in the testicles themselves. From
|
|
the aorta there extend vein-like ducts to the head of each of the
|
|
testicles, and another two from the kidneys; these two from the
|
|
kidneys are supplied with blood, while the two from the aorta are
|
|
devoid of it. From the head of the testicle alongside of the
|
|
testicle itself is a duct, thicker and more sinewy than the other just
|
|
alluded to-a duct that bends back again at the end of the testicle
|
|
to its head; and from the head of each of the two testicles the two
|
|
ducts extend until they coalesce in front at the penis. The duct
|
|
that bends back again and that which is in contact with the testicle
|
|
are enveloped in one and the same membrane, so that, until you draw
|
|
aside the membrane, they present all the appearance of being a
|
|
single undifferentiated duct. Further, the duct in contact with the
|
|
testicle has its moist content qualified by blood, but to a
|
|
comparatively less extent than in the case of the ducts higher up
|
|
which are connected with the aorta; in the ducts that bend back
|
|
towards the tube of the penis, the liquid is white-coloured. There
|
|
also runs a duct from the bladder, opening into the upper part of
|
|
the canal, around which lies, sheathwise, what is called the 'penis'.
|
|
|
|
All these descriptive particulars may be regarded by the light of
|
|
the accompanying diagram; wherein the letter A marks the
|
|
starting-point of the ducts that extend from the aorta; the letters KK
|
|
mark the heads of the testicles and the ducts descending thereunto;
|
|
the ducts extending from these along the testicles are marked MM; the
|
|
ducts turning back, in which is the white fluid, are marked BB; the
|
|
penis D; the bladder E; and the testicles XX.
|
|
|
|
(By the way, when the testicles are cut off or removed, the ducts
|
|
draw upwards by contraction. Moreover, when male animals are young,
|
|
their owner sometimes destroys the organ in them by attrition;
|
|
sometimes they castrate them at a later period. And I may here add,
|
|
that a bull has been known to serve a cow immediately after
|
|
castration, and actually to impregnate her.)
|
|
|
|
So much then for the properties of testicles in male animals.
|
|
|
|
In female animals furnished with a womb, the womb is not in all
|
|
cases the same in form or endowed with the same properties, but both
|
|
in the vivipara and the ovipara great diversities present
|
|
themselves. In all creatures that have the womb close to the genitals,
|
|
the womb is two-horned, and one horn lies to the right-hand side and
|
|
the other to the left; its commencement, however, is single, and so is
|
|
the orifice, resembling in the case of the most numerous and largest
|
|
animals a tube composed of much flesh and gristle. Of these parts
|
|
one is termed the hystera or delphys, whence is derived the word
|
|
adelphos, and the other part, the tube or orifice, is termed metra. In
|
|
all biped or quadruped vivipara the womb is in all cases below the
|
|
midriff, as in man, the dog, the pig, the horse, and the ox; the
|
|
same is the case also in all horned animals. At the extremity of the
|
|
so-called ceratia, or horns, the wombs of most animals have a twist or
|
|
convolution.
|
|
|
|
In the case of those ovipara that lay eggs externally, the wombs
|
|
are not in all cases similarly situated. Thus the wombs of birds are
|
|
close to the midriff, and the wombs of fishes down below, just like
|
|
the wombs of biped and quadruped vivipara, only that, in the case of
|
|
the fish, the wombs are delicately formed, membranous, and
|
|
elongated; so much so that in extremely small fish, each of the two
|
|
bifurcated parts looks like a single egg, and those fishes whose egg
|
|
is described as crumbling would appear to have inside them a pair of
|
|
eggs, whereas in reality each of the two sides consists not of one but
|
|
of many eggs, and this accounts for their breaking up into so many
|
|
particles.
|
|
|
|
The womb of birds has the lower and tubular portion fleshy and
|
|
firm, and the part close to the midriff membranous and exceedingly
|
|
thin and fine: so thin and fine that the eggs might seem to be outside
|
|
the womb altogether. In the larger birds the membrane is more
|
|
distinctly visible, and, if inflated through the tube, lifts and
|
|
swells out; in the smaller birds all these parts are more indistinct.
|
|
|
|
The properties of the womb are similar in oviparous quadrupeds, as
|
|
the tortoise, the lizard, the frog and the like; for the tube below is
|
|
single and fleshy, and the cleft portion with the eggs is at the top
|
|
close to the midriff. With animals devoid of feet that are
|
|
internally oviparous and viviparous externally, as is the case with
|
|
the dogfish and the other so-called Selachians (and by this title we
|
|
designate such creatures destitute of feet and furnished with gills as
|
|
are viviparous), with these animals the womb is bifurcate, and
|
|
beginning down below it extends as far as the midriff, as in the
|
|
case of birds. There is also a narrow part between the two horns
|
|
running up as far as the midriff, and the eggs are engendered here and
|
|
above at the origin of the midriff; afterwards they pass into the
|
|
wider space and turn from eggs into young animals. However, the
|
|
differences in respect to the wombs of these fishes as compared with
|
|
others of their own species or with fishes in general, would be more
|
|
satisfactorily studied in their various forms in specimens under
|
|
dissection.
|
|
|
|
The members of the serpent genus also present divergencies either
|
|
when compared with the above-mentioned creatures or with one
|
|
another. Serpents as a rule are oviparous, the viper being the only
|
|
viviparous member of the genus. The viper is, previously to external
|
|
parturition, oviparous internally; and owing to this perculiarity
|
|
the properties of the womb in the viper are similar to those of the
|
|
womb in the selachians. The womb of the serpent is long, in keeping
|
|
with the body, and starting below from a single duct extends
|
|
continuously on both sides of the spine, so as to give the
|
|
impression of thus being a separate duct on each side of the spine,
|
|
until it reaches the midriff, where the eggs are engendered in a
|
|
row; and these eggs are laid not one by one, but all strung
|
|
together. (And all animals that are viviparous both internally and
|
|
externally have the womb situated above the stomach, and all the
|
|
ovipara underneath, near to the loin. Animals that are viviparous
|
|
externally and internally oviparous present an intermediate
|
|
arrangement; for the underneath portion of the womb, in which the eggs
|
|
are, is placed near to the loin, but the part about the orifice is
|
|
above the gut.)
|
|
|
|
Further, there is the following diversity observable in wombs as
|
|
compared with one another: namely that the females of horned
|
|
nonambidental animals are furnished with cotyledons in the womb when
|
|
they are pregnant, and such is the case, among ambidentals, with the
|
|
hare, the mouse, and the bat; whereas all other animals that are
|
|
ambidental, viviparous, and furnished with feet, have the womb quite
|
|
smooth, and in their case the attachment of the embryo is to the
|
|
womb itself and not to any cotyledon inside it.
|
|
|
|
The parts, then, in animals that are not homogeneous with
|
|
themselves and uniform in their texture, both parts external and parts
|
|
internal, have the properties above assigned to them.
|
|
|
|
2
|
|
|
|
In sanguineous animals the homogeneous or uniform part most
|
|
universally found is the blood, and its habitat the vein; next in
|
|
degree of universality, their analogues, lymph and fibre, and, that
|
|
which chiefly constitutes the frame of animals, flesh and whatsoever
|
|
in the several parts is analogous to flesh; then bone, and parts
|
|
that are analogous to bone, as fish-bone and gristle; and then, again,
|
|
skin, membrane, sinew, hair, nails, and whatever corresponds to these;
|
|
and, furthermore, fat, suet, and the excretions: and the excretions
|
|
are dung, phlegm, yellow bile, and black bile.
|
|
|
|
Now, as the nature of blood and the nature of the veins have
|
|
all the appearance of being primitive, we must discuss their
|
|
properties first of all, and all the more as some previous writers
|
|
have treated them very unsatisfactorily. And the cause of the
|
|
ignorance thus manifested is the extreme difficulty experienced in the
|
|
way of observation. For in the dead bodies of animals the nature of
|
|
the chief veins is undiscoverable, owing to the fact that they
|
|
collapse at once when the blood leaves them; for the blood pours out
|
|
of them in a stream, like liquid out of a vessel, since there is no
|
|
blood separately situated by itself, except a little in the heart, but
|
|
it is all lodged in the veins. In living animals it is impossible to
|
|
inspect these parts, for of their very nature they are situated inside
|
|
the body and out of sight. For this reason anatomists who have carried
|
|
on their investigations on dead bodies in the dissecting room have
|
|
failed to discover the chief roots of the veins, while those who
|
|
have narrowly inspected bodies of living men reduced to extreme
|
|
attenuation have arrived at conclusions regarding the origin of the
|
|
veins from the manifestations visible externally. Of these
|
|
investigators, Syennesis, the physician of Cyprus, writes as follows:-
|
|
|
|
'The big veins run thus:-from the navel across the loins, along
|
|
the back, past the lung, in under the breasts; one from right to left,
|
|
and the other from left to right; that from the left, through the
|
|
liver to the kidney and the testicle, that from the right, to the
|
|
spleen and kidney and testicle, and from thence to the penis.'
|
|
Diogenes of Apollonia writes thus:-
|
|
|
|
'The veins in man are as follows:-There are two veins
|
|
pre-eminent in magnitude. These extend through the belly along the
|
|
backbone, one to right, one to left; either one to the leg on its
|
|
own side, and upwards to the head, past the collar bones, through
|
|
the throat. From these, veins extend all over the body, from that on
|
|
the right hand to the right side and from that on the left hand to the
|
|
left side; the most important ones, two in number, to the heart in the
|
|
region of the backbone; other two a little higher up through the chest
|
|
in underneath the armpit, each to the hand on its side: of these
|
|
two, one being termed the vein splenitis, and the other the vein
|
|
hepatitis. Each of the pair splits at its extremity; the one
|
|
branches in the direction of the thumb and the other in the
|
|
direction of the palm; and from these run off a number of minute veins
|
|
branching off to the fingers and to all parts of the hand. Other
|
|
veins, more minute, extend from the main veins; from that on the right
|
|
towards the liver, from that on the left towards the spleen and the
|
|
kidneys. The veins that run to the legs split at the juncture of the
|
|
legs with the trunk and extend right down the thigh. The largest of
|
|
these goes down the thigh at the back of it, and can be discerned
|
|
and traced as a big one; the second one runs inside the thigh, not
|
|
quite as big as the one just mentioned. After this they pass on
|
|
along the knee to the shin and the foot (as the upper veins were
|
|
described as passing towards the hands), and arrive at the sole of the
|
|
foot, and from thence continue to the toes. Moreover, many delicate
|
|
veins separate off from the great veins towards the stomach and
|
|
towards the ribs.
|
|
|
|
'The veins that run through the throat to the head can be
|
|
discerned and traced in the neck as large ones; and from each one of
|
|
the two, where it terminates, there branch off a number of veins to
|
|
the head; some from the right side towards the left, and some from the
|
|
left side towards the right; and the two veins terminate near to
|
|
each of the two ears. There is another pair of veins in the neck
|
|
running along the big vein on either side, slightly less in size
|
|
than the pair just spoken of, and with these the greater part of the
|
|
veins in the head are connected. This other pair runs through the
|
|
throat inside; and from either one of the two there extend veins in
|
|
underneath the shoulder blade and towards the hands; and these
|
|
appear alongside the veins splenitis and hepatitis as another pair
|
|
of veins smaller in size. When there is a pain near the surface of the
|
|
body, the physician lances these two latter veins; but when the pain
|
|
is within and in the region of the stomach he lances the veins
|
|
splenitis and hepatitis. And from these, other veins depart to run
|
|
below the breasts.
|
|
|
|
'There is also another pair running on each side through the
|
|
spinal marrow to the testicles, thin and delicate. There is,
|
|
further, a pair running a little underneath the cuticle through the
|
|
flesh to the kidneys, and these with men terminate at the testicle,
|
|
and with women at the womb. These veins are termed the spermatic
|
|
veins. The veins that leave the stomach are comparatively broad just
|
|
as they leave; but they become gradually thinner, until they change
|
|
over from right to left and from left to right.
|
|
|
|
'Blood is thickest when it is imbibed by the fleshy parts; when
|
|
it is transmitted to the organs above-mentioned, it becomes thin,
|
|
warm, and frothy.'
|
|
|
|
3
|
|
|
|
Such are the accounts given by Syennesis and Diogenes. Polybus
|
|
writes to the following effect:-
|
|
|
|
'There are four pairs of veins. The first extends from the back of
|
|
the head, through the neck on the outside, past the backbone on either
|
|
side, until it reaches the loins and passes on to the legs, after
|
|
which it goes on through the shins to the outer side of the ankles and
|
|
on to the feet. And it is on this account that surgeons, for pains
|
|
in the back and loin, bleed in the ham and in the outer side of the
|
|
ankle. Another pair of veins runs from the head, past ears, through
|
|
the neck; which veins are termed the jugular veins. This pair goes
|
|
on inside along the backbone, past the muscles of the loins, on to the
|
|
testicles, and onwards to the thighs, and through the inside of the
|
|
hams and through the shins down to the inside of the ankles and to the
|
|
feet; and for this reason, surgeons, for pains in the muscles of the
|
|
loins and in the testicles, bleed on the hams and the inner side of
|
|
the ankles. The third pair extends from the temples, through the neck,
|
|
in underneath the shoulder-blades, into the lung; those from right
|
|
to left going in underneath the breast and on to the spleen and the
|
|
kidney; those from left to right running from the lung in underneath
|
|
the breast and into the liver and the kidney; and both terminate in
|
|
the fundament. The fourth pair extend from the front part of the
|
|
head and the eyes in underneath the neck and the collar-bones; from
|
|
thence they stretch on through the upper part of the upper arms to the
|
|
elbows and then through the fore-arms on to the wrists and the
|
|
jointings of the fingers, and also through the lower part of the
|
|
upper-arms to the armpits, and so on, keeping above the ribs, until
|
|
one of the pair reaches the spleen and the other reaches the liver;
|
|
and after this they both pass over the stomach and terminate at the
|
|
penis.'
|
|
|
|
The above quotations sum up pretty well the statements of all
|
|
previous writers. Furthermore, there are some writers on Natural
|
|
History who have not ventured to lay down the law in such precise
|
|
terms as regards the veins, but who all alike agree in assigning the
|
|
head and the brain as the starting-point of the veins. And in this
|
|
opinion they are mistaken.
|
|
|
|
The investigation of such a subject, as has been remarked, is one
|
|
fraught with difficulties; but, if any one be keenly interested in the
|
|
matter, his best plan will be to allow his animals to starve to
|
|
emaciation, then to strangle them on a sudden, and thereupon to
|
|
prosecute his investigations.
|
|
|
|
We now proceed to give particulars regarding the properties and
|
|
functions of the veins. There are two blood-vessels in the thorax by
|
|
the backbone, and lying to its inner side; and of these two the larger
|
|
one is situated to the front, and the lesser one is to the rear of it;
|
|
and the larger is situated rather to the right hand side of the
|
|
body, and the lesser one to the left; and by some this vein is
|
|
termed the 'aorta', from the fact that even in dead bodies part of
|
|
it is observed to be full of air. These blood-vessels have their
|
|
origins in the heart, for they traverse the other viscera, in whatever
|
|
direction they happen to run, without in any way losing their
|
|
distinctive characteristic as blood-vessels, whereas the heart is as
|
|
it were a part of them (and that too more in respect to the
|
|
frontward and larger one of the two), owing to the fact that these two
|
|
veins are above and below, with the heart lying midway.
|
|
|
|
The heart in all animals has cavities inside it. In the case of
|
|
the smaller animals even the largest of the chambers is scarcely
|
|
discernible; the second larger is scarcely discernible in animals of
|
|
medium size; but in the largest animals all three chambers are
|
|
distinctly seen. In the heart then (with its pointed end directed
|
|
frontwards, as has been observed) the largest of the three chambers is
|
|
on the right-hand side and highest up; the least one is on the
|
|
left-hand side; and the medium-sized one lies in betwixt the other
|
|
two; and the largest one of the three chambers is a great deal
|
|
larger than either of the two others. All three, however, are
|
|
connected with passages leading in the direction of the lung, but
|
|
all these communications are indistinctly discernible by reason of
|
|
their minuteness, except one.
|
|
|
|
The great blood-vessel, then, is attached to the biggest of the
|
|
three chambers, the one that lies uppermost and on the right-hand
|
|
side; it then extends right through the chamber, coming out as
|
|
blood-vessel again; just as though the cavity of the heart were a part
|
|
of the vessel, in which the blood broadens its channel as a river that
|
|
widens out in a lake. The aorta is attached to the middle chamber;
|
|
only, by the way, it is connected with it by much narrower pipe.
|
|
|
|
The great blood-vessel then passes through the heart (and runs
|
|
from the heart into the aorta). The great vessel looks as though
|
|
made of membrane or skin, while the aorta is narrower than it, and
|
|
is very sinewy; and as it stretches away to the head and to the
|
|
lower parts it becomes exceedingly narrow and sinewy.
|
|
|
|
First of all, then, upwards from the heart there stretches a
|
|
part of the great blood-vessel towards the lung and the attachment
|
|
of the aorta, a part consisting of a large undivided vessel. But there
|
|
split off from it two parts; one towards the lung and the other
|
|
towards the backbone and the last vertebra of the neck.
|
|
|
|
The vessel, then, that extends to the lung, as the lung itself
|
|
is duplicate, divides at first into two; and then extends along by
|
|
every pipe and every perforation, greater along the greater ones,
|
|
lesser along the less, so continuously that it is impossible to
|
|
discern a single part wherein there is not perforation and vein; for
|
|
the extremities are indistinguishable from their minuteness, and in
|
|
point of fact the whole lung appears to be filled with blood.
|
|
|
|
The branches of the blood-vessels lie above the tubes that
|
|
extend from the windpipe. And that vessel which extends to the
|
|
vertebra of the neck and the backbone, stretches back again along
|
|
the backbone; as Homer represents in the lines:-
|
|
|
|
(Antilochus, as Thoon turned him round),
|
|
|
|
Transpierc'd his back with a dishonest wound;
|
|
|
|
The hollow vein that to the neck extends,
|
|
|
|
Along the chine, the eager javelin rends.
|
|
|
|
From this vessel there extend small blood-vessels at each rib
|
|
and each vertebra; and at the vertebra above the kidneys the vessel
|
|
bifurcates. And in the above way the parts branch off from the great
|
|
blood-vessel.
|
|
|
|
But up above all these, from that part which is connected with the
|
|
heart, the entire vein branches off in two directions. For its
|
|
branches extend to the sides and to the collarbones, and then pass on,
|
|
in men through the armpits to the arms, in quadrupeds to the forelegs,
|
|
in birds to the wings, and in fishes to the upper or pectoral fins.
|
|
(See diagram.) The trunks of these veins, where they first branch
|
|
off, are called the 'jugular' veins; and, where they branch off to
|
|
the neck the great vein run alongside the windpipe; and,
|
|
occasionally, if these veins are pressed externally, men, though not
|
|
actually choked, become insensible, shut their eyes, and fall flat on
|
|
the ground. Extending in the way described and keeping the windpipe
|
|
in betwixt them, they pass on until they reach the ears at the
|
|
junction of the lower jaw with the skull. Hence again they branch off
|
|
into four veins, of which one bends back and descends through the
|
|
neck and the shoulder, and meets the previous branching off of the
|
|
vein at the bend of the arm, while the rest of it terminates at the
|
|
hand and fingers. (See diagram.)
|
|
|
|
Each vein of the other pair stretches from the region of the ear
|
|
to the brain, and branches off in a number of fine and delicate
|
|
veins into the so-called meninx, or membrane, which surrounds the
|
|
brain. The brain itself in all animals is destitute of blood, and no
|
|
vein, great or small, holds its course therein. But of the remaining
|
|
veins that branch off from the last mentioned vein some envelop the
|
|
head, others close their courses in the organs of sense and at the
|
|
roots of the teeth in veins exceedingly fine and minute.
|
|
|
|
4
|
|
|
|
And in like manner the parts of the lesser one of the two chief
|
|
blood-vessels, designated the aorta, branch off, accompanying the
|
|
branches from the big vein; only that, in regard to the aorta, the
|
|
passages are less in size, and the branches very considerably less
|
|
than are those of the great vein. So much for the veins as observed in
|
|
the regions above the heart.
|
|
|
|
The part of the great vein that lies underneath the heart
|
|
extends, freely suspended, right through the midriff, and is united
|
|
both to the aorta and the backbone by slack membranous communications.
|
|
From it one vein, short and wide, extends through the liver, and
|
|
from it a number of minute veins branch off into the liver and
|
|
disappear. From the vein that passes through the liver two branches
|
|
separate off, of which one terminates in the diaphragm or so-called
|
|
midriff, and the other runs up again through the armpit into the right
|
|
arm and unites with the other veins at the inside of the bend of the
|
|
arm; and it is in consequence of this local connexion that, when the
|
|
surgeon opens this vein in the forearm, the patient is relieved of
|
|
certain pains in the liver; and from the left-hand side of it there
|
|
extends a short but thick vein to the spleen and the little veins
|
|
branching off it disappear in that organ. Another part branches off
|
|
from the left-hand side of the great vein, and ascends, by a course
|
|
similar to the course recently described, into the left arm; only that
|
|
the ascending vein in the one case is the vein that traverses the
|
|
liver, while in this case it is distinct from the vein that runs
|
|
into the spleen. Again, other veins branch off from the big vein;
|
|
one to the omentum, and another to the pancreas, from which vein run a
|
|
number of veins through the mesentery. All these veins coalesce in a
|
|
single large vein, along the entire gut and stomach to the oesophagus;
|
|
about these parts there is a great ramification of branch veins.
|
|
|
|
As far as the kidneys, each of the two remaining undivided, the
|
|
aorta and the big vein extend; and here they get more closely attached
|
|
to the backbone, and branch off, each of the two, into a A shape,
|
|
and the big vein gets to the rear of the aorta. But the chief
|
|
attachment of the aorta to the backbone takes place in the region of
|
|
the heart; and the attachment is effected by means of minute and
|
|
sinewy vessels. The aorta, just as it draws off from the heart, is a
|
|
tube of considerable volume, but, as it advances in its course, it
|
|
gets narrower and more sinewy. And from the aorta there extend veins
|
|
to the mesentery just like the veins that extend thither from the
|
|
big vein, only that the branches in the case of the aorta are
|
|
considerably less in magnitude; they are, indeed, narrow and
|
|
fibrillar, and they end in delicate hollow fibre-like veinlets.
|
|
|
|
There is no vessel that runs from the aorta into the liver or
|
|
the spleen.
|
|
|
|
From each of the two great blood-vessels there extend branches
|
|
to each of the two flanks, and both branches fasten on to the bone.
|
|
Vessels also extend to the kidneys from the big vein and the aorta;
|
|
only that they do not open into the cavity of the organ, but their
|
|
ramifications penetrate into its substance. From the aorta run two
|
|
other ducts to the bladder, firm and continuous; and there are other
|
|
ducts from the hollow of the kidneys, in no way communicating with the
|
|
big vein. From the centre of each of the two kidneys springs a
|
|
hollow sinewy vein, running along the backbone right through the
|
|
loins; by and by each of the two veins first disappears in its own
|
|
flank, and soon afterwards reappears stretching in the direction of
|
|
the flank. The extremities of these attach to the bladder, and also in
|
|
the male to the penis and in the female to the womb. From the big vein
|
|
no vein extends to the womb, but the organ is connected with the aorta
|
|
by veins numerous and closely packed.
|
|
|
|
Furthermore, from the aorta and the great vein at the points of
|
|
divarication there branch off other veins. Some of these run to the
|
|
groins-large hollow veins-and then pass on down through the legs and
|
|
terminate in the feet and toes. And, again, another set run through
|
|
the groins and the thighs cross-garter fashion, from right to left and
|
|
from left to right, and unite in the hams with the other veins.
|
|
|
|
In the above description we have thrown light upon the course of
|
|
the veins and their points of departure.
|
|
|
|
In all sanguineous animals the case stands as here set forth in
|
|
regard to the points of departure and the courses of the chief
|
|
veins. But the description does not hold equally good for the entire
|
|
vein-system in all these animals. For, in point of fact, the organs
|
|
are not identically situated in them all; and, what is more, some
|
|
animals are furnished with organs of which other animals are
|
|
destitute. At the same time, while the description so far holds
|
|
good, the proof of its accuracy is not equally easy in all cases,
|
|
but is easiest in the case of animals of considerable magnitude and
|
|
supplied abundantly with blood. For in little animals and those
|
|
scantily supplied with blood, either from natural and inherent
|
|
causes or from a prevalence of fat in the body, thorough accuracy in
|
|
investigation is not equally attainable; for in the latter of these
|
|
creatures the passages get clogged, like water-channels choked with
|
|
slush; and the others have a few minute fibres to serve instead of
|
|
veins. But in all cases the big vein is plainly discernible, even in
|
|
creatures of insignificant size.
|
|
|
|
5
|
|
|
|
The sinews of animals have the following properties. For these
|
|
also the point of origin is the heart; for the heart has sinews within
|
|
itself in the largest of its three chambers, and the aorta is a
|
|
sinew-like vein; in fact, at its extremity it is actually a sinew, for
|
|
it is there no longer hollow, and is stretched like the sinews where
|
|
they terminate at the jointings of the bones. Be it remembered,
|
|
however, that the sinews do not proceed in unbroken sequence from
|
|
one point of origin, as do the blood-vessels.
|
|
|
|
For the veins have the shape of the entire body, like a sketch
|
|
of a mannikin; in such a way that the whole frame seems to be filled
|
|
up with little veins in attenuated subjects-for the space occupied
|
|
by flesh in fat individuals is filled with little veins in thin
|
|
ones-whereas the sinews are distributed about the joints and the
|
|
flexures of the bones. Now, if the sinews were derived in unbroken
|
|
sequence from a common point of departure, this continuity would be
|
|
discernible in attenuated specimens.
|
|
|
|
In the ham, or the part of the frame brought into full play in the
|
|
effort of leaping, is an important system of sinews; and another
|
|
sinew, a double one, is that called 'the tendon', and others are those
|
|
brought into play when a great effort of physical strength is
|
|
required; that is to say, the epitonos or back-stay and the
|
|
shoulder-sinews. Other sinews, devoid of specific designation, are
|
|
situated in the region of the flexures of the bones; for all the bones
|
|
that are attached to one another are bound together by sinews, and a
|
|
great quantity of sinews are placed in the neighbourhood of all the
|
|
bones. Only, by the way, in the head there is no sinew; but the head
|
|
is held together by the sutures of the bones.
|
|
|
|
Sinew is fissile lengthwise, but crosswise it is not easily
|
|
broken, but admits of a considerable amount of hard tension. In
|
|
connexion with sinews a liquid mucus is developed, white and
|
|
glutinous, and the organ, in fact, is sustained by it and appears to
|
|
be substantially composed of it. Now, vein may be submitted to the
|
|
actual cautery, but sinew, when submitted to such action, shrivels
|
|
up altogether; and, if sinews be cut asunder, the severed parts will
|
|
not again cohere. A feeling of numbness is incidental only to parts of
|
|
the frame where sinew is situated.
|
|
|
|
There is a very extensive system of sinews connected severally
|
|
with the feet, the hands, the ribs, the shoulder-blades, the neck, and
|
|
the arms.
|
|
|
|
All animals supplied with blood are furnished with sinews; but
|
|
in the case of animals that have no flexures to their limbs, but
|
|
are, in fact, destitute of either feet or hands, the sinews are fine
|
|
and inconspicuous; and so, as might have been anticipated, the
|
|
sinews in the fish are chiefly discernible in connexion with the fin.
|
|
|
|
6
|
|
|
|
The ines (or fibrous connective tissue) are a something
|
|
intermediate between sinew and vein. Some of them are supplied with
|
|
fluid, the lymph; and they pass from sinew to vein and from vein to
|
|
sinew. There is another kind of ines or fibre that is found in
|
|
blood, but not in the blood of all animals alike. If this fibre be
|
|
left in the blood, the blood will coagulate; if it be removed or
|
|
extracted, the blood is found to be incapable of coagulation. While,
|
|
however, this fibrous matter is found in the blood of the great
|
|
majority of animals, it is not found in all. For instance, we fail
|
|
to find it in the blood of the deer, the roe, the antelope, and some
|
|
other animals; and, owing to this deficiency of the fibrous tissue,
|
|
the blood of these animals does not coagulate to the extent observed
|
|
in the blood of other animals. The blood of the deer coagulates to
|
|
about the same extent as that of the hare: that is to the blood in
|
|
either case coagulates, but not into a stiff or jelly-like
|
|
substance, like the blood of ordinary animals, but only into a flaccid
|
|
consistency like that of milk which is not subjected to the action
|
|
of rennet. The blood of the antelope admits of a firmer consistency in
|
|
coagulation; for in this respect it resembles, or only comes a
|
|
little short of, the blood of sheep. Such are the properties of
|
|
vein, sinew, and fibrous tissue.
|
|
|
|
7
|
|
|
|
The bones in animals are all connected with one single bone, and
|
|
are interconnected, like the veins, in one unbroken sequence; and
|
|
there is no instance of a bone standing apart by itself. In all
|
|
animals furnished with bones, the spine or backbone is the point of
|
|
origin for the entire osseous system. The spine is composed of
|
|
vertebrae, and it extends from the head down to the loins. The
|
|
vertebrae are all perforated, and, above, the bony portion of the head
|
|
is connected with the topmost vertebrae, and is designated the
|
|
'skull'. And the serrated lines on the skull are termed 'sutures'.
|
|
|
|
The skull is not formed alike in all animals. In some animals
|
|
the skull consists of one single undivided bone, as in the case of the
|
|
dog; in others it is composite in structure, as in man; and in the
|
|
human species the suture is circular in the female, while in the
|
|
male it is made up of three separate sutures, uniting above in
|
|
three-corner fashion; and instances have been known of a man's skull
|
|
being devoid of suture altogether. The skull is composed not of four
|
|
bones, but of six; two of these are in the region of the ears, small
|
|
in comparison with the other four. From the skull extend the jaws,
|
|
constituted of bone. (Animals in general move the lower jaw; the river
|
|
crocodile is the only animal that moves the upper one.) In the jaws is
|
|
the tooth-system; and the teeth are constituted of bone, and are
|
|
half-way perforated; and the bone in question is the only kind of bone
|
|
which it is found impossible to grave with a graving tool.
|
|
|
|
On the upper part of the course of the backbone are the
|
|
collar-bones and the ribs. The chest rests on ribs; and these ribs
|
|
meet together, whereas the others do not; for no animal has bone in
|
|
the region of the stomach. Then come the shoulder-bones, or
|
|
blade-bones, and the arm-bones connected with these, and the bones
|
|
in the hands connected with the bones of the arms. With animals that
|
|
have forelegs, the osseous system of the foreleg resembles that of the
|
|
arm in man.
|
|
|
|
Below the level of the backbone, after the haunch-bone, comes
|
|
the hip-socket; then the leg-bones, those in the thighs and those in
|
|
the shins, which are termed colenes or limb-bones, a part of which
|
|
is the ankle, while a part of the same is the so-called 'plectrum'
|
|
in those creatures that have an ankle; and connected with these
|
|
bones are the bones in the feet.
|
|
|
|
Now, with all animals that are supplied with blood and furnished
|
|
with feet, and are at the same time viviparous, the bones do not
|
|
differ greatly one from another, but only in the way of relative
|
|
hardness, softness, or magnitude. A further difference, by the way, is
|
|
that in one and the same animal certain bones are supplied with
|
|
marrow, while others are destitute of it. Some animals might on casual
|
|
observation appear to have no marrow whatsoever in their bones: as
|
|
is the case with the lion, owing to his having marrow only in small
|
|
amount, poor and thin, and in very few bones; for marrow is found in
|
|
his thigh and armbones. The bones of the lion are exceptionally
|
|
hard; so hard, in fact, that if they are rubbed hard against one
|
|
another they emit sparks like flint-stones. The dolphin has bones, and
|
|
not fish-spine.
|
|
|
|
Of the other animals supplied with blood, some differ but
|
|
little, as is the case with birds; others have systems analogous, as
|
|
fishes; for viviparous fishes, such as the cartilaginous species,
|
|
are gristle-spined, while the ovipara have a spine which corresponds
|
|
to the backbone in quadrupeds. This exceptional property has been
|
|
observed in fishes, that in some of them there are found delicate
|
|
spines scattered here and there throughout the fleshy parts. The
|
|
serpent is similarly constructed to the fish; in other words, his
|
|
backbone is spinous. With oviparous quadrupeds, the skeleton of the
|
|
larger ones is more or less osseous; of the smaller ones, more or less
|
|
spinous. But all sanguineous animals have a backbone of either one
|
|
kind or other: that is, composed either of bone or of spine.
|
|
|
|
The other portions of the skeleton are found in some animals and
|
|
not found in others, but the presence or the absence of this and
|
|
that part carries with it, as a matter of course, the presence or
|
|
the absence of the bones or the spines corresponding to this or that
|
|
part. For animals that are destitute of arms and legs cannot be
|
|
furnished with limb-bones: and in like manner with animals that have
|
|
the same parts, but yet have them unlike in form; for in these animals
|
|
the corresponding bones differ from one another in the way of relative
|
|
excess or relative defect, or in the way of analogy taking the place
|
|
of identity. So much for the osseous or spinous systems in animals.
|
|
|
|
8
|
|
|
|
Gristle is of the same nature as bone, but differs from it in
|
|
the way of relative excess or relative defect. And just like bone,
|
|
cartilage also, if cut, does not grow again. In terrestrial viviparous
|
|
sanguinea the gristle formations are unperforated, and there is no
|
|
marrow in them as there is in bones; in the selachia, however--for, be
|
|
it observed, they are gristle-spined--there is found in the case of
|
|
the flat space in the region of the backbone, a gristle-like substance
|
|
analogous to bone, and in this gristle-like substance there is a
|
|
liquid resembling marrow. In viviparous animals furnished with feet,
|
|
gristle formations are found in the region of the ears, in the
|
|
nostrils, and around certain extremities of the bones.
|
|
|
|
9
|
|
|
|
Furthermore, there are parts of other kinds, neither identical
|
|
with, nor altogether diverse from, the parts above enumerated: such as
|
|
nails, hooves, claws, and horns; and also, by the way, beaks, such
|
|
as birds are furnished with-all in the several animals that are
|
|
furnished therewithal. All these parts are flexible and fissile; but
|
|
bone is neither flexible nor fissile, but frangible.
|
|
|
|
And the colours of horns and nails and claw and hoof follow the
|
|
colour of the skin and the hair. For according as the skin of an
|
|
animal is black, or white, or of medium hue, so are the horns, the
|
|
claws, or the hooves, as the case may be, of hue to match. And it is
|
|
the same with nails. The teeth, however, follow after the bones.
|
|
Thus in black men, such as the Aethiopians and the like, the teeth and
|
|
bones are white, but the nails are black, like the whole of the skin.
|
|
|
|
Horns in general are hollow at their point of attachment to the
|
|
bone which juts out from the head inside the horn, but they have a
|
|
solid portion at the tip, and they are simple and undivided in
|
|
structure. In the case of the stag alone of all animals the horns
|
|
are solid throughout, and ramify into branches (or antlers). And,
|
|
whereas no other animal is known to shed its horns, the deer sheds its
|
|
horns annually, unless it has been castrated; and with regard to the
|
|
effects of castration in animals we shall have much to say
|
|
hereafter. Horns attach rather to the skin than to the bone; which
|
|
will account for the fact that there are found in Phrygia and
|
|
elsewhere cattle that can move their horns as freely as their ears.
|
|
|
|
Of animals furnished with nails-and, by the way, all animals
|
|
have nails that have toes, and toes that have feet, except the
|
|
elephant; and the elephant has toes undivided and slightly
|
|
articulated, but has no nails whatsoever--of animals furnished with
|
|
nails, some are straight-nailed, like man; others are crooked
|
|
nailed, as the lion among animals that walk, and the eagle among
|
|
animals that fly.
|
|
|
|
10
|
|
|
|
The following are the properties of hair and of parts analogous to
|
|
hair, and of skin or hide. All viviparous animals furnished with
|
|
feet have hair; all oviparous animals furnished with feet have
|
|
horn-like tessellates; fishes, and fishes only, have scales-that is,
|
|
such oviparous fishes as have the crumbling egg or roe. For of the
|
|
lanky fishes, the conger has no such egg, nor the muraena, and the eel
|
|
has no egg at all.
|
|
|
|
The hair differs in the way of thickness and fineness, and of
|
|
length, according to the locality of the part in which it is found,
|
|
and according to the quality of skin or hide on which it grows. For,
|
|
as a general rule, the thicker the hide, the harder and the thicker is
|
|
the hair; and the hair is inclined to grow in abundance and to a great
|
|
length in localities of the bodies hollow and moist, if the localities
|
|
be fitted for the growth of hair at all. The facts are similar in
|
|
the case of animals whether coated with scales or with tessellates.
|
|
With soft-haired animals the hair gets harder with good feeding, and
|
|
with hard-haired or bristly animals it gets softer and scantier from
|
|
the same cause. Hair differs in quality also according to the relative
|
|
heat or warmth of the locality: just as the hair in man is hard in
|
|
warm places and soft in cold ones. Again, straight hair is inclined to
|
|
be soft, and curly hair to be bristly.
|
|
|
|
11
|
|
|
|
Hair is naturally fissile, and in this respect it differs in
|
|
degree in diverse animals. In some animals the hair goes on
|
|
gradually hardening into bristle until it no longer resembles hair but
|
|
spine, as in the case of the hedgehog. And in like manner with the
|
|
nails; for in some animals the nail differs as regards solidity in
|
|
no way from bone.
|
|
|
|
Of all animals man has the most delicate skin: that is, if we take
|
|
into consideration his relative size. In the skin or hide of all
|
|
animals there is a mucous liquid, scanty in some animals and plentiful
|
|
in others, as, for instance, in the hide of the ox; for men
|
|
manufacture glue out of it. (And, by the way, in some cases glue is
|
|
manufactured from fishes also.) The skin, when cut, is in itself
|
|
devoid of sensation; and this is especially the case with the skin
|
|
on the head, owing to there being no flesh between it and the skull.
|
|
And wherever the skin is quite by itself, if it be cut asunder, it
|
|
does not grow together again, as is seen in the thin part of the
|
|
jaw, in the prepuce, and the eyelid. In all animals the skin is one of
|
|
the parts that extends continuous and unbroken, and it comes to a stop
|
|
only where the natural ducts pour out their contents, and at the mouth
|
|
and nails.
|
|
|
|
All sanguineous animals, then, have skin; but not all such animals
|
|
have hair, save only under the circumstances described above. The hair
|
|
changes its colour as animals grow old, and in man it turns white or
|
|
grey. With animals, in general, the change takes place, but not very
|
|
obviously, or not so obviously as in the case of the horse. Hair turns
|
|
grey from the point backwards to the roots. But, in the majority of
|
|
cases, grey hairs are white from the beginning; and this is a proof
|
|
that greyness of hair does not, as some believe to be the case,
|
|
imply withering or decrepitude, for no part is brought into
|
|
existence in a withered or decrepit condition.
|
|
|
|
In the eruptive malady called the white-sickness all the hairs get
|
|
grey; and instances have been known where the hair became grey while
|
|
the patients were ill of the malady, whereas the grey hairs shed off
|
|
and black ones replaced them on their recovery. (Hair is more apt to
|
|
turn grey when it is kept covered than when exposed to the action of
|
|
the outer air.) In men, the hair over the temples is the first to turn
|
|
grey, and the hair in the front grows grey sooner than the hair at the
|
|
back; and the hair on the pubes is the last to change colour.
|
|
|
|
Some hairs are congenital, others grow after the maturity of the
|
|
animal; but this occurs in man only. The congenital hairs are on the
|
|
head, the eyelids, and the eyebrows; of the later growths the hairs on
|
|
the pubes are the first to come, then those under the armpits, and,
|
|
thirdly, those on the chin; for, singularly enough, the regions
|
|
where congenital growths and the subsequent growths are found are
|
|
equal in number. The hair on the head grows scanty and sheds out to
|
|
a greater extent and sooner than all the rest. But this remark applies
|
|
only to hair in front; for no man ever gets bald at the back of his
|
|
head. Smoothness on the top of the head is termed 'baldness', but
|
|
smoothness on the eyebrows is denoted by a special term which means
|
|
'forehead-baldness'; and neither of these conditions of baldness
|
|
supervenes in a man until he shall have come under the influence of
|
|
sexual passion. For no boy ever gets bald, no woman, and no
|
|
castrated man. In fact, if a man be castrated before reaching puberty,
|
|
the later growths of hair never come at all; and, if the operation
|
|
take place subsequently, the aftergrowths, and these only, shed off;
|
|
or, rather, two of the growths shed off, but not that on the pubes.
|
|
|
|
Women do not grow hairs on the chin; except that a scanty beard
|
|
grows on some women after the monthly courses have stopped; and
|
|
similar phenomenon is observed at times in priestesses in Caria, but
|
|
these cases are looked upon as portentous with regard to coming
|
|
events. The other after-growths are found in women, but more scanty
|
|
and sparse. Men and women are at times born constitutionally and
|
|
congenitally incapable of the after-growths; and individuals that
|
|
are destitute even of the growth upon the pubes are constitutionally
|
|
impotent.
|
|
|
|
Hair as a rule grows more or less in length as the wearer grows in
|
|
age; chiefly the hair on the head, then that in the beard, and fine
|
|
hair grows longest of all. With some people as they grow old the
|
|
eyebrows grow thicker, to such an extent that they have to be cut off;
|
|
and this growth is owing to the fact that the eyebrows are situated at
|
|
a conjuncture of bones, and these bones, as age comes on, draw apart
|
|
and exude a gradual increase of moisture or rheum. The eyelashes do
|
|
not grow in size, but they shed when the wearer comes first under
|
|
the influence of sexual feelings, and shed all the quicker as this
|
|
influence is the more powerful; and these are the last hairs to grow
|
|
grey.
|
|
|
|
Hairs if plucked out before maturity grow again; but they do not
|
|
grow again if plucked out afterwards. Every hair is supplied with a
|
|
mucous moisture at its root, and immediately after being plucked out
|
|
it can lift light articles if it touch them with this mucus.
|
|
|
|
Animals that admit of diversity of colour in the hair admit of a
|
|
similar diversity to start with in the skin and in the cuticle of
|
|
the tongue.
|
|
|
|
In some cases among men the upper lip and the chin is thickly
|
|
covered with hair, and in other cases these parts are smooth and the
|
|
cheeks are hairy; and, by the way, smooth-chinned men are less
|
|
inclined than bearded men to baldness.
|
|
|
|
The hair is inclined to grow in certain diseases, especially in
|
|
consumption, and in old age, and after death; and under these
|
|
circumstances the hair hardens concomitantly with its growth, and
|
|
the same duplicate phenomenon is observable in respect of the nails.
|
|
|
|
In the case of men of strong sexual passions the congenital
|
|
hairs shed the sooner, while the hairs of the after-growths are the
|
|
quicker to come. When men are afflicted with varicose veins they are
|
|
less inclined to take on baldness; and if they be bald when they
|
|
become thus afflicted, they have a tendency to get their hair again.
|
|
|
|
If a hair be cut, it does not grow at the point of section; but it
|
|
gets longer by growing upward from below. In fishes the scales grow
|
|
harder and thicker with age, and when the amimal gets emaciated or
|
|
is growing old the scales grow harder. In quadrupeds as they grow
|
|
old the hair in some and the wool in others gets deeper but scantier
|
|
in amount: and the hooves or claws get larger in size; and the same is
|
|
the case with the beaks of birds. The claws also increase in size,
|
|
as do also the nails.
|
|
|
|
12
|
|
|
|
With regard to winged animals, such as birds, no creature is
|
|
liable to change of colour by reason of age, excepting the crane.
|
|
The wings of this bird are ash-coloured at first, but as it grows
|
|
old the wings get black. Again, owing to special climatic
|
|
influences, as when unusual frost prevails, a change is sometimes
|
|
observed to take place in birds whose plumage is of one uniform
|
|
colour; thus, birds that have dusky or downright black plumage turn
|
|
white or grey, as the raven, the sparrow, and the swallow; but no case
|
|
has ever yet been known of a change of colour from white to black.
|
|
(Further, most birds change the colour of their plumage at different
|
|
seasons of the year, so much so that a man ignorant of their habits
|
|
might be mistaken as to their identity.) Some animals change the
|
|
colour of their hair with a change in their drinking-water, for in
|
|
some countries the same species of animal is found white in one
|
|
district and black in another. And in regard to the commerce of the
|
|
sexes, water in many places is of such peculiar quality that rams,
|
|
if they have intercourse with the female after drinking it, beget
|
|
black lambs, as is the case with the water of the Psychrus
|
|
(so-called from its coldness), a river in the district of Assyritis in
|
|
the Chalcidic Peninsula, on the coast of Thrace; and in Antandria
|
|
there are two rivers of which one makes the lambs white and the
|
|
other black. The river Scamander also has the reputation of making
|
|
lambs yellow, and that is the reason, they say, why Homer designates
|
|
it the 'Yellow River.' Animals as a general rule have no hair on their
|
|
internal surfaces, and, in regard to their extremities, they have hair
|
|
on the upper, but not on the lower side.
|
|
|
|
The hare, or dasypod, is the only animal known to have hair inside
|
|
its mouth and underneath its feet. Further, the so-called mousewhale
|
|
instead of teeth has hairs in its mouth resembling pigs' bristles.
|
|
|
|
Hairs after being cut grow at the bottom but not at the top; if
|
|
feathers be cut off, they grow neither at top nor bottom, but shed and
|
|
fall out. Further, the bee's wing will not grow again after being
|
|
plucked off, nor will the wing of any creature that has undivided
|
|
wings. Neither will the sting grow again if the bee lose it, but the
|
|
creature will die of the loss.
|
|
|
|
13
|
|
|
|
In all sanguineous animals membranes are found. And membrane
|
|
resembles a thin close-textured skin, but its qualities are different,
|
|
as it admits neither of cleavage nor of extension. Membrane envelops
|
|
each one of the bones and each one of the viscera, both in the
|
|
larger and the smaller animals; though in the smaller animals the
|
|
membranes are indiscernible from their extreme tenuity and minuteness.
|
|
The largest of all the membranes are the two that surround the
|
|
brain, and of these two the one that lines the bony skull is
|
|
stronger and thicker than the one that envelops the brain; next in
|
|
order of magnitude comes the membrane that encloses the heart. If
|
|
membrane be bared and cut asunder it will not grow together again, and
|
|
the bone thus stripped of its membrane mortifies.
|
|
|
|
14
|
|
|
|
The omentum or caul, by the way, is membrane. All sanguineous
|
|
animals are furnished with this organ; but in some animals the organ
|
|
is supplied with fat, and in others it is devoid of it. The omentum
|
|
has both its starting-point and its attachment, with ambidental
|
|
vivipara, in the centre of the stomach, where the stomach has a kind
|
|
of suture; in non-ambidental vivipara it has its starting-point and
|
|
attachment in the chief of the ruminating stomachs.
|
|
|
|
15
|
|
|
|
The bladder also is of the nature of membrane, but of membrane
|
|
peculiar in kind, for it is extensile. The organ is not common to
|
|
all animals, but, while it is found in all the vivipara, the
|
|
tortoise is the only oviparous animal that is furnished therewithal.
|
|
The bladder, like ordinary membrane, if cut asunder will not grow
|
|
together again, unless the section be just at the commencement of
|
|
the urethra: except indeed in very rare cases, for instances of
|
|
healing have been known to occur. After death, the organ passes no
|
|
liquid excretion; but in life, in addition to the normal liquid
|
|
excretion, it passes at times dry excretion also, which turns into
|
|
stones in the case of sufferers from that malady. Indeed, instances
|
|
have been known of concretions in the bladder so shaped as closely
|
|
to resemble cockleshells.
|
|
|
|
Such are the properties, then, of vein, sinew and skin, of fibre
|
|
and membrane, of hair, nail, claw and hoof, of horns, of teeth, of
|
|
beak, of gristle, of bones, and of parts that are analogous to any
|
|
of the parts here enumerated.
|
|
|
|
16
|
|
|
|
Flesh, and that which is by nature akin to it in sanguineous
|
|
animals, is in all cases situated in between the skin and the bone, or
|
|
the substance analogous to bone; for just as spine is a counterpart of
|
|
bone, so is the flesh-like substance of animals that are constructed a
|
|
spinous system the counterpart of the flesh of animals constructed
|
|
on an osseous one.
|
|
|
|
Flesh can be divided asunder in any direction, not lengthwise only
|
|
as is the case with sinew and vein. When animals are subjected to
|
|
emaciation the flesh disappears, and the creatures become a mass of
|
|
veins and fibres; when they are over fed, fat takes the place of
|
|
flesh. Where the flesh is abundant in an animal, its veins are
|
|
somewhat small and the blood abnormally red; the viscera also and
|
|
the stomach are diminutive; whereas with animals whose veins are large
|
|
the blood is somewhat black, the viscera and the stomach are large,
|
|
and the flesh is somewhat scanty. And animals with small stomachs
|
|
are disposed to take on flesh.
|
|
|
|
17
|
|
|
|
Again, fat and suet differ from one another. Suet is frangible
|
|
in all directions and congeals if subjected to extreme cold, whereas
|
|
fat can melt but cannot freeze or congeal; and soups made of the flesh
|
|
of animals supplied with fat do not congeal or coagulate, as is
|
|
found with horse-flesh and pork; but soups made from the flesh of
|
|
animals supplied with suet do coagulate, as is seen with mutton and
|
|
goat's flesh. Further, fat and suet differ as to their localities: for
|
|
fat is found between the skin and flesh, but suet is found only at the
|
|
limit of the fleshy parts. Also, in animals supplied with fat the
|
|
omentum or caul is supplied with fat, and it is supplied with suet
|
|
in animals supplied with suet. Moreover, ambidental animals are
|
|
supplied with fat, and non-ambidentals with suet.
|
|
|
|
Of the viscera the liver in some animals becomes fatty, as,
|
|
among fishes, is the case with the selachia, by the melting of whose
|
|
livers an oil is manufactured. These cartilaginous fish themselves
|
|
have no free fat at all in connexion with the flesh or with the
|
|
stomach. The suet in fish is fatty, and does not solidify or
|
|
congeal. All animals are furnished with fat, either intermingled
|
|
with their flesh, or apart. Such as have no free or separate fat are
|
|
less fat than others in stomach and omentum, as the eel; for it has
|
|
only a scanty supply of suet about the omentum. Most animals take on
|
|
fat in the belly, especially such animals as are little in motion.
|
|
|
|
The brains of animals supplied with fat are oily, as in the pig;
|
|
of animals supplied with suet, parched and dry. But it is about the
|
|
kidneys more than any other viscera that animals are inclined to
|
|
take on fat; and the right kidney is always less supplied with fat
|
|
than the left kidney, and, be the two kidneys ever so fat, there is
|
|
always a space devoid of fat in between the two. Animals supplied with
|
|
suet are specially apt to have it about the kidneys, and especially
|
|
the sheep; for this animal is apt to die from its kidneys being
|
|
entirely enveloped. Fat or suet about the kidney is superinduced by
|
|
overfeeding, as is found at Leontini in Sicily; and consequently in
|
|
this district they defer driving out sheep to pasture until the day is
|
|
well on, with the view of limiting their food by curtailment of the
|
|
hours of pasture.
|
|
|
|
18
|
|
|
|
The part around the pupil of the eye is fatty in all animals,
|
|
and this part resembles suet in all animals that possess such a part
|
|
and that are not furnished with hard eyes.
|
|
|
|
Fat animals, whether male or female, are more or less unfitted for
|
|
breeding purposes. Animals are disposed to take on fat more when old
|
|
than when young, and especially when they have attained their full
|
|
breadth and their full length and are beginning to grow depthways.
|
|
|
|
19
|
|
|
|
And now to proceed to the consideration of the blood. In
|
|
sanguineous animals blood is the most universal and the most
|
|
indispensable part; and it is not an acquired or adventitious part,
|
|
but it is a consubstantial part of all animals that are not corrupt or
|
|
moribund. All blood is contained in a vascular system, to wit, the
|
|
veins, and is found nowhere else, excepting in the heart. Blood is not
|
|
sensitive to touch in any animal, any more than the excretions of
|
|
the stomach; and the case is similar with the brain and the marrow.
|
|
When flesh is lacerated, blood exudes, if the animal be alive and
|
|
unless the flesh be gangrened. Blood in a healthy condition is
|
|
naturally sweet to the taste, and red in colour, blood that
|
|
deteriorates from natural decay or from disease more or less black.
|
|
Blood at its best, before it undergoes deterioration from either
|
|
natural decay or from disease, is neither very thick nor very thin. In
|
|
the living animal it is always liquid and warm, but, on issuing from
|
|
the body, it coagulates in all cases except in the case of the deer,
|
|
the roe, and the like animals; for, as a general rule, blood
|
|
coagulates unless the fibres be extracted. Bull's blood is the
|
|
quickest to coagulate.
|
|
|
|
Animals that are internally and externally viviparous are more
|
|
abundantly supplied with blood than the sanguineous ovipara. Animals
|
|
that are in good condition, either from natural causes or from their
|
|
health having been attended to, have the blood neither too abundant-as
|
|
creatures just after drinking have the liquid inside them in
|
|
abundance-nor again very scanty, as is the case with animals when
|
|
exceedingly fat. For animals in this condition have pure blood, but
|
|
very little of it, and the fatter an animal gets the less becomes
|
|
its supply of blood; for whatsoever is fat is destitute of blood.
|
|
|
|
A fat substance is incorruptible, but blood and all things
|
|
containing it corrupt rapidly, and this property characterizes
|
|
especially all parts connected with the bones. Blood is finest and
|
|
purest in man; and thickest and blackest in the bull and the ass, of
|
|
all vivipara. In the lower and the higher parts of the body blood is
|
|
thicker and blacker than in the central parts.
|
|
|
|
Blood beats or palpitates in the veins of all animals alike all
|
|
over their bodies, and blood is the only liquid that permeates the
|
|
entire frames of living animals, without exception and at all times,
|
|
as long as life lasts. Blood is developed first of all in the heart of
|
|
animals before the body is differentiated as a whole. If blood be
|
|
removed or if it escape in any considerable quantity, animals fall
|
|
into a faint or swoon; if it be removed or if it escape in an
|
|
exceedingly large quantity they die. If the blood get exceedingly
|
|
liquid, animals fall sick; for the blood then turns into something
|
|
like ichor, or a liquid so thin that it at times has been known to
|
|
exude through the pores like sweat. In some cases blood, when
|
|
issuing from the veins, does not coagulate at all, or only here and
|
|
there. Whilst animals are sleeping the blood is less abundantly
|
|
supplied near the exterior surfaces, so that, if the sleeping creature
|
|
be pricked with a pin, the blood does not issue as copiously as it
|
|
would if the creature were awake. Blood is developed out of ichor by
|
|
coction, and fat in like manner out of blood. If the blood get
|
|
diseased, haemorrhoids may ensue in the nostril or at the anus, or the
|
|
veins may become varicose. Blood, if it corrupt in the body, has a
|
|
tendency to turn into pus, and pus may turn into a solid concretion.
|
|
|
|
Blood in the female differs from that in the male, for,
|
|
supposing the male and female to be on a par as regards age and
|
|
general health, the blood in the female is thicker and blacker than in
|
|
the male; and with the female there is a comparative superabundance of
|
|
it in the interior. Of all female animals the female in man is the
|
|
most richly supplied with blood, and of all female animals the
|
|
menstruous discharges are the most copious in woman. The blood of
|
|
these discharges under disease turns into flux. Apart from the
|
|
menstrual discharges, the female in the human species is less
|
|
subject to diseases of the blood than the male.
|
|
|
|
Women are seldom afflicted with varicose veins, with haemorrhoids,
|
|
or with bleeding at the nose, and, if any of these maladies supervene,
|
|
the menses are imperfectly discharged.
|
|
|
|
Blood differs in quantity and appearance according to age; in very
|
|
young animals it resembles ichor and is abundant, in the old it is
|
|
thick and black and scarce, and in middle-aged animals its qualities
|
|
are intermediate. In old animals the blood coagulates rapidly, even
|
|
blood at the surface of the body; but this is not the case with
|
|
young animals. Ichor is, in fact, nothing else but unconcocted
|
|
blood: either blood that has not yet been concocted, or that has
|
|
become fluid again.
|
|
|
|
20
|
|
|
|
We now proceed to discuss the properties of marrow; for this is
|
|
one of the liquids found in certain sanguineous animals. All the
|
|
natural liquids of the body are contained in vessels: as blood in
|
|
veins, marrow in bones other moistures in membranous structures of the
|
|
skin
|
|
|
|
In young animals the marrow is exceedingly sanguineous, but, as
|
|
animals grow old, it becomes fatty in animals supplied with fat, and
|
|
suet-like in animals with suet. All bones, however, are not supplied
|
|
with marrow, but only the hollow ones, and not all of these. For of
|
|
the bones in the lion some contain no marrow at all, and some are only
|
|
scantily supplied therewith; and that accounts, as was previously
|
|
observed, for the statement made by certain writers that the lion is
|
|
marrowless. In the bones of pigs it is found in small quantities;
|
|
and in the bones of certain animals of this species it is not found at
|
|
all.
|
|
|
|
These liquids, then, are nearly always congenital in animals,
|
|
but milk and sperm come at a later time. Of these latter, that
|
|
which, whensoever it is present, is secreted in all cases
|
|
ready-made, is the milk; sperm, on the other hand, is not secreted out
|
|
in all cases, but in some only, as in the case of what are
|
|
designated thori in fishes.
|
|
|
|
Whatever animals have milk, have it in their breasts. All
|
|
animals have breasts that are internally and externally viviparous, as
|
|
for instance all animals that have hair, as man and the horse; and the
|
|
cetaceans, as the dolphin, the porpoise, and the whale-for these
|
|
animals have breasts and are supplied with milk. Animals that are
|
|
oviparous or only externally viviparous have neither breasts nor milk,
|
|
as the fish and the bird.
|
|
|
|
All milk is composed of a watery serum called 'whey', and a
|
|
consistent substance called curd (or cheese); and the thicker the
|
|
milk, the more abundant the curd. The milk, then, of non-ambidentals
|
|
coagulates, and that is why cheese is made of the milk of such animals
|
|
under domestication; but the milk of ambidentals does not coagulate,
|
|
nor their fat either, and the milk is thin and sweet. Now the
|
|
camel's milk is the thinnest, and that of the human species next after
|
|
it, and that of the ass next again, but cow's milk is the thickest.
|
|
Milk does not coagulate under the influence of cold, but rather runs
|
|
to whey; but under the influence of heat it coagulates and thickens.
|
|
As a general rule milk only comes to animals in pregnancy. When the
|
|
animal is pregnant milk is found, but for a while it is unfit for use,
|
|
and then after an interval of usefulness it becomes unfit for use
|
|
again. In the case of female animals not pregnant a small quantity
|
|
of milk has been procured by the employment of special food, and cases
|
|
have been actually known where women advanced in years on being
|
|
submitted to the process of milking have produced milk, and in some
|
|
cases have produced it in sufficient quantities to enable them to
|
|
suckle an infant.
|
|
|
|
The people that live on and about Mount Oeta take such she-goats
|
|
as decline the male and rub their udders hard with nettles to cause an
|
|
irritation amounting to pain; hereupon they milk the animals,
|
|
procuring at first a liquid resembling blood, then a liquid mixed with
|
|
purulent matter, and eventually milk, as freely as from females
|
|
submitting to the male.
|
|
|
|
As a general rule, milk is not found in the male of man or of
|
|
any other animal, though from time to time it has been found in a
|
|
male; for instance, once in Lemnos a he-goat was milked by its dugs
|
|
(for it has, by the way, two dugs close to the penis), and was
|
|
milked to such effect that cheese was made of the produce, and the
|
|
same phenomenon was repeated in a male of its own begetting. Such
|
|
occurrences, however, are regarded as supernatural and fraught with
|
|
omen as to futurity, and in point of fact when the Lemnian owner of
|
|
the animal inquired of the oracle, the god informed him that the
|
|
portent foreshadowed the acquisition of a fortune. With some men,
|
|
after puberty, milk can be produced by squeezing the breasts; cases
|
|
have been known where on their being subjected to a prolonged
|
|
milking process a considerable quantity of milk has been educed.
|
|
|
|
In milk there is a fatty element, which in clotted milk gets to
|
|
resemble oil. Goat's milk is mixed with sheep's milk in Sicily, and
|
|
wherever sheep's milk is abundant. The best milk for clotting is not
|
|
only that where the cheese is most abundant, but that also where the
|
|
cheese is driest.
|
|
|
|
Now some animals produce not only enough milk to rear their young,
|
|
but a superfluous amount for general use, for cheese-making and for
|
|
storage. This is especially the case with the sheep and the goat,
|
|
and next in degree with the cow. Mare's milk, by the way, and milk
|
|
of the she-ass are mixed in with Phrygian cheese. And there is more
|
|
cheese in cow's milk than in goat's milk; for graziers tell us that
|
|
from nine gallons of goat's milk they can get nineteen cheeses at an
|
|
obol apiece, and from the same amount of cow's milk, thirty. Other
|
|
animals give only enough of milk to rear their young withal, and no
|
|
superfluous amount and none fitted for cheese-making, as is the case
|
|
with all animals that have more than two breasts or dugs; for with
|
|
none of such animals is milk produced in superabundance or used for
|
|
the manufacture of cheese.
|
|
|
|
The juice of the fig and rennet are employed to curdle milk. The
|
|
fig-juice is first squeezed out into wool; the wool is then washed and
|
|
rinsed, and the rinsing put into a little milk, and if this be mixed
|
|
with other milk it curdles Rennet is a kind of milk, for it is found
|
|
in the stomach of the animal while it is yet suckling.
|
|
|
|
21
|
|
|
|
Rennet then consists of milk with an admixture of fire, which
|
|
comes from the natural heat of the animal, as the milk is concocted.
|
|
All ruminating animals produce rennet, and, of ambidentals, the
|
|
hare. Rennet improves in quality the longer it is kept; and cow's
|
|
rennet, after being kept a good while, and also hare's rennet, is good
|
|
for diarrhoea, and the best of all rennet is that of the young deer.
|
|
|
|
In milk-producing animals the comparative amount of the yield
|
|
varies with the size of the animal and the diversities of pasturage.
|
|
For instance, there are in Phasis small cattle that in all cases
|
|
give a copious supply of milk, and the large cows in Epirus yield each
|
|
one daily some nine gallons of milk, and half of this from each pair
|
|
of teats, and the milker has to stand erect, stooping forward a
|
|
little, as otherwise, if he were seated, he would be unable to reach
|
|
up to the teats. But, with the exception of the ass, all the
|
|
quadrupeds in Epirus are of large size, and relatively, the cattle and
|
|
the dogs are the largest. Now large animals require abundant
|
|
pasture, and this country supplies just such pasturage, and also
|
|
supplies diverse pasture grounds to suit the diverse seasons of the
|
|
year. The cattle are particularly large, and likewise the sheep of the
|
|
so-called Pyrrhic breed, the name being given in honour of King
|
|
Pyrrhus.
|
|
|
|
Some pasture quenches milk, as Median grass or lucerne, and that
|
|
especially in ruminants; other feeding renders it copious, as
|
|
cytisus and vetch; only, by the way, cytisus in flower is not
|
|
recommended, as it has burning properties, and vetch is not good for
|
|
pregnant kine, as it causes increased difficulty in parturition.
|
|
However, beasts that have access to good feeding, as they are
|
|
benefited thereby in regard to pregnancy, so also being well nourished
|
|
produce milk in plenty. Some of the leguminous plants bring milk in
|
|
abundance, as for instance, a large feed of beans with the ewe, the
|
|
common she-goat, the cow, and the small she-goat; for this feeding
|
|
makes them drop their udders. And, by the way, the pointing of the
|
|
udder to the ground before parturition is a sign of there being plenty
|
|
of milk coming.
|
|
|
|
Milk remains for a long time in the female, if she be kept from
|
|
the male and be properly fed, and, of quadrupeds, this is especially
|
|
true of the ewe; for the ewe can be milked for eight months. As a
|
|
general rule, ruminating animals give milk in abundance, and milk
|
|
fitted for cheese manufacture. In the neighbourhood of Torone cows run
|
|
dry for a few days before calving, and have milk all the rest of the
|
|
time. In women, milk of a livid colour is better than white for
|
|
nursing purposes; and swarthy women give healthier milk than fair
|
|
ones. Milk that is richest in cheese is the most nutritious, but
|
|
milk with a scanty supply of cheese is the more wholesome for
|
|
children.
|
|
|
|
22
|
|
|
|
All sanguineous animals eject sperm. As to what, and how, it
|
|
contributes to generation, these questions will be discussed in
|
|
another treatise. Taking the size of his body into account, man
|
|
emits more sperm than any other animal. In hairy-coated animals the
|
|
sperm is sticky, but in other animals it is not so. It is white in all
|
|
cases, and Herodotus is under a misapprehension when he states that
|
|
the Aethiopians eject black sperm.
|
|
|
|
Sperm issues from the body white and consistent, if it be healthy,
|
|
and after quitting the body becomes thin and black. In frosty
|
|
weather it does not coagulate, but gets exceedingly thin and watery
|
|
both in colour and consistency; but it coagulates and thickens under
|
|
the influence of heat. If it be long in the womb before issuing out,
|
|
it comes more than usually thick; and sometimes it comes out dry and
|
|
compact. Sperm capable of impregnating or of fructification sinks in
|
|
water; sperm incapable Of producing that result dissolves away. But
|
|
there is no truth in what Ctesias has written about the sperm of the
|
|
elephant.
|
|
|
|
Book IV
|
|
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
We have now treated, in regard to blooded animals of the parts
|
|
they have in common and of the parts peculiar to this genus or that,
|
|
and of the parts both composite and simple, whether without or within.
|
|
We now proceed to treat of animals devoid of blood. These animals
|
|
are divided into several genera.
|
|
|
|
One genus consists of so-called 'molluscs'; and by the term
|
|
'mollusc' we mean an animal that, being devoid of blood, has its
|
|
flesh-like substance outside, and any hard structure it may happen
|
|
to have, inside-in this respect resembling the red-blooded animals,
|
|
such as the genus of the cuttle-fish.
|
|
|
|
Another genus is that of the malacostraca. These are animals
|
|
that have their hard structure outside, and their soft or fleshlike
|
|
substance inside, and the hard substance belonging to them has to be
|
|
crushed rather than shattered; and to this genus belongs the
|
|
crawfish and the crab.
|
|
|
|
A third genus is that of the ostracoderms or 'testaceans'. These
|
|
are animals that have their hard substance outside and their
|
|
flesh-like substance within, and their hard substance can be shattered
|
|
but not crushed; and to this genus belong the snail and the oyster.
|
|
|
|
The fourth genus is that of insects; and this genus comprehends
|
|
numerous and dissimilar species. Insects are creatures that, as the
|
|
name implies, have nicks either on the belly or on the back, or on
|
|
both belly and back, and have no one part distinctly osseous and no
|
|
one part distinctly fleshy, but are throughout a something
|
|
intermediate between bone and flesh; that is to say, their body is
|
|
hard all through, inside and outside. Some insects are wingless,
|
|
such as the iulus and the centipede; some are winged, as the bee,
|
|
the cockchafer, and the wasp; and the same kind is in some cases
|
|
both winged and wingless, as the ant and the glow-worm.
|
|
|
|
In molluscs the external parts are as follows: in the first place,
|
|
the so-called feet; secondly, and attached to these, the head;
|
|
thirdly, the mantle-sac, containing the internal parts, and
|
|
incorrectly designated by some writers the head; and, fourthly, fins
|
|
round about the sac. (See diagram.) In all molluscs the head is found
|
|
to be between the feet and the belly. All molluscs are furnished with
|
|
eight feet, and in all cases these feet are severally furnished with
|
|
a double row of suckers, with the exception of one single species of
|
|
poulpe or octopus. The sepia, the small calamary and the large
|
|
calamary have an exceptional organ in a pair of long arms or
|
|
tentacles, having at their extremities a portion rendered rough by
|
|
the presence of two rows of suckers; and with these arms or tentacles
|
|
they apprehend their food and draw it into their mouths, and in
|
|
stormy weather they cling by them to a rock and sway about in the
|
|
rough water like ships lying at anchor. They swim by the aid of the
|
|
fins that they have about the sac. In all cases their feet are
|
|
furnished with suckers.
|
|
|
|
The octopus, by the way, uses his feelers either as feet or hands;
|
|
with the two which stand over his mouth he draws in food, and the last
|
|
of his feelers he employs in the act of copulation; and this last one,
|
|
by the way, is extremely sharp, is exceptional as being of a whitish
|
|
colour, and at its extremity is bifurcate; that is to say, it has an
|
|
additional something on the rachis, and by rachis is meant the
|
|
smooth surface or edge of the arm on the far side from the suckers.
|
|
(See diagram.)
|
|
|
|
In front of the sac and over the feelers they have a hollow
|
|
tube, by means of which they discharge any sea-water that they may
|
|
have taken into the sac of the body in the act of receiving food by
|
|
the mouth. They can shift the tube from side to side, and by means
|
|
of it they discharge the black liquid peculiar to the animal.
|
|
|
|
Stretching out its feet, it swims obliquely in the direction of
|
|
the so-called head, and by this mode of swimming it can see in
|
|
front, for its eyes are at the top, and in this attitude it has its
|
|
mouth at the rear. The 'head', while the creature is alive, is hard,
|
|
and looks as though it were inflated. It apprehends and retains
|
|
objects by means of the under-surface of its arms, and the membrane in
|
|
between its feet is kept at full tension; if the animal get on to
|
|
the sand it can no longer retain its hold.
|
|
|
|
There is a difference between the octopus and the other molluscs
|
|
above mentioned: the body of the octopus is small, and his feet are
|
|
long, whereas in the others the body is large and the feet short; so
|
|
short, in fact, that they cannot walk on them. Compared with one
|
|
another, the teuthis, or calamary, is long-shaped, and the sepia
|
|
flat-shaped; and of the calamaries the so-called teuthus is much
|
|
bigger than the teuthis; for teuthi have been found as much as five
|
|
ells long. Some sepiae attain a length of two ells, and the feelers of
|
|
the octopus are sometimes as long, or even longer. The species teuthus
|
|
is not a numerous one; the teuthus differs from the teuthis in
|
|
shape; that is, the sharp extremity of the teuthus is broader than
|
|
that of the other, and, further, the encircling fin goes all round the
|
|
trunk, whereas it is in part lacking in the teuthis; both animals
|
|
are pelagic.
|
|
|
|
In all cases the head comes after the feet, in the middle of the
|
|
feet that are called arms or feelers. There is here situated a
|
|
mouth, and two teeth in the mouth; and above these two large eyes, and
|
|
betwixt the eyes a small cartilage enclosing a small brain; and within
|
|
the mouth it has a minute organ of a fleshy nature, and this it uses
|
|
as a tongue, for no other tongue does it possess. Next after this,
|
|
on the outside, is what looks like a sac; the flesh of which it is
|
|
made is divisible, not in long straight strips, but in annular flakes;
|
|
and all molluscs have a cuticle around this flesh. Next after or at
|
|
the back of the mouth comes a long and narrow oesophagus, and close
|
|
after that a crop or craw, large and spherical, like that of a bird;
|
|
then comes the stomach, like the fourth stomach in ruminants; and
|
|
the shape of it resembles the spiral convolution in the trumpet-shell;
|
|
from the stomach there goes back again, in the direction of the mouth,
|
|
thin gut, and the gut is thicker than the oesophagus. (See diagram.)
|
|
|
|
Molluscs have no viscera, but they have what is called a
|
|
mytis, and on it a vessel containing a thick black juice; in the sepia
|
|
or cuttle-fish this vessel is the largest, and this juice is most
|
|
abundant. All molluscs, when frightened, discharge such a juice, but
|
|
the discharge is most copious in the cuttle-fish. The mytis, then,
|
|
is situated under the mouth, and the oesophagus runs through it; and
|
|
down below at the point to which the gut extends is the vesicle of the
|
|
black juice, and the animal has the vesicle and the gut enveloped in
|
|
one and the same membrane, and by the same membrane, same orifice
|
|
discharges both the black juice and the residuum. The animals have
|
|
also certain hair-like or furry growths in their bodies.
|
|
|
|
In the sepia, the teuthis, and the teuthus the hard parts are
|
|
within, towards the back of the body; those parts are called in one
|
|
the sepium, and in the other the 'sword'. They differ from one
|
|
another, for the sepium in the cuttle-fish and teuthus is hard and
|
|
flat, being a substance intermediate between bone and fishbone, with
|
|
(in part) a crumbling, spongy texture, but in the teuthis the part
|
|
is thin and somewhat gristly. These parts differ from one another in
|
|
shape, as do also the bodies of the animals. The octopus has nothing
|
|
hard of this kind in its interior, but it has a gristly substance
|
|
round the head, which, if the animal grows old, becomes hard.
|
|
|
|
The females differ from the males. The males have a duct in
|
|
under the oesophagus, extending from the mantle-cavity to the lower
|
|
portion of the sac, and there is an organ to which it attaches,
|
|
resembling a breast; (see diagram) in the female there are two of
|
|
these organs, situated higher up; (see diagram) with both sexes there
|
|
are underneath these organs certain red formations. The egg of the
|
|
octopus is single, uneven on its surface, and of large size; the
|
|
fluid substance within is all uniform in colour, smooth, and in
|
|
colour white; the size of the egg is so great as to fill a vessel
|
|
larger than the creature's head. The sepia has two sacs, and inside
|
|
them a number of eggs, like in appearance to white hailstones. For
|
|
the disposition of these parts I must refer to my anatomical
|
|
diagrams.
|
|
|
|
The males of all these animals differ from the females, and the
|
|
difference between the sexes is most marked in the sepia; for the back
|
|
of the trunk, which is blacker than the belly, is rougher in the
|
|
male than in the female, and in the male the back is striped, and
|
|
the rump is more sharply pointed.
|
|
|
|
There are several species of the octopus. One keeps close to the
|
|
surface, and is the largest of them all, and near the shore the size
|
|
is larger than in deep water; and there are others, small,
|
|
variegated in colour, which are not articles of food. There are two
|
|
others, one called the heledone, which differs from its congeners in
|
|
the length of its legs and in having one row of suckers-all the rest
|
|
of the molluscs having two,-the other nicknamed variously the
|
|
bolitaina or the 'onion,' and the ozolis or the 'stinkard'.
|
|
|
|
There are two others found in shells resembling those of the
|
|
testaceans. One of them is nicknamed by some persons the nautilus or
|
|
the pontilus, or by others the 'polypus' egg'; and the shell of this
|
|
creature is something like a separate valve of a deep scallop-shell.
|
|
This polypus lives very often near to the shore, and is apt to be
|
|
thrown up high and dry on the beach; under these circumstances it is
|
|
found with its shell detached, and dies by and by on dry land. These
|
|
polypods are small, and are shaped, as regards the form of their
|
|
bodies, like the bolbidia. There is another polypus that is placed
|
|
within a shell like a snail; it never comes out of the shell, but
|
|
lives inside the shell like the snail, and from time to time protrudes
|
|
its feelers.
|
|
|
|
So much for molluscs.
|
|
|
|
2
|
|
|
|
With regard to the Malacostraca or crustaceans, one species is
|
|
that of the crawfish, and a second, resembling the first, is that of
|
|
the lobster; the lobster differing from the crawfish in having
|
|
claws, and in a few other respects as well. Another species is that of
|
|
the carid, and another is that of the crab, and there are many kinds
|
|
both of carid and of crab.
|
|
|
|
Of carids there are the so-called cyphae, or 'hunch-backs', the
|
|
crangons, or squillae, and the little kind, or shrimps, and the little
|
|
kind do not develop into a larger kind.
|
|
|
|
Of the crab, the varieties are indefinite and incalculable. The
|
|
largest of all crabs is one nicknamed Maia, a second variety is the
|
|
pagarus and the crab of Heracleotis, and a third variety is the
|
|
fresh-water crab; the other varieties are smaller in size and
|
|
destitute of special designations. In the neighbourhood of Phoenice
|
|
there are found on the beach certain crabs that are nicknamed the
|
|
'horsemen', from their running with such speed that it is difficult to
|
|
overtake them; these crabs, when opened, are usually found empty,
|
|
and this emptiness may be put down to insufficiency of nutriment.
|
|
(There is another variety, small like the crab, but resembling in
|
|
shape the lobster.) All these animals, as has been stated, have
|
|
their hard and shelly part outside, where the skin is in other
|
|
animals, and the fleshy part inside; and the belly is more or less
|
|
provided with lamellae, or little flaps, and the female here
|
|
deposits her spawn.
|
|
|
|
The crawfishes have five feet on either side, including the
|
|
claws at the end; and in like manner the crabs have ten feet in all,
|
|
including the claws. Of the carids, the hunch-backed, or prawns,
|
|
have five feet on either side, which are sharp-pointed-those towards
|
|
the head; and five others on either side in the region of the belly,
|
|
with their extremities flat; they are devoid of flaps on the under
|
|
side such as the crawfish has, but on the back they resemble the
|
|
crawfish. (See diagram.)It is very different with the crangon, or
|
|
squilla; it has four front legs on either side, then three thin ones
|
|
close behind on either side, and the rest of the body is for the most
|
|
part devoid of feet. (See diagram.) Of all these animals the feet
|
|
bend out obliquely, as is the case with insects; and the claws, where
|
|
claws are found, turn inwards. The crawfish has a tail, and five fins
|
|
on it; and the round-backed carid has a tail and four fins; the
|
|
squilla also has fins at the tail on either side. In the case of both
|
|
the hump-backed carid and the squilla the middle art of the tail is
|
|
spinous: only that in the squilla the part is flattened and in the
|
|
carid it is sharp-pointed. Of all animals of this genus the crab is
|
|
the only one devoid of a rump; and, while the body of the carid and
|
|
the crawfish is elongated, that of the crab is rotund.
|
|
|
|
In the crawfish the male differs from the female: in the female
|
|
the first foot is bifurcate, in the male it is undivided; the
|
|
belly-fins in the female are large and overlapping on the neck,
|
|
while in the male they are smaller and do not overlap; and, further,
|
|
on the last feet of the male there are spur-like projections, large
|
|
and sharp, which projections in the female are small and smooth.
|
|
Both male and female have two antennae in front of the eyes, large and
|
|
rough, and other antennae underneath, small and smooth. The eyes of
|
|
all these creatures are hard and beady, and can move either to the
|
|
inner or to the outer side. The eyes of most crabs have a similar
|
|
facility of movement, or rather, in the crab this facility is
|
|
developed in a higher degree. (See diagram.)
|
|
|
|
The lobster is all over grey-coloured, with a mottling of black.
|
|
Its under or hinder feet, up to the big feet or claws, are eight in
|
|
number; then come the big feet, far larger and flatter at the tips
|
|
than the same organs in the crawfish; and these big feet or claws
|
|
are exceptional in their structure, for the right claw has the extreme
|
|
flat surface long and thin, while the left claw has the
|
|
corresponding surface thick and round. Each of the two claws,
|
|
divided at the end like a pair of jaws, has both below and above a set
|
|
of teeth: only that in the right claw they are all small and
|
|
saw-shaped, while in the left claw those at the apex are saw-shaped
|
|
and those within are molar-shaped, these latter being, in the under
|
|
part of the cleft claw, four teeth close together, and in the upper
|
|
part three teeth, not close together. Both right and left claws have
|
|
the upper part mobile, and bring it to bear against the lower one, and
|
|
both are curved like bandy-legs, being thereby adapted for
|
|
apprehension and constriction. Above the two large claws come two
|
|
others, covered with hair, a little underneath the mouth; and
|
|
underneath these the gill-like formations in the region of the
|
|
mouth, hairy and numerous. These organs the animal keeps in
|
|
perpetual motion; and the two hairy feet it bends and draws in towards
|
|
its mouth. The feet near the mouth are furnished also with delicate
|
|
outgrowing appendages. Like the crawfish, the lobster has two teeth,
|
|
or mandibles, and above these teeth are its antennae, long, but
|
|
shorter and finer by far than those of the crawfish, and then four
|
|
other antennae similar in shape, but shorter and finer than the
|
|
others. Over these antennae come the eyes, small and short, not
|
|
large like the eyes of the crawfish. Over the eyes is a peaky rough
|
|
projection like a forehead, larger than the same part in the crawfish;
|
|
in fact, the frontal part is more pointed and the thorax is much
|
|
broader in the lobster than in the crawfish, and the body in general
|
|
is smoother and more full of flesh. Of the eight feet, four are
|
|
bifurcate at the extremities, and four are undivided. The region of
|
|
the so-called neck is outwardly divided into five divisions, and
|
|
sixthly comes the flattened portion at the end, and this portion has
|
|
five flaps, or tail-fins; and the inner or under parts, into which the
|
|
female drops her spawn, are four in number and hairy, and on each of
|
|
the aforesaid parts is a spine turned outwards, short and straight.
|
|
The body in general and the region of the thorax in particular are
|
|
smooth, not rough as in the crawfish; but on the large claws the outer
|
|
portion has larger spines. There is no apparent difference between the
|
|
male and female, for they both have one claw, whichever it may be,
|
|
larger than the other, and neither male nor female is ever found
|
|
with both claws of the same size.
|
|
|
|
All crustaceans take in water close by the mouth. The crab
|
|
discharges it, closing up, as it does so, a small portion of the same,
|
|
and the crawfish discharges it by way of the gills; and, by the way,
|
|
the gill-shaped organs in the crawfish are very numerous.
|
|
|
|
The following properties are common to all crustaceans: they
|
|
have in all cases two teeth, or mandibles (for the front teeth in
|
|
the crawfish are two in number), and in all cases there is in the
|
|
mouth a small fleshy structure serving for a tongue; and the stomach
|
|
is close to the mouth, only that the crawfish has a little
|
|
oesophagus in front of the stomach, and there is a straight gut
|
|
attached to it. This gut, in the crawfish and its congeners, and in
|
|
the carids, extends in a straight line to the tail, and terminates
|
|
where the animal discharges the residuum, and where the female
|
|
deposits her spawn; in the crab it terminates where the flap is
|
|
situated, and in the centre of the flap. (And by the way, in all these
|
|
animals the spawn is deposited outside.) Further, the female has the
|
|
place for the spawn running along the gut. And, again, all these
|
|
animals have, more or less, an organ termed the 'mytis', or
|
|
'poppyjuice'.
|
|
|
|
We must now proceed to review their several differentiae.
|
|
|
|
The crawfish then, as has been said, has two teeth, large and
|
|
hollow, in which is contained a juice resembling the mytis, and in
|
|
between the teeth is a fleshy substance, shaped like a tongue. After
|
|
the mouth comes a short oesophagus, and then a membranous stomach
|
|
attached to the oesophagus, and at the orifice Of the stomach are
|
|
three teeth, two facing one another and a third standing by itself
|
|
underneath. Coming off at a bend from the stomach is a gut, simple and
|
|
of equal thickness throughout the entire length of the body until it
|
|
reaches the anal vent.
|
|
|
|
These are all common properties of the crawfish, the carid, and
|
|
the crab; for the crab, be it remembered, has two teeth.
|
|
|
|
Again, the crawfish has a duct attached all the way from the chest
|
|
to the anal vent; and this duct is connected with the ovary in the
|
|
female, and with the seminal ducts in the male. This passage is
|
|
attached to the concave surface of the flesh in such a way that the
|
|
flesh is in betwixt the duct and the gut; for the gut is related to
|
|
the convexity and this duct to the concavity, pretty much as is
|
|
observed in quadrupeds. And the duct is identical in both the sexes;
|
|
that is to say, the duct in both is thin and white, and charged with a
|
|
sallow-coloured moisture, and is attached to the chest.
|
|
|
|
(The following are the properties of the egg and of the convolutes
|
|
in the carid.)
|
|
|
|
The male, by the way, differs from the female in regard to its
|
|
flesh, in having in connexion with the chest two separate and distinct
|
|
white substances, resembling in colour and conformation the
|
|
tentacles of the cuttle-fish, and they are convoluted like the 'poppy'
|
|
or quasi-liver of the trumpet-shell. These organs have their
|
|
starting-point in 'cotyledons' or papillae, which are situated under
|
|
the hindmost feet; and hereabouts the flesh is red and blood-coloured,
|
|
but is slippery to the touch and in so far unlike flesh. Off from
|
|
the convolute organ at the chest branches off another coil about as
|
|
thick as ordinary twine; and underneath there are two granular seminal
|
|
bodies in juxta-position with the gut. These are the organs of the
|
|
male. The female has red-coloured eggs, which are adjacent to the
|
|
stomach and to each side of the gut all along to the fleshy parts,
|
|
being enveloped in a thin membrane.
|
|
|
|
Such are the parts, internal and external, of the carid.
|
|
|
|
3
|
|
|
|
The inner organs of sanguineous animals happen to have specific
|
|
designations; for these animals have in all cases the inner viscera,
|
|
but this is not the case with the bloodless animals, but what they
|
|
have in common with red-blooded animals is the stomach, the
|
|
oesophagus, and the gut.
|
|
|
|
With regard to the crab, it has already been stated that it has
|
|
claws and feet, and their position has been set forth; furthermore,
|
|
for the most part they have the right claw bigger and stronger than
|
|
the left. It has also been stated' that in general the eyes of the
|
|
crab look sideways. Further, the trunk of the crab's body is single
|
|
and undivided, including its head and any other part it may possess.
|
|
Some crabs have eyes placed sideways on the upper part, immediately
|
|
under the back, and standing a long way apart, and some have their
|
|
eyes in the centre and close together, like the crabs of Heracleotis
|
|
and the so-called 'grannies'. The mouth lies underneath the eyes,
|
|
and inside it there are two teeth, as is the case with the crawfish,
|
|
only that in the crab the teeth are not rounded but long; and over the
|
|
teeth are two lids, and in betwixt them are structures such as the
|
|
crawfish has besides its teeth. The crab takes in water near by the
|
|
mouth, using the lids as a check to the inflow, and discharges the
|
|
water by two passages above the mouth, closing by means of the lids
|
|
the way by which it entered; and the two passage-ways are underneath
|
|
the eyes. When it has taken in water it closes its mouth by means of
|
|
both lids, and ejects the water in the way above described. Next after
|
|
the teeth comes the oesophagus, very short, so short in fact that
|
|
the stomach seems to come straightway after the mouth. Next after
|
|
the oesophagus comes the stomach, two-horned, to the centre of which
|
|
is attached a simple and delicate gut; and the gut terminates
|
|
outwards, at the operculum, as has been previously stated. (The crab
|
|
has the parts in between the lids in the neighbourhood of the teeth
|
|
similar to the same parts in the crawfish.) Inside the trunk is a
|
|
sallow juice and some few little bodies, long and white, and others
|
|
spotted red. The male differs from the female in size and breadth, and
|
|
in respect of the ventral flap; for this is larger in the female
|
|
than in the male, and stands out further from the trunk, and is more
|
|
hairy (as is the case also with the female in the crawfish).
|
|
|
|
So much, then, for the organs of the malacostraca or crustacea.
|
|
|
|
4
|
|
|
|
With the ostracoderma, or testaceans, such as the land-snails
|
|
and the sea-snails, and all the 'oysters' so-called, and also with the
|
|
sea-urchin genus, the fleshy part, in such as have flesh, is similarly
|
|
situated to the fleshy part in the crustaceans; in other words, it
|
|
is inside the animal, and the shell is outside, and there is no hard
|
|
substance in the interior. As compared with one another the testaceans
|
|
present many diversities both in regard to their shells and to the
|
|
flesh within. Some of them have no flesh at all, as the sea-urchin;
|
|
others have flesh, but it is inside and wholly hidden, except the
|
|
head, as in the land-snails, and the so-called cocalia, and, among
|
|
pelagic animals, in the purple murex, the ceryx or trumpet-shell,
|
|
the sea-snail, and the spiral-shaped testaceans in general. Of the
|
|
rest, some are bivalved and some univalved; and by 'bivalves' I mean
|
|
such as are enclosed within two shells, and by 'univalved' such as are
|
|
enclosed within a single shell, and in these last the fleshy part is
|
|
exposed, as in the case of the limpet. Of the bivalves, some can
|
|
open out, like the scallop and the mussel; for all such shells are
|
|
grown together on one side and are separate on the other, so as to
|
|
open and shut. Other bivalves are closed on both sides alike, like the
|
|
solen or razor-fish. Some testaceans there are, that are entirely
|
|
enveloped in shell and expose no portion of their flesh outside, as
|
|
the tethya or ascidians.
|
|
|
|
Again, in regard to the shells themselves, the testaceans
|
|
present differences when compared with one another. Some are
|
|
smooth-shelled, like the solen, the mussel, and some clams, viz. those
|
|
that are nicknamed 'milkshells', while others are rough-shelled,
|
|
such as the pool-oyster or edible oyster, the pinna, and certain
|
|
species of cockles, and the trumpet shells; and of these some are
|
|
ribbed, such as the scallop and a certain kind of clam or cockle,
|
|
and some are devoid of ribs, as the pinna and another species of clam.
|
|
Testaceans also differ from one another in regard to the thickness
|
|
or thinness of their shell, both as regards the shell in its
|
|
entirety and as regards specific parts of the shell, for instance, the
|
|
lips; for some have thin-lipped shells, like the mussel, and others
|
|
have thick-lipped shells, like the oyster. A property common to the
|
|
above mentioned, and, in fact, to all testaceans, is the smoothness of
|
|
their shells inside. Some also are capable of motion, like the
|
|
scallop, and indeed some aver that scallops can actually fly, owing to
|
|
the circumstance that they often jump right out of the apparatus by
|
|
means of which they are caught; others are incapable of motion and are
|
|
attached fast to some external object, as is the case with the
|
|
pinna. All the spiral-shaped testaceans can move and creep, and even
|
|
the limpet relaxes its hold to go in quest of food. In the case of the
|
|
univalves and the bivalves, the fleshy substance adheres to the
|
|
shell so tenaciously that it can only be removed by an effort; in
|
|
the case of the stromboids, it is more loosely attached. And a
|
|
peculiarity of all the stromboids is the spiral twist of the shell
|
|
in the part farthest away from the head; they are also furnished
|
|
from birth with an operculum. And, further, all stromboid testaceans
|
|
have their shells on the right hand side, and move not in the
|
|
direction of the spire, but the opposite way. Such are the diversities
|
|
observed in the external parts of these animals.
|
|
|
|
The internal structure is almost the same in all these
|
|
creatures, and in the stromboids especially; for it is in size that
|
|
these latter differ from one another, and in accidents of the nature
|
|
of excess or defect. And there is not much difference between most
|
|
of the univalves and bivalves; but, while those that open and shut
|
|
differ from one another but slightly, they differ considerably from
|
|
such as are incapable of motion. And this will be illustrated more
|
|
satisfactorily hereafter.
|
|
|
|
The spiral-shaped testaceans are all similarly constructed, but
|
|
differ from one another, as has been said, in the way of excess or
|
|
defect (for the larger species have larger and more conspicuous
|
|
organs, and the smaller have smaller and less conspicuous), and,
|
|
furthermore, in relative hardness or softness, and in other such
|
|
accidents or properties. All the stromboids, for instance, have the
|
|
flesh that extrudes from the mouth of the shell, hard and stiff;
|
|
some more, and some less. From the middle of this protrudes the head
|
|
and two horns, and these horns are large in the large species, but
|
|
exceedingly minute in the smaller ones. The head protrudes from them
|
|
all in the same way; and, if the animal be alarmed, the head draws
|
|
in again. Some of these creatures have a mouth and teeth, as the
|
|
snail; teeth sharp, and small, and delicate. They have also a
|
|
proboscis just like that of the fly; and the proboscis is
|
|
tongue-shaped. The ceryx and the purple murex have this organ firm and
|
|
solid; and just as the myops, or horse-fly, and the oestrus, or
|
|
gadfly, can pierce the skin of a quadruped, so is that proboscis
|
|
proportionately stronger in these testaceans; for they bore right
|
|
through the shells of other shell-fish on which they prey. The stomach
|
|
follows close upon the mouth, and, by the way, this organ in the snail
|
|
resembles a bird's crop. Underneath come two white firm formations,
|
|
mastoid or papillary in form; and similar formations are found in
|
|
the cuttle-fish also, only that they are of a firmer consistency in
|
|
the cuttle-fish. After the stomach comes an oesophagus, simple and
|
|
long, extending to the poppy or quasi-liver, which is in the innermost
|
|
recess of the shell. All these statements may be verified in the
|
|
case of the purple murex and the ceryx by observation within the whorl
|
|
of the shell. What comes next to the oesophagus is the gut; in fact,
|
|
the gut is continuous with the oesophagus, and runs its whole length
|
|
uncomplicated to the outlet of the residuum. The gut has its point
|
|
of origin in the region of the coil of the mecon, or so-called
|
|
'poppy', and is wider hereabouts (for remember, the mecon is for the
|
|
most part a sort of excretion in all testaceans); it then takes a bend
|
|
and runs up again towards the fleshy part, and terminates by the
|
|
side of the head, where the animal discharges its residuum; and this
|
|
holds good in the case of all stromboid testaceans, whether
|
|
terrestrial or marine. From the stomach there is drawn in a parallel
|
|
direction with the oesophagus, in the larger snails, a long white duct
|
|
enveloped in a membrane, resembling in colour the mastoid formations
|
|
higher up; and in it are nicks or interruptions, as in the egg-mass of
|
|
the crawfish, only, by the way, the duct of which we are treating is
|
|
white and the egg-mass of the crawfish is red. This formation has no
|
|
outlet nor duct, but is enveloped in a thin membrane with a narrow
|
|
cavity in its interior. And from the gut downward extend black and
|
|
rough formations, in close connexion, something like the formations in
|
|
the tortoise, only not so black. Marine snails, also, have these
|
|
formations, and the white ones, only that the formations are smaller
|
|
in the smaller species.
|
|
|
|
The non-spiral univalves and bivalves are in some respect
|
|
similar in construction, and in some respects dissimilar, to the
|
|
spiral testaceans. They all have a head and horns, and a mouth, and
|
|
the organ resembling a tongue; but these organs, in the smaller
|
|
species, are indiscernible owing to the minuteness of these animals,
|
|
and some are indiscernible even in the larger species when dead, or
|
|
when at rest and motionless. They all have the mecon, or poppy, but
|
|
not all in the same place, nor of equal size, nor similarly open to
|
|
observation; thus, the limpets have this organ deep down in the bottom
|
|
of the shell, and the bivalves at the hinge connecting the two valves.
|
|
They also have in all cases the hairy growths or beards, in a circular
|
|
form, as in the scallops. And, with regard to the so-called 'egg',
|
|
in those that have it, when they have it, it is situated in one of the
|
|
semi-circles of the periphery, as is the case with the white formation
|
|
in the snail; for this white formation in the snail corresponds to the
|
|
so-called egg of which we are speaking. But all these organs, as has
|
|
been stated, are distinctly traceable in the larger species, while
|
|
in the small ones they are in some cases almost, and in others
|
|
altogether, indiscernible. Hence they are most plainly visible in
|
|
the large scallops; and these are the bivalves that have one valve
|
|
flat-shaped, like the lid of a pot. The outlet of the excretion is
|
|
in all these animals (save for the exception to be afterwards related)
|
|
on one side; for there is a passage whereby the excretion passes
|
|
out. (And, remember, the mecon or poppy, as has been stated, is an
|
|
excretion in all these animals-an excretion enveloped in a
|
|
membrane.) The so-called egg has no outlet in any of these
|
|
creatures, but is merely an excrescence in the fleshy mass; and it
|
|
is not situated in the same region with the gut, but the 'egg' is
|
|
situated on the right-hand side and the gut on the left. Such are
|
|
the relations of the anal vent in most of these animals; but in the
|
|
case of the wild limpet (called by some the 'sea-ear'), the residuum
|
|
issues beneath the shell, for the shell is perforated to give an
|
|
outlet. In this particular limpet the stomach is seen coming after the
|
|
mouth, and the egg-shaped formations are discernible. But for the
|
|
relative positions of these parts you are referred to my Treatise on
|
|
Anatomy.
|
|
|
|
The so-called carcinium or hermit crab is in a way intermediate
|
|
between the crustaceans and the testaceans. In its nature it resembles
|
|
the crawfish kind, and it is born simple of itself, but by its habit
|
|
of introducing itself into a shell and living there it resembles the
|
|
testaceans, and so appears to partake of the characters of both kinds.
|
|
In shape, to give a simple illustration, it resembles a spider, only
|
|
that the part below the head and thorax is larger in this creature
|
|
than in the spider. It has two thin red horns, and underneath these
|
|
horns two long eyes, not retreating inwards, nor turning sideways like
|
|
the eyes of the crab, but protruding straight out; and underneath
|
|
these eyes the mouth, and round about the mouth several hair-like
|
|
growths, and next after these two bifurcate legs or claws, whereby
|
|
it draws in objects towards itself, and two other legs on either side,
|
|
and a third small one. All below the thorax is soft, and when opened
|
|
in dissection is found to be sallow-coloured within. From the mouth
|
|
there runs a single passage right on to the stomach, but the passage
|
|
for the excretions is not discernible. The legs and the thorax are
|
|
hard, but not so hard as the legs and the thorax of the crab. It
|
|
does not adhere to its shell like the purple murex and the ceryx,
|
|
but can easily slip out of it. It is longer when found in the shell of
|
|
the stromboids than when found in the shell of the neritae.
|
|
|
|
And, by the way, the animal found in the shell of the neritae is a
|
|
separate species, like to the other in most respects; but of its
|
|
bifurcate feet or claws, the right-hand one is small and the left-hand
|
|
one is large, and it progresses chiefly by the aid of this latter
|
|
and larger one. (In the shells of these animals, and in certain
|
|
others, there is found a parasite whose mode of attachment is similar.
|
|
The particular one which we have just described is named the
|
|
cyllarus.)
|
|
|
|
The nerites has a smooth large round shell, and resembles the
|
|
ceryx in shape, only the poppy-juice is, in its case, not black but
|
|
red. It clings with great force near the middle. In calm weather,
|
|
then, they go free afield, but when the wind blows the carcinia take
|
|
shelter against the rocks: the neritae themselves cling fast like
|
|
limpets; and the same is the case with the haemorrhoid or aporrhaid
|
|
and all others of the like kind. And, by the way, they cling to the
|
|
rock, when they turn back their operculum, for this operculum seems
|
|
like a lid; in fact this structure represents the one part, in the
|
|
stromboids, of that which in the bivalves is a duplicate shell. The
|
|
interior of the animal is fleshy, and the mouth is inside. And it is
|
|
the same with the haemorrhoid, the purple murex, and all suchlike
|
|
animals.
|
|
|
|
Such of the little crabs as have the left foot or claw the
|
|
bigger of the two are found in the neritae, but not in the stromboids.
|
|
are some snail-shells which have inside them creatures resembling
|
|
those little crayfish that are also found in fresh water. These
|
|
creatures, however, differ in having the part inside the shells But as
|
|
to the characters, you are referred to my Treatise on Anatomy.
|
|
|
|
5
|
|
|
|
The urchins are devoid of flesh, and this is a character
|
|
peculiar to them; and while they are in all cases empty and devoid
|
|
of any flesh within, they are in all cases furnished with the black
|
|
formations. There are several species of the urchin, and one of
|
|
these is that which is made use of for food; this is the kind in which
|
|
are found the so-called eggs, large and edible, in the larger and
|
|
smaller specimens alike; for even when as yet very small they are
|
|
provided with them. There are two other species, the spatangus, and
|
|
the so-called bryssus, these animals are pelagic and scarce.
|
|
Further, there are the echinometrae, or 'mother-urchins', the
|
|
largest in size of all the species. In addition to these there is
|
|
another species, small in size, but furnished with large hard
|
|
spines; it lives in the sea at a depth of several fathoms; and is used
|
|
by some people as a specific for cases of strangury. In the
|
|
neighbourhood of Torone there are sea-urchins of a white colour,
|
|
shells, spines, eggs and all, and that are longer than the ordinary
|
|
sea-urchin. The spine in this species is not large nor strong, but
|
|
rather limp; and the black formations in connexion with the mouth
|
|
are more than usually numerous, and communicate with the external
|
|
duct, but not with one another; in point of fact, the animal is in a
|
|
manner divided up by them. The edible urchin moves with greatest
|
|
freedom and most often; and this is indicated by the fact that these
|
|
urchins have always something or other on their spines.
|
|
|
|
All urchins are supplied with eggs, but in some of the species the
|
|
eggs are exceedingly small and unfit for food. Singularly enough,
|
|
the urchin has what we may call its head and mouth down below, and a
|
|
place for the issue of the residuum up above; (and this same
|
|
property is common to all stromboids and to limpets). For the food
|
|
on which the creature lives lies down below; consequently the mouth
|
|
has a position well adapted for getting at the food, and the excretion
|
|
is above, near to the back of the shell. The urchin has, also, five
|
|
hollow teeth inside, and in the middle of these teeth a fleshy
|
|
substance serving the office of a tongue. Next to this comes the
|
|
oesophagus, and then the stomach, divided into five parts, and
|
|
filled with excretion, all the five parts uniting at the anal vent,
|
|
where the shell is perforated for an outlet. Underneath the stomach,
|
|
in another membrane, are the so-called eggs, identical in number in
|
|
all cases, and that number is always an odd number, to wit five. Up
|
|
above, the black formations are attached to the starting-point of
|
|
the teeth, and they are bitter to the taste, and unfit for food. A
|
|
similar or at least an analogous formation is found in many animals;
|
|
as, for instance, in the tortoise, the toad, the frog, the stromboids,
|
|
and, generally, in the molluscs; but the formation varies here and
|
|
there in colour, and in all cases is altogether uneatable, or more
|
|
or less unpalatable. In reality the mouth-apparatus of the urchin is
|
|
continuous from one end to the other, but to outward appearance it
|
|
is not so, but looks like a horn lantern with the panes of horn left
|
|
out. The urchin uses its spines as feet; for it rests its weight on
|
|
these, and then moving shifts from place to place.
|
|
|
|
6
|
|
|
|
The so-called tethyum or ascidian has of all these animals the
|
|
most remarkable characteristics. It is the only mollusc that has its
|
|
entire body concealed within its shell, and the shell is a substance
|
|
intermediate between hide and shell, so that it cuts like a piece of
|
|
hard leather. It is attached to rocks by its shell, and is provided
|
|
with two passages placed at a distance from one another, very minute
|
|
and hard to see, whereby it admits and discharges the sea-water; for
|
|
it has no visible excretion (whereas of shell fish in general some
|
|
resemble the urchin in this matter of excretion, and others are
|
|
provided with the so-called mecon, or poppy-juice). If the animal be
|
|
opened, it is found to have, in the first place, a tendinous
|
|
membrane running round inside the shell-like substance, and within
|
|
this membrane is the flesh-like substance of the ascidian, not
|
|
resembling that in other molluscs; but this flesh, to which I now
|
|
allude, is the same in all ascidia. And this substance is attached
|
|
in two places to the membrane and the skin, obliquely; and at the
|
|
point of attachment the space is narrowed from side to side, where the
|
|
fleshy substance stretches towards the passages that lead outwards
|
|
through the shell; and here it discharges and admits food and liquid
|
|
matter, just as it would if one of the passages were a mouth and the
|
|
other an anal vent; and one of the passages is somewhat wider than the
|
|
other Inside it has a pair of cavities, one on either side, a small
|
|
partition separating them; and one of these two cavities contains
|
|
the liquid. The creature has no other organ whether motor or
|
|
sensory, nor, as was said in the case of the others, is it furnished
|
|
with any organ connected with excretion, as other shell-fish are.
|
|
The colour of the ascidian is in some cases sallow, and in other cases
|
|
red.
|
|
|
|
There is, furthermore, the genus of the sea-nettles, peculiar in
|
|
its way. The sea-nettle, or sea-anemone, clings to rocks like
|
|
certain of the testaceans, but at times relaxes its hold. It has no
|
|
shell, but its entire body is fleshy. It is sensitive to touch, and,
|
|
if you put your hand to it, it will seize and cling to it, as the
|
|
cuttlefish would do with its feelers, and in such a way as to make the
|
|
flesh of your hand swell up. Its mouth is in the centre of its body,
|
|
and it lives adhering to the rock as an oyster to its shell. If any
|
|
little fish come up against it it it clings to it; in fact, just as
|
|
I described it above as doing to your hand, so it does to anything
|
|
edible that comes in its way; and it feeds upon sea-urchins and
|
|
scallops. Another species of the sea-nettle roams freely abroad. The
|
|
sea-nettle appears to be devoid altogether of excretion, and in this
|
|
respect it resembles a plant.
|
|
|
|
Of sea-nettles there are two species, the lesser and more
|
|
edible, and the large hard ones, such as are found in the
|
|
neighbourhood of Chalcis. In winter time their flesh is firm, and
|
|
accordingly they are sought after as articles of food, but in summer
|
|
weather they are worthless, for they become thin and watery, and if
|
|
you catch at them they break at once into bits, and cannot be taken
|
|
off the rocks entire; and being oppressed by the heat they tend to
|
|
slip back into the crevices of the rocks.
|
|
|
|
So much for the external and the internal organs of molluscs,
|
|
crustaceans, and testaceans.
|
|
|
|
7
|
|
|
|
We now proceed to treat of insects in like manner. This genus
|
|
comprises many species, and, though several kinds are clearly
|
|
related to one another, these are not classified under one common
|
|
designation, as in the case of the bee, the drone, the wasp, and all
|
|
such insects, and again as in the case of those that have their
|
|
wings in a sheath or shard, like the cockchafer, the carabus or
|
|
stag-beetle, the cantharis or blister-beetle, and the like.
|
|
|
|
Insects have three parts common to them all; the head, the trunk
|
|
containing the stomach, and a third part in betwixt these two,
|
|
corresponding to what in other creatures embraces chest and back. In
|
|
the majority of insects this intermediate part is single; but in the
|
|
long and multipedal insects it has practically the same number of
|
|
segments as of nicks.
|
|
|
|
All insects when cut in two continue to live, excepting such as
|
|
are naturally cold by nature, or such as from their minute size
|
|
chill rapidly; though, by the way, wasps notwithstanding their small
|
|
size continue living after severance. In conjunction with the middle
|
|
portion either the head or the stomach can live, but the head cannot
|
|
live by itself. Insects that are long in shape and many-footed can
|
|
live for a long while after being cut in twain, and the severed
|
|
portions can move in either direction, backwards or forwards; thus,
|
|
the hinder portion, if cut off, can crawl either in the direction of
|
|
the section or in the direction of the tail, as is observed in the
|
|
scolopendra.
|
|
|
|
All insects have eyes, but no other organ of sense discernible,
|
|
except that some insects have a kind of a tongue corresponding to a
|
|
similar organ common to all testaceans; and by this organ such insects
|
|
taste and imbibe their food. In some insects this organ is soft; in
|
|
other insects it is firm; as it is, by the way, in the purple-fish,
|
|
among testaceans. In the horsefly and the gadfly this organ is hard,
|
|
and indeed it is hard in most insects. In point of fact, such
|
|
insects as have no sting in the rear use this organ as a weapon, (and,
|
|
by the way, such insects as are provided with this organ are
|
|
unprovided with teeth, with the exception of a few insects); the fly
|
|
by a touch can draw blood with this organ, and the gnat can prick or
|
|
sting with it.
|
|
|
|
Certain insects are furnished with prickers or stings. Some
|
|
insects have the sting inside, as the bee and the wasp, others
|
|
outside, as the scorpion; and, by the way, this is the only insect
|
|
furnished with a long tail. And, further, the scorpion is furnished
|
|
with claws, as is also the creature resembling a scorpion found within
|
|
the pages of books.
|
|
|
|
In addition to their other organs, flying insects are furnished
|
|
with wings. Some insects are dipterous or double-winged, as the fly;
|
|
others are tetrapterous or furnished with four wings, as the bee; and,
|
|
by the way, no insect with only two wings has a sting in the rear.
|
|
Again, some winged insects have a sheath or shard for their wings,
|
|
as the cockchafer; whereas in others the wings are unsheathed, as in
|
|
the bee. But in the case of all alike, flight is in no way modified by
|
|
tail-steerage, and the wing is devoid of quill-structure or division
|
|
of any kind.
|
|
|
|
Again, some insects have antennae in front of their eyes, as the
|
|
butterfly and the horned beetle. Such of them as have the power of
|
|
jumping have the hinder legs the longer; and these long hind-legs
|
|
whereby they jump bend backwards like the hind-legs of quadrupeds. All
|
|
insects have the belly different from the back; as, in fact, is the
|
|
case with all animals. The flesh of an insect's body is neither
|
|
shell-like nor is it like the internal substance of shell-covered
|
|
animals, nor is it like flesh in the ordinary sense of the term; but
|
|
it is a something intermediate in quality. Wherefore they have nor
|
|
spine, nor bone, nor sepia-bone, nor enveloping shell; but their
|
|
body by its hardness is its own protection and requires no
|
|
extraneous support. However, insects have a skin; but the skin is
|
|
exceedingly thin. These and such-like are the external organs of
|
|
insects.
|
|
|
|
Internally, next after the mouth, comes a gut, in the majority
|
|
of cases straight and simple down to the outlet of the residuum: but
|
|
in a few cases the gut is coiled. No insect is provided with any
|
|
viscera, or is supplied with fat; and these statements apply to all
|
|
animals devoid of blood. Some have a stomach also, and attached to
|
|
this the rest of the gut, either simple or convoluted as in the case
|
|
of the acris or grasshopper.
|
|
|
|
The tettix or cicada, alone of such creatures (and, in fact, alone
|
|
of all creatures), is unprovided with a mouth, but it is provided with
|
|
the tongue-like formation found in insects furnished with frontward
|
|
stings; and this formation in the cicada is long, continuous, and
|
|
devoid of any split; and by the aid of this the creature feeds on dew,
|
|
and on dew only, and in its stomach no excretion is ever found. Of the
|
|
cicada there are several kinds, and they differ from one another in
|
|
relative magnitude, and in this respect that the achetes or chirper is
|
|
provided with a cleft or aperture under the hypozoma and has in it a
|
|
membrane quite discernible, whilst the membrane is indiscernible in
|
|
the tettigonia.
|
|
|
|
Furthermore, there are some strange creatures to be found in the
|
|
sea, which from their rarity we are unable to classify. Experienced
|
|
fishermen affirm, some that they have at times seen in the sea animals
|
|
like sticks, black, rounded, and of the same thickness throughout;
|
|
others that they have seen creatures resembling shields, red in
|
|
colour, and furnished with fins packed close together; and others that
|
|
they have seen creatures resembling the male organ in shape and
|
|
size, with a pair of fins in the place of the testicles, and they aver
|
|
that on one occasion a creature of this description was brought up
|
|
on the end of a nightline.
|
|
|
|
So much then for the parts, external and internal, exceptional and
|
|
common, of all animals.
|
|
|
|
8
|
|
|
|
We now proceed to treat of the senses; for there are diversities
|
|
in animals with regard to the senses, seeing that some animals have
|
|
the use of all the senses, and others the use of a limited number of
|
|
them. The total number of the senses (for we have no experience of any
|
|
special sense not here included), is five: sight, hearing, smell,
|
|
taste, and touch.
|
|
|
|
Man, then, and all vivipara that have feet, and, further, all
|
|
red-blooded ovipara, appear to have the use of all the five senses,
|
|
except where some isolated species has been subjected to mutilation,
|
|
as in the case of the mole. For this animal is deprived of sight; it
|
|
has no eyes visible, but if the skin-a thick one, by the way-be
|
|
stripped off the head, about the place in the exterior where eyes
|
|
usually are, the eyes are found inside in a stunted condition,
|
|
furnished with all the parts found in ordinary eyes; that is to say,
|
|
we find there the black rim, and the fatty part surrounding it; but
|
|
all these parts are smaller than the same parts in ordinary visible
|
|
eyes. There is no external sign of the existence of these organs in
|
|
the mole, owing to the thickness of the skin drawn over them, so
|
|
that it would seem that the natural course of development were
|
|
congenitally arrested; (for extending from the brain at its junction
|
|
with the marrow are two strong sinewy ducts running past the sockets
|
|
of the eyes, and terminating at the upper eye-teeth). All the other
|
|
animals of the kinds above mentioned have a perception of colour and
|
|
of sound, and the senses of smell and taste; the fifth sense, that,
|
|
namely, of touch, is common to all animals whatsoever.
|
|
|
|
In some animals the organs of sense are plainly discernible; and
|
|
this is especially the case with the eyes. For animals have a
|
|
special locality for the eyes, and also a special locality for
|
|
hearing: that is to say, some animals have ears, while others have the
|
|
passage for sound discernible. It is the same with the sense of smell;
|
|
that is to say, some animals have nostrils, and others have only the
|
|
passages for smell, such as birds. It is the same also with the
|
|
organ of taste, the tongue. Of aquatic red-blooded animals, fishes
|
|
possess the organ of taste, namely the tongue, but it is in an
|
|
imperfect and amorphous form, in other words it is osseous and
|
|
undetached. In some fish the palate is fleshy, as in the fresh-water
|
|
carp, so that by an inattentive observer it might be mistaken for a
|
|
tongue.
|
|
|
|
There is no doubt but that fishes have the sense of taste, for a
|
|
great number of them delight in special flavours; and fishes freely
|
|
take the hook if it be baited with a piece of flesh from a tunny or
|
|
from any fat fish, obviously enjoying the taste and the eating of food
|
|
of this kind. Fishes have no visible organs for hearing or for
|
|
smell; for what might appear to indicate an organ for smell in the
|
|
region of the nostril has no communication with the brain. These
|
|
indications, in fact, in some cases lead nowhere, like blind alleys,
|
|
and in other cases lead only to the gills; but for all this fishes
|
|
undoubtedly hear and smell. For they are observed to run away from any
|
|
loud noise, such as would be made by the rowing of a galley, so as
|
|
to become easy of capture in their holes; for, by the way, though a
|
|
sound be very slight in the open air, it has a loud and alarming
|
|
resonance to creatures that hear under water. And this is shown in the
|
|
capture of the dolphin; for when the hunters have enclosed a shoal
|
|
of these fishes with a ring of their canoes, they set up from inside
|
|
the canoes a loud splashing in the water, and by so doing induce the
|
|
creatures to run in a shoal high and dry up on the beach, and so
|
|
capture them while stupefied with the noise. And yet, for all this,
|
|
the dolphin has no organ of hearing discernible. Furthermore, when
|
|
engaged in their craft, fishermen are particularly careful to make
|
|
no noise with oar or net; and after they have spied a shoal, they
|
|
let down their nets at a spot so far off that they count upon no noise
|
|
being likely to reach the shoal, occasioned either by oar or by the
|
|
surging of their boats through the water; and the crews are strictly
|
|
enjoined to preserve silence until the shoal has been surrounded. And,
|
|
at times, when they want the fish to crowd together, they adopt the
|
|
stratagem of the dolphin-hunter; in other words they clatter stones
|
|
together, that the fish may, in their fright, gather close into one
|
|
spot, and so they envelop them within their nets. (Before
|
|
surrounding them, then, they preserve silence, as was said; but, after
|
|
hemming the shoal in, they call on every man to shout out aloud and
|
|
make any kind of noise; for on hearing the noise and hubbub the fish
|
|
are sure to tumble into the nets from sheer fright.) Further, when
|
|
fishermen see a shoal of fish feeding at a distance, disporting
|
|
themselves in calm bright weather on the surface of the water, if they
|
|
are anxious to descry the size of the fish and to learn what kind of a
|
|
fish it is, they may succeed in coming upon the shoal whilst yet
|
|
basking at the surface if they sail up without the slightest noise,
|
|
but if any man make a noise previously, the shoal will be seen to
|
|
scurry away in alarm. Again, there is a small river-fish called the
|
|
cottus or bullhead; this creature burrows under a rock, and fishers
|
|
catch it by clattering stones against the rock, and the fish,
|
|
bewildered at the noise, darts out of its hiding-place. From these
|
|
facts it is quite obvious that fishes can hear; and indeed some
|
|
people, from living near the sea and frequently witnessing such
|
|
phenomena, affirm that of all living creatures the fish is the
|
|
quickest of hearing. And, by the way, of all fishes the quickest of
|
|
hearing are the cestreus or mullet, the chremps, the labrax or
|
|
basse, the salpe or saupe, the chromis or sciaena, and such like.
|
|
Other fishes are less quick of hearing, and, as might be expected, are
|
|
more apt to be found living at the bottom of the sea.
|
|
|
|
The case is similar in regard to the sense of smell. Thus, as a
|
|
rule, fishes will not touch a bait that is not fresh, neither are they
|
|
all caught by one and the same bait, but they are severally caught
|
|
by baits suited to their several likings, and these baits they
|
|
distinguish by their sense of smell; and, by the way, some fishes
|
|
are attracted by malodorous baits, as the saupe, for instance, is
|
|
attracted by excrement. Again, a number of fishes live in caves; and
|
|
accordingly fishermen, when they want to entice them out, smear the
|
|
mouth of a cave with strong-smelling pickles, and the fish are Soon
|
|
attracted to the smell. And the eel is caught in a similar way; for
|
|
the fisherman lays down an earthen pot that has held pickles, after
|
|
inserting a 'weel' in the neck thereof. As a general rule, fishes
|
|
are especially attracted by savoury smells. For this reason, fishermen
|
|
roast the fleshy parts of the cuttle-fish and use it as bait on
|
|
account of its smell, for fish are peculiarly attracted by it; they
|
|
also bake the octopus and bait their fish-baskets or weels with it,
|
|
entirely, as they say, on account of its smell. Furthermore,
|
|
gregarious fishes, if fish washings or bilge-water be thrown
|
|
overboard, are observed to scud off to a distance, from apparent
|
|
dislike of the smell. And it is asserted that they can at once
|
|
detect by smell the presence of their own blood; and this faculty is
|
|
manifested by their hurrying off to a great distance whenever
|
|
fish-blood is spilt in the sea. And, as a general rule, if you bait
|
|
your weel with a stinking bait, the fish refuse to enter the weel or
|
|
even to draw near; but if you bait the weel with a fresh and savoury
|
|
bait, they come at once from long distances and swim into it. And
|
|
all this is particularly manifest in the dolphin; for, as was
|
|
stated, it has no visible organ of hearing, and yet it is captured
|
|
when stupefied with noise; and so, while it has no visible organ for
|
|
smell, it has the sense of smell remarkably keen. It is manifest,
|
|
then, that the animals above mentioned are in possession of all the
|
|
five senses.
|
|
|
|
All other animals may, with very few exceptions, be comprehended
|
|
within four genera: to wit, molluscs, crustaceans, testaceans, and
|
|
insects. Of these four genera, the mollusc, the crustacean, and the
|
|
insect have all the senses: at all events, they have sight, smell, and
|
|
taste. As for insects, both winged and wingless, they can detect the
|
|
presence of scented objects afar off, as for instance bees and
|
|
snipes detect the presence of honey at a distance; and do so
|
|
recognizing it by smell. Many insects are killed by the smell of
|
|
brimstone; ants, if the apertures to their dwellings be smeared with
|
|
powdered origanum and brimstone, quit their nests; and most insects
|
|
may be banished with burnt hart's horn, or better still by the burning
|
|
of the gum styrax. The cuttle-fish, the octopus, and the crawfish
|
|
may be caught by bait. The octopus, in fact, clings so tightly to
|
|
the rocks that it cannot be pulled off, but remains attached even when
|
|
the knife is employed to sever it; and yet, if you apply fleabane to
|
|
the creature, it drops off at the very smell of it. The facts are
|
|
similar in regard to taste. For the food that insects go in quest of
|
|
is of diverse kinds, and they do not all delight in the same flavours:
|
|
for instance, the bee never settles on a withered or wilted flower,
|
|
but on fresh and sweet ones; and the conops or gnat settles only on
|
|
acrid substances and not on sweet. The sense of touch, by the way,
|
|
as has been remarked, is common to all animals. Testaceans have the
|
|
senses of smell and taste. With regard to their possession of the
|
|
sense of smell, that is proved by the use of baits, e.g. in the case
|
|
of the purple-fish; for this creature is enticed by baits of rancid
|
|
meat, which it perceives and is attracted to from a great distance.
|
|
The proof that it possesses a sense of taste hangs by the proof of its
|
|
sense of smell; for whenever an animal is attracted to a thing by
|
|
perceiving its smell, it is sure to like the taste of it. Further, all
|
|
animals furnished with a mouth derive pleasure or pain from the
|
|
touch of sapid juices.
|
|
|
|
With regard to sight and hearing, we cannot make statements with
|
|
thorough confidence or on irrefutable evidence. However, the solen
|
|
or razor-fish, if you make a noise, appears to burrow in the sand, and
|
|
to hide himself deeper when he hears the approach of the iron rod (for
|
|
the animal, be it observed, juts a little out of its hole, while the
|
|
greater part of the body remains within),-and scallops, if you present
|
|
your finger near their open valves, close them tight again as though
|
|
they could see what you were doing. Furthermore, when fishermen are
|
|
laying bait for neritae, they always get to leeward of them, and never
|
|
speak a word while so engaged, under the firm impression that the
|
|
animal can smell and hear; and they assure us that, if any one
|
|
speaks aloud, the creature makes efforts to escape. With regard to
|
|
testaceans, of the walking or creeping species the urchin appears to
|
|
have the least developed sense of smell; and, of the stationary
|
|
species, the ascidian and the barnacle.
|
|
|
|
So much for the organs of sense in the general run of animals.
|
|
We now proceed to treat of voice.
|
|
|
|
9
|
|
|
|
Voice and sound are different from one another; and language
|
|
differs from voice and sound. The fact is that no animal can give
|
|
utterance to voice except by the action of the pharynx, and
|
|
consequently such animals as are devoid of lung have no voice; and
|
|
language is the articulation of vocal sounds by the instrumentality of
|
|
the tongue. Thus, the voice and larynx can emit vocal or vowel sounds;
|
|
non-vocal or consonantal sounds are made by the tongue and the lips;
|
|
and out of these vocal and non-vocal sounds language is composed.
|
|
Consequently, animals that have no tongue at all or that have a tongue
|
|
not freely detached, have neither voice nor language; although, by the
|
|
way, they may be enabled to make noises or sounds by other organs than
|
|
the tongue.
|
|
|
|
Insects, for instance, have no voice and no language, but they can
|
|
emit sound by internal air or wind, though not by the emission of
|
|
air or wind; for no insects are capable of respiration. But some of
|
|
them make a humming noise, like the bee and the other winged
|
|
insects; and others are said to sing, as the cicada. And all these
|
|
latter insects make their special noises by means of the membrane that
|
|
is underneath the 'hypozoma'-those insects, that is to say, whose body
|
|
is thus divided; as for instance, one species of cicada, which makes
|
|
the sound by means of the friction of the air. Flies and bees, and the
|
|
like, produce their special noise by opening and shutting their
|
|
wings in the act of flying; for the noise made is by the friction of
|
|
air between the wings when in motion. The noise made by grasshoppers
|
|
is produced by rubbing or reverberating with their long hind-legs.
|
|
|
|
No mollusc or crustacean can produce any natural voice or sound.
|
|
Fishes can produce no voice, for they have no lungs, nor windpipe
|
|
and pharynx; but they emit certain inarticulate sounds and squeaks,
|
|
which is what is called their 'voice', as the lyra or gurnard, and the
|
|
sciaena (for these fishes make a grunting kind of noise) and the
|
|
caprus or boar-fish in the river Achelous, and the chalcis and the
|
|
cuckoo-fish; for the chalcis makes a sort piping sound, and the
|
|
cuckoo-fish makes a sound greatly like the cry of the cuckoo, and is
|
|
nicknamed from the circumstance. The apparent voice in all these
|
|
fishes is a sound caused in some cases by a rubbing motion of their
|
|
gills, which by the way are prickly, or in other cases by internal
|
|
parts about their bellies; for they all have air or wind inside
|
|
them, by rubbing and moving which they produce the sounds. Some
|
|
cartilaginous fish seem to squeak.
|
|
|
|
But in these cases the term 'voice' is inappropriate; the more
|
|
correct expression would be 'sound'. For the scallop, when it goes
|
|
along supporting itself on the water, which is technically called
|
|
'flying', makes a whizzing sound; and so does the sea-swallow or
|
|
flying-fish: for this fish flies in the air, clean out of the water,
|
|
being furnished with fins broad and long. Just then as in the flight
|
|
of birds the sound made by their wings is obviously not voice, so is
|
|
it in the case of all these other creatures.
|
|
|
|
The dolphin, when taken out of the water, gives a squeak and moans
|
|
in the air, but these noises do not resemble those above mentioned.
|
|
For this creature has a voice (and can therefore utter vocal or
|
|
vowel sounds), for it is furnished with a lung and a windpipe; but its
|
|
tongue is not loose, nor has it lips, so as to give utterance to an
|
|
articulate sound (or a sound of vowel and consonant in combination.)
|
|
|
|
Of animals which are furnished with tongue and lung, the oviparous
|
|
quadrupeds produce a voice, but a feeble one; in some cases, a
|
|
shrill piping sound, like the serpent; in others, a thin faint cry; in
|
|
others, a low hiss, like the tortoise. The formation of the tongue
|
|
in the frog is exceptional. The front part of the tongue, which in
|
|
other animals is detached, is tightly fixed in the frog as it is in
|
|
all fishes; but the part towards the pharynx is freely detached, and
|
|
may, so to speak, be spat outwards, and it is with this that it
|
|
makes its peculiar croak. The croaking that goes on in the marsh is
|
|
the call of the males to the females at rutting time; and, by the way,
|
|
all animals have a special cry for the like end at the like season, as
|
|
is observed in the case of goats, swine, and sheep. (The bull-frog
|
|
makes its croaking noise by putting its under jaw on a level with
|
|
the surface of the water and extending its upper jaw to its utmost
|
|
capacity. The tension is so great that the upper jaw becomes
|
|
transparent, and the animal's eyes shine through the jaw like lamps;
|
|
for, by the way, the commerce of the sexes takes place usually in
|
|
the night time.) Birds can utter vocal sounds; and such of them can
|
|
articulate best as have the tongue moderately flat, and also such as
|
|
have thin delicate tongues. In some cases, the male and the female
|
|
utter the same note; in other cases, different notes. The smaller
|
|
birds are more vocal and given to chirping than the larger ones; but
|
|
in the pairing season every species of bird becomes particularly
|
|
vocal. Some of them call when fighting, as the quail, others cry or
|
|
crow when challenging to combat, as the partridge, or when victorious,
|
|
as the barn-door cock. In some cases cock-birds and hens sing alike,
|
|
as is observed in the nightingale, only that the hen stops singing
|
|
when brooding or rearing her young; in other birds, the cocks sing
|
|
more than the hens; in fact, with barn-door fowls and quails, the cock
|
|
sings and the hen does not.
|
|
|
|
Viviparous quadrupeds utter vocal sounds of different kinds, but
|
|
they have no power of converse. In fact, this power, or language, is
|
|
peculiar to man. For while the capability of talking implies the
|
|
capability of uttering vocal sounds, the converse does not hold
|
|
good. Men that are born deaf are in all cases also dumb; that is, they
|
|
can make vocal sounds, but they cannot speak. Children, just as they
|
|
have no control over other parts, so have no control, at first, over
|
|
the tongue; but it is so far imperfect, and only frees and detaches
|
|
itself by degrees, so that in the interval children for the most
|
|
part lisp and stutter.
|
|
|
|
Vocal sounds and modes of language differ according to locality.
|
|
Vocal sounds are characterized chiefly by their pitch, whether high or
|
|
low, and the kinds of sound capable of being produced are identical
|
|
within the limits of one and the same species; but articulate sound,
|
|
that one might reasonably designate 'language', differs both in
|
|
various animals, and also in the same species according to diversity
|
|
of locality; as for instance, some partridges cackle, and some make
|
|
a shrill twittering noise. Of little birds, some sing a different note
|
|
from the parent birds, if they have been removed from the nest and
|
|
have heard other birds singing; and a mother-nightingale has been
|
|
observed to give lessons in singing to a young bird, from which
|
|
spectacle we might obviously infer that the song of the bird was not
|
|
equally congenital with mere voice, but was something capable of
|
|
modification and of improvement. Men have the same voice or vocal
|
|
sounds, but they differ from one another in speech or language.
|
|
|
|
The elephant makes a vocal sound of a windlike sort by the mouth
|
|
alone, unaided by the trunk, just like the sound of a man panting or
|
|
sighing; but, if it employ the trunk as well, the sound produced is
|
|
like that of a hoarse trumpet.
|
|
|
|
10
|
|
|
|
With regard to the sleeping and waking of animals, all creatures
|
|
that are red-blooded and provided with legs give sensible proof that
|
|
they go to sleep and that they waken up from sleep; for, as a matter
|
|
of fact, all animals that are furnished with eyelids shut them up when
|
|
they go to sleep. Furthermore, it would appear that not only do men
|
|
dream, but horses also, and dogs, and oxen; aye, and sheep, and goats,
|
|
and all viviparous quadrupeds; and dogs show their dreaming by barking
|
|
in their sleep. With regard to oviparous animals we cannot be sure
|
|
that they dream, but most undoubtedly they sleep. And the same may
|
|
be said of water animals, such as fishes, molluscs, crustaceans, to
|
|
wit crawfish and the like. These animals sleep without doubt, although
|
|
their sleep is of very short duration. The proof of their sleeping
|
|
cannot be got from the condition of their eyes-for none of these
|
|
creatures are furnished with eyelids-but can be obtained only from
|
|
their motionless repose.
|
|
|
|
Apart from the irritation caused by lice and what are nicknamed
|
|
fleas, fish are met with in a state so motionless that one might
|
|
easily catch them by hand; and, as a matter of fact, these little
|
|
creatures, if the fish remain long in one position, will attack them
|
|
in myriads and devour them. For these parasites are found in the
|
|
depths of the sea, and are so numerous that they devour any bait
|
|
made of fish's flesh if it be left long on the ground at the bottom;
|
|
and fishermen often draw up a cluster of them, all clinging on to
|
|
the bait.
|
|
|
|
But it is from the following facts that we may more reasonably
|
|
infer that fishes sleep. Very often it is possible to take a fish
|
|
off its guard so far as to catch hold of it or to give it a blow
|
|
unawares; and all the while that you are preparing to catch or
|
|
strike it, the fish is quite still but for a slight motion of the
|
|
tail. And it is quite obvious that the animal is sleeping, from its
|
|
movements if any disturbance be made during its repose; for it moves
|
|
just as you would expect in a creature suddenly awakened. Further,
|
|
owing to their being asleep, fish may be captured by torchlight. The
|
|
watchmen in the tunny-fishery often take advantage of the fish being
|
|
asleep to envelop them in a circle of nets; and it is quite obvious
|
|
that they were thus sleeping by their lying still and allowing the
|
|
glistening under-parts of their bodies to become visible, while the
|
|
capture is taking Place. They sleep in the night-time more than during
|
|
the day; and so soundly at night that you may cast the net without
|
|
making them stir. Fish, as a general rule, sleep close to the
|
|
ground, or to the sand or to a stone at the bottom, or after
|
|
concealing themselves under a rock or the ground. Flat fish go to
|
|
sleep in the sand; and they can be distinguished by the outlines of
|
|
their shapes in the sand, and are caught in this position by being
|
|
speared with pronged instruments. The basse, the chrysophrys or
|
|
gilt-head, the mullet, and fish of the like sort are often caught in
|
|
the daytime by the prong owing to their having been surprised when
|
|
sleeping; for it is scarcely probable that fish could be pronged while
|
|
awake. Cartilaginous fish sleep at times so soundly that they may be
|
|
caught by hand. The dolphin and the whale, and all such as are
|
|
furnished with a blow-hole, sleep with the blow-hole over the
|
|
surface of the water, and breathe through the blow-hole while they
|
|
keep up a quiet flapping of their fins; indeed, some mariners assure
|
|
us that they have actually heard the dolphin snoring.
|
|
|
|
Molluscs sleep like fishes, and crustaceans also. It is plain also
|
|
that insects sleep; for there can be no mistaking their condition of
|
|
motionless repose. In the bee the fact of its being asleep is very
|
|
obvious; for at night-time bees are at rest and cease to hum. But
|
|
the fact that insects sleep may be very well seen in the case of
|
|
common every-day creatures; for not only do they rest at night-time
|
|
from dimness of vision (and, by the way, all hard-eyed creatures see
|
|
but indistinctly), but even if a lighted candle be presented they
|
|
continue sleeping quite as soundly.
|
|
|
|
Of all animals man is most given to dreaming. Children and infants
|
|
do not dream, but in most cases dreaming comes on at the age of four
|
|
or five years. Instances have been known of full-grown men and women
|
|
that have never dreamed at all; in exceptional cases of this kind,
|
|
it has been observed that when a dream occurs in advanced life it
|
|
prognosticates either actual dissolution or a general break-up of
|
|
the system.
|
|
|
|
So much then for sensation and for the phenomena of sleeping and
|
|
of awakening.
|
|
|
|
11
|
|
|
|
With regard to sex, some animals are divided into male and female,
|
|
but others are not so divided but can only be said in a comparative
|
|
way to bring forth young and to be pregnant. In animals that live
|
|
confined to one spot there is no duality of sex; nor is there such, in
|
|
fact, in any testaceans. In molluscs and in crustaceans we find male
|
|
and female: and, indeed, in all animals furnished with feet, biped
|
|
or quadruped; in short, in all such as by copulation engender either
|
|
live young or egg or grub. In the several genera, with however certain
|
|
exceptions, there either absolutely is or absolutely is not a
|
|
duality of sex. Thus, in quadrupeds the duality is universal, while
|
|
the absence of such duality is universal in testaceans, and of these
|
|
creatures, as with plants, some individuals are fruitful and some
|
|
are not their lying still
|
|
|
|
But among insects and fishes, some cases are found wholly devoid
|
|
of this duality of sex. For instance, the eel is neither male nor
|
|
female, and can engender nothing. In fact, those who assert that
|
|
eels are at times found with hair-like or worm-like progeny
|
|
attached, make only random assertions from not having carefully
|
|
noticed the locality of such attachments. For no eel nor animal of
|
|
this kind is ever viviparous unless previously oviparous; and no eel
|
|
was ever yet seen with an egg. And animals that are viviparous have
|
|
their young in the womb and closely attached, and not in the belly;
|
|
for, if the embryo were kept in the belly, it would be subjected to
|
|
the process of digestion like ordinary food. When people rest
|
|
duality of sex in the eel on the assertion that the head of the male
|
|
is bigger and longer, and the head of the female smaller and more
|
|
snubbed, they are taking diversity of species for diversity of sex.
|
|
|
|
There are certain fish that are nicknamed the epitragiae, or
|
|
capon-fish, and, by the way, fish of this description are found in
|
|
fresh water, as the carp and the balagrus. This sort of fish never has
|
|
either roe or milt; but they are hard and fat all over, and are
|
|
furnished with a small gut; and these fish are regarded as of
|
|
super-excellent quality.
|
|
|
|
Again, just as in testaceans and in plants there is what bears and
|
|
engenders, but not what impregnates, so is it, among fishes, with
|
|
the psetta, the erythrinus, and the channe; for these fish are in
|
|
all cases found furnished with eggs.
|
|
|
|
As a general rule, in red-blooded animals furnished with feet
|
|
and not oviparous, the male is larger and longer-lived than the female
|
|
(except with the mule, where the female is longer-lived and bigger
|
|
than the male); whereas in oviparous and vermiparous creatures, as
|
|
in fishes and in insects, the female is larger than the male; as,
|
|
for instance, with the serpent, the phalangium or venom-spider, the
|
|
gecko, and the frog. The same difference in size of the sexes is found
|
|
in fishes, as, for instance, in the smaller cartilaginous fishes, in
|
|
the greater part of the gregarious species, and in all that live in
|
|
and about rocks. The fact that the female is longer-lived than the
|
|
male is inferred from the fact that female fishes are caught older
|
|
than males. Furthermore, in all animals the upper and front parts
|
|
are better, stronger, and more thoroughly equipped in the male than in
|
|
the female, whereas in the female those parts are the better that
|
|
may be termed hinder-parts or underparts. And this statement is
|
|
applicable to man and to all vivipara that have feet. Again, the
|
|
female is less muscular and less compactly jointed, and more thin
|
|
and delicate in the hair-that is, where hair is found; and, where
|
|
there is no hair, less strongly furnished in some analogous substance.
|
|
And the female is more flaccid in texture of flesh, and more
|
|
knock-kneed, and the shin-bones are thinner; and the feet are more
|
|
arched and hollow in such animals as are furnished with feet. And with
|
|
regard to voice, the female in all animals that are vocal has a
|
|
thinner and sharper voice than the male; except, by the way, with
|
|
kine, for the lowing and bellowing of the cow has a deeper note than
|
|
that of the bull. With regard to organs of defence and offence, such
|
|
as teeth, tusks, horns, spurs, and the like, these in some species the
|
|
male possesses and the female does not; as, for instance, the hind has
|
|
no horns, and where the cock-bird has a spur the hen is entirely
|
|
destitute of the organ; and in like manner the sow is devoid of tusks.
|
|
In other species such organs are found in both sexes, but are more
|
|
perfectly developed in the male; as, for instance, the horn of the
|
|
bull is more powerful than the horn of the cow.
|
|
|
|
Book V
|
|
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
As to the parts internal and external that all animals are
|
|
furnished withal, and further as to the senses, to voice, and sleep,
|
|
and the duality sex, all these topics have now been touched upon. It
|
|
now remains for us to discuss, duly and in order, their several
|
|
modes of propagation.
|
|
|
|
These modes are many and diverse, and in some respects are like,
|
|
and in other respects are unlike to one another. As we carried on
|
|
our previous discussion genus by genus, so we must attempt to follow
|
|
the same divisions in our present argument; only that whereas in the
|
|
former case we started with a consideration of the parts of man, in
|
|
the present case it behoves us to treat of man last of all because
|
|
he involves most discussion. We shall commence, then, with testaceans,
|
|
and then proceed to crustaceans, and then to the other genera in due
|
|
order; and these other genera are, severally, molluscs, and insects,
|
|
then fishes viviparous and fishes oviparous, and next birds; and
|
|
afterwards we shall treat of animals provided with feet, both such
|
|
as are oviparous and such as are viviparous, and we may observe that
|
|
some quadrupeds are viviparous, but that the only viviparous biped
|
|
is man.
|
|
|
|
Now there is one property that animals are found to have in common
|
|
with plants. For some plants are generated from the seed of plants,
|
|
whilst other plants are self-generated through the formation of some
|
|
elemental principle similar to a seed; and of these latter plants some
|
|
derive their nutriment from the ground, whilst others grow inside
|
|
other plants, as is mentioned, by the way, in my treatise on Botany.
|
|
So with animals, some spring from parent animals according to their
|
|
kind, whilst others grow spontaneously and not from kindred stock; and
|
|
of these instances of spontaneous generation some come from putrefying
|
|
earth or vegetable matter, as is the case with a number of insects,
|
|
while others are spontaneously generated in the inside of animals
|
|
out of the secretions of their several organs.
|
|
|
|
In animals where generation goes by heredity, wherever there is
|
|
duality of sex generation is due to copulation. In the group of
|
|
fishes, however, there are some that are neither male nor female,
|
|
and these, while they are identical generically with other fish,
|
|
differ from them specifically; but there are others that stand
|
|
altogether isolated and apart by themselves. Other fishes there are
|
|
that are always female and never male, and from them are conceived
|
|
what correspond to the wind-eggs in birds. Such eggs, by the way, in
|
|
birds are all unfruitful; but it is their nature to be independently
|
|
capable of generation up to the egg-stage, unless indeed there be some
|
|
other mode than the one familiar to us of intercourse with the male;
|
|
but concerning these topics we shall treat more precisely later on. In
|
|
the case of certain fishes, however, after they have spontaneously
|
|
generated eggs, these eggs develop into living animals; only that in
|
|
certain of these cases development is spontaneous, and in others is
|
|
not independent of the male; and the method of proceeding in regard to
|
|
these matters will set forth by and by, for the method is somewhat
|
|
like to the method followed in the case of birds. But whensoever
|
|
creatures are spontaneously generated, either in other animals, in the
|
|
soil, or on plants, or in the parts of these, and when such are
|
|
generated male and female, then from the copulation of such
|
|
spontaneously generated males and females there is generated a
|
|
something-a something never identical in shape with the parents, but a
|
|
something imperfect. For instance, the issue of copulation in lice
|
|
is nits; in flies, grubs; in fleas, grubs egg-like in shape; and
|
|
from these issues the parent-species is never reproduced, nor is any
|
|
animal produced at all, but the like nondescripts only.
|
|
|
|
First, then, we must proceed to treat of 'covering' in regard to
|
|
such animals as cover and are covered; and then after this to treat in
|
|
due order of other matters, both the exceptional and those of
|
|
general occurrence.
|
|
|
|
2
|
|
|
|
Those animals, then, cover and are covered in which there is a
|
|
duality of sex, and the modes of covering in such animals are not in
|
|
all cases similar nor analogous. For the red-blooded animals that
|
|
are viviparous and furnished with feet have in all cases organs
|
|
adapted for procreation, but the sexes do not in all cases come
|
|
together in like manner. Thus, opisthuretic animals copulate with a
|
|
rearward presentment, as is the case with the lion, the hare, and
|
|
the lynx; though, by the way, in the case of the hare, the female is
|
|
often observed to cover the male.
|
|
|
|
The case is similar in most other such animals; that is to say,
|
|
the majority of quadrupeds copulate as best they can, the male
|
|
mounting the female; and this is the only method of copulating adopted
|
|
by birds, though there are certain diversities of method observed even
|
|
in birds. For in some cases the female squats on the ground and the
|
|
male mounts on top of her, as is the case with the cock and hen
|
|
bustard, and the barn-door cock and hen; in other cases, the male
|
|
mounts without the female squatting, as with the male and female
|
|
crane; for, with these birds, the male mounts on to the back of the
|
|
female and covers her, and like the cock-sparrow consumes but very
|
|
little time in the operation. Of quadrupeds, bears perform the
|
|
operation lying prone on one another, in the same way as other
|
|
quadrupeds do while standing up; that is to say, with the belly of the
|
|
male pressed to the back of the female. Hedgehogs copulate erect,
|
|
belly to belly.
|
|
|
|
With regard to large-sized vivipara, the hind only very rarely
|
|
sustains the mounting of the stag to the full conclusion of the
|
|
operation, and the same is the case with the cow as regards the
|
|
bull, owing to the rigidity of the penis of the bull. In point of
|
|
fact, the females of these animals elicit the sperm of the male in the
|
|
act of withdrawing from underneath him; and, by the way, this
|
|
phenomenon has been observed in the case of the stag and hind,
|
|
domesticated, of course. Covering with the wolf is the same as with
|
|
the dog. Cats do not copulate with a rearward presentment on the
|
|
part of the female, but the male stands erect and the female puts
|
|
herself underneath him; and, by the way, the female cat is
|
|
peculiarly lecherous, and wheedles the male on to sexual commerce, and
|
|
caterwauls during the operation. Camels copulate with the female in
|
|
a sitting posture, and the male straddles over and covers her, not
|
|
with the hinder presentment on the female's part but like the other
|
|
quadrupeds mentioned above, and they pass the whole day long in the
|
|
operation; when thus engaged they retire to lonely spots, and none but
|
|
their keeper dare approach them. And, be it observed, the penis of the
|
|
camel is so sinewy that bow-strings are manufactured out of it.
|
|
Elephants, also, copulate in lonely places, and especially by
|
|
river-sides in their usual haunts; the female squats down, and
|
|
straddles with her legs, and the male mounts and covers her. The
|
|
seal covers like all opisthuretic animals, and in this species the
|
|
copulation extends over a lengthened time, as is the case with the dog
|
|
and bitch; and the penis in the male seal is exceptionally large.
|
|
|
|
3
|
|
|
|
Oviparous quadrupeds cover one another in the same way. That is to
|
|
say, in some cases the male mounts the female precisely as in the
|
|
viviparous animals, as is observed in both the land and the sea
|
|
tortoise....And these creatures have an organ in which the ducts
|
|
converge, and with which they perform the act of copulation, as is
|
|
also observed in the toad, the frog, and all other animals of the same
|
|
group.
|
|
|
|
4
|
|
|
|
Long animals devoid of feet, like serpents and muraenae,
|
|
intertwine in coition, belly to belly. And, in fact, serpents coil
|
|
round one another so tightly as to present the appearance of a
|
|
single serpent with a pair of heads. The same mode is followed by
|
|
the saurians; that is to say, they coil round one another in the act
|
|
of coition.
|
|
|
|
5
|
|
|
|
All fishes, with the exception of the flat selachians, lie down
|
|
side by side, and copulate belly to belly. Fishes, however, that are
|
|
flat and furnished with tails-as the ray, the trygon, and the
|
|
like-copulate not only in this way, but also, where the tail from
|
|
its thinness is no impediment, by mounting of the male upon the
|
|
female, belly to back. But the rhina or angel-fish, and other like
|
|
fishes where the tail is large, copulate only by rubbing against one
|
|
another sideways, belly to belly. Some men assure us that they have
|
|
seen some of the selachia copulating hindways, dog and bitch. In the
|
|
cartilaginous species the female is larger than the male; and the same
|
|
is the case with other fishes for the most part. And among
|
|
cartilaginous fishes are included, besides those already named, the
|
|
bos, the lamia, the aetos, the narce or torpedo, the fishing-frog, and
|
|
all the galeodes or sharks and dogfish. Cartilaginous fishes, then, of
|
|
all kinds, have in many instances been observed copulating in the
|
|
way above mentioned; for, by the way, in viviparous animals the
|
|
process of copulation is of longer duration than in the ovipara.
|
|
|
|
It is the same with the dolphin and with all cetaceans; that
|
|
is to say, they come side by side, male and female, and copulate,
|
|
and the act extends over a time which is neither short nor very long.
|
|
|
|
Again, in cartilaginous fishes the male, in some species,
|
|
differs from the female in the fact that he is furnished with two
|
|
appendages hanging down from about the exit of the residuum, and
|
|
that the female is not so furnished; and this distinction between
|
|
the sexes is observed in all the species of the sharks and dog-fish.
|
|
|
|
Now neither fishes nor any animals devoid of feet are
|
|
furnished with testicles, but male serpents and male fishes have a
|
|
pair of ducts which fill with milt or sperm at the rutting season, and
|
|
discharge, in all cases, a milk-like juice. These ducts unite, as in
|
|
birds; for birds, by the way, have their testicles in their
|
|
interior, and so have all ovipara that are furnished with feet. And
|
|
this union of the ducts is so far continued and of such extension as
|
|
to enter the receptive organ in the female.
|
|
|
|
In viviparous animals furnished with feet there is outwardly one
|
|
and the same duct for the sperm and the liquid residuum; but there are
|
|
separate ducts internally, as has been observed in the differentiation
|
|
of the organs. And with such animals as are not viviparous the same
|
|
passage serves for the discharge also of the solid residuum; although,
|
|
internally, there are two passages, separate but near to one
|
|
another. And these remarks apply to both male and female; for these
|
|
animals are unprovided with a bladder except in the case of the
|
|
tortoise; and the she-tortoise, though furnished with a bladder, has
|
|
only one passage; and tortoises, by the way, belong to the ovipara.
|
|
|
|
In the case of oviparous fishes the process of coition is less
|
|
open to observation. In point of fact, some are led by the want of
|
|
actual observation to surmise that the female becomes impregnated by
|
|
swallowing the seminal fluid of the male. And there can be no doubt
|
|
that this proceeding on the part of the female is often witnessed; for
|
|
at the rutting season the females follow the males and perform this
|
|
operation, and strike the males with their mouths under the belly, and
|
|
the males are thereby induced to part with the sperm sooner and more
|
|
plentifully. And, further, at the spawning season the males go in
|
|
pursuit of the females, and, as the female spawns, the males swallow
|
|
the eggs; and the species is continued in existence by the spawn
|
|
that survives this process. On the coast of Phoenicia they take
|
|
advantage of these instinctive propensities of the two sexes to
|
|
catch both one and the other: that is to say, by using the male of the
|
|
grey mullet as a decoy they collect and net the female, and by using
|
|
the female, the male.
|
|
|
|
The repeated observation of this phenomenon has led to the
|
|
notion that the process was equivalent to coition, but the fact is
|
|
that a similar phenomenon is observable in quadrupeds. For at the
|
|
rutting seasons both the males and the females take to running at
|
|
their genitals, and the two sexes take to smelling each other at those
|
|
parts. (With partridges, by the way, if the female gets to leeward
|
|
of the male, she becomes thereby impregnated. And often when they
|
|
happen to be in heat she is affected in this wise by the voice of
|
|
the male, or by his breathing down on her as he flies overhead; and,
|
|
by the way, both the male and the female partridge keep the mouth wide
|
|
open and protrude the tongue in the process of coition.)
|
|
|
|
The actual process of copulation on the part of oviparous fishes
|
|
is seldom accurately observed, owing to the fact that they very soon
|
|
fall aside and slip asunder. But, for all that, the process has been
|
|
observed to take place in the manner above described.
|
|
|
|
6
|
|
|
|
Molluscs, such as the octopus, the sepia, and the calamary, have
|
|
sexual intercourse all in the same way; that is to say, they unite
|
|
at the mouth, by an interlacing of their tentacles. When, then, the
|
|
octopus rests its so-called head against the ground and spreads abroad
|
|
its tentacles, the other sex fits into the outspreading of these
|
|
tentacles, and the two sexes then bring their suckers into mutual
|
|
connexion.
|
|
|
|
Some assert that the male has a kind of penis in one of his
|
|
tentacles, the one in which are the largest suckers; and they
|
|
further assert that the organ is tendinous in character, growing
|
|
attached right up to the middle of the tentacle, and that the latter
|
|
enables it to enter the nostril or funnel of the female.
|
|
|
|
Now cuttle-fish and calamaries swim about closely intertwined,
|
|
with mouths and tentacles facing one another and fitting closely
|
|
together, and swim thus in opposite directions; and they fit their
|
|
so-called nostrils into one another, and the one sex swims backwards
|
|
and the other frontwards during the operation. And the female lays its
|
|
spawn by the so-called 'blow-hole'; and, by the way, some declare that
|
|
it is at this organ that the coition really takes place.
|
|
|
|
7
|
|
|
|
Crustaceans copulate, as the crawfish, the lobster, the carid
|
|
and the like, just like the opisthuretic quadrupeds, when the one
|
|
animal turns up its tail and the other puts his tail on the other's
|
|
tail. Copulation takes place in the early spring, near to the shore;
|
|
and, in fact, the process has often been observed in the case of all
|
|
these animals. Sometimes it takes place about the time when the figs
|
|
begin to ripen. Lobsters and carids copulate in like manner.
|
|
|
|
Crabs copulate at the front parts of one another, belly to
|
|
belly, throwing their overlapping opercula to meet one another:
|
|
first the smaller crab mounts the larger at the rear; after he has
|
|
mounted, the larger one turns on one side. Now, the female differs
|
|
in no respect from the male except in the circumstance that its
|
|
operculum is larger, more elevated, and more hairy, and into this
|
|
operculum it spawns its eggs and in the same neighbourhood is the
|
|
outlet of the residuum. In the copulative process of these animals
|
|
there is no protrusion of a member from one animal into the other.
|
|
|
|
8
|
|
|
|
Insects copulate at the hinder end, and the smaller individuals
|
|
mount the larger; and the smaller individual is I I is the male. The
|
|
female pushes from underneath her sexual organ into the body of the
|
|
male above, this being the reverse of the operation observed in
|
|
other creatures; and this organ in the case of some insects appears to
|
|
be disproportionately large when compared to the size of the body, and
|
|
that too in very minute creatures; in some insects the disproportion
|
|
is not so striking. This phenomenon may be witnessed if any one will
|
|
pull asunder flies that are copulating; and, by the way, these
|
|
creatures are, under the circumstances, averse to separation; for
|
|
the intercourse of the sexes in their case is of long duration, as may
|
|
be observed with common everyday insects, such as the fly and the
|
|
cantharis. They all copulate in the manner above described, the fly,
|
|
the cantharis, the sphondyle, (the phalangium spider) any others of
|
|
the kind that copulate at all. The phalangia-that is to say, such of
|
|
the species as spin webs-perform the operation in the following way:
|
|
the female takes hold of the suspended web at the middle and gives a
|
|
pull, and the male gives a counter pull; this operation they repeat
|
|
until they are drawn in together and interlaced at the hinder ends;
|
|
for, by the way, this mode of copulation suits them in consequence
|
|
of the rotundity of their stomachs.
|
|
|
|
So much for the modes of sexual intercourse in all animals; but,
|
|
with regard to the same phenomenon, there are definite laws followed
|
|
as regards the season of the year and the age of the animal.
|
|
|
|
Animals in general seem naturally disposed to this intercourse
|
|
at about the same period of the year, and that is when winter is
|
|
changing into summer. And this is the season of spring, in which
|
|
almost all things that fly or walk or swim take to pairing. Some
|
|
animals pair and breed in autumn also and in winter, as is the case
|
|
with certain aquatic animals and certain birds. Man pairs and breeds
|
|
at all seasons, as is the case also with domesticated animals, owing
|
|
to the shelter and good feeding they enjoy: that is to say, with those
|
|
whose period of gestation is also comparatively brief, as the sow
|
|
and the bitch, and with those birds that breed frequently. Many
|
|
animals time the season of intercourse with a view to the right
|
|
nurture subsequently of their young. In the human species, the male is
|
|
more under sexual excitement in winter, and the female in summer.
|
|
|
|
With birds the far greater part, as has been said, pair and
|
|
breed during the spring and early summer, with the exception of the
|
|
halcyon.
|
|
|
|
The halcyon breeds at the season of the winter solstice.
|
|
Accordingly, when this season is marked with calm weather, the name of
|
|
'halcyon days' is given to the seven days preceding, and to as many
|
|
following, the solstice; as Simonides the poet says:
|
|
|
|
God lulls for fourteen days the winds to sleep
|
|
|
|
In winter; and this temperate interlude
|
|
|
|
Men call the Holy Season, when the deep
|
|
|
|
Cradles the mother Halcyon and her brood.
|
|
|
|
And these days are calm, when southerly winds prevail at the
|
|
solstice, northerly ones having been the accompaniment of the Pleiads.
|
|
The halcyon is said to take seven days for building her nest, and
|
|
the other seven for laying and hatching her eggs. In our country there
|
|
are not always halcyon days about the time of the winter solstice, but
|
|
in the Sicilian seas this season of calm is almost periodical. The
|
|
bird lays about five eggs.
|
|
|
|
9
|
|
|
|
(The aithyia, or diver, and the larus, or gull, lay their eggs
|
|
on rocks bordering on the sea, two or three at a time; but the gull
|
|
lays in the summer, and the diver at the beginning of spring, just
|
|
after the winter solstice, and it broods over its eggs as birds do
|
|
in general. And neither of these birds resorts to a hiding-place.)
|
|
|
|
The halcyon is the most rarely seen of all birds. It is seen
|
|
only about the time of the setting of the Pleiads and the winter
|
|
solstice. When ships are lying at anchor in the roads, it will hover
|
|
about a vessel and then disappear in a moment, and Stesichorus in
|
|
one of his poems alludes to this peculiarity. The nightingale also
|
|
breeds at the beginning of summer, and lays five or six eggs; from
|
|
autumn until spring it retires to a hiding-place.
|
|
|
|
Insects copulate and breed in winter also, that is when the
|
|
weather is fine and south winds prevail; such, I mean, as do not
|
|
hibernate, as the fly and the ant. The greater part of wild animals
|
|
bring forth once and once only in the year, except in the case of
|
|
animals like the hare, where the female can become superfoetally
|
|
impregnated.
|
|
|
|
In like manner the great majority of fishes breed only once a
|
|
year, like the shoal-fishes (or, in other words, such as are caught in
|
|
nets), the tunny, the pelamys, the grey mullet, the chalcis, the
|
|
mackerel, the sciaena, the psetta and the like, with the exception
|
|
of the labrax or basse; for this fish (alone amongst those
|
|
mentioned) breeds twice a year, and the second brood is the weaker
|
|
of the two. The trichias and the rock-fishes breed twice a year; the
|
|
red mullet breeds thrice a year, and is exceptional in this respect.
|
|
This conclusion in regard to the red mullet is inferred from the
|
|
spawn; for the spawn of the fish may be seen in certain places at
|
|
three different times of the year. The scorpaena breeds twice a
|
|
year. The sargue breeds twice, in the spring and in the autumn. The
|
|
saupe breeds once a year only, in the autumn. The female tunny
|
|
breeds only once a year, but owing to the fact that the fish in some
|
|
cases spawn early and in others late, it looks as though the fish bred
|
|
twice over. The first spawning takes place in December before the
|
|
solstice, and the latter spawning in the spring. The male tunny
|
|
differs from the female in being unprovided with the fin beneath the
|
|
belly which is called aphareus.
|
|
|
|
10
|
|
|
|
Of cartilaginous fishes, the rhina or angelfish is the only one
|
|
that breeds twice; for it breeds at the beginning of autumn, and at
|
|
the setting of the Pleiads: and, of the two seasons, it is in better
|
|
condition in the autumn. It engenders at a birth seven or eight young.
|
|
Certain of the dog-fishes, for example the spotted dog, seem to
|
|
breed twice a month, and this results from the circumstance that the
|
|
eggs do not all reach maturity at the same time.
|
|
|
|
Some fishes breed at all seasons, as the muraena. This animal
|
|
lays a great number of eggs at a time; and the young when hatched
|
|
are very small but grow with great rapidity, like the young of the
|
|
hippurus, for these fishes from being diminutive at the outset grow
|
|
with exceptional rapidity to an exceptional size. (Be it observed that
|
|
the muraena breeds at all seasons, but the hippurus only in the
|
|
spring. The smyrus differs from the smyraena; for the muraena is
|
|
mottled and weakly, whereas the smyrus is strong and of one uniform
|
|
colour, and the colour resembles that of the pine-tree, and the animal
|
|
has teeth inside and out. They say that in this case, as in other
|
|
similar ones, the one is the male, and the other the female, of a
|
|
single species. They come out on to the land, and are frequently
|
|
caught.) Fishes, then, as a general rule, attain their full growth
|
|
with great rapidity, but this is especially the case, among small
|
|
fishes, with the coracine or crow-fish: it spawns, by the way, near
|
|
the shore, in weedy and tangled spots. The orphus also, or
|
|
sea-perch, is small at first, and rapidly attains a great size. The
|
|
pelamys and the tunny breed in the Euxine, and nowhere else. The
|
|
cestreus or mullet, the chrysophrys or gilt-head, and the labrax or
|
|
basse, breed best where rivers run into the sea. The orcys or
|
|
large-sized tunny, the scorpis, and many other species spawn in the
|
|
open sea.
|
|
|
|
11
|
|
|
|
Fish for the most part breed some time or other during the three
|
|
months between the middle of March and the middle of June. Some few
|
|
breed in autumn: as, for instance, the saupe and the sargus, and
|
|
such others of this sort as breed shortly before the autumn equinox;
|
|
likewise the electric ray and the angel-fish. Other fishes breed
|
|
both in winter and in summer, as was previously observed: as, for
|
|
instance, in winter-time the basse, the grey mullet, and the belone or
|
|
pipe-fish; and in summer-time, from the middle of June to the middle
|
|
of July, the female tunny, about the time of the summer solstice;
|
|
and the tunny lays a sac-like enclosure in which are contained a
|
|
number of small eggs. The ryades or shoal-fishes breed in summer.
|
|
|
|
Of the grey mullets, the chelon begins to be in roe between
|
|
the middle of November and the middle of December; as also the sargue,
|
|
and the smyxon or myxon, and the cephalus; and their period of
|
|
gestation is thirty days. And, by the way, some of the grey mullet
|
|
species are not produced from copulation, but grow spontaneously
|
|
from mud and sand.
|
|
|
|
As a general rule, then, fishes are in roe in the spring-time;
|
|
while some, as has been said, are so in summer, in autumn, or in
|
|
winter. But whereas the impregnation in the spring-time follows a
|
|
general law, impregnation in the other seasons does not follow the
|
|
same rule either throughout or within the limits of one genus; and,
|
|
further, conception in these variant seasons is not so prolific.
|
|
And, indeed, we must bear this in mind, that just as with plants and
|
|
quadrupeds diversity of locality has much to do not only with
|
|
general physical health but also with the comparative frequency of
|
|
sexual intercourse and generation, so also with regard to fishes
|
|
locality of itself has much to do not only in regard to the size and
|
|
vigour of the creature, but also in regard to its parturition and
|
|
its copulations, causing the same species to breed oftener in one
|
|
place and seldomer in another.
|
|
|
|
12
|
|
|
|
The molluscs also breed in spring. Of the marine molluscs one of
|
|
the first to breed is the sepia. It spawns at all times of the day and
|
|
its period of gestation is fifteen days. After the female has laid her
|
|
eggs, the male comes and discharges the milt over the eggs, and the
|
|
eggs thereupon harden. And the two sexes of this animal go about in
|
|
pairs, side by side; and the male is more mottled and more black on
|
|
the back than the female.
|
|
|
|
The octopus pairs in winter and breeds in spring, lying hidden
|
|
for about two months. Its spawn is shaped like a vine-tendril, and
|
|
resembles the fruit of the white poplar; the creature is
|
|
extraordinarily prolific, for the number of individuals that come from
|
|
the spawn is something incalculable. The male differs from the
|
|
female in the fact that its head is longer, and that the organ
|
|
called by the fishermen its penis, in the tentacle, is white. The
|
|
female, after laying her eggs, broods over them, and in consequence
|
|
gets out of condition, by reason of not going in quest of food
|
|
during the hatching period.
|
|
|
|
The purple murex breeds about springtime, and the ceryx at the
|
|
close of the winter. And, as a general rule, the testaceans are
|
|
found to be furnished with their so-called eggs in spring-time and
|
|
in autumn, with the exception of the edible urchin; for this animal
|
|
has the so-called eggs in most abundance in these seasons, but at no
|
|
season is unfurnished with them; and it is furnished with them in
|
|
especial abundance in warm weather or when a full moon is in the
|
|
sky. Only, by the way, these remarks do not apply to the sea-urchin
|
|
found in the Pyrrhaean Straits, for this urchin is at its best for
|
|
table purposes in the winter; and these urchins are small but full
|
|
of eggs.
|
|
|
|
Snails are found by observations to become in all cases
|
|
impregnated about the same season.
|
|
|
|
13
|
|
|
|
(Of birds the wild species, as has been stated, as a general
|
|
rule pair and breed only once a year. The swallow, however, and the
|
|
blackbird breed twice. With regard to the blackbird, however, its
|
|
first brood is killed by inclemency of weather (for it is the earliest
|
|
of all birds to breed), but the second brood it usually succeeds in
|
|
rearing.
|
|
|
|
Birds that are domesticated or that are capable of domestication
|
|
breed frequently, just as the common pigeon breeds all through the
|
|
summer, and as is seen in the barn-door hen; for the barn-door cock
|
|
and hen have intercourse, and the hen breeds, at all seasons alike:
|
|
excepting by the way, during the days about the winter solstice.
|
|
|
|
Of the pigeon family there are many diversities; for the peristera
|
|
or common pigeon is not identical with the peleias or rock-pigeon.
|
|
In other words, the rock-pigeon is smaller than the common pigeon, and
|
|
is less easily domesticated; it is also black, and small, red-footed
|
|
and rough-footed; and in consequence of these peculiarities it is
|
|
neglected by the pigeon-fancier. The largest of all the pigeon species
|
|
is the phatta or ring-dove; and the next in size is the oenas or
|
|
stock-dove; and the stock-dove is a little larger than the common
|
|
pigeon. The smallest of all the species is the turtle-dove. Pigeons
|
|
breed and hatch at all seasons, if they are furnished with a sunny
|
|
place and all requisites; unless they are so furnished, they breed
|
|
only in the summer. The spring brood is the best, or the autumn brood.
|
|
At all events, without doubt, the produce of the hot season, the
|
|
summer brood, is the poorest of the three.)
|
|
|
|
14
|
|
|
|
Further, animals differ from one another in regard to the time
|
|
of life that is best adapted for sexual intercourse.
|
|
|
|
To begin with, in most animals the secretion of the seminal
|
|
fluid and its generative capacity are not phenomena simultaneously
|
|
manifested, but manifested successively. Thus, in all animals, the
|
|
earliest secretion of sperm is unfruitful, or if it be fruitful the
|
|
issue is comparatively poor and small. And this phenomenon is
|
|
especially observable in man, in viviparous quadrupeds, and in
|
|
birds; for in the case of man and the quadruped the offspring is
|
|
smaller, and in the case of the bird, the egg.
|
|
|
|
For animals that copulate, of one and the same species, the
|
|
age for maturity is in most species tolerably uniform, unless it
|
|
occurs prematurely by reason of abnormality, or is postponed by
|
|
physical injury.
|
|
|
|
In man, then, maturity is indicated by a change of the tone of
|
|
voice, by an increase in size and an alteration in appearance of the
|
|
sexual organs, as also in an increase of size and alteration in
|
|
appearance of the breasts; and above all, in the hair-growth at the
|
|
pubes. Man begins to possess seminal fluid about the age of
|
|
fourteen, and becomes generatively capable at about the age of
|
|
twenty-one years.
|
|
|
|
In other animals there is no hair-growth at the pubes (for
|
|
some animals have no hair at all, and others have none on the belly,
|
|
or less on the belly than on the back), but still, in some animals the
|
|
change of voice is quite obvious; and in some animals other organs
|
|
give indication of the commencing secretion of the sperm and the onset
|
|
of generative capacity. As a general rule the female is
|
|
sharper-toned in voice than the male, and the young animal than the
|
|
elder; for, by the way, the stag has a much deeper-toned bay than
|
|
the hind. Moreover, the male cries chiefly at rutting time, and the
|
|
female under terror and alarm; and the cry of the female is short, and
|
|
that of the male prolonged. With dogs also, as they grow old, the tone
|
|
of the bark gets deeper.
|
|
|
|
There is a difference observable also in the neighings of
|
|
horses. That is to say, the female foal has a thin small neigh, and
|
|
the male foal a small neigh, yet bigger and deeper-toned than that
|
|
of the female, and a louder one as time goes on. And when the young
|
|
male and female are two years old and take to breeding, the neighing
|
|
of the stallion becomes loud and deep, and that of the mare louder and
|
|
shriller than heretofore; and this change goes on until they reach the
|
|
age of about twenty years; and after this time the neighing in both
|
|
sexes becomes weaker and weaker.
|
|
|
|
As a rule, then, as was stated, the voice of the male differs
|
|
from the voice of the female, in animals where the voice admits of a
|
|
continuous and prolonged sound, in the fact that the note in the
|
|
male voice is more deep and bass; not, however, in all animals, for
|
|
the contrary holds good in the case of some, as for instance in
|
|
kine: for here the cow has a deeper note than the bull, and the calves
|
|
a deeper note than the cattle. And we can thus understand the change
|
|
of voice in animals that undergo gelding; for male animals that
|
|
undergo this process assume the characters of the female.
|
|
|
|
The following are the ages at which various animals become
|
|
capacitated for sexual commerce. The ewe and the she-goat are sexually
|
|
mature when one year old, and this statement is made more
|
|
confidently in respect to the she-goat than to the ewe; the ram and
|
|
the he-goat are sexually mature at the same age. The progeny of very
|
|
young individuals among these animals differs from that of other
|
|
males: for the males improve in the course of the second year, when
|
|
they become fully mature. The boar and the sow are capable of
|
|
intercourse when eight months old, and the female brings forth when
|
|
one year old, the difference corresponding to her period of gestation.
|
|
The boar is capable of generation when eight months old, but, with a
|
|
sire under a year in age, the litter is apt to be a poor one. The
|
|
ages, however, are not invariable; now and then the boar and the sow
|
|
are capable of intercourse when four months old, and are capable of
|
|
producing a litter which can be reared when six months old; but at
|
|
times the boar begins to be capable of intercourse when ten months. He
|
|
continues sexually mature until he is three years old. The dog and the
|
|
bitch are, as a rule, sexually capable and sexually receptive when a
|
|
year old, and sometimes when eight months old; but the priority in
|
|
date is more common with the dog than with the bitch. The period of
|
|
gestation with the bitch is sixty days, or sixty-one, or sixty-two, or
|
|
sixty-three at the utmost; the period is never under sixty days, or,
|
|
if it is, the litter comes to no good. The bitch, after delivering a
|
|
litter, submits to the male in six months, but not before. The horse
|
|
and the mare are, at the earliest, sexually capable and sexually
|
|
mature when two years old; the issue, however, of parents of this
|
|
age is small and poor. As a general rule these animals are sexually
|
|
capable when three years old, and they grow better for breeding
|
|
purposes until they reach twenty years. The stallion is sexually
|
|
capable up to the age of thirty-three years, and the mare up to forty,
|
|
so that, in point of fact, the animals are sexually capable all
|
|
their lives long; for the stallion, as a rule, lives for about
|
|
thirty-five years, and the mare for a little over forty; although,
|
|
by the way, a horse has known to live to the age of seventy-five.
|
|
The ass and the she-ass are sexually capable when thirty months old;
|
|
but, as a rule, they are not generatively mature until they are
|
|
three years old, or three years and a half. An instance has been known
|
|
of a she-ass bearing and bringing forth a foal when only a year old. A
|
|
cow has been known to calve when only a year old, and the calf grew as
|
|
big as might be expected, but no more. So much for the dates in time
|
|
at which these animals attain to generative capacity.
|
|
|
|
In the human species, the male is generative, at the longest, up
|
|
to seventy years, and the female up to fifty; but such extended
|
|
periods are rare. As a rule, the male is generative up to the age of
|
|
sixty-five, and to the age of forty-five the female is capable of
|
|
conception.
|
|
|
|
The ewe bears up to eight years, and, if she be carefully
|
|
tended, up to eleven years; in fact, the ram and the ewe are
|
|
sexually capable pretty well all their lives long. He-goats, if they
|
|
be fat, are more or less unserviceable for breeding; and this, by
|
|
the way, is the reason why country folk say of a vine when it stops
|
|
bearing that it is 'running the goat'. However, if an over-fat he-goat
|
|
be thinned down, he becomes sexually capable and generative.
|
|
|
|
Rams single out the oldest ewes for copulation, and show no
|
|
regard for the young ones. And, as has been stated, the issue of the
|
|
younger ewes is poorer than that of the older ones.
|
|
|
|
The boar is good for breeding purposes until he is three years
|
|
of age; but after that age his issue deteriorates, for after that
|
|
age his vigour is on the decline. The boar is most capable after a
|
|
good feed, and with the first sow it mounts; if poorly fed or put to
|
|
many females, the copulation is abbreviated, and the litter is
|
|
comparatively poor. The first litter of the sow is the fewest in
|
|
number; at the second litter she is at her prime. The animal, as it
|
|
grows old, continues to breed, but the sexual desire abates. When they
|
|
reach fifteen years, they become unproductive, and are getting old. If
|
|
a sow be highly fed, it is all the more eager for sexual commerce,
|
|
whether old or young; but, if it be over-fattened in pregnancy, it
|
|
gives the less milk after parturition. With regard to the age of the
|
|
parents, the litter is the best when they are in their prime; but with
|
|
regard to the seasons of the year, the litter is the best that comes
|
|
at the beginning of winter; and the summer litter the poorest,
|
|
consisting as it usually does of animals small and thin and flaccid.
|
|
The boar, if it be well fed, is sexually capable at all hours, night
|
|
and day; but otherwise is peculiarly salacious early in the morning.
|
|
As it grows old the sexual passion dies away, as we have already
|
|
remarked. Very often a boar, when more or less impotent from age or
|
|
debility, finding itself unable to accomplish the sexual commerce with
|
|
due speed, and growing fatigued with the standing posture, will roll
|
|
the sow over on the ground, and the pair will conclude the operation
|
|
side by side of one another. The sow is sure of conception if it drops
|
|
its lugs in rutting time; if the ears do not thus drop, it may have to
|
|
rut a second time before impregnation takes place.
|
|
|
|
Bitches do not submit to the male throughout their lives, but
|
|
only until they reach a certain maturity of years. As a general
|
|
rule, they are sexually receptive and conceptive until they are twelve
|
|
years old; although, by the way, cases have been known where dogs
|
|
and bitches have been respectively procreative and conceptive to the
|
|
ages of eighteen and even of twenty years. But, as a rule, age
|
|
diminishes the capability of generation and of conception with these
|
|
animals as with all others.
|
|
|
|
The female of the camel is opisthuretic, and submits to the male
|
|
in the way above described; and the season for copulation in Arabia is
|
|
about the month of October. Its period of gestation is twelve
|
|
months; and it is never delivered of more than one foal at a time. The
|
|
female becomes sexually receptive and the male sexually capable at the
|
|
age of three years. After parturition, an interval of a year elapses
|
|
before the female is again receptive to the male.
|
|
|
|
The female elephant becomes sexually receptive when ten years
|
|
old at the youngest, and when fifteen at the oldest; and the male is
|
|
sexually capable when five years old, or six. The season for
|
|
intercourse is spring. The male allows an interval of three years to
|
|
elapse after commerce with a female: and, after it has once
|
|
impregnated a female, it has no intercourse with her again. The period
|
|
of gestation with the female is two years; and only one young animal
|
|
is produced at a time, in other words it is uniparous. And the
|
|
embryo is the size of a calf two or three months old.
|
|
|
|
15
|
|
|
|
So much for the copulations of such animals as copulate.
|
|
|
|
We now proceed to treat of generation both with respect to
|
|
copulating and non-copulating animals, and we shall commence with
|
|
discussing the subject of generation in the case of the testaceans.
|
|
|
|
The testacean is almost the only genus that throughout all its
|
|
species is non-copulative.
|
|
|
|
The porphyrae, or purple murices, gather together to some one
|
|
place in the spring-time, and deposit the so-called 'honeycomb'.
|
|
This substance resembles the comb, only that it is not so neat and
|
|
delicate; and looks as though a number of husks of white chick-peas
|
|
were all stuck together. But none of these structures has any open
|
|
passage, and the porphyra does not grow out of them, but these and all
|
|
other testaceans grow out of mud and decaying matter. The substance,
|
|
is, in fact, an excretion of the porphyra and the ceryx; for it is
|
|
deposited by the ceryx as well. Such, then, of the testaceans as
|
|
deposit the honeycomb are generated spontaneously like all other
|
|
testaceans, but they certainly come in greater abundance in places
|
|
where their congeners have been living previously. At the commencement
|
|
of the process of depositing the honeycomb, they throw off a
|
|
slippery mucus, and of this the husklike formations are composed.
|
|
These formations, then, all melt and deposit their contents on the
|
|
ground, and at this spot there are found on the ground a number of
|
|
minute porphyrae, and porphyrae are caught at times with these
|
|
animalculae upon them, some of which are too small to be
|
|
differentiated in form. If the porphyrae are caught before producing
|
|
this honey-comb, they sometimes go through the process in
|
|
fishing-creels, not here and there in the baskets, but gathering to
|
|
some one spot all together, just as they do in the sea; and owing to
|
|
the narrowness of their new quarters they cluster together like a
|
|
bunch of grapes.
|
|
|
|
There are many species of the purple murex; and some are
|
|
large, as those found off Sigeum and Lectum; others are small, as
|
|
those found in the Euripus, and on the coast of Caria. And those
|
|
that are found in bays are large and rough; in most of them the
|
|
peculiar bloom from which their name is derived is dark to
|
|
blackness, in others it is reddish and small in size; some of the
|
|
large ones weigh upwards of a mina apiece. But the specimens that
|
|
are found along the coast and on the rocks are small-sized, and the
|
|
bloom in their case is of a reddish hue. Further, as a general rule,
|
|
in northern waters the bloom is blackish, and in southern waters of
|
|
a reddish hue. The murex is caught in the spring-time when engaged
|
|
in the construction of the honeycomb; but it is not caught at any time
|
|
about the rising of the dog-star, for at that period it does not feed,
|
|
but conceals itself and burrows. The bloom of the animal is situated
|
|
between the mecon (or quasi-liver) and the neck, and the co-attachment
|
|
of these is an intimate one. In colour it looks like a white membrane,
|
|
and this is what people extract; and if it be removed and squeezed
|
|
it stains your hand with the colour of the bloom. There is a kind of
|
|
vein that runs through it, and this quasi-vein would appear to be in
|
|
itself the bloom. And the qualities, by the way, of this organ are
|
|
astringent. It is after the murex has constructed the honeycomb that
|
|
the bloom is at its worst. Small specimens they break in pieces,
|
|
shells and all, for it is no easy matter to extract the organ; but
|
|
in dealing with the larger ones they first strip off the shell and
|
|
then abstract the bloom. For this purpose the neck and mecon are
|
|
separated, for the bloom lies in between them, above the so-called
|
|
stomach; hence the necessity of separating them in abstracting the
|
|
bloom. Fishermen are anxious always to break the animal in pieces
|
|
while it is yet alive, for, if it die before the process is completed,
|
|
it vomits out the bloom; and for this reason the fishermen keep the
|
|
animals in creels, until they have collected a sufficient number and
|
|
can attend to them at their leisure. Fishermen in past times used
|
|
not to lower creels or attach them to the bait, so that very often the
|
|
animal got dropped off in the pulling up; at present, however, they
|
|
always attach a basket, so that if the animal fall off it is not lost.
|
|
The animal is more inclined to slip off the bait if it be full inside;
|
|
if it be empty it is difficult to shake it off. Such are the phenomena
|
|
connected with the porphyra or murex.
|
|
|
|
The same phenomena are manifested by the ceryx or trumpet-shell;
|
|
and the seasons are the same in which the phenomena are observable.
|
|
Both animals, also, the murex and the ceryx, have their opercula
|
|
similarly situated-and, in fact, all the stromboids, and this is
|
|
congenital with them all; and they feed by protruding the so-called
|
|
tongue underneath the operculum. The tongue of the murex is bigger
|
|
than one's finger, and by means of it, it feeds, and perforates
|
|
conchylia and the shells of its own kind. Both the murex and the ceryx
|
|
are long lived. The murex lives for about six years; and the yearly
|
|
increase is indicated by a distinct interval in the spiral convolution
|
|
of the shell.
|
|
|
|
The mussel also constructs a honeycomb.
|
|
|
|
With regard to the limnostreae, or lagoon oysters, wherever you
|
|
have slimy mud there you are sure to find them beginning to grow.
|
|
Cockles and clams and razor-fishes and scallops row spontaneously in
|
|
sandy places. The pinna grows straight up from its tuft of anchoring
|
|
fibres in sandy and slimy places; these creatures have inside them a
|
|
parasite nicknamed the pinna-guard, in some cases a small carid and in
|
|
other cases a little crab; if the pinna be deprived of this
|
|
pinna-guard it soon dies.
|
|
|
|
As a general rule, then, all testaceans grow by spontaneous
|
|
generation in mud, differing from one another according to the
|
|
differences of the material; oysters growing in slime, and cockles and
|
|
the other testaceans above mentioned on sandy bottoms; and in the
|
|
hollows of the rocks the ascidian and the barnacle, and common
|
|
sorts, such as the limpet and the nerites. All these animals grow with
|
|
great rapidity, especially the murex and the scallop; for the murex
|
|
and the scallop attain their full growth in a year. In some of the
|
|
testaceans white crabs are found, very diminutive in size; they are
|
|
most numerous in the trough shaped mussel. In the pinna also is
|
|
found the so-called pinna-guard. They are found also in the scallop
|
|
and in the oyster; these parasites never appear to grow in size.
|
|
Fishermen declare that the parasite is congenital with the larger
|
|
animal. (Scallops burrow for a time in the sand, like the murex.)
|
|
|
|
(Shell-fish, then, grow in the way above mentioned; and some
|
|
of them grow in shallow water, some on the sea-shore, some in rocky
|
|
places, some on hard and stony ground, and some in sandy places.) Some
|
|
shift about from place to place, others remain permanent on one
|
|
spot. Of those that keep to one spot the pinnae are rooted to the
|
|
ground; the razor-fish and the clam keep to the same locality, but are
|
|
not so rooted; but still, if forcibly removed they die.
|
|
|
|
(The star-fish is naturally so warm that whatever it lays hold
|
|
of is found, when suddenly taken away from the animal, to have
|
|
undergone a process like boiling. Fishermen say that the star-fish
|
|
is a great pest in the Strait of Pyrrha. In shape it resembles a
|
|
star as seen in an ordinary drawing. The so-called 'lungs' are
|
|
generated spontaneously. The shells that painters use are a good
|
|
deal thicker, and the bloom is outside the shell on the surface. These
|
|
creatures are mostly found on the coast of Caria.)
|
|
|
|
The hermit-crab grows spontaneously out of soil and slime, and
|
|
finds its way into untenanted shells. As it grows it shifts to a
|
|
larger shell, as for instance into the shell of the nerites, or of the
|
|
strombus or the like, and very often into the shell of the small
|
|
ceryx. After entering new shell, it carries it about, and begins again
|
|
to feed, and, by and by, as it grows, it shifts again into another
|
|
larger one.
|
|
|
|
16
|
|
|
|
Moreover, the animals that are unfurnished with shells grow
|
|
spontaneously, like the testaceans, as, for instance, the
|
|
sea-nettles and the sponges in rocky caves.
|
|
|
|
Of the sea-nettle, or sea-anemone, there are two species; and of
|
|
these one species lives in hollows and never loosens its hold upon the
|
|
rocks, and the other lives on smooth flat reefs, free and detached,
|
|
and shifts its position from time to time. (Limpets also detach
|
|
themselves, and shift from place to place.)
|
|
|
|
In the chambered cavities of sponges pinna-guards or parasites are
|
|
found. And over the chambers there is a kind of spider's web, by the
|
|
opening and closing of which they catch mute fishes; that is to say,
|
|
they open the web to let the fish get in, and close it again to entrap
|
|
them.
|
|
|
|
Of sponges there are three species; the first is of loose porous
|
|
texture, the second is close textured, the third, which is nicknamed
|
|
'the sponge of Achilles', is exceptionally fine and close-textured and
|
|
strong. This sponge is used as a lining to helmets and greaves, for
|
|
the purpose of deadening the sound of the blow; and this is a very
|
|
scarce species. Of the close textured sponges such as are particularly
|
|
hard and rough are nicknamed 'goats'.
|
|
|
|
Sponges grow spontaneously either attached to a rock or on
|
|
sea-beaches, and they get their nutriment in slime: a proof of this
|
|
statement is the fact that when they are first secured they are
|
|
found to be full of slime. This is characteristic of all living
|
|
creatures that get their nutriment by close local attachment. And,
|
|
by the way, the close-textured sponges are weaker than the more openly
|
|
porous ones because their attachment extends over a smaller area.
|
|
|
|
It is said that the sponge is sensitive; and as a proof of
|
|
this statement they say that if the sponge is made aware of an attempt
|
|
being made to pluck it from its place of attachment it draws itself
|
|
together, and it becomes a difficult task to detach it. It makes a
|
|
similar contractile movement in windy and boisterous weather,
|
|
obviously with the object of tightening its hold. Some persons express
|
|
doubts as to the truth of this assertion; as, for instance, the people
|
|
of Torone.
|
|
|
|
The sponge breeds parasites, worms, and other creatures, on
|
|
which, if they be detached, the rock-fishes prey, as they prey also on
|
|
the remaining stumps of the sponge; but, if the sponge be broken
|
|
off, it grows again from the remaining stump and the place is soon
|
|
as well covered as before.
|
|
|
|
The largest of all sponges are the loose-textured ones, and
|
|
these are peculiarly abundant on the coast of Lycia. The softest are
|
|
the close-textured sponges; for, by the way, the so-called sponges
|
|
of Achilles are harder than these. As a general rule, sponges that are
|
|
found in deep calm waters are the softest; for usually windy and
|
|
stormy weather has a tendency to harden them (as it has to harden
|
|
all similar growing things), and to arrest their growth. And this
|
|
accounts for the fact that the sponges found in the Hellespont are
|
|
rough and close-textured; and, as a general rule, sponges found beyond
|
|
or inside Cape Malea are, respectively, comparatively soft or
|
|
comparatively hard. But, by the way, the habitat of the sponge
|
|
should not be too sheltered and warm, for it has a tendency to
|
|
decay, like all similar vegetable-like growths. And this accounts
|
|
for the fact that the sponge is at its best when found in deep water
|
|
close to shore; for owing to the depth of the water they enjoy shelter
|
|
alike from stormy winds and from excessive heat.
|
|
|
|
Whilst they are still alive and before they are washed and
|
|
cleaned, they are blackish in colour. Their attachment is not made
|
|
at one particular spot, nor is it made all over their bodies; for
|
|
vacant pore-spaces intervene. There is a kind of membrane stretched
|
|
over the under parts; and in the under parts the points of
|
|
attachment are the more numerous. On the top most of the pores are
|
|
closed, but four or five are open and visible; and we are told by some
|
|
that it is through these pores that the animal takes its food.
|
|
|
|
There is a particular species that is named the 'aplysia' or the
|
|
'unwashable', from the circumstance that it cannot be cleaned. This
|
|
species has the large open and visible pores, but all the rest of
|
|
the body is close-textured; and, if it be dissected, it is found to be
|
|
closer and more glutinous than the ordinary sponge, and, in a word,
|
|
something lung like in consistency. And, on all hands, it is allowed
|
|
that this species is sensitive and long-lived. They are
|
|
distinguished in the sea from ordinary sponges from the circumstance
|
|
that the ordinary sponges are white while the slime is in them, but
|
|
that these sponges are under any circumstances black.
|
|
|
|
And so much with regard to sponges and to generation in the
|
|
testaceans.
|
|
|
|
17
|
|
|
|
Of crustaceans, the female crawfish after copulation conceives and
|
|
retains its eggs for about three months, from about the middle of
|
|
May to about the middle of August; they then lay the eggs into the
|
|
folds underneath the belly, and their eggs grow like grubs. This
|
|
same phenomenon is observable in molluscs also, and in such fishes
|
|
as are oviparous; for in all these cases the egg continues to grow.
|
|
|
|
The spawn of the crawfish is of a loose or granular consistency,
|
|
and is divided into eight parts; for corresponding to each of the
|
|
flaps on the side there is a gristly formation to which the spawn is
|
|
attached, and the entire structure resembles a cluster of grapes;
|
|
for each gristly formation is split into several parts. This is
|
|
obvious enough if you draw the parts asunder; but at first sight the
|
|
whole appears to be one and indivisible. And the largest are not those
|
|
nearest to the outlet but those in the middle, and the farthest off
|
|
are the smallest. The size of the small eggs is that of a small seed
|
|
in a fig; and they are not quite close to the outlet, but placed
|
|
middleways; for at both ends, tailwards and trunkwards, there are
|
|
two intervals devoid of eggs; for it is thus that the flaps also grow.
|
|
The side flaps, then, cannot close, but by placing the end flap on
|
|
them the animal can close up all, and this end-flap serves them for
|
|
a lid. And in the act of laying its eggs it seems to bring them
|
|
towards the gristly formations by curving the flap of its tail, and
|
|
then, squeezing the eggs towards the said gristly formations and
|
|
maintaining a bent posture, it performs the act of laying. The gristly
|
|
formations at these seasons increase in size and become receptive of
|
|
the eggs; for the animal lays its eggs into these formations, just
|
|
as the sepia lays its eggs among twigs and driftwood.
|
|
|
|
It lays its eggs, then, in this manner, and after hatching
|
|
them for about twenty days it rids itself of them all in one solid
|
|
lump, as is quite plain from outside. And out of these eggs crawfish
|
|
form in about fifteen days, and these crawfish are caught at times
|
|
less then a finger's breadth, or seven-tenths of an inch, in length.
|
|
The animal, then, lays its eggs before the middle of September, and
|
|
after the middle of that month throws off its eggs in a lump. With the
|
|
humped carids or prawns the time for gestation is four months or
|
|
thereabouts.
|
|
|
|
Crawfish are found in rough and rocky places, lobsters in smooth
|
|
places, and neither crawfish nor lobsters are found in muddy ones; and
|
|
this accounts for the fact that lobsters are found in the Hellespont
|
|
and on the coast of Thasos, and crawfish in the neighbourhood of
|
|
Sigeum and Mount Athos. Fishermen, accordingly, when they want to
|
|
catch these various creatures out at sea, take bearings on the beach
|
|
and elsewhere that tell them where the ground at the bottom is stony
|
|
and where soft with slime. In winter and spring these animals keep
|
|
in near to land, in summer they keep in deep water; thus at various
|
|
times seeking respectively for warmth or coolness.
|
|
|
|
The so-called arctus or bear-crab lays its eggs at about the
|
|
same time as the crawfish; and consequently in winter and in the
|
|
spring-time, before laying their eggs, they are at their best, and
|
|
after laying at their worst.
|
|
|
|
They cast their shell in the spring-time (just as serpents
|
|
shed their so-called 'old-age' or slough), both directly after birth
|
|
and in later life; this is true both of crabs and crawfish. And, by
|
|
the way, all crawfish are long lived.
|
|
|
|
18
|
|
|
|
Molluscs, after pairing and copulation, lay a white spawn; and
|
|
this spawn, as in the case of the testacean, gets granular in time.
|
|
The octopus discharges into its hole, or into a potsherd or into any
|
|
similar cavity, a structure resembling the tendrils of a young vine or
|
|
the fruit of the white poplar, as has been previously observed. The
|
|
eggs, when the female has laid them, are clustered round the sides
|
|
of the hole. They are so numerous that, if they be removed they
|
|
suffice to fill a vessel much larger than the animal's body in which
|
|
they were contained. Some fifty days later, the eggs burst and the
|
|
little polypuses creep out, like little spiders, in great numbers; the
|
|
characteristic form of their limbs is not yet to be discerned in
|
|
detail, but their general outline is clear enough. And, by the way,
|
|
they are so small and helpless that the greater number perish; it is a
|
|
fact that they have been seen so extremely minute as to be
|
|
absolutely without organization, but nevertheless when touched they
|
|
moved. The eggs of the sepia look like big black myrtle-berries, and
|
|
they are linked all together like a bunch of grapes, clustered round a
|
|
centre, and are not easily sundered from one another: for the male
|
|
exudes over them some moist glairy stuff, which constitutes the sticky
|
|
gum. These eggs increase in size; and they are white at the outset,
|
|
but black and larger after the sprinkling of the male seminal fluid.
|
|
|
|
When it has come into being the young sepia is first
|
|
distinctly formed inside out of the white substance, and when the
|
|
egg bursts it comes out. The inner part is formed as soon as the
|
|
female lays the egg, something like a hail-stone; and out of this
|
|
substance the young sepia grows by a head-attachment, just as young
|
|
birds grow by a belly-attachment. What is the exact nature of the
|
|
navel-attachment has not yet been observed, except that as the young
|
|
sepia grows the white substance grows less and less in size, and at
|
|
length, as happens with the yolk in the case of birds, the white
|
|
substance in the case of the young sepia disappears. In the case of
|
|
the young sepia, as in the case of the young of most animals, the eyes
|
|
at first seem very large. To illustrate this by way of a figure, let A
|
|
represent the ovum, B and C the eyes, and D the sepidium, or body of
|
|
the little sepia. (See diagram.)
|
|
|
|
The female sepia goes pregnant in the spring-time, and lays
|
|
its eggs after fifteen days of gestation; after the eggs are laid
|
|
there comes in another fifteen days something like a bunch of
|
|
grapes, and at the bursting of these the young sepiae issue forth. But
|
|
if, when the young ones are fully formed, you sever the outer covering
|
|
a moment too soon, the young creatures eject excrement, and their
|
|
colour changes from white to red in their alarm.
|
|
|
|
Crustaceans, then, hatch their eggs by brooding over them as
|
|
they carry them about beneath their bodies; but the octopus, the
|
|
sepia, and the like hatch their eggs without stirring from the spot
|
|
where they may have laid them, and this statement is particularly
|
|
applicable to the sepia; in fact, the nest of the female sepia is
|
|
often seen exposed to view close in to shore. The female octopus at
|
|
times sits brooding over her eggs, and at other times squats in
|
|
front of her hole, stretching out her tentacles on guard.
|
|
|
|
The sepia lays her spawn near to land in the neighbourhood of
|
|
sea-weed or reeds or any off-sweepings such as brushwood, twigs, or
|
|
stones; and fishermen place heaps of faggots here and there on
|
|
purpose, and on to such heaps the female deposits a long continuous
|
|
roe in shape like a vine tendril. It lays or spirts out the spawn with
|
|
an effort, as though there were difficulty in the process. The
|
|
female calamary spawns at sea; and it emits the spawn, as does the
|
|
sepia, in the mass.
|
|
|
|
The calamary and the cuttle-fish are short-lived, as, with few
|
|
exceptions, they never see the year out; and the same statement is
|
|
applicable to the octopus.
|
|
|
|
From one single egg comes one single sepia; and this is likewise
|
|
true of the young calamary.
|
|
|
|
The male calamary differs from the female; for if its
|
|
gill-region be dilated and examined there are found two red formations
|
|
resembling breasts, with which the male is unprovided. In the sepia,
|
|
apart from this distinction in the sexes, the male, as has been
|
|
stated, is more mottled than the female.
|
|
|
|
19
|
|
|
|
With regard to insects, that the male is less than the female
|
|
and that he mounts upon her back, and how he performs the act of
|
|
copulation and the circumstance that he gives over reluctantly, all
|
|
this has already been set forth, most cases of insect copulation
|
|
this process is speedily followed up by parturition.
|
|
|
|
All insects engender grubs, with the exception of a species of
|
|
butterfly; and the female of this species lays a hard egg,
|
|
resembling the seed of the cnecus, with a juice inside it. But from
|
|
the grub, the young animal does not grow out of a mere portion of
|
|
it, as a young animal grows from a portion only of an egg, but the
|
|
grub entire grows and the animal becomes differentiated out of it.
|
|
|
|
And of insects some are derived from insect congeners, as the
|
|
venom-spider and the common-spider from the venom-spider and the
|
|
common-spider, and so with the attelabus or locust, the acris or
|
|
grasshopper, and the tettix or cicada. Other insects are not derived
|
|
from living parentage, but are generated spontaneously: some out of
|
|
dew falling on leaves, ordinarily in spring-time, but not seldom in
|
|
winter when there has been a stretch of fair weather and southerly
|
|
winds; others grow in decaying mud or dung; others in timber, green or
|
|
dry; some in the hair of animals; some in the flesh of animals; some
|
|
in excrements: and some from excrement after it has been voided, and
|
|
some from excrement yet within the living animal, like the
|
|
helminthes or intestinal worms. And of these intestinal worms there
|
|
are three species: one named the flat-worm, another the round worm,
|
|
and the third the ascarid. These intestinal worms do not in any case
|
|
propagate their kind. The flat-worm, however, in an exceptional way,
|
|
clings fast to the gut, and lays a thing like a melon-seed, by
|
|
observing which indication the physician concludes that his patient is
|
|
troubled with the worm.
|
|
|
|
The so-called psyche or butterfly is generated from caterpillars
|
|
which grow on green leaves, chiefly leaves of the raphanus, which some
|
|
call crambe or cabbage. At first it is less than a grain of millet; it
|
|
then grows into a small grub; and in three days it is a tiny
|
|
caterpillar. After this it grows on and on, and becomes quiescent
|
|
and changes its shape, and is now called a chrysalis. The outer
|
|
shell is hard, and the chrysalis moves if you touch it. It attaches
|
|
itself by cobweb-like filaments, and is unfurnished with mouth or
|
|
any other apparent organ. After a little while the outer covering
|
|
bursts asunder, and out flies the winged creature that we call the
|
|
psyche or butterfly. At first, when it is a caterpillar, it feeds
|
|
and ejects excrement; but when it turns into the chrysalis it
|
|
neither feeds nor ejects excrement.
|
|
|
|
The same remarks are applicable to all such insects as are
|
|
developed out of the grub, both such grubs as are derived from the
|
|
copulation of living animals and such as are generated without
|
|
copulation on the part of parents. For the grub of the bee, the
|
|
anthrena, and the wasp, whilst it is young, takes food and voids
|
|
excrement; but when it has passed from the grub shape to its defined
|
|
form and become what is termed a 'nympha', it ceases to take food
|
|
and to void excrement, and remains tightly wrapped up and motionless
|
|
until it has reached its full size, when it breaks the formation
|
|
with which the cell is closed, and issues forth. The insects named the
|
|
hypera and the penia are derived from similar caterpillars, which move
|
|
in an undulatory way, progressing with one part and then pulling up
|
|
the hinder parts by a bend of the body. The developed insect in each
|
|
case takes its peculiar colour from the parent caterpillar.
|
|
|
|
From one particular large grub, which has as it were horns, and in
|
|
other respects differs from grubs in general, there comes, by a
|
|
metamorphosis of the grub, first a caterpillar, then the cocoon,
|
|
then the necydalus; and the creature passes through all these
|
|
transformations within six months. A class of women unwind and reel
|
|
off the cocoons of these creatures, and afterwards weave a fabric with
|
|
the threads thus unwound; a Coan woman of the name of Pamphila,
|
|
daughter of Plateus, being credited with the first invention of the
|
|
fabric. After the same fashion the carabus or stag-beetle comes from
|
|
grubs that live in dry wood: at first the grub is motionless, but
|
|
after a while the shell bursts and the stag-beetle issues forth.
|
|
|
|
From the cabbage is engendered the cabbageworm, and from the
|
|
leek the prasocuris or leekbane; this creature is also winged. From
|
|
the flat animalcule that skims over the surface of rivers comes the
|
|
oestrus or gadfly; and this accounts for the fact that gadflies most
|
|
abound in the neighbourhood of waters on whose surface these
|
|
animalcules are observed. From a certain small, black and hairy
|
|
caterpillar comes first a wingless glow-worm; and this creature
|
|
again suffers a metamorphosis, and transforms into a winged insect
|
|
named the bostrychus (or hair-curl).
|
|
|
|
Gnats grow from ascarids; and ascarids are engendered in the
|
|
slime of wells, or in places where there is a deposit left by the
|
|
draining off of water. This slime decays, and first turns white,
|
|
then black, and finally blood-red; and at this stage there originate
|
|
in it, as it were, little tiny bits of red weed, which at first
|
|
wriggle about all clinging together, and finally break loose and
|
|
swim in the water, and are hereupon known as ascarids. After a few
|
|
days they stand straight up on the water motionless and hard, and by
|
|
and by the husk breaks off and the gnats are seen sitting upon it,
|
|
until the sun's heat or a puff of wind sets them in motion, when
|
|
they fly away.
|
|
|
|
With all grubs and all animals that break out from the grub
|
|
state, generation is due primarily to the heat of the sun or to wind.
|
|
|
|
Ascarids are more likely to be found, and grow with unusual
|
|
rapidity, in places where there is a deposit of a mixed and
|
|
heterogeneous kind, as in kitchens and in ploughed fields, for the
|
|
contents of such places are disposed to rapid putrefaction. In autumn,
|
|
also, owing to the drying up of moisture, they grow in unusual
|
|
numbers.
|
|
|
|
The tick is generated from couch-grass. The cockchafer comes
|
|
from a grub that is generated in the dung of the cow or the ass. The
|
|
cantharus or scarabeus rolls a piece of dung into a ball, lies
|
|
hidden within it during the winter, and gives birth therein to small
|
|
grubs, from which grubs come new canthari. Certain winged insects also
|
|
come from the grubs that are found in pulse, in the same fashion as in
|
|
the cases described.
|
|
|
|
Flies grow from grubs in the dung that farmers have gathered
|
|
up into heaps: for those who are engaged in this work assiduously
|
|
gather up the compost, and this they technically term 'working-up' the
|
|
manure. The grub is exceedingly minute to begin with; first even at
|
|
this stage-it assumes a reddish colour, and then from a quiescent
|
|
state it takes on the power of motion, as though born to it; it then
|
|
becomes a small motionless grub; it then moves again, and again
|
|
relapses into immobility; it then comes out a perfect fly, and moves
|
|
away under the influence of the sun's heat or of a puff of air. The
|
|
myops or horse-fly is engendered in timber. The orsodacna or budbane
|
|
is a transformed grub; and this grub is engendered in
|
|
cabbage-stalks. The cantharis comes from the caterpillars that are
|
|
found on fig-trees or pear-trees or fir-trees--for on all these
|
|
grubs are engendered-and also from caterpillars found on the dog-rose;
|
|
and the cantharis takes eagerly to ill-scented substances, from the
|
|
fact of its having been engendered in ill-scented woods. The conops
|
|
comes from a grub that is engendered in the slime of vinegar.
|
|
|
|
And, by the way, living animals are found in substances that are
|
|
usually supposed to be incapable of putrefaction; for instance,
|
|
worms are found in long-lying snow; and snow of this description
|
|
gets reddish in colour, and the grub that is engendered in it is
|
|
red, as might have been expected, and it is also hairy. The grubs
|
|
found in the snows of Media are large and white; and all such grubs
|
|
are little disposed to motion. In Cyprus, in places where copper-ore
|
|
is smelted, with heaps of the ore piled on day after day, an animal is
|
|
engendered in the fire, somewhat larger than a blue bottle fly,
|
|
furnished with wings, which can hop or crawl through the fire. And the
|
|
grubs and these latter animals perish when you keep the one away
|
|
from the fire and the other from the snow. Now the salamander is a
|
|
clear case in point, to show us that animals do actually exist that
|
|
fire cannot destroy; for this creature, so the story goes, not only
|
|
walks through the fire but puts it out in doing so.
|
|
|
|
On the river Hypanis in the Cimmerian Bosphorus, about the
|
|
time of the summer solstice, there are brought down towards the sea by
|
|
the stream what look like little sacks rather bigger than grapes,
|
|
out of which at their bursting issues a winged quadruped. The insect
|
|
lives and flies about until the evening, but as the sun goes down it
|
|
pines away, and dies at sunset having lived just one day, from which
|
|
circumstance it is called the ephemeron.
|
|
|
|
As a rule, insects that come from caterpillars and grubs are
|
|
held at first by filaments resembling the threads of a spider's web.
|
|
|
|
Such is the mode of generation of the insects above
|
|
enumerated. but if the latter impregnation takes placeduring the
|
|
change of the yellow
|
|
|
|
20
|
|
|
|
The wasps that are nicknamed 'the ichneumons' (or hunters), less
|
|
in size, by the way, than the ordinary wasp, kill spiders and carry
|
|
off the dead bodies to a wall or some such place with a hole in it;
|
|
this hole they smear over with mud and lay their grubs inside it,
|
|
and from the grubs come the hunter-wasps. Some of the coleoptera and
|
|
of the small and nameless insects make small holes or cells of mud
|
|
on a wall or on a grave-stone, and there deposit their grubs.
|
|
|
|
With insects, as a general rule, the time of generation from its
|
|
commencement to its completion comprises three or four weeks. With
|
|
grubs and grub-like creatures the time is usually three weeks, and
|
|
in the oviparous insects as a rule four. But, in the case of oviparous
|
|
insects, the egg-formation comes at the close of seven days from
|
|
copulation, and during the remaining three weeks the parent broods
|
|
over and hatches its young; i.e. where this is the result of
|
|
copulation, as in the case of the spider and its congeners. As a rule,
|
|
the transformations take place in intervals of three or four days,
|
|
corresponding to the lengths of interval at which the crises recur
|
|
in intermittent fevers.
|
|
|
|
So much for the generation of insects. Their death is due to the
|
|
shrivelling of their organs, just as the larger animals die of old
|
|
age.
|
|
|
|
Winged insects die in autumn from the shrinking of their wings.
|
|
The myops dies from dropsy in the eyes.
|
|
|
|
21
|
|
|
|
With regard to the generation of bees different hypotheses are
|
|
in vogue. Some affirm that bees neither copulate nor give birth to
|
|
young, but that they fetch their young. And some say that they fetch
|
|
their young from the flower of the callyntrum; others assert that they
|
|
bring them from the flower of the reed, others, from the flower of the
|
|
olive. And in respect to the olive theory, it is stated as a proof
|
|
that, when the olive harvest is most abundant, the swarms are most
|
|
numerous. Others declare that they fetch the brood of the drones
|
|
from such things as above mentioned, but that the working bees are
|
|
engendered by the rulers of the hive.
|
|
|
|
Now of these rulers there are two kinds: the better kind is
|
|
red in colour, the inferior kind is black and variegated; the ruler is
|
|
double the size of the working bee. These rulers have the abdomen or
|
|
part below the waist half as large again, and they are called by
|
|
some the 'mothers', from an idea that they bear or generate the
|
|
bees; and, as a proof of this theory of their motherhood, they declare
|
|
that the brood of the drones appears even when there is no ruler-bee
|
|
in the hive, but that the bees do not appear in his absence. Others,
|
|
again, assert that these insects copulate, and that the drones are
|
|
male and the bees female.
|
|
|
|
The ordinary bee is generated in the cells of the comb, but
|
|
the ruler-bees in cells down below attached to the comb, suspended
|
|
from it, apart from the rest, six or seven in number, and growing in a
|
|
way quite different from the mode of growth of the ordinary brood.
|
|
|
|
Bees are provided with a sting, but the drones are not so
|
|
provided. The rulers are provided with stings, but they never use
|
|
them; and this latter circumstance will account for the belief of some
|
|
people that they have no stings at all.
|
|
|
|
22
|
|
|
|
Of bees there are various species. The best kind is a little round
|
|
mottled insect; another is long, and resembles the anthrena; a third
|
|
is a black and flat-bellied, and is nick-named the 'robber'; a
|
|
fourth kind is the drone, the largest of all, but stingless and
|
|
inactive. And this proportionate size of the drone explains why some
|
|
bee-masters place a net-work in front of the hives; for the network is
|
|
put to keep the big drones out while it lets the little bees go in.
|
|
|
|
Of the king bees there are, as has been stated, two kinds. In
|
|
every hive there are more kings than one; and a hive goes to ruin if
|
|
there be too few kings, not because of anarchy thereby ensuing, but,
|
|
as we are told, because these creatures contribute in some way to
|
|
the generation of the common bees. A hive will go also to ruin if
|
|
there be too large a number of kings in it; for the members of the
|
|
hives are thereby subdivided into too many separate factions.
|
|
|
|
Whenever the spring-time is late a-coming, and when there is
|
|
drought and mildew, then the progeny of the hive is small in number.
|
|
But when the weather is dry they attend to the honey, and in rainy
|
|
weather their attention is concentrated on the brood; and this will
|
|
account for the coincidence of rich olive-harvests and abundant
|
|
swarms.
|
|
|
|
The bees first work at the honeycomb, and then put the pupae
|
|
in it: by the mouth, say those who hold the theory of their bringing
|
|
them from elsewhere. After putting in the pupae they put in the
|
|
honey for subsistence, and this they do in the summer and autumn; and,
|
|
by the way, the autumn honey is the better of the two.
|
|
|
|
The honeycomb is made from flowers, and the materials for the
|
|
wax they gather from the resinous gum of trees, while honey is
|
|
distilled from dew, and is deposited chiefly at the risings of the
|
|
constellations or when a rainbow is in the sky: and as a general
|
|
rule there is no honey before the rising of the Pleiads. (The bee,
|
|
then, makes the wax from flowers. The honey, however, it does not
|
|
make, but merely gathers what is deposited out of the atmosphere;
|
|
and as a proof of this statement we have the known fact that
|
|
occasionally bee-keepers find the hives filled with honey within the
|
|
space of two or three days. Furthermore, in autumn flowers are
|
|
found, but honey, if it be withdrawn, is not replaced; now, after
|
|
the withdrawal of the original honey, when no food or very little is
|
|
in the hives, there would be a fresh stock of honey, if the bees
|
|
made it from flowers.) Honey, if allowed to ripen and mature, gathers
|
|
consistency; for at first it is like water and remains liquid for
|
|
several days. If it be drawn off during these days it has no
|
|
consistency; but it attains consistency in about twenty days. The
|
|
taste of thyme-honey is discernible at once, from its peculiar
|
|
sweetness and consistency.
|
|
|
|
The bee gathers from every flower that is furnished with a calyx
|
|
or cup, and from all other flowers that are sweet-tasted, without
|
|
doing injury to any fruit; and the juices of the flowers it takes up
|
|
with the organ that resembles a tongue and carries off to the hive.
|
|
|
|
Swarms are robbed of their honey on the appearance of the wild
|
|
fig. They produce the best larvae at the time the honey is a-making.
|
|
The bee carries wax and bees' bread round its legs, but vomits the
|
|
honey into the cell. After depositing its young, it broods over it
|
|
like a bird. The grub when it is small lies slantwise in the comb, but
|
|
by and by rises up straight by an effort of its own and takes food,
|
|
and holds on so tightly to the honeycomb as actually to cling to it.
|
|
|
|
The young of bees and of drones is white, and from the young
|
|
come the grubs; and the grubs grow into bees and drones. The egg of
|
|
the king bee is reddish in colour, and its substance is about as
|
|
consistent as thick honey; and from the first it is about as big as
|
|
the bee that is produced from it. From the young of the king bee there
|
|
is no intermediate stage, it is said, of the grub, but the bee comes
|
|
at once.
|
|
|
|
Whenever the bee lays an egg in the comb there is always a
|
|
drop of honey set against it. The larva of the bee gets feet and wings
|
|
as soon as the cell has been stopped up with wax, and when it
|
|
arrives at its completed form it breaks its membrane and flies away.
|
|
It ejects excrement in the grub state, but not afterwards; that is,
|
|
not until it has got out of the encasing membrane, as we have
|
|
already described. If you remove the heads from off the larvae
|
|
before the coming of the wings, the bees will eat them up; and if
|
|
you nip off the wings from a drone and let it go, the bees will
|
|
spontaneously bite off the wings from off all the remaining drones.
|
|
|
|
The bee lives for six years as a rule, as an exception for seven
|
|
years. If a swarm lasts for nine years, or ten, great credit is
|
|
considered due to its management.
|
|
|
|
In Pontus are found bees exceedingly white in colour, and
|
|
these bees produce their honey twice a month. (The bees in Themiscyra,
|
|
on the banks of the river Thermodon, build honeycombs in the ground
|
|
and in hives, and these honeycombs are furnished with very little wax
|
|
but with honey of great consistency; and the honeycomb, by the way,
|
|
is smooth and level.) But this is not always the case with these bees,
|
|
but only in the winter season; for in Pontus the ivy is abundant,
|
|
and it flowers at this time of the year, and it is from the ivy-flower
|
|
that they derive their honey. A white and very consistent honey is
|
|
brought down from the upper country to Amisus, which is deposited by
|
|
bees on trees without the employment of honeycombs: and this kind of
|
|
honey is produced in other districts in Pontus.
|
|
|
|
There are bees also that construct triple honeycombs in the
|
|
ground; and these honeycombs supply honey but never contain grubs. But
|
|
the honeycombs in these places are not all of this sort, nor do all
|
|
the bees construct them.
|
|
|
|
23
|
|
|
|
Anthrenae and wasps construct combs for their young. When they
|
|
have no king, but are wandering about in search of one, the anthrene
|
|
constructs its comb on some high place, and the wasp inside a hole.
|
|
When the anthrene and the wasp have a king, they construct their combs
|
|
underground. Their combs are in all cases hexagonal like the comb of
|
|
the bee. They are composed, however, not of wax, but of a bark-like
|
|
filamented fibre, and the comb of the anthrene is much neater than the
|
|
comb of the wasp. Like the bee, they put their young just like a
|
|
drop of liquid on to the side of the cell, and the egg clings to the
|
|
wall of the cell. But the eggs are not deposited in the cells
|
|
simultaneously; on the contrary, in some cells are creatures big
|
|
enough to fly, in others are nymphae, and in others are mere grubs. As
|
|
in the case of bees, excrement is observed only in the cells where the
|
|
grubs are found. As long as the creatures are in the nymph condition
|
|
they are motionless, and the cell is cemented over. In the comb of the
|
|
anthrene there is found in the cell of the young a drop of honey in
|
|
front of it. The larvae of the anthrene and the wasp make their
|
|
appearance not in the spring but in the autumn; and their growth is
|
|
especially discernible in times of full moon. And, by the way, the
|
|
eggs and the grubs never rest at the bottom of the cells, but always
|
|
cling on to the side wall.
|
|
|
|
24
|
|
|
|
There is a kind of humble-bee that builds a cone-shaped nest of
|
|
clay against a stone or in some similar situation, besmearing the clay
|
|
with something like spittle. And this nest or hive is exceedingly
|
|
thick and hard; in point of fact, one can hardly break it open with
|
|
a spike. Here the insects lay their eggs, and white grubs are produced
|
|
wrapped in a black membrane. Apart from the membrane there is found
|
|
some wax in the honeycomb; and this a wax is much sallower in hue than
|
|
the wax in the honeycomb of the bee.
|
|
|
|
25
|
|
|
|
Ants copulate and engender grubs; and these grubs attach
|
|
themselves to nothing in particular, but grow on and on from small and
|
|
rounded shapes until they become elongated and defined in shape: and
|
|
they are engendered in spring-time.
|
|
|
|
26
|
|
|
|
The land-scorpion also lays a number of egg shaped grubs, and
|
|
broods over them. When the hatching is completed, the parent animal,
|
|
as happens with the parent spider, is ejected and put to death by
|
|
the young ones; for very often the young ones are about eleven in
|
|
number.
|
|
|
|
27
|
|
|
|
Spiders in all cases copulate in the way above mentioned, and
|
|
generate at first small grubs. And these grubs metamorphose in their
|
|
entirety, and not partially, into spiders; for, by the way, the
|
|
grubs are round-shaped at the outset. And the spider, when it lays its
|
|
eggs, broods over them, and in three days the eggs or grubs take
|
|
definite shape.
|
|
|
|
All spiders lay their eggs in a web; but some spiders lay in a
|
|
small and fine web, and others in a thick one; and some, as a rule,
|
|
lay in a round-shaped case or capsule, and some are only partially
|
|
enveloped in the web. The young grubs are not all developed at one and
|
|
the same time into young spiders; but the moment the development takes
|
|
place, the young spider makes a leap and begins to spin his web. The
|
|
juice of the grub, if you squeeze it, is the same as the juice found
|
|
in the spider when young; that is to say, it is thick and white.
|
|
|
|
The meadow spider lays its eggs into a web, one half of which is
|
|
attached to itself and the other half is free; and on this the
|
|
parent broods until the eggs are hatched. The phalangia lay their eggs
|
|
in a sort of strong basket which they have woven, and brood over it
|
|
until the eggs are hatched. The smooth spider is much less prolific
|
|
than the phalangium or hairy spider. These phalangia, when they grow
|
|
to full size, very often envelop the mother phalangium and eject and
|
|
kill her; and not seldom they kill the father-phalangium as well, if
|
|
they catch him: for, by the way, he has the habit of co-operating with
|
|
the mother in the hatching. The brood of a single phalangium is
|
|
sometimes three hundred in number. The spider attains its full
|
|
growth in about four weeks.
|
|
|
|
28
|
|
|
|
Grasshoppers (or locusts) copulate in the same way as other
|
|
insects; that is to say, with the lesser covering the larger, for
|
|
the male is smaller than the female. The females first insert the
|
|
hollow tube, which they have at their tails, in the ground, and then
|
|
lay their eggs: and the male, by the way, is not furnished with this
|
|
tube. The females lay their eggs all in a lump together, and in one
|
|
spot, so that the entire lump of eggs resembles a honeycomb. After
|
|
they have laid their eggs, the eggs assume the shape of oval grubs
|
|
that are enveloped by a sort of thin clay, like a membrane; in this
|
|
membrane-like formation they grow on to maturity. The larva is so soft
|
|
that it collapses at a touch. The larva is not placed on the surface
|
|
of the ground, but a little beneath the surface; and, when it
|
|
reaches maturity, it comes out of its clayey investiture in the
|
|
shape of a little black grasshopper; by and by, the skin integument
|
|
strips off, and it grows larger and larger.
|
|
|
|
The grasshopper lays its eggs at the close of summer, and dies
|
|
after laying them. The fact is that, at the time of laying the eggs,
|
|
grubs are engendered in the region of the mother grasshopper's neck;
|
|
and the male grasshoppers die about the same time. In spring-time they
|
|
come out of the ground; and, by the way, no grasshoppers are found
|
|
in mountainous land or in poor land, but only in flat and loamy
|
|
land, for the fact is they lay their eggs in cracks of the soil.
|
|
During the winter their eggs remain in the ground; and with the coming
|
|
of summer the last year's larva develops into the perfect grasshopper.
|
|
|
|
29
|
|
|
|
The attelabi or locusts lay their eggs and die in like manner
|
|
after laying them. Their eggs are subject to destruction by the autumn
|
|
rains, when the rains are unusually heavy; but in seasons of drought
|
|
the locusts are exceedingly numerous, from the absence of any
|
|
destructive cause, since their destruction seems then to be a matter
|
|
of accident and to depend on luck.
|
|
|
|
30
|
|
|
|
Of the cicada there are two kinds; one, small in size, the first
|
|
to come and the last to disappear; the other, large, the singing one
|
|
that comes last and first disappears. Both in the small and the
|
|
large species some are divided at the waist, to wit, the singing ones,
|
|
and some are undivided; and these latter have no song. The large and
|
|
singing cicada is by some designated the 'chirper', and the small
|
|
cicada the 'tettigonium' or cicadelle. And, by the way, such of the
|
|
tettigonia as are divided at the waist can sing just a little.
|
|
|
|
The cicada is not found where there are no trees; and this
|
|
accounts for the fact that in the district surrounding the city of
|
|
Cyrene it is not found at all in the plain country, but is found in
|
|
great numbers in the neighbourhood of the city, and especially where
|
|
olive-trees are growing: for an olive grove is not thickly shaded. And
|
|
the cicada is not found in cold places, and consequently is not
|
|
found in any grove that keeps out the sunlight.
|
|
|
|
The large and the small cicada copulate alike, belly to belly. The
|
|
male discharges sperm into the female, as is the case with insects
|
|
in general, and the female cicada has a cleft generative organ; and it
|
|
is the female into which the male discharges the sperm.
|
|
|
|
They lay their eggs in fallow lands, boring a hole with the
|
|
pointed organ they carry in the rear, as do the locusts likewise;
|
|
for the locust lays its eggs in untilled lands, and this fact may
|
|
account for their numbers in the territory adjacent to the city of
|
|
Cyrene. The cicadae also lay their eggs in the canes on which
|
|
husbandmen prop vines, perforating the canes; and also in the stalks
|
|
of the squill. This brood runs into the ground. And they are most
|
|
numerous in rainy weather. The grub, on attaining full size in the
|
|
ground, becomes a tettigometra (or nymph), and the creature is
|
|
sweetest to the taste at this stage before the husk is broken. When
|
|
the summer solstice comes, the creature issues from the husk at
|
|
night-time, and in a moment, as the husk breaks, the larva becomes the
|
|
perfect cicada. creature, also, at once turns black in colour and
|
|
harder and larger, and takes to singing. In both species, the larger
|
|
and the smaller, it is the male that sings, and the female that is
|
|
unvocal. At first, the males are the sweeter eating; but, after
|
|
copulation, the females, as they are full then of white eggs.
|
|
|
|
If you make a sudden noise as they are flying overhead they let
|
|
drop something like water. Country people, in regard to this, say that
|
|
they are voiding urine, ie. that they have an excrement, and that they
|
|
feed upon dew.
|
|
|
|
If you present your finger to a cicada and bend back the tip
|
|
of it and then extend it again, it will endure the presentation more
|
|
quietly than if you were to keep your finger outstretched
|
|
altogether; and it will set to climbing your finger: for the
|
|
creature is so weak-sighted that it will take to climbing your
|
|
finger as though that were a moving leaf.
|
|
|
|
31
|
|
|
|
Of insects that are not carnivorous but that live on the juices of
|
|
living flesh, such as lice and fleas and bugs, all, without exception,
|
|
generate what are called 'nits', and these nits generate nothing.
|
|
|
|
Of these insects the flea is generated out of the slightest amount
|
|
of putrefying matter; for wherever there is any dry excrement, a
|
|
flea is sure to be found. Bugs are generated from the moisture of
|
|
living animals, as it dries up outside their bodies. Lice are
|
|
generated out of the flesh of animals.
|
|
|
|
When lice are coming there is a kind of small eruption
|
|
visible, unaccompanied by any discharge of purulent matter; and, if
|
|
you prick an animal when in this condition at the spot of eruption,
|
|
the lice jump out. In some men the appearance of lice is a disease, in
|
|
cases where the body is surcharged with moisture; and, indeed, men
|
|
have been known to succumb to this louse-disease, as Alcman the poet
|
|
and the Syrian Pherecydes are said to have done. Moreover, in
|
|
certain diseases lice appear in great abundance.
|
|
|
|
There is also a species of louse called the 'wild louse', and
|
|
this is harder than the ordinary louse, and there is exceptional
|
|
difficulty in getting the skin rid of it. Boys' heads are apt to be
|
|
lousy, but men's in less degree; and women are more subject to lice
|
|
than men. But, whenever people are troubled with lousy heads, they are
|
|
less than ordinarily troubled with headache. And lice are generated in
|
|
other animals than man. For birds are infested with them; and
|
|
pheasants, unless they clean themselves in the dust, are actually
|
|
destroyed by them. All other winged animals that are furnished with
|
|
feathers are similarly infested, and all hair-coated creatures also,
|
|
with the single exception of the ass, which is infested neither with
|
|
lice nor with ticks.
|
|
|
|
Cattle suffer both from lice and from ticks. Sheep and goats breed
|
|
ticks, but do not breed lice. Pigs breed lice large and hard. In
|
|
dogs are found the flea peculiar to the animal, the Cynoroestes. In
|
|
all animals that are subject to lice, the latter originate from the
|
|
animals themselves. Moreover, in animals that bathe at all, lice are
|
|
more than usually abundant when they change the water in which they
|
|
bathe.
|
|
|
|
In the sea, lice are found on fishes, but they are generated not
|
|
out of the fish but out of slime; and they resemble multipedal
|
|
wood-lice, only that their tail is flat. Sea-lice are uniform in shape
|
|
and universal in locality, and are particularly numerous on the body
|
|
of the red mullet. And all these insects are multipedal and devoid
|
|
of blood.
|
|
|
|
The parasite that feeds on the tunny is found in the region of
|
|
the fins; it resembles a scorpion, and is about the size of a
|
|
spider. In the seas between Cyrene and Egypt there is a fish that
|
|
attends on the dolphin, which is called the 'dolphin's louse'. This
|
|
fish gets exceedingly fat from enjoying an abundance of food while the
|
|
dolphin is out in pursuit of its prey.
|
|
|
|
32
|
|
|
|
Other animalcules besides these are generated, as we have
|
|
already remarked, some in wool or in articles made of wool, as the ses
|
|
or clothes-moth. And these animalcules come in greater numbers if
|
|
the woollen substances are dusty; and they come in especially large
|
|
numbers if a spider be shut up in the cloth or wool, for the
|
|
creature drinks up any moisture that may be there, and dries up the
|
|
woollen substance. This grub is found also in men's clothes.
|
|
|
|
A creature is also found in wax long laid by, just as in wood,
|
|
and it is the smallest of animalcules and is white in colour, and is
|
|
designated the acari or mite. In books also other animalcules are
|
|
found, some resembling the grubs found in garments, and some
|
|
resembling tailless scorpions, but very small. As a general rule we
|
|
may state that such animalcules are found in practically anything,
|
|
both in dry things that are becoming moist and in moist things that
|
|
are drying, provided they contain the conditions of life.
|
|
|
|
There is a grub entitled the 'faggot-bearer', as strange a
|
|
creature as is known. Its head projects outside its shell, mottled
|
|
in colour, and its feet are near the end or apex, as is the case
|
|
with grubs in general; but the rest of its body is cased in a tunic as
|
|
it were of spider's web, and there are little dry twigs about it, that
|
|
look as though they had stuck by accident to the creature as it went
|
|
walking about. But these twig-like formations are naturally
|
|
connected with the tunic, for just as the shell is with the body of
|
|
the snail so is the whole superstructure with our grub; and they do
|
|
not drop off, but can only be torn off, as though they were all of a
|
|
piece with him, and the removal of the tunic is as fatal to this
|
|
grub as the removal of the shell would be to the snail. In course of
|
|
time this grub becomes a chrysalis, as is the case with the
|
|
silkworm, and lives in a motionless condition. But as yet it is not
|
|
known into what winged condition it is transformed.
|
|
|
|
The fruit of the wild fig contains the psen, or fig-wasp. This
|
|
creature is a grub at first; but in due time the husk peels off and
|
|
the psen leaves the husk behind it and flies away, and enters into the
|
|
fruit of the fig-tree through its orifice, and causes the fruit not to
|
|
drop off; and with a view to this phenomenon, country folk are in
|
|
the habit of tying wild figs on to fig-trees, and of planting wild
|
|
fig-trees near domesticated ones.
|
|
|
|
33
|
|
|
|
In the case of animals that are quadrupeds and red-blooded and
|
|
oviparous, generation takes place in the spring, but copulation does
|
|
not take place in an uniform season. In some cases it takes place in
|
|
the spring, in others in summer time, and in others in the autumn,
|
|
according as the subsequent season may be favourable for the young.
|
|
|
|
The tortoise lays eggs with a hard shell and of two colours
|
|
within, like birds' eggs, and after laying them buries them in the
|
|
ground and treads the ground hard over them; it then broods over the
|
|
eggs on the surface of the ground, and hatches the eggs the next year.
|
|
The hemys, or fresh-water tortoise, leaves the water and lays its
|
|
eggs. It digs a hole of a casklike shape, and deposits therein the
|
|
eggs; after rather less than thirty days it digs the eggs up again and
|
|
hatches them with great rapidity, and leads its young at once off to
|
|
the water. The sea-turtle lays on the ground eggs just like the eggs
|
|
of domesticated birds, buries the eggs in the ground, and broods
|
|
over them in the night-time. It lays a very great number of eggs,
|
|
amounting at times to one hundred.
|
|
|
|
Lizards and crocodiles, terrestrial and fluvial, lay eggs on land.
|
|
The eggs of lizards hatch spontaneously on land, for the lizard does
|
|
not live on into the next year; in fact, the life of the animal is
|
|
said not to exceed six months. The river-crocodile lays a number of
|
|
eggs, sixty at the most, white in colour, and broods over them for
|
|
sixty days: for, by the way, the creature is very long-lived. And
|
|
the disproportion is more marked in this animal than in any other
|
|
between the smallness of the original egg and the huge size of the
|
|
full-grown animal. For the egg is not larger than that of the goose,
|
|
and the young crocodile is small, answering to the egg in size, but
|
|
the full-grown animal attains the length of twenty-six feet; in
|
|
fact, it is actually stated that the animal goes on growing to the end
|
|
of its days.
|
|
|
|
34
|
|
|
|
With regard to serpents or snakes, the viper is externally
|
|
viviparous, having been previously oviparous internally. The egg, as
|
|
with the egg of fishes, is uniform in colour and soft-skinned. The
|
|
young serpent grows on the surface of the egg, and, like the young
|
|
of fishes, has no shell-like envelopment. The young of the viper is
|
|
born inside a membrane that bursts from off the young creature in
|
|
three days; and at times the young viper eats its way out from the
|
|
inside of the egg. The mother viper brings forth all its young in
|
|
one day, twenty in number, and one at a time. The other serpents are
|
|
externally oviparous, and their eggs are strung on to one another like
|
|
a lady's necklace; after the dam has laid her eggs in the ground she
|
|
broods over them, and hatches the eggs in the following year.
|
|
|
|
Book VI
|
|
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
So much for the generative processes in snakes and insects, and
|
|
also in oviparous quadrupeds. Birds without exception lay eggs, but
|
|
the pairing season and the times of parturition are not alike for all.
|
|
Some birds couple and lay at almost any time in the year, as for
|
|
instance the barn-door hen and the pigeon: the former of these
|
|
coupling and laying during the entire year, with the exception of
|
|
the month before and the month after the winter solstice. Some hens,
|
|
even in the high breeds, lay a large quantity of eggs before brooding,
|
|
amounting to as many as sixty; and, by the way, the higher breeds
|
|
are less prolific than the inferior ones. The Adrian hens are
|
|
small-sized, but they lay every day; they are cross-tempered, and
|
|
often kill their chickens; they are of all colours. Some
|
|
domesticated hens lay twice a day; indeed, instances have been known
|
|
where hens, after exhibiting extreme fecundity, have died suddenly.
|
|
Hens, then, lay eggs, as has been stated, at all times
|
|
indiscriminately; the pigeon, the ring-dove, the turtle-dove, and
|
|
the stock-dove lay twice a year, and the pigeon actually lays ten
|
|
times a year. The great majority of birds lay during the
|
|
spring-time. Some birds are prolific, and prolific in either of two
|
|
ways-either by laying often, as the pigeon, or by laying many eggs
|
|
at a sitting, as the barn-door hen. All birds of prey, or birds with
|
|
crooked talons, are unprolific, except the kestrel: this bird is the
|
|
most prolific of birds of prey; as many as four eggs have been
|
|
observed in the nest, and occasionally it lays even more.
|
|
|
|
Birds in general lay their eggs in nests, but such as are
|
|
disqualified for flight, as the partridge and the quail, do not lay
|
|
them in nests but on the ground, and cover them over with loose
|
|
material. The same is the case with the lark and the tetrix. These
|
|
birds hatch in sheltered places; but the bird called merops in
|
|
Boeotia, alone of all birds, burrows into holes in the ground and
|
|
hatches there.
|
|
|
|
Thrushes, like swallows, build nests of clay, on high trees, and
|
|
build them in rows all close together, so that from their continuity
|
|
the structure resembles a necklace of nests. Of all birds that hatch
|
|
for themselves the hoopoe is the only one that builds no nest
|
|
whatever; it gets into the hollow of the trunk of a tree, and lays its
|
|
eggs there without making any sort of nest. The circus builds either
|
|
under a dwelling-roof or on cliffs. The tetrix, called ourax in
|
|
Athens, builds neither on the ground nor on trees, but on low-lying
|
|
shrubs.
|
|
|
|
2
|
|
|
|
The egg in the case of all birds alike is hard-shelled, if it be
|
|
the produce of copulation and be laid by a healthy hen-for some hens
|
|
lay soft eggs. The interior of the egg is of two colours, and the
|
|
white part is outside and the yellow part within.
|
|
|
|
The eggs of birds that frequent rivers and marshes differ from
|
|
those of birds that live on dry land; that is to say, the eggs of
|
|
waterbirds have comparatively more of the yellow or yolk and less of
|
|
the white. Eggs vary in colour according to their kind. Some eggs
|
|
are white, as those of the pigeon and of the partridge; others are
|
|
yellowish, as the eggs of marsh birds; in some cases the eggs are
|
|
mottled, as the eggs of the guinea-fowl and the pheasant; while the
|
|
eggs of the kestrel are red, like vermilion.
|
|
|
|
Eggs are not symmetrically shaped at both ends: in other
|
|
words, one end is comparatively sharp, and the other end is
|
|
comparatively blunt; and it is the latter end that protrudes first
|
|
at the time of laying. Long and pointed eggs are female; those that
|
|
are round, or more rounded at the narrow end, are male. Eggs are
|
|
hatched by the incubation of the mother-bird. In some cases, as in
|
|
Egypt, they are hatched spontaneously in the ground, by being buried
|
|
in dung heaps. A story is told of a toper in Syracuse, how he used
|
|
to put eggs into the ground under his rush-mat and to keep on drinking
|
|
until he hatched them. Instances have occurred of eggs being deposited
|
|
in warm vessels and getting hatched spontaneously.
|
|
|
|
The sperm of birds, as of animals in general, is white. After
|
|
the female has submitted to the male, she draws up the sperm to
|
|
underneath her midriff. At first it is little in size and white in
|
|
colour; by and by it is red, the colour of blood; as it grows, it
|
|
becomes pale and yellow all over. When at length it is getting ripe
|
|
for hatching, it is subject to differentiation of substance, and the
|
|
yolk gathers together within and the white settles round it on the
|
|
outside. When the full time is come, the egg detaches itself and
|
|
protrudes, changing from soft to hard with such temporal exactitude
|
|
that, whereas it is not hard during the process of protrusion, it
|
|
hardens immediately after the process is completed: that is if there
|
|
be no concomitant pathological circumstances. Cases have occurred
|
|
where substances resembling the egg at a critical point of its
|
|
growth-that is, when it is yellow all over, as the yolk is
|
|
subsequently-have been found in the cock when cut open, underneath his
|
|
midriff, just where the hen has her eggs; and these are entirely
|
|
yellow in appearance and of the same size as ordinary eggs. Such
|
|
phenomena are regarded as unnatural and portentous.
|
|
|
|
Such as affirm that wind-eggs are the residua of eggs previously
|
|
begotten from copulation are mistaken in this assertion, for we have
|
|
cases well authenticated where chickens of the common hen and goose
|
|
have laid wind-eggs without ever having been subjected to
|
|
copulation. Wind-eggs are smaller, less palatable, and more liquid
|
|
than true eggs, and are produced in greater numbers. When they are put
|
|
under the mother bird, the liquid contents never coagulate, but both
|
|
the yellow and the white remain as they were. Wind-eggs are laid by
|
|
a number of birds: as for instance by the common hen, the hen
|
|
partridge, the hen pigeon, the peahen, the goose, and the vulpanser.
|
|
Eggs are hatched under brooding hens more rapidly in summer than in
|
|
winter; that is to say, hens hatch in eighteen days in summer, but
|
|
occasionally in winter take as many as twenty-five. And by the way for
|
|
brooding purposes some birds make better mothers than others. If it
|
|
thunders while a hen-bird is brooding, the eggs get addled.
|
|
Wind-eggs that are called by some cynosura and uria are produced
|
|
chiefly in summer. Wind-eggs are called by some zephyr-eggs, because
|
|
at spring-time hen-birds are observed to inhale the breezes; they do
|
|
the same if they be stroked in a peculiar way by hand. Wind-eggs can
|
|
turn into fertile eggs, and eggs due to previous copulation can change
|
|
breed, if before the change of the yellow to the white the hen that
|
|
contains wind-eggs, or eggs begotten of copulation be trodden by
|
|
another cock-bird. Under these circumstances the wind-eggs turn into
|
|
fertile eggs, and the previously impregnated eggs follow the breed
|
|
of the impregnator; but if the latter impregnation takes place
|
|
during the change of the yellow to the white, then no change in the
|
|
egg takes place: the wind-egg does not become a true egg, and the true
|
|
egg does not take on the breed of the latter impregnator. If when
|
|
the egg-substance is small copulation be intermitted, the previously
|
|
existing egg-substance exhibits no increase; but if the hen be again
|
|
submitted to the male the increase in size proceeds with rapidity.
|
|
|
|
The yolk and the white are diverse not only in colour but also
|
|
in properties. Thus, the yolk congeals under the influence of cold,
|
|
whereas the white instead of congealing is inclined rather to liquefy.
|
|
Again, the white stiffens under the influence of fire, whereas the
|
|
yolk does not stiffen; but, unless it be burnt through and through, it
|
|
remains soft, and in point of fact is inclined to set or to harden
|
|
more from the boiling than from the roasting of the egg. The yolk
|
|
and the white are separated by a membrane from one another. The
|
|
so-called 'hail-stones', or treadles, that are found at the
|
|
extremity of the yellow in no way contribute towards generation, as
|
|
some erroneously suppose: they are two in number, one below and the
|
|
other above. If you take out of the shells a number of yolks and a
|
|
number of whites and pour them into a sauce pan and boil them slowly
|
|
over a low fire, the yolks will gather into the centre and the
|
|
whites will set all around them.
|
|
|
|
Young hens are the first to lay, and they do so at the beginning
|
|
of spring and lay more eggs than the older hens, but the eggs of the
|
|
younger hens are comparatively small. As a general rule, if hens get
|
|
no brooding they pine and sicken. After copulation hens shiver and
|
|
shake themselves, and often kick rubbish about all round them-and
|
|
this, by the way, they do sometimes after laying-whereas pigeons trail
|
|
their rumps on the ground, and geese dive under the water.
|
|
Conception of the true egg and conformation of the wind-egg take place
|
|
rapidly with most birds; as for instance with the hen-partridge when
|
|
in heat. The fact is that, when she stands to windward and within
|
|
scent of the male, she conceives, and becomes useless for decoy
|
|
purposes: for, by the way, the partridge appears to have a very
|
|
acute sense of smell.
|
|
|
|
The generation of the egg after copulation and the generation of
|
|
the chick from the subsequent hatching of the egg are not brought
|
|
about within equal periods for all birds, but differ as to time
|
|
according to the size of the parent-birds. The egg of the common hen
|
|
after copulation sets and matures in ten days a general rule; the
|
|
egg of the pigeon in a somewhat lesser period. Pigeons have the
|
|
faculty of holding back the egg at the very moment of parturition;
|
|
if a hen pigeon be put about by any one, for instance if it be
|
|
disturbed on its nest, or have a feather plucked out, or sustain any
|
|
other annoyance or disturbance, then even though she had made up her
|
|
mind to lay she can keep the egg back in abeyance. A singular
|
|
phenomenon is observed in pigeons with regard to pairing: that is,
|
|
they kiss one another just when the male is on the point of mounting
|
|
the female, and without this preliminary the male would decline to
|
|
perform his function. With the older males the preliminary kiss is
|
|
only given to begin with, and subsequently sequently he mounts without
|
|
previously kissing; with younger males the preliminary is never
|
|
omitted. Another singularity in these birds is that the hens tread one
|
|
another when a cock is not forthcoming, after kissing one another just
|
|
as takes place in the normal pairing. Though they do not impregnate
|
|
one another they lay more eggs under these than under ordinary
|
|
circumstances; no chicks, however, result therefrom, but all such eggs
|
|
are wind-eggs.
|
|
|
|
3
|
|
|
|
Generation from the egg proceeds in an identical manner with all
|
|
birds, but the full periods from conception to birth differ, as has
|
|
been said. With the common hen after three days and three nights there
|
|
is the first indication of the embryo; with larger birds the
|
|
interval being longer, with smaller birds shorter. Meanwhile the
|
|
yolk comes into being, rising towards the sharp end, where the
|
|
primal element of the egg is situated, and where the egg gets hatched;
|
|
and the heart appears, like a speck of blood, in the white of the egg.
|
|
This point beats and moves as though endowed with life, and from it
|
|
two vein-ducts with blood in them trend in a convoluted course (as the
|
|
egg substance goes on growing, towards each of the two circumjacent
|
|
integuments); and a membrane carrying bloody fibres now envelops the
|
|
yolk, leading off from the vein-ducts. A little afterwards the body is
|
|
differentiated, at first very small and white. The head is clearly
|
|
distinguished, and in it the eyes, swollen out to a great extent. This
|
|
condition of the eyes lat on for a good while, as it is only by
|
|
degrees that they diminish in size and collapse. At the outset the
|
|
under portion of the body appears insignificant in comparison with the
|
|
upper portion. Of the two ducts that lead from the heart, the one
|
|
proceeds towards the circumjacent integument, and the other, like a
|
|
navel-string, towards the yolk. The life-element of the chick is in
|
|
the white of the egg, and the nutriment comes through the navel-string
|
|
out of the yolk.
|
|
|
|
When the egg is now ten days old the chick and all its parts are
|
|
distinctly visible. The head is still larger than the rest of its
|
|
body, and the eyes larger than the head, but still devoid of vision.
|
|
The eyes, if removed about this time, are found to be larger than
|
|
beans, and black; if the cuticle be peeled off them there is a white
|
|
and cold liquid inside, quite glittering in the sunlight, but there is
|
|
no hard substance whatsoever. Such is the condition of the head and
|
|
eyes. At this time also the larger internal organs are visible, as
|
|
also the stomach and the arrangement of the viscera; and veins that
|
|
seem to proceed from the heart are now close to the navel. From the
|
|
navel there stretch a pair of veins; one towards the membrane that
|
|
envelops the yolk (and, by the way, the yolk is now liquid, or more so
|
|
than is normal), and the other towards that membrane which envelops
|
|
collectively the membrane wherein the chick lies, the membrane of
|
|
the yolk, and the intervening liquid. (For, as the chick grows, little
|
|
by little one part of the yolk goes upward, and another part downward,
|
|
and the white liquid is between them; and the white of the egg is
|
|
underneath the lower part of the yolk, as it was at the outset.) On
|
|
the tenth day the white is at the extreme outer surface, reduced in
|
|
amount, glutinous, firm in substance, and sallow in colour.
|
|
|
|
The disposition of the several constituent parts is as
|
|
follows. First and outermost comes the membrane of the egg, not that
|
|
of the shell, but underneath it. Inside this membrane is a white
|
|
liquid; then comes the chick, and a membrane round about it,
|
|
separating it off so as to keep the chick free from the liquid; next
|
|
after the chick comes the yolk, into which one of the two veins was
|
|
described as leading, the other one leading into the enveloping
|
|
white substance. (A membrane with a liquid resembling serum envelops
|
|
the entire structure. Then comes another membrane right round the
|
|
embryo, as has been described, separating it off against the liquid.
|
|
Underneath this comes the yolk, enveloped in another membrane (into
|
|
which yolk proceeds the navel-string that leads from the heart and the
|
|
big vein), so as to keep the embryo free of both liquids.)
|
|
|
|
About the twentieth day, if you open the egg and touch the
|
|
chick, it moves inside and chirps; and it is already coming to be
|
|
covered with down, when, after the twentieth day is ast, the chick
|
|
begins to break the shell. The head is situated over the right leg
|
|
close to the flank, and the wing is placed over the head; and about
|
|
this time is plain to be seen the membrane resembling an after-birth
|
|
that comes next after the outermost membrane of the shell, into
|
|
which membrane the one of the navel-strings was described as leading
|
|
(and, by the way, the chick in its entirety is now within it), and
|
|
so also is the other membrane resembling an after-birth, namely that
|
|
surrounding the yolk, into which the second navel-string was described
|
|
as leading; and both of them were described as being connected with
|
|
the heart and the big vein. At this conjuncture the navel-string
|
|
that leads to the outer afterbirth collapses and becomes detached from
|
|
the chick, and the membrane that leads into the yolk is fastened on to
|
|
the thin gut of the creature, and by this time a considerable amount
|
|
of the yolk is inside the chick and a yellow sediment is in its
|
|
stomach. About this time it discharges residuum in the direction of
|
|
the outer after-birth, and has residuum inside its stomach; and the
|
|
outer residuum is white (and there comes a white substance inside). By
|
|
and by the yolk, diminishing gradually in size, at length becomes
|
|
entirely used up and comprehended within the chick (so that, ten
|
|
days after hatching, if you cut open the chick, a small remnant of the
|
|
yolk is still left in connexion with the gut), but it is detached from
|
|
the navel, and there is nothing in the interval between, but it has
|
|
been used up entirely. During the period above referred to the chick
|
|
sleeps, wakes up, makes a move and looks up and Chirps; and the
|
|
heart and the navel together palpitate as though the creature were
|
|
respiring. So much as to generation from the egg in the case of birds.
|
|
|
|
Birds lay some eggs that are unfruitful, even eggs that are
|
|
the result of copulation, and no life comes from such eggs by
|
|
incubation; and this phenomenon is observed especially with pigeons.
|
|
|
|
Twin eggs have two yolks. In some twin eggs a thin partition
|
|
of white intervenes to prevent the yolks mixing with each other, but
|
|
some twin eggs are unprovided with such partition, and the yokes run
|
|
into one another. There are some hens that lay nothing but twin
|
|
eggs, and in their case the phenomenon regarding the yolks has been
|
|
observed. For instance, a hen has been known to lay eighteen eggs, and
|
|
to hatch twins out of them all, except those that were wind-eggs;
|
|
the rest were fertile (though, by the way, one of the twins is
|
|
always bigger than the other), but the eighteenth was abnormal or
|
|
monstrous.
|
|
|
|
4
|
|
|
|
Birds of the pigeon kind, such as the ringdove and the
|
|
turtle-dove, lay two eggs at a time; that is to say, they do so as a
|
|
general rule, and they never lay more than three. The pigeon, as has
|
|
been said, lays at all seasons; the ring-dove and the turtle-dove
|
|
lay in the springtime, and they never lay more than twice in the
|
|
same season. The hen-bird lays the second pair of eggs when the
|
|
first pair happens to have been destroyed, for many of the hen-pigeons
|
|
destroy the first brood. The hen-pigeon, as has been said,
|
|
occasionally lays three eggs, but it never rears more than two chicks,
|
|
and sometimes rears only one; and the odd one is always a wind-egg.
|
|
|
|
Very few birds propagate within their first year. All birds,
|
|
after once they have begun laying, keep on having eggs, though in
|
|
the case of some birds it is difficult to detect the fact from the
|
|
minute size of the creature.
|
|
|
|
The pigeon, as a rule, lays a male and a female egg, and generally
|
|
lays the male egg first; after laying it allows a day's interval to
|
|
ensue and then lays the second egg. The male takes its turn of sitting
|
|
during the daytime; the female sits during the night. The first-laid
|
|
egg is hatched and brought to birth within twenty days; and the mother
|
|
bird pecks a hole in the egg the day before she hatches it out. The
|
|
two parent birds brood for some time over the chicks in the way in
|
|
which they brooded previously over the eggs. In all connected with the
|
|
rearing of the young the female parent is more cross-tempered than the
|
|
male, as is the case with most animals after parturition. The hens lay
|
|
as many as ten times in the year; occasional instances have been known
|
|
of their laying eleven times, and in Egypt they actually lay twelve
|
|
times. The pigeon, male and female, couples within the year; in
|
|
fact, it couples when only six months old. Some assert that
|
|
ringdoves and turtle-doves pair and procreate when only three months
|
|
old, and instance their superabundant numbers by way of proof of the
|
|
assertion. The hen-pigeon carries her eggs fourteen days; for as
|
|
many more days the parent birds hatch the eggs; by the end of
|
|
another fourteen days the chicks are so far capable of flight as to be
|
|
overtaken with difficulty. (The ring-dove, according to all
|
|
accounts, lives up to forty years. The partridge lives over
|
|
sixteen.) (After one brood the pigeon is ready for another within
|
|
thirty days.)
|
|
|
|
5
|
|
|
|
The vulture builds its nest on inaccessible cliffs; for which
|
|
reason its nest and young are rarely seen. And therefore Herodorus,
|
|
father of Bryson the Sophist, declares that vultures belong to some
|
|
foreign country unknown to us, stating as a proof of the assertion
|
|
that no one has ever seen a vulture's nest, and also that vultures
|
|
in great numbers make a sudden appearance in the rear of armies.
|
|
However, difficult as it is to get a sight of it, a vulture's nest has
|
|
been seen. The vulture lays two eggs.
|
|
|
|
(Carnivorous birds in general are observed to lay but once a
|
|
year. The swallow is the only carnivorous bird that builds a nest
|
|
twice. If you prick out the eyes of swallow chicks while they are
|
|
yet young, the birds will get well again and will see by and by.)
|
|
|
|
6
|
|
|
|
The eagle lays three eggs and hatches two of them, as it is said
|
|
in the verses ascribed to Musaeus:
|
|
|
|
That lays three, hatches two, and cares for one.
|
|
|
|
This is the case in most instances, though occasionally a brood of
|
|
three has been observed. As the young ones grow, the mother becomes
|
|
wearied with feeding them and extrudes one of the pair from the
|
|
nest. At the same time the bird is said to abstain from food, to avoid
|
|
harrying the young of wild animals. That is to say, its wings blanch,
|
|
and for some days its talons get turned awry. It is in consequence
|
|
about this time cross-tempered to its own young. The phene is said
|
|
to rear the young one that has been expelled the nest. The eagle
|
|
broods for about thirty days.
|
|
|
|
The hatching period is about the same for the larger birds, such
|
|
as the goose and the great bustard; for the middle-sized birds it
|
|
extends over about twenty days, as in the case of the kite and the
|
|
hawk. The kite in general lays two eggs, but occasionally rears
|
|
three young ones. The so-called aegolius at times rears four. It is
|
|
not true that, as some aver, the raven lays only two eggs; it lays a
|
|
larger number. It broods for about twenty days and then extrudes its
|
|
young. Other birds perform the same operation; at all events mother
|
|
birds that lay several eggs often extrude one of their young.
|
|
|
|
Birds of the eagle species are not alike in the treatment of their
|
|
young. The white-tailed eagle is cross, the black eagle is
|
|
affectionate in the feeding of the young; though, by the way, all
|
|
birds of prey, when their brood is rather forward in being able to
|
|
fly, beat and extrude them from the nest. The majority of birds
|
|
other than birds of prey, as has been said, also act in this manner,
|
|
and after feeding their young take no further care of them; but the
|
|
crow is an exception. This bird for a considerable time takes charge
|
|
of her young; for, even when her young can fly, she flies alongside of
|
|
them and supplies them with food.
|
|
|
|
7
|
|
|
|
The cuckoo is said by some to be a hawk transformed, because at
|
|
the time of the cuckoo's coming, the hawk, which it resembles, is
|
|
never seen; and indeed it is only for a few days that you will see
|
|
hawks about when the cuckoo's note sounds early in the season. The
|
|
cuckoo appears only for a short time in summer, and in winter
|
|
disappears. The hawk has crooked talons, which the cuckoo has not;
|
|
neither with regard to the head does the cuckoo resemble the hawk.
|
|
In point of fact, both as regards the head and the claws it more
|
|
resembles the pigeon. However, in colour and in colour alone it does
|
|
resemble the hawk, only that the markings of the hawk are striped, and
|
|
of the cuckoo mottled. And, by the way, in size and flight it
|
|
resembles the smallest of the hawk tribe, which bird disappears as a
|
|
rule about the time of the appearance of the cuckoo, though the two
|
|
have been seen simultaneously. The cuckoo has been seen to be preyed
|
|
on by the hawk; and this never happens between birds of the same
|
|
species. They say no one has ever seen the young of the cuckoo. The
|
|
bird eggs, but does not build a nest. Sometimes it lays its eggs in
|
|
the nest of a smaller bird after first devouring the eggs of this
|
|
bird; it lays by preference in the nest of the ringdove, after first
|
|
devouring the eggs of the pigeon. (It occasionally lays two, but
|
|
usually one.) It lays also in the nest of the hypolais, and the
|
|
hypolais hatches and rears the brood. It is about this time that the
|
|
bird becomes fat and palatable. (The young of hawks also get palatable
|
|
and fat. One species builds a nest in the wilderness and on sheer
|
|
and inaccessible cliffs.)
|
|
|
|
8
|
|
|
|
With most birds, as has been said of the pigeon, the hatching is
|
|
carried on by the male and the female in turns: with some birds,
|
|
however, the male only sits long enough to allow the female to provide
|
|
herself with food. In the goose tribe the female alone incubates,
|
|
and after once sitting on the eggs she continues brooding until they
|
|
are hatched.
|
|
|
|
The nests of all marsh-birds are built in districts fenny and well
|
|
supplied with grass; consequently, the mother-bird while sitting quiet
|
|
on her eggs can provide herself with food without having to submit
|
|
to absolute fasting.
|
|
|
|
With the crow also the female alone broods, and broods
|
|
throughout the whole period; the male bird supports the female,
|
|
bringing her food and feeding her. The female of the ring-dove
|
|
begins to brood in the afternoon and broods through the entire night
|
|
until breakfast-time of the following day; the male broods during
|
|
the rest of the time. Partridges build a nest in two compartments; the
|
|
male broods on the one and the female on the other. After hatching,
|
|
each of the parent birds rears its brood. But the male, when he
|
|
first takes his young out of the nest, treads them.
|
|
|
|
9
|
|
|
|
Peafowl live for about twenty-five years, breed about the third
|
|
year, and at the same time take on their spangled plumage. They
|
|
hatch their eggs within thirty days or rather more. The peahen lays
|
|
but once a year, and lays twelve eggs, or may be a slightly lesser
|
|
number: she does not lay all the eggs there and then one after the
|
|
other, but at intervals of two or three days. Such as lay for the
|
|
first time lay about eight eggs. The peahen lays wind-eggs. They
|
|
pair in the spring; and laying begins immediately after pairing. The
|
|
bird moults when the earliest trees are shedding their leaves, and
|
|
recovers its plumage when the same trees are recovering their foliage.
|
|
People that rear peafowl put the eggs under the barn-door hen, owing
|
|
to the fact that when the peahen is brooding over them the peacock
|
|
attacks her and tries to trample on them; owing to this circumstance
|
|
some birds of wild varieties run away from the males and lay their
|
|
eggs and brood in solitude. Only two eggs are put under a barn-door
|
|
hen, for she could not brood over and hatch a large number. They
|
|
take every precaution, by supplying her with food, to prevent her
|
|
going off the eggs and discontinuing the brooding.
|
|
|
|
With male birds about pairing time the testicles are obviously
|
|
larger than at other times, and this is conspicuously the case with
|
|
the more salacious birds, such as the barn-door cock and the cock
|
|
partridge; the peculiarity is less conspicuous in such birds as are
|
|
intermittent in regard to pairing.
|
|
|
|
10
|
|
|
|
So much for the conception and generation of birds.
|
|
|
|
It has been previously stated that fishes are not all oviparous.
|
|
Fishes of the cartilaginous genus are viviparous; the rest are
|
|
oviparous. And cartilaginous fishes are first oviparous internally and
|
|
subsequently viviparous; they rear the embryos internally, the
|
|
batrachus or fishing-frog being an exception.
|
|
|
|
Fishes also, as was above stated, are provided with wombs, and
|
|
wombs of diverse kinds. The oviparous genera have wombs bifurcate in
|
|
shape and low down in position; the cartilaginous genus have wombs
|
|
shaped like those of O birds. The womb, however, in the
|
|
cartilaginous fishes differs in this respect from the womb of birds,
|
|
that with some cartilaginous fishes the eggs do not settle close to
|
|
the diaphragm but middle-ways along the backbone, and as they grow
|
|
they shift their position.
|
|
|
|
The egg with all fishes is not of two colours within but is of
|
|
even hue; and the colour is nearer to white than to yellow, and that
|
|
both when the young is inside it and previously as well.
|
|
|
|
Development from the egg in fishes differs from that in birds in
|
|
this respect, that it does not exhibit that one of the two
|
|
navel-strings that leads off to the membrane that lies close under the
|
|
shell, while it does exhibit that one of the two that in the case of
|
|
birds leads off to the yolk. In a general way the rest of the
|
|
development from the egg onwards is identical in birds and fishes.
|
|
That is to say, development takes place at the upper part of the
|
|
egg, and the veins extend in like manner, at first from the heart; and
|
|
at first the head, the eyes, and the upper parts are largest; and as
|
|
the creature grows the egg-substance decreases and eventually
|
|
disappears, and becomes absorbed within the embryo, just as takes
|
|
place with the yolk in birds.
|
|
|
|
The navel-string is attached a little way below the aperture
|
|
of the belly. When the creatures are young the navel-string is long,
|
|
but as they grow it diminishes in size; at length it gets small and
|
|
becomes incorporated, as was described in the case of birds. The
|
|
embryo and the egg are enveloped by a common membrane, and just
|
|
under this is another membrane that envelops the embryo by itself; and
|
|
in between the two membranes is a liquid. The food inside the
|
|
stomach of the little fishes resembles that inside the stomach of
|
|
young chicks, and is partly white and partly yellow.
|
|
|
|
As regards the shape of the womb, the reader is referred to my
|
|
treatise on Anatomy. The womb, however, is diverse in diverse
|
|
fishes, as for instance in the sharks as compared one with another
|
|
or as compared with the skate. That is to say, in some sharks the eggs
|
|
adhere in the middle of the womb round about the backbone, as has been
|
|
stated, and this is the case with the dog-fish; as the eggs grow
|
|
they shift their place; and since the womb is bifurcate and adheres to
|
|
the midriff, as in the rest of similar creatures, the eggs pass into
|
|
one or other of the two compartments. This womb and the womb of the
|
|
other sharks exhibit, as you go a little way off from the midriff,
|
|
something resembling white breasts, which never make their
|
|
appearance unless there be conception.
|
|
|
|
Dog-fish and skate have a kind of egg-shell, in the which is
|
|
found an egg-like liquid. The shape of the egg-shell resembles the
|
|
tongue of a bagpipe, and hair-like ducts are attached to the shell.
|
|
With the dog-fish which is called by some the 'dappled shark', the
|
|
young are born when the shell-formation breaks in pieces and falls
|
|
out; with the ray, after it has laid the egg the shell-formation
|
|
breaks up and the young move out. The spiny dog-fish has its close
|
|
to the midriff above the breast like formations; when the egg
|
|
descends, as soon as it gets detached the young is born. The mode of
|
|
generation is the same in the case of the fox-shark.
|
|
|
|
The so-called smooth shark has its eggs in betwixt the wombs
|
|
like the dog-fish; these eggs shift into each of the two horns of
|
|
the womb and descend, and the young develop with the navel-string
|
|
attached to the womb, so that, as the egg-substance gets used up,
|
|
the embryo is sustained to all appearance just as in the case of
|
|
quadrupeds. The navel-string is long and adheres to the under part
|
|
of the womb (each navel-string being attached as it were by a sucker),
|
|
and also to the centre of the embryo in the place where the liver is
|
|
situated. If the embryo be cut open, even though it has the
|
|
egg-substance no longer, the food inside is egg-like in appearance.
|
|
Each embryo, as in the case of quadrupeds, is provided with a
|
|
chorion and separate membranes. When young the embryo has its head
|
|
upwards, but downwards when it gets strong and is completed in form.
|
|
Males are generated on the left-hand side of the womb, and females
|
|
on the right-hand side, and males and females on the same side
|
|
together. If the embryo be cut open, then, as with quadrupeds, such
|
|
internal organs as it is furnished with, as for instance the liver,
|
|
are found to be large and supplied with blood.
|
|
|
|
All cartilaginous fishes have at one and the same time eggs
|
|
above close to the midriff (some larger, some smaller), in
|
|
considerable numbers, and also embryos lower down. And this
|
|
circumstance leads many to suppose that fishes of this species pair
|
|
and bear young every month, inasmuch as they do not produce all
|
|
their young at once, but now and again and over a lengthened period.
|
|
But such eggs as have come down below within the womb are
|
|
simultaneously ripened and completed in growth.
|
|
|
|
Dog-fish in general can extrude and take in again their young,
|
|
as can also the angel-fish and the electric ray-and, by the way, a
|
|
large electric ray has been seen with about eighty embryos inside
|
|
it-but the spiny dogfish is an exception to the rule, being
|
|
prevented by the spine of the young fish from so doing. Of the flat
|
|
cartilaginous fish, the trygon and the ray cannot extrude and take
|
|
in again in consequence of the roughness of the tails of the young.
|
|
The batrachus or fishing-frog also is unable to take in its young
|
|
owing to the size of the head and the prickles; and, by the way, as
|
|
was previously remarked, it is the only one of these fishes that is
|
|
not viviparous.
|
|
|
|
So much for the varieties of the cartilaginous species and for
|
|
their modes of generation from the egg.
|
|
|
|
11
|
|
|
|
At the breeding season the sperm-ducts of the male are filled with
|
|
sperm, so much so that if they be squeezed the sperm flows out
|
|
spontaneously as a white fluid; the ducts are bifurcate, and start
|
|
from the midriff and the great vein. About this period the sperm-ducts
|
|
of the male are quite distinct (from the womb of the female) but at
|
|
any other than the actual breeding time their distinctness is not
|
|
obvious to a non-expert. The fact is that in certain fishes at certain
|
|
times these organs are imperceptible, as was stated regarding the
|
|
testicles of birds.
|
|
|
|
Among other distinctions observed between the thoric ducts and the
|
|
womb-ducts is the circumstance that the thoric ducts are attached to
|
|
the loins, while the womb-ducts move about freely and are attached
|
|
by a thin membrane. The particulars regarding the thoric ducts may
|
|
be studied by a reference to the diagrams in my treatise on Anatomy.
|
|
|
|
Cartilaginous fishes are capable of superfoetation, and their
|
|
period of gestation is six months at the longest. The so-called starry
|
|
dogfish bears young the most frequently; in other words it bears twice
|
|
a month. The breeding season is in the month of Maemacterion. The
|
|
dog-fish as a general rule bear twice in the year, with the
|
|
exception of the little dog-fish, which bears only once a year. Some
|
|
of them bring forth in the springtime. The rhine, or angel-fish, bears
|
|
its first brood in the springtime, and its second in the autumn, about
|
|
the winter setting of the Pleiads; the second brood is the stronger of
|
|
the two. The electric ray brings forth in the late autumn.
|
|
|
|
Cartilaginous fishes come out from the main seas and deep waters
|
|
towards the shore and there bring forth their young, and they do so
|
|
for the sake of warmth and by way of protection for their young.
|
|
|
|
Observations would lead to the general rule that no one
|
|
variety of fish pairs with another variety. The angel-fish, however,
|
|
and the batus or skate appear to pair with one another; for there is a
|
|
fish called the rhinobatus, with the head and front parts of the skate
|
|
and the after parts of the rhine or angel-fish, just as though it were
|
|
made up of both fishes together.
|
|
|
|
Sharks then and their congeners, as the fox-shark and the
|
|
dog-fish, and the flat fishes, such as the electric ray, the ray,
|
|
the smooth skate, and the trygon, are first oviparous and then
|
|
viviparous in the way above mentioned, (as are also the saw-fish and
|
|
the ox-ray.)
|
|
|
|
12
|
|
|
|
The dolphin, the whale, and all the rest of the Cetacea, all, that
|
|
is to say, that are provided with a blow-hole instead of gills, are
|
|
viviparous. That is to say, no one of all these fishes is ever seen to
|
|
be supplied with eggs, but directly with an embryo from whose
|
|
differentiation comes the fish, just as in the case of mankind and the
|
|
viviparous quadrupeds.
|
|
|
|
The dolphin bears one at a time generally, but occasionally two.
|
|
The whale bears one or at the most two, generally two. The porpoise in
|
|
this respect resembles the dolphin, and, by the way, it is in form
|
|
like a little dolphin, and is found in the Euxine; it differs,
|
|
however, from the dolphin as being less in size and broader in the
|
|
back; its colour is leaden-black. Many people are of opinion that
|
|
the porpoise is a variety of the dolphin.
|
|
|
|
All creatures that have a blow-hole respire and inspire, for
|
|
they are provided with lungs. The dolphin has been seen asleep with
|
|
his nose above water, and when asleep he snores.
|
|
|
|
The dolphin and the porpoise are provided with milk, and
|
|
suckle their young. They also take their young, when small, inside
|
|
them. The young of the dolphin grow rapidly, being full grown at ten
|
|
years of age. Its period of gestation is ten months. It brings forth
|
|
its young summer, and never at any other season; (and, singularly
|
|
enough, under the Dogstar it disappears for about thirty days). Its
|
|
young accompany it for a considerable period; and, in fact, the
|
|
creature is remarkable for the strength of its parental affection.
|
|
It lives for many years; some are known to have lived for more than
|
|
twenty-five, and some for thirty years; the fact is fishermen nick
|
|
their tails sometimes and set them adrift again, and by this expedient
|
|
their ages are ascertained.
|
|
|
|
The seal is an amphibious animal: that is to say, it cannot take
|
|
in water, but breathes and sleeps and brings forth on dry land-only
|
|
close to the shore-as being an animal furnished with feet; it
|
|
spends, however, the greater part of its time in the sea and derives
|
|
its food from it, so that it must be classed in the category of marine
|
|
animals. It is viviparous by immediate conception and brings forth its
|
|
young alive, and exhibits an after-birth and all else just like a ewe.
|
|
It bears one or two at a time, and three at the most. It has two
|
|
teats, and suckles its young like a quadruped. Like the human
|
|
species it brings forth at all seasons of the year, but especially
|
|
at the time when the earliest kids are forthcoming. It conducts its
|
|
young ones, when they are about twelve days old, over and over again
|
|
during the day down to the sea, accustoming them by slow degrees to
|
|
the water. It slips down steep places instead of walking, from the
|
|
fact that it cannot steady itself by its feet. It can contract and
|
|
draw itself in, for it is fleshy and soft and its bones are gristly.
|
|
Owing to the flabbiness of its body it is difficult to kill a seal
|
|
by a blow, unless you strike it on the temple. It looks like a cow.
|
|
The female in regard to its genital organs resembles the female of the
|
|
ray; in all other respects it resembles the female of the human
|
|
species.
|
|
|
|
So much for the phenomena of generation and of parturition in
|
|
animals that live in water and are viviparous either internally or
|
|
externally.
|
|
|
|
13
|
|
|
|
Oviparous fishes have their womb bifurcate and placed low down, as
|
|
was said previously-and, by the way, all scaly fish are oviparous,
|
|
as the basse, the mullet, the grey mullet, and the etelis, and all the
|
|
so-called white-fish, and all the smooth or slippery fish except the
|
|
eel-and their roe is of a crumbling or granular substance. This
|
|
appearance is due to the fact that the whole womb of such fishes is
|
|
full of eggs, so that in little fishes there seem to be only a
|
|
couple of eggs there; for in small fishes the womb is
|
|
indistinguishable, from its diminutive size and thin contexture. The
|
|
pairing of fishes has been discussed previously.
|
|
|
|
Fishes for the most part are divided into males and females, but
|
|
one is puzzled to account for the erythrinus and the channa, for
|
|
specimens of these species are never caught except in a condition of
|
|
pregnancy.
|
|
|
|
With such fish as pair, eggs are the result of copulation, but
|
|
such fish have them also without copulation; and this is shown in
|
|
the case of some river-fish, for the minnow has eggs when quite
|
|
small,-almost, one may say, as soon as it is born. These fishes shed
|
|
their eggs little by little, and, as is stated, the males swallow
|
|
the greater part of them, and some portion of them goes to waste in
|
|
the water; but such of the eggs as the female deposits on the spawning
|
|
beds are saved. If all the eggs were preserved, each species would
|
|
be infinite in number. The greater number of these eggs so deposited
|
|
are not productive, but only those over which the male sheds the
|
|
milt or sperm; for when the female has laid her eggs, the male follows
|
|
and sheds its sperm over them, and from all the eggs so besprinkled
|
|
young fishes proceed, while the rest are left to their fate.
|
|
|
|
The same phenomenon is observed in the case of molluscs also;
|
|
for in the case of the cuttlefish or sepia, after the female has
|
|
deposited her eggs, the male besprinkles them. It is highly probable
|
|
that a similar phenomenon takes place in regard to molluscs in
|
|
general, though up to the present time the phenomenon has been
|
|
observed only in the case of the cuttlefish.
|
|
|
|
Fishes deposit their eggs close in to shore, the goby close to
|
|
stones; and, by the way, the spawn of the goby is flat and crumbly.
|
|
Fish in general so deposit their eggs; for the water close in to shore
|
|
is warm and is better supplied with food than the outer sea, and
|
|
serves as a protection to the spawn against the voracity of the larger
|
|
fish. And it is for this reason that in the Euxine most fishes spawn
|
|
near the mouth of the river Thermodon, because the locality is
|
|
sheltered, genial, and supplied with fresh water.
|
|
|
|
Oviparous fish as a rule spawn only once a year. The little
|
|
phycis or black goby is an exception, as it spawns twice; the male
|
|
of the black goby differs from the female as being blacker and
|
|
having larger scales.
|
|
|
|
Fishes then in general produce their young by copulation, and
|
|
lay their eggs; but the pipefish, as some call it, when the time of
|
|
parturition arrives, bursts in two, and the eggs escape out. For the
|
|
fish has a diaphysis or cloven growth under the belly and abdomen
|
|
(like the blind snakes), and, after it has spawned by the splitting of
|
|
this diaphysis, the sides of the split grow together again.
|
|
|
|
Development from the egg takes place similarly with fishes that
|
|
are oviparous internally and with fishes that are oviparous
|
|
externally; that is to say, the embryo comes at the upper end of the
|
|
egg and is enveloped in a membrane, and the eyes, large and spherical,
|
|
are the first organs visible. From this circumstance it is plain
|
|
that the assertion is untenable which is made by some writers, to wit,
|
|
that the young of oviparous fishes are generated like the grubs of
|
|
worms; for the opposite phenomena are observed in the case of these
|
|
grubs, in that their lower extremities are the larger at the outset,
|
|
and that the eyes and the head appear later on. After the egg has been
|
|
used up, the young fishes are like tadpoles in shape, and at first,
|
|
without taking any nutriment, they grow by sustenance derived from the
|
|
juice oozing from the egg; by and by, they are nourished up to full
|
|
growth by the river-waters.
|
|
|
|
When the Euxine is 'purged' a substance called phycus is carried
|
|
into the Hellespont, and this substance is of a pale yellow colour.
|
|
Some writers aver that it is the flower of the phycus, from which
|
|
rouge is made; it comes at the beginning of summer. Oysters and the
|
|
small fish of these localities feed on this substance, and some of the
|
|
inhabitants of these maritime districts say that the purple murex
|
|
derives its peculiar colour from it.
|
|
|
|
14
|
|
|
|
Marsh-fishes and river-fishes conceive at the age of five months
|
|
as a general rule, and deposit their spawn towards the close of the
|
|
year without exception. And with these fishes, like as with the marine
|
|
fishes, the female does not void all her eggs at one time, nor the
|
|
male his sperm; but they are at all times more or less provided, the
|
|
female with eggs, and the male with sperm. The-carp spawns as the
|
|
seasons come round, five or six times, and follows in spawning the
|
|
rising of the greater constellations. The chalcis spawns three
|
|
times, and the other fishes once only in the year. They all spawn in
|
|
pools left by the overflowing of rivers, and near to reedy places in
|
|
marshes; as for instance the phoxinus or minnow and the perch.
|
|
|
|
The glanis or sheat-fish and the perch deposit their spawn in
|
|
one continuous string, like the frog; so continuous, in fact, is the
|
|
convoluted spawn of the perch that, by reason of its smoothness, the
|
|
fishermen in the marshes can unwind it off the reeds like threads
|
|
off a reel. The larger individuals of the sheat-fish spawn in deep
|
|
waters, some in water of a fathom's depth, the smaller in shallower
|
|
water, generally close to the roots of the willow or of some other
|
|
tree, or close to reeds or to moss. At times these fishes intertwine
|
|
with one another, a big with a little one, and bring into
|
|
juxtaposition the ducts-which some writers designate as navels-at
|
|
the point where they emit the generative products and discharge the
|
|
egg in the case of the female and the milt in the case of the male.
|
|
Such eggs as are besprinkled with the milt grow, in a day or
|
|
thereabouts, whiter and larger, and in a little while afterwards the
|
|
fish's eyes become visible for these organs in all fishes, as for that
|
|
matter in all other animals, are early conspicuous and seem
|
|
disproportionately big. But such eggs as the milt fails to touch
|
|
remain, as with marine fishes, useless and infertile. From the fertile
|
|
eggs, as the little fish grow, a kind of sheath detaches itself;
|
|
this is a membrane that envelops the egg and the young fish. When
|
|
the milt has mingled with the eggs, the resulting product becomes very
|
|
sticky or viscous, and adheres to the roots of trees or wherever it
|
|
may have been laid. The male keeps on guard at the principal
|
|
spawning-place, and the female after spawning goes away.
|
|
|
|
In the case of the sheat-fish the growth from the egg is
|
|
exceptionally slow, and, in consequence, the male has to keep watch
|
|
for forty or fifty days to prevent the-spawn being devoured by such
|
|
little fishes as chance to come by. Next in point of slowness is the
|
|
generation of the carp. As with fishes in general, so even with these,
|
|
the spawn thus protected disappears and gets lost rapidly.
|
|
|
|
In the case of some of the smaller fishes when they are only
|
|
three days old young fishes are generated. Eggs touched by the male
|
|
sperm take on increase both the same day and also later. The egg of
|
|
the sheat-fish is as big as a vetch-seed; the egg of the carp and of
|
|
the carp-species as big as a millet-seed.
|
|
|
|
These fishes then spawn and generate in the way here
|
|
described. The chalcis, however, spawns in deep water in dense
|
|
shoals of fish; and the so-called tilon spawns near to beaches in
|
|
sheltered spots in shoals likewise. The carp, the baleros, and
|
|
fishes in general push eagerly into the shallows for the purpose of
|
|
spawning, and very often thirteen or fourteen males are seen following
|
|
a single female. When the female deposits her spawn and departs, the
|
|
males follow on and shed the milt. The greater portion of the spawn
|
|
gets wasted; because, owing to the fact that the female moves about
|
|
while spawning, the spawn scatters, or so much of it as is caught in
|
|
the stream and does not get entangled with some rubbish. For, with the
|
|
exception of the sheatfish, no fish keeps on guard; unless, by the
|
|
way, it be the carp, which is said to remain on guard, if it so happen
|
|
that its spawn lies in a solid mass.
|
|
|
|
All male fishes are supplied with milt, excepting the eel: with
|
|
the eel, the male is devoid of milt, and the female of spawn. The
|
|
mullet goes up from the sea to marshes and rivers; the eels, on the
|
|
contrary, make their way down from the marshes and rivers to the sea.
|
|
|
|
15
|
|
|
|
The great majority of fish, then, as has been stated, proceed from
|
|
eggs. However, there are some fish that proceed from mud and sand,
|
|
even of those kinds that proceed also from pairing and the egg. This
|
|
occurs in ponds here and there, and especially in a pond in the
|
|
neighbourhood of Cnidos. This pond, it is said, at one time ran dry
|
|
about the rising of the Dogstar, and the mud had all dried up; at
|
|
the first fall of the rains there was a show of water in the pond, and
|
|
on the first appearance of the water shoals of tiny fish were found in
|
|
the pond. The fish in question was a kind of mullet, one which does
|
|
not proceed from normal pairing, about the size of a small sprat,
|
|
and not one of these fishes was provided with either spawn or milt.
|
|
There are found also in Asia Minor, in rivers not communicating with
|
|
the sea, little fishes like whitebait, differing from the small fry
|
|
found near Cnidos but found under similar circumstances. Some
|
|
writers actually aver that mullet all grow spontaneously. In this
|
|
assertion they are mistaken, for the female of the fish is found
|
|
provided with spawn, and the male with milt. However, there is a
|
|
species of mullet that grows spontaneously out of mud and sand.
|
|
|
|
From the facts above enumerated it is quite proved that certain
|
|
fishes come spontaneously into existence, not being derived from
|
|
eggs or from copulation. Such fish as are neither oviparous nor
|
|
viviparous arise all from one of two sources, from mud, or from sand
|
|
and from decayed matter that rises thence as a scum; for instance, the
|
|
so-called froth of the small fry comes out of sandy ground. This fry
|
|
is incapable of growth and of propagating its kind; after living for a
|
|
while it dies away and another creature takes its place, and so,
|
|
with short intervals excepted, it may be said to last the whole year
|
|
through. At all events, it lasts from the autumn rising of Arcturus up
|
|
to the spring-time. As a proof that these fish occasionally come out
|
|
of the ground we have the fact that in cold weather they are not
|
|
caught, and that they are caught in warm weather, obviously coming
|
|
up out of the ground to catch the heat; also, when the fishermen use
|
|
dredges and the ground is scraped up fairly often, the fishes appear
|
|
in larger numbers and of superior quality. All other small fry are
|
|
inferior in quality owing to rapidity of growth. The fry are found
|
|
in sheltered and marshy districts, when after a spell of fine
|
|
weather the ground is getting warmer, as, for instance, in the
|
|
neighbourhood of Athens, at Salamis and near the tomb of
|
|
Themistocles and at Marathon; for in these districts the froth is
|
|
found. It appears, then, in such districts and during such weather,
|
|
and occasionally appears after a heavy fall of rain in the froth
|
|
that is thrown up by the falling rain, from which circumstance the
|
|
substance derives its specific name. Foam is occasionally brought in
|
|
on the surface of the sea in fair weather. (And in this, where it
|
|
has formed on the surface, the so-called froth collects, as grubs
|
|
swarm in manure; for which-reason this fry is often brought in from
|
|
the open sea. The fish is at its best in quality and quantity in moist
|
|
warm weather.)
|
|
|
|
The ordinary fry is the normal issue of parent fishes: the
|
|
so-called gudgeon-fry of small insignificant gudgeon-like fish that
|
|
burrow under the ground. From the Phaleric fry comes the membras, from
|
|
the membras the trichis, from the trichis the trichias, and from one
|
|
particular sort of fry, to wit from that found in the harbour of
|
|
Athens, comes what is called the encrasicholus, or anchovy. There is
|
|
another fry, derived from the maenis and the mullet.
|
|
|
|
The unfertile fry is watery and keeps only a short time, as
|
|
has been stated, for at last only head and eyes are left. However, the
|
|
fishermen of late have hit upon a method of transporting it to a
|
|
distance, as when salted it keeps for a considerable time.
|
|
|
|
16
|
|
|
|
Eels are not the issue of pairing, neither are they oviparous; nor
|
|
was an eel ever found supplied with either milt or spawn, nor are they
|
|
when cut open found to have within them passages for spawn or for
|
|
eggs. In point of fact, this entire species of blooded animals
|
|
proceeds neither from pair nor from the egg.
|
|
|
|
There can be no doubt that the case is so. For in some standing
|
|
pools, after the water has been drained off and the mud has been
|
|
dredged away, the eels appear again after a fall of rain. In time of
|
|
drought they do not appear even in stagnant ponds, for the simple
|
|
reason that their existence and sustenance is derived from rain-water.
|
|
|
|
There is no doubt, then, that they proceed neither from
|
|
pairing nor from an egg. Some writers, however, are of opinion that
|
|
they generate their kind, because in some eels little worms are found,
|
|
from which they suppose that eels are derived. But this opinion is not
|
|
founded on fact. Eels are derived from the so-called 'earth's guts'
|
|
that grow spontaneously in mud and in humid ground; in fact, eels have
|
|
at times been seen to emerge out of such earthworms, and on other
|
|
occasions have been rendered visible when the earthworms were laid
|
|
open by either scraping or cutting. Such earthworms are found both
|
|
in the sea and in rivers, especially where there is decayed matter: in
|
|
the sea in places where sea-weed abounds, and in rivers and marshes
|
|
near to the edge; for it is near to the water's edge that sun-heat has
|
|
its chief power and produces putrefaction. So much for the
|
|
generation of the eel.
|
|
|
|
17
|
|
|
|
Fish do not all bring forth their young at the same season nor all
|
|
in like manner, neither is the period of gestation for all of the same
|
|
duration.
|
|
|
|
Before pairing the males and females gather together in
|
|
shoals; at the time for copulation and parturition they pair off. With
|
|
some fishes the time of gestation is not longer than thirty days, with
|
|
others it is a lesser period; but with all it extends over a number of
|
|
days divisible by seven. The longest period of gestation is that of
|
|
the species which some call a marinus.
|
|
|
|
The sargue conceives during the month of Poseideon (or
|
|
December), and carries its spawn for thirty days; and the species of
|
|
mullet named by some the chelon, and the myxon, go with spawn at the
|
|
same period and over the same length of time.
|
|
|
|
All fish suffer greatly during the period of gestation, and
|
|
are in consequence very apt to be thrown up on shore at this time.
|
|
In some cases they are driven frantic with pain and throw themselves
|
|
on land. At all events they are throughout this time continually in
|
|
motion until parturition is over (this being especially true of the
|
|
mullet), and after parturition they are in repose. With many fish
|
|
the time for parturition terminates on the appearance of grubs
|
|
within the belly; for small living grubs get generated there and eat
|
|
up the spawn.
|
|
|
|
With shoal fishes parturition takes place in the spring, and
|
|
indeed, with most fishes, about the time of the spring equinox; with
|
|
others it is at different times, in summer with some, and with
|
|
others about the autumn equinox.
|
|
|
|
The first of shoal fishes to spawn is the atherine, and it
|
|
spawns close to land; the last is the cephalus: and this is inferred
|
|
from the fact that the brood of the atherine appears first of all
|
|
and the brood of the cephalus last. The mullet also spawns early.
|
|
The saupe spawns usually at the beginning of summer, but
|
|
occasionally in the autumn. The aulopias, which some call the anthias,
|
|
spawns in the summer. Next in order of spawning comes the
|
|
chrysophrys or gilthead, the basse, the mormyrus, and in general
|
|
such fish as are nicknamed 'runners'. Latest in order of the shoal
|
|
fish come the red mullet and the coracine; these spawn in autumn.
|
|
The red mullet spawns on mud, and consequently, as the mud continues
|
|
cold for a long while, spawns late in the year. The coracine carries
|
|
its spawn for a long time; but, as it lives usually on rocky ground,
|
|
it goes to a distance and spawns in places abounding in seaweed, at
|
|
a period later than the red mullet. The maenis spawns about the winter
|
|
solstice. Of the others, such as are pelagic spawn for the most part
|
|
in summer; which fact is proved by their not being caught by fishermen
|
|
during this period.
|
|
|
|
Of ordinary fishes the most prolific is the sprat; of
|
|
cartilaginous fishes, the fishing-frog. Specimens, however, of the
|
|
fishing-frog are rare from the facility with which the young are
|
|
destroyed, as the female lays her spawn all in a lump close in to
|
|
shore. As a rule, cartilaginous fish are less prolific than other fish
|
|
owing to their being viviparous; and their young by reason of their
|
|
size have a better chance of escaping destruction.
|
|
|
|
The so-called needle-fish (or pipe-fish) is late in spawning,
|
|
and the greater portion of them are burst asunder by the eggs before
|
|
spawning; and the eggs are not so many in number as large in size. The
|
|
young fish cluster round the parent like so many young spiders, for
|
|
the fish spawns on to herself; and, if any one touch the young, they
|
|
swim away. The atherine spawns by rubbing its belly against the sand.
|
|
|
|
Tunny fish also burst asunder by reason of their fat. They live
|
|
for two years; and the fishermen infer this age from the
|
|
circumstance that once when there was a failure of the young tunny
|
|
fish for a year there was a failure of the full-grown tunny the next
|
|
summer. They are of opinion that the tunny is a fish a year older than
|
|
the pelamyd. The tunny and the mackerel pair about the close of the
|
|
month of Elaphebolion, and spawn about the commencement of the month
|
|
of Hecatombaeon; they deposit their spawn in a sort of bag. The growth
|
|
of the young tunny is rapid. After the females have spawned in the
|
|
Euxine, there comes from the egg what some call scordylae, but what
|
|
the Byzantines nickname the 'auxids' or 'growers', from their
|
|
growing to a considerable size in a few days; these fish go out of the
|
|
Pontus in autumn along with the young tunnies, and enter Pontus in the
|
|
spring as pelamyds. Fishes as a rule take on growth with rapidity, but
|
|
this is peculiarly the case with all species of fish found in the
|
|
Pontus; the growth, for instance, of the amia-tunny is quite visible
|
|
from day to day.
|
|
|
|
To resume, we must bear in mind that the same fish in the same
|
|
localities have not the same season for pairing, for conception, for
|
|
parturition, or for favouring weather. The coracine, for instance,
|
|
in some places spawns about wheat-harvest. The statements here given
|
|
pretend only to give the results of general observation.
|
|
|
|
The conger also spawns, but the fact is not equally obvious in
|
|
all localities, nor is the spawn plainly visible owing to the fat of
|
|
the fish; for the spawn is lanky in shape as it is with serpents.
|
|
However, if it be put on the fire it shows its nature; for the fat
|
|
evaporates and melts, while the eggs dance about and explode with a
|
|
crack. Further, if you touch the substances and rub them with your
|
|
fingers, the fat feels smooth and the egg rough. Some congers are
|
|
provided with fat but not with any spawn, others are unprovided with
|
|
fat but have egg-spawn as here described.
|
|
|
|
18
|
|
|
|
We have, then, treated pretty fully of the animals that fly in the
|
|
air or swim in the water, and of such of those that walk on dry land
|
|
as are oviparous, to wit of their pairing, conception, and the like
|
|
phenomena; it now remains to treat of the same phenomena in
|
|
connexion with viviparous land animals and with man.
|
|
|
|
The statements made in regard to the pairing of the sexes
|
|
apply partly to the particular kinds of animal and partly to all in
|
|
general. It is common to all animals to be most excited by the
|
|
desire of one sex for the other and by the pleasure derived from
|
|
copulation. The female is most cross-tempered just after
|
|
parturition, the male during the time of pairing; for instance,
|
|
stallions at this period bite one another, throw their riders, and
|
|
chase them. Wild boars, though usually enfeebled at this time as the
|
|
result of copulation, are now unusually fierce, and fight with one
|
|
another in an extraordinary way, clothing themselves with defensive
|
|
armour, or in other words deliberately thickening their hide by
|
|
rubbing against trees or by coating themselves repeatedly all over
|
|
with mud and then drying themselves in the sun. They drive one another
|
|
away from the swine pastures, and fight with such fury that very often
|
|
both combatants succumb. The case is similar with bulls, rams, and
|
|
he-goats; for, though at ordinary times they herd together, at
|
|
breeding time they hold aloof from and quarrel with one another. The
|
|
male camel also is cross-tempered at pairing time if either a man or a
|
|
camel comes near him; as for a horse, a camel is ready to fight him at
|
|
any time. It is the same with wild animals. The bear, the wolf, and
|
|
the lion are all at this time ferocious towards such as come in
|
|
their way, but the males of these animals are less given to fight with
|
|
one another from the fact that they are at no time gregarious. The
|
|
she-bear is fierce after cubbing, and the bitch after pupping.
|
|
|
|
Male elephants get savage about pairing time, and for this
|
|
reason it is stated that men who have charge of elephants in India
|
|
never allow the males to have intercourse with the females; on the
|
|
ground that the males go wild at this time and turn topsy-turvy the
|
|
dwellings of their keepers, lightly constructed as they are, and
|
|
commit all kinds of havoc. They also state that abundancy of food
|
|
has a tendency to tame the males. They further introduce other
|
|
elephants amongst the wild ones, and punish and break them in by
|
|
setting on the new-comers to chastise the others.
|
|
|
|
Animals that pair frequently and not at a single specific
|
|
season, as for instance animals domesticated by man, such as swine and
|
|
dogs, are found to indulge in such freaks to a lesser degree owing
|
|
to the frequency of their sexual intercourse.
|
|
|
|
Of female animals the mare is the most sexually wanton, and next
|
|
in order comes the cow. In fact, the mare is said to go a-horsing; and
|
|
the term derived from the habits of this one animal serves as a term
|
|
of abuse applicable to such females of the human species as are
|
|
unbridled in the way of sexual appetite. This is the common phenomenon
|
|
as observed in the sow when she is said to go a-boaring. The mare is
|
|
said also about this time to get wind-impregnated if not impregnated
|
|
by the stallion, and for this reason in Crete they never remove the
|
|
stallion from the mares; for when the mare gets into this condition
|
|
she runs away from all other horses. The mares under these
|
|
circumstances fly invariably either northwards or southwards, and
|
|
never towards either east or west. When this complaint is on them they
|
|
allow no one to approach, until either they are exhausted with fatigue
|
|
or have reached the sea. Under either of these circumstances they
|
|
discharge a certain substance 'hippomanes', the title given to a
|
|
growth on a new-born foal; this resembles the sow-virus, and is in
|
|
great request amongst women who deal in drugs and potions. About
|
|
horsing time the mares huddle closer together, are continually
|
|
switching their tails, their neigh is abnormal in sound, and from
|
|
the sexual organ there flows a liquid resembling genital sperm, but
|
|
much thinner than the sperm of the male. It is this substance that
|
|
some call hippomanes, instead of the growth found on the foal; they
|
|
say it is extremely difficult to get as it oozes out only in small
|
|
drops at a time. Mares also, when in heat, discharge urine frequently,
|
|
and frisk with one another. Such are the phenomena connected with
|
|
the horse.
|
|
|
|
Cows go a-bulling; and so completely are they under the
|
|
influence of the sexual excitement that the herdsmen have no control
|
|
over them and cannot catch hold of them in the fields. Mares and
|
|
kine alike, when in heat, indicate the fact by the upraising of
|
|
their genital organs, and by continually voiding urine. Further,
|
|
kine mount the bulls, follow them about; and keep standing beside
|
|
them. The younger females both with horses and oxen are the first to
|
|
get in heat; and their sexual appetites are all the keener if the
|
|
weather warm and their bodily condition be healthy. Mares, when
|
|
clipt of their coat, have the sexual feeling checked, and assume a
|
|
downcast drooping appearance. The stallion recognizes by the scent the
|
|
mares that form his company, even though they have been together
|
|
only a few days before breeding time: if they get mixed up with
|
|
other mares, the stallion bites and drives away the interlopers. He
|
|
feeds apart, accompanied by his own troop of mares. Each stallion
|
|
has assigned to him about thirty mares or even somewhat more; when a
|
|
strange stallion approaches, he huddles his mares into a close ring,
|
|
runs round them, then advances to the encounter of the newcomer; if
|
|
one of the mares make a movement, he bites her and drives her back.
|
|
The bull in breeding time begins to graze with the cows, and fights
|
|
with other bulls (having hitherto grazed with them), which is termed
|
|
by graziers 'herd-spurning'. Often in Epirus a bull disappears for
|
|
three months together. In a general way one may state that of male
|
|
animals either none or few herd with their respective females before
|
|
breeding time; but they keep separate after reaching maturity, and the
|
|
two sexes feed apart. Sows, when they are moved by sexual desire, or
|
|
are, as it is called, a-boaring, will attack even human beings.
|
|
|
|
With bitches the same sexual condition is termed 'getting into
|
|
heat'. The sexual organ rises at this time, and there is a moisture
|
|
about the parts. Mares drip with a white liquid at this season.
|
|
|
|
Female animals are subject to menstrual discharges, but never in
|
|
such-abundance as is the female of the human species. With ewes and
|
|
she-goats there are signs of menstruation in breeding time, just
|
|
before the for submitting to the male; after copulation also the signs
|
|
are manifest, and then cease for an interval until the period of
|
|
parturition arrives; the process then supervenes, and it is by this
|
|
supervention that the shepherd knows that such and such an ewe is
|
|
about to bring forth. After parturition comes copious menstruation,
|
|
not at first much tinged with blood, but deeply dyed with it by and
|
|
by. With the cow, the she ass, and the mare, the discharge is more
|
|
copious actually, owing to their greater bulk, but proportionally to
|
|
the greater bulk it is far less copious. The cow, for instance, when
|
|
in heat, exhibits a small discharge to the extent of a quarter of a
|
|
pint of liquid or a little less; and the time when this discharge
|
|
takes place is the best time for her to be covered by the bull. Of all
|
|
quadrupeds the mare is the most easily delivered of its young,
|
|
exhibits the least amount of discharge after parturition, and emits
|
|
the least amount of blood; that is to say, of all animals in
|
|
proportion to size. With kine and mares menstruation usually manifests
|
|
itself at intervals of two, four, and six months; but, unless one be
|
|
constantly attending to and thoroughly acquainted with such animals,
|
|
it is difficult to verify the circumstance, and the result is that
|
|
many people are under the belief that the process never takes place
|
|
with these animals at all.
|
|
|
|
With mules menstruation never takes place, but the urine of the
|
|
female is thicker than the urine of the male. As a general rule the
|
|
discharge from the bladder in the case of quadrupeds is thicker than
|
|
it is in the human species, and this discharge with ewes and she-goats
|
|
is thicker than with rams and he-goats; but the urine of the jackass
|
|
is thicker than the urine of the she-ass, and the urine of the bull is
|
|
more pungent than the urine of the cow. After parturition the urine of
|
|
all quadrupeds becomes thicker, especially with such animals as
|
|
exhibit comparatively slight discharges. At breeding time the milk
|
|
become purulent, but after parturition it becomes wholesome. During
|
|
pregnancy ewes and she-goats get fatter and eat more; as is also the
|
|
case with cows, and, indeed, with the females of all quadrupeds.
|
|
|
|
In general the sexual appetites of animals are keenest in
|
|
spring-time; the time of pairing, however, is not the same for all,
|
|
but is adapted so as to ensure the rearing of the young at a
|
|
convenient season.
|
|
|
|
Domesticated swine carry their young for four months, and
|
|
bring forth a litter of twenty at the utmost; and, by the way, if
|
|
the litter be exceedingly numerous they cannot rear all the young.
|
|
As the sow grows old she continues to bear, but grows indifferent to
|
|
the boar; she conceives after a single copulation, but they have to
|
|
put the boar to her repeatedly owing to her dropping after intercourse
|
|
what is called the sow-virus. This incident befalls all sows, but some
|
|
of them discharge the genital sperm as well. During conception any one
|
|
of the litter that gets injured or dwarfed is called an afterpig or
|
|
scut: such injury may occur at any part of the womb. After littering
|
|
the mother offers the foremost teat to the first-born. When the sow is
|
|
in heat, she must not at once be put to the boar, but only after she
|
|
lets her lugs drop, for otherwise she is apt to get into heat again;
|
|
if she be put to the boar when in full condition of heat, one
|
|
copulation, as has been said, is sufficient. It is as well to supply
|
|
the boar at the period of copulation with barley, and the sow at the
|
|
time of parturition with boiled barley. Some swine give fine litters
|
|
only at the beginning, with others the litters improve as the
|
|
mothers grow in age and size. It is said that a sow, if she have one
|
|
of her eyes knocked out, is almost sure to die soon afterwards.
|
|
Swine for the most part live for fifteen years, but some fall little
|
|
short of the twenty.
|
|
|
|
19
|
|
|
|
Ewes conceive after three or four copulations with the ram. If
|
|
rain falls after intercourse, the ram impregnates the ewe again; and
|
|
it is the same with the she-goat. The ewe bears usually two lambs,
|
|
sometimes three or four. Both ewe and she-goat carry their young for
|
|
five months; consequently wherever a district is sunny and the animals
|
|
are used to comfort and well fed, they bear twice in the year. The
|
|
goat lives for eight years and the sheep for ten, but in most cases
|
|
not so long; the bell-wether, however, lives to fifteen years. In
|
|
every flock they train one of the rams for bell-wether. When he is
|
|
called on by name by the shepherd, he takes the lead of the flock: and
|
|
to this duty the creature is trained from its earliest years. Sheep in
|
|
Ethiopia live for twelve or thirteen years, goats for ten or eleven.
|
|
In the case of the sheep and the goat the two sexes have intercourse
|
|
all their lives long.
|
|
|
|
Twins with sheep and goats may be due to richness of
|
|
pasturage, or to the fact that either the ram or the he-goat is a
|
|
twin-begetter or that the ewe or the she-goat is a twin-bearer. Of
|
|
these animals some give birth to males and others to females; and
|
|
the difference in this respect depends on the waters they drink and
|
|
also on the sires. And if they submit to the male when north winds are
|
|
blowing, they are apt to bear males; if when south winds are
|
|
blowing, females. Such as bear females may get to bear males, due
|
|
regard being paid to their looking northwards when put to the male.
|
|
Ewes accustomed to be put to the ram early will refuse him if he
|
|
attempt to mount them late. Lambs are born white and black according
|
|
as white or black veins are under the ram's tongue; the lambs are
|
|
white if the veins are white, and black if the veins are black, and
|
|
white and black if the veins are white and black; and red if the veins
|
|
are red. The females that drink salted waters are the first to take
|
|
the male; the water should be salted before and after parturition, and
|
|
again in the springtime. With goats the shepherds appoint no
|
|
bell-wether, as the animal is not capable of repose but frisky and apt
|
|
to ramble. If at the appointed season the elders of the flock are
|
|
eager for intercourse, the shepherds say that it bodes well for the
|
|
flock; if the younger ones, that the flock is going to be bad.
|
|
|
|
20
|
|
|
|
Of dogs there are several breeds. Of these the Laconian hound of
|
|
either sex is fit for breeding purposes when eight months old: at
|
|
about the same age some dogs lift the leg when voiding urine. The
|
|
bitch conceives with one lining; this is clearly seen in the case
|
|
where a dog contrives to line a bitch by stealth, as they impregnate
|
|
after mounting only once. The Laconian bitch carries her young the
|
|
sixth part of a year or sixty days: or more by one, two, or three,
|
|
or less by one; the pups are blind for twelve days after birth.
|
|
After pupping, the bitch gets in heat again in six months, but not
|
|
before. Some bitches carry their young for the fifth part of the
|
|
year or for seventy-two days; and their pups are blind for fourteen
|
|
days. Other bitches carry their young for a quarter of a year or for
|
|
three whole months; and the whelps of these are blind for seventeen
|
|
days. The bitch appears go in heat for the same length of time.
|
|
Menstruation continues for seven days, and a swelling of the genital
|
|
organ occurs simultaneously; it is not during this period that the
|
|
bitch is disposed to submit to the dog, but in the seven days that
|
|
follow. The bitch as a rule goes in heat for fourteen days, but
|
|
occasionally for sixteen. The birth-discharge occurs simultaneously
|
|
with the delivery of the whelps, and the substance of it is thick
|
|
and mucous. (The falling-off in bulk on the part of the mother is
|
|
not so great as might have been inferred from the size of her
|
|
frame.) The bitch is usually supplied with milk five days before
|
|
parturition; some seven days previously, some four; and the milk is
|
|
serviceable immediately after birth. The Laconian bitch is supplied
|
|
with milk thirty days after lining. The milk at first is thickish, but
|
|
gets thinner by degrees; with the bitch the milk is thicker than
|
|
with the female of any other animal excepting the sow and the hare.
|
|
When the bitch arrives at full growth an indication is given of her
|
|
capacity for the male; that is to say, just as occurs in the female of
|
|
the human species, a swelling takes place in the teats of the breasts,
|
|
and the breasts take on gristle. This incident, however, it is
|
|
difficult for any but an expert to detect, as the part that gives
|
|
the indication is inconsiderable. The preceding statements relate to
|
|
the female, and not one of them to the male. The male as a rule
|
|
lifts his leg to void urine when six months old; some at a later
|
|
period, when eight months old, some before they reach six months. In a
|
|
general way one may put it that they do so when they are out of
|
|
puppyhood. The bitch squats down when she voids urine; it is a rare
|
|
exception that she lifts the leg to do so. The bitch bears twelve pups
|
|
at the most, but usually five or six; occasionally a bitch will bear
|
|
one only. The bitch of the Laconian breed generally bears eight. The
|
|
two sexes have intercourse with each other at all periods of life. A
|
|
very remarkable phenomenon is observed in the case of the Laconian
|
|
hound: in other words, he is found to be more vigorous in commerce
|
|
with the female after being hard-worked than when allowed to live
|
|
idle.
|
|
|
|
The dog of the Laconian breed lives ten years, and the bitch
|
|
twelve. The bitch of other breeds usually lives for fourteen or
|
|
fifteen years, but some live to twenty; and for this reason certain
|
|
critics consider that Homer did well in representing the dog of
|
|
Ulysses as having died in his twentieth year. With the Laconian hound,
|
|
owing to the hardships to which the male is put, he is less long-lived
|
|
than the female; with other breeds the distinction as to longevity
|
|
is not very apparent, though as a general rule the male is the
|
|
longer-lived.
|
|
|
|
The dog sheds no teeth except the so-called 'canines'; these a dog
|
|
of either sex sheds when four months old. As they shed these only,
|
|
many people are in doubt as to the fact, and some people, owing to
|
|
their shedding but two and its being hard to hit upon the time when
|
|
they do so, fancy that the animal sheds no teeth at all; others, after
|
|
observing the shedding of two, come to the conclusion that the
|
|
creature sheds the rest in due turn. Men discern the age of a dog by
|
|
inspection of its teeth; with young dogs the teeth are white and sharp
|
|
pointed, with old dogs black and blunted.
|
|
|
|
21
|
|
|
|
The bull impregnates the cow at a single mount, and mounts with
|
|
such vigour as to weigh down the cow; if his effort be unsuccessful,
|
|
the cow must be allowed an interval of twenty days before being
|
|
again submitted. Bulls of mature age decline to mount the same cow
|
|
several times on one day, except, by the way, at considerable
|
|
intervals. Young bulls by reason of their vigour are enabled to
|
|
mount the same cow several times in one day, and a good many cows
|
|
besides. The bull is the least salacious of male animals.... The
|
|
victor among the bulls is the one that mounts the females; when he
|
|
gets exhausted by his amorous efforts, his beaten antagonist sets on
|
|
him and very often gets the better of the conflict. The bull and the
|
|
cow are about a year old when it is possible for them to have commerce
|
|
with chance of offspring: as a rule, however, they are about twenty
|
|
months old, but it is universally allowed that they are capable in
|
|
this respect at the age of two years. The cow goes with calf for
|
|
nine months, and she calves in the tenth month; some maintain that
|
|
they go in calf for ten months, to the very day. A calf delivered
|
|
before the times here specified is an abortion and never lives,
|
|
however little premature its birth may have been, as its hooves are
|
|
weak and imperfect. The cow as a rule bears but one calf, very
|
|
seldom two; she submits to the bull and bears as long as she lives.
|
|
|
|
Cows live for about fifteen years, and the bulls too, if they
|
|
have been castrated; but some live for twenty years or even more, if
|
|
their bodily constitutions be sound. The herdsmen tame the castrated
|
|
bulls, and give them an office in the herd analogous to the office
|
|
of the bell-wether in a flock; and these bulls live to an
|
|
exceptionally advanced age, owing to their exemption from hardship and
|
|
to their browsing on pasture of good quality. The bull is in fullest
|
|
vigour when five years old, which leads the critics to commend Homer
|
|
for applying to the bull the epithets of 'five-year-old', or 'of
|
|
nine seasons', which epithets are alike in meaning. The ox sheds his
|
|
teeth at the age of two years, not all together but just as the
|
|
horse sheds his. When the animal suffers from podagra it does not shed
|
|
the hoof, but is subject to a painful swelling in the feet. The milk
|
|
of the cow is serviceable after parturition, and before parturition
|
|
there is no milk at all. The milk that first presents itself becomes
|
|
as hard as stone when it clots; this result ensues unless it be
|
|
previously diluted with water. Oxen younger than a year old do not
|
|
copulate unless under circumstances of an unnatural and portentous
|
|
kind: instances have been recorded of copulation in both sexes at
|
|
the age of four months. Kine in general begin to submit to the male
|
|
about the month of Thargelion or of Scirophorion; some, however, are
|
|
capable of conception right on to the autumn. When kine in large
|
|
numbers receive the bull and conceive, it is looked upon as prognostic
|
|
of rain and stormy weather. Kine herd together like mares, but in
|
|
lesser degree.
|
|
|
|
22
|
|
|
|
In the case of horses, the stallion and the mare are first
|
|
fitted for breeding purposes when two years old. Instances, however,
|
|
of such early maturity are rare, and their young are exceptionally
|
|
small and weak; the ordinary age for sexual maturity is three years,
|
|
and from that age to twenty the two sexes go on improving in the
|
|
quality of their offspring. The mare carries her foal for eleven
|
|
months, and casts it in the twelfth. It is not a fixed number of
|
|
days that the stallion takes to impregnate the mare; it may be one,
|
|
two, three, or more. An ass in covering will impregnate more
|
|
expeditiously than a stallion. The act of intercourse with horses is
|
|
not laborious as it is with oxen. In both sexes the horse is the
|
|
most salacious of animals next after the human species. The breeding
|
|
faculties of the younger horses may be stimulated beyond their years
|
|
if they be supplied with good feeding in abundance. The mare as a rule
|
|
bears only one foal; occasionally she has two, but never more. A
|
|
mare has been known to cast two mules; but such a circumstance was
|
|
regarded as unnatural and portentous.
|
|
|
|
The horse then is first fitted for breeding purposes at the
|
|
age of two and a half years, but achieves full sexual maturity when it
|
|
has ceased to shed teeth, except it be naturally infertile; it must be
|
|
added, however, that some horses have been known to impregnate the
|
|
mare while the teeth were in process of shedding.
|
|
|
|
The horse has forty teeth. It sheds its first set of four, two
|
|
from the upper jaw and two from the lower, when two and a half years
|
|
old. After a year's interval, it sheds another set of four in like
|
|
manner, and another set of four after yet another year's interval;
|
|
after arriving at the age of four years and six months it sheds no
|
|
more. An instance has occurred where a horse shed all his teeth at
|
|
once, and another instance of a horse shedding all his teeth with
|
|
his last set of four; but such instances are very rare. It
|
|
consequently happens that a horse when four and a half years old is in
|
|
excellent condition for breeding purposes.
|
|
|
|
The older horses, whether of the male or female, are the more
|
|
generatively productive. Horses will cover mares from which they
|
|
have been foaled and mares which they have begotten; and, indeed, a
|
|
troop of horses is only considered perfect when such promiscuity of
|
|
intercourse occurs. Scythians use pregnant mares for riding when the
|
|
embryo has turned rather soon in the womb, and they assert that
|
|
thereby the mothers have all the easier delivery. Quadrupeds as a rule
|
|
lie down for parturition, and in consequence the young of them all
|
|
come out of the womb sideways. The mare, however, when the time for
|
|
parturition arrives, stands erect and in that posture casts its foal.
|
|
|
|
The horse in general lives for eighteen or twenty years; some
|
|
horses live for twenty-five or even thirty, and if a horse be
|
|
treated with extreme care, it may last on to the age of fifty years; a
|
|
horse, however, when it reaches thirty years is regarded as
|
|
exceptionally old. The mare lives usually for twenty-five years,
|
|
though instances have occurred of their attaining the age of forty.
|
|
The male is less long-lived than the female by reason of the sexual
|
|
service he is called on to render; and horses that are reared in a
|
|
private stable live longer than such as are reared in troops. The mare
|
|
attains her full length and height at five years old, the stallion
|
|
at six; in another six years the animal reaches its full bulk, and
|
|
goes on improving until it is twenty years old. The female, then,
|
|
reaches maturity more rapidly than the male, but in the womb the
|
|
case is reversed, just as is observed in regard to the sexes of the
|
|
human species; and the same phenomenon is observed in the case of
|
|
all animals that bear several young.
|
|
|
|
The mare is said to suckle a mule-foal for six months, but not
|
|
to allow its approach for any longer on account of the pain it is
|
|
put to by the hard tugging of the young; an ordinary foal it allows to
|
|
suck for a longer period.
|
|
|
|
Horse and mule are at their best after the shedding of the
|
|
teeth. After they have shed them all, it is not easy to distinguish
|
|
their age; hence they are said to carry their mark before the
|
|
shedding, but not after. However, even after the shedding their age is
|
|
pretty well recognized by the aid of the canines; for in the case of
|
|
horses much ridden these teeth are worn away by attrition caused by
|
|
the insertion of the bit; in the case of horses not ridden the teeth
|
|
are large and detached, and in young horses they are sharp and small.
|
|
|
|
The male of the horse will breed at all seasons and during its
|
|
whole life; the mare can take the horse all its life long, but is
|
|
not thus ready to pair at all seasons unless it be held in check by
|
|
a halter or some other compulsion be brought to bear. There is no
|
|
fixed time at which intercourse of the two sexes cannot take place;
|
|
and accordingly intercourse may chance to take place at a time that
|
|
may render difficult the rearing of the future progeny. In a stable in
|
|
Opus there was a stallion that used to serve mares when forty years
|
|
old: his fore legs had to be lifted up for the operation.
|
|
|
|
Mares first take the horse in the spring-time. After a mare
|
|
has foaled she does not get impregnated at once again, but only
|
|
after a considerable interval; in fact, the foals will be all the
|
|
better if the interval extend over four or five years. It is, at all
|
|
events, absolutely necessary to allow an interval of one year, and for
|
|
that period to let her lie fallow. A mare, then, breeds at
|
|
intervals; a she-ass breeds on and on without intermission. Of mares
|
|
some are absolutely sterile, others are capable of conception but
|
|
incapable of bringing the foal to full term; it is said to be an
|
|
indication of this condition in a mare, that her foal if dissected
|
|
is found to have other kidney-shaped substances round about its
|
|
kidneys, presenting the appearance of having four kidneys.
|
|
|
|
After parturition the mare at once swallows the after-birth, and
|
|
bites off the growth, called the 'hippomanes', that is found on the
|
|
forehead of the foal. This growth is somewhat smaller than a dried
|
|
fig; and in shape is broad and round, and in colour black. If any
|
|
bystander gets possession of it before the mare, and the mare gets a
|
|
smell of it, she goes wild and frantic at the smell. And it is for
|
|
this reason that venders of drugs and simples hold the substance in
|
|
high request and include it among their stores.
|
|
|
|
If an ass cover a mare after the mare has been covered by a
|
|
horse, the ass will destroy the previously formed embryo.
|
|
|
|
(Horse-trainers do not appoint a horse as leader to a troop, as
|
|
herdsmen appoint a bull as leader to a herd, and for this reason
|
|
that the horse is not steady but quick-tempered and skittish.)
|
|
|
|
23
|
|
|
|
The ass of both sexes is capable of breeding, and sheds its
|
|
first teeth at the age of two and a half years; it sheds its second
|
|
teeth within six months, its third within another six months, and
|
|
the fourth after the like interval. These fourth teeth are termed
|
|
the gnomons or age-indicators.
|
|
|
|
A she-ass has been known to conceive when a year old, and the
|
|
foal to be reared. After intercourse with the male it will discharge
|
|
the genital sperm unless it be hindered, and for this reason it is
|
|
usually beaten after such intercourse and chased about. It casts its
|
|
young in the twelfth month. It usually bears but one foal, and that is
|
|
its natural number, occasionally however it bears twins. The ass if it
|
|
cover a mare destroys, as has been said, the embryo previously
|
|
begotten by the horse; but, after the mare has been covered by the
|
|
ass, the horse supervening will not spoil the embryo. The she-ass
|
|
has milk in the tenth month of pregnancy. Seven days after casting a
|
|
foal the she-ass submits to the male, and is almost sure to conceive
|
|
if put to the male on this particular day; the same result, however,
|
|
is quite possible later on. The she-ass will refuse to cast her foal
|
|
with any one looking on or in the daylight and just before foaling she
|
|
has to be led away into a dark place. If the she-ass has had young
|
|
before the shedding of the index-teeth, she will bear all her life
|
|
through; but if not, then she will neither conceive nor bear for the
|
|
rest of her days. The ass lives for more than thirty years, and the
|
|
she-ass lives longer than the male.
|
|
|
|
When there is a cross between a horse and a she-ass or a jackass
|
|
and a mare, there is much greater chance of a miscarriage than where
|
|
the commerce is normal. The period for gestation in the case of a
|
|
cross depends on the male, and is just what it would have been if
|
|
the male had had commerce with a female of his own kind. In regard
|
|
to size, looks, and vigour, the foal is more apt to resemble the
|
|
mother than the sire. If such hybrid connexions be continued without
|
|
intermittence, the female will soon go sterile; and for this reason
|
|
trainers always allow of intervals between breeding times. A mare will
|
|
not take the ass, nor a she ass the horse, unless the ass or she-ass
|
|
shall have been suckled by a mare; and for this reason trainers put
|
|
foals of the she-ass under mares, which foals are technically spoken
|
|
of as 'mare-suckled'. These asses, thus reared, mount the mares in the
|
|
open pastures, mastering them by force as the stallions do.
|
|
|
|
24
|
|
|
|
A mule is fitted for commerce with the female after the first
|
|
shedding of its teeth, and at the age of seven will impregnate
|
|
effectually; and where connexion has taken place with a mare, a
|
|
'hinny' has been known to be produced. After the seventh year it has
|
|
no further intercourse with the female. A female mule has been known
|
|
to be impregnated, but without the impregnation being followed up by
|
|
parturition. In Syrophoenicia she-mules submit to the mule and bear
|
|
young; but the breed, though it resembles the ordinary one, is
|
|
different and specific. The hinny or stunted mule is foaled by a
|
|
mare when she has gone sick during gestation, and corresponds to the
|
|
dwarf in the human species and to the after-pig or scut in swine;
|
|
and as is the case with dwarfs, the sexual organ of the hinny is
|
|
abnormally large.
|
|
|
|
The mule lives for a number of years. There are on record
|
|
cases of mules living to the age of eighty, as did one in Athens at
|
|
the time of the building of the temple; this mule on account of its
|
|
age was let go free, but continued to assist in dragging burdens,
|
|
and would go side by side with the other draught-beasts and
|
|
stimulate them to their work; and in consequence a public decree was
|
|
passed forbidding any baker driving the creature away from his
|
|
bread-tray. The she-mule grows old more slowly than the mule. Some
|
|
assert that the she-mule menstruates by the act of voiding her
|
|
urine, and that the mule owes the prematurity of his decay to his
|
|
habit of smelling at the urine. So much for the modes of generation in
|
|
connexion with these animals.
|
|
|
|
25
|
|
|
|
Breeders and trainers can distinguish between young and old
|
|
quadrupeds. If, when drawn back from the jaw, the skin at once goes
|
|
back to its place, the animal is young; if it remains long wrinkled
|
|
up, the animal is old.
|
|
|
|
26
|
|
|
|
The camel carries its young for ten months, and bears but one at
|
|
a time and never more; the young camel is removed from the mother when
|
|
a year old. The animal lives for a long period, more than fifty years.
|
|
It bears in spring-time, and gives milk until the time of the next
|
|
conception. Its flesh and milk are exceptionally palatable. The milk
|
|
is drunk mixed with water in the proportion of either two to one or
|
|
three to one.
|
|
|
|
27
|
|
|
|
The elephant of either sex is fitted for breeding before
|
|
reaching the age of twenty. The female carries her young, according to
|
|
some accounts, for two and a half years; according to others, for
|
|
three years; and the discrepancy in the assigned periods is due to the
|
|
fact that there are never human eyewitnesses to the commerce between
|
|
the sexes. The female settles down on its rear to cast its young,
|
|
and obviously suffers greatly during the process. The young one,
|
|
immediately after birth, sucks the mother, not with its trunk but with
|
|
the mouth; and can walk about and see distinctly the moment it is
|
|
born.
|
|
|
|
28
|
|
|
|
The wild sow submits to the boar at the beginning of winter, and
|
|
in the spring-time retreats for parturition to a lair in some district
|
|
inaccessible to intrusion, hemmed in with sheer cliffs and chasms
|
|
and overshadowed by trees. The boar usually remains by the sow for
|
|
thirty days. The number of the litter and the period gestation is
|
|
the same as in the case of the domesticated congener. The sound of the
|
|
grunt also is similar; only that the sow grunts continually, and the
|
|
boar but seldom. Of the wild boars such as are castrated grow to the
|
|
largest size and become fiercest: to which circumstance Homer
|
|
alludes when he says:-
|
|
|
|
'He reared against him a wild castrated boar: it was not like a
|
|
food-devouring brute, but like a forest-clad promontory.'
|
|
|
|
Wild boars become castrated owing to an itch befalling them in
|
|
early life in the region of the testicles, and the castration is
|
|
superinduced by their rubbing themselves against the trunks of trees.
|
|
|
|
29
|
|
|
|
The hind, as has been stated, submits to the stag as a rule only
|
|
under compulsion, as she is unable to endure the male often owing to
|
|
the rigidity of the penis. However, they do occasionally submit to the
|
|
stag as the ewe submits ram; and when they are in heat the hinds avoid
|
|
one another. The stag is not constant to one particular hind, but
|
|
after a while quits one and mates with others. The breeding time is
|
|
after the rising of Arcturus, during the months of Boedromion and
|
|
Maimacterion. The period of gestation lasts for eight months.
|
|
Conception comes on a few days after intercourse; and a number of
|
|
hinds can be impregnated by a single male. The hind, as a rule,
|
|
bears but one fawn, although instances have been known of her
|
|
casting two. Out of dread of wild beasts she casts her young by the
|
|
side of the high-road. The young fawn grows with rapidity.
|
|
Menstruation occurs at no other time with the hind; it takes place
|
|
only after parturition, and the substance is phlegm-like.
|
|
|
|
The hind leads the fawn to her lair; this is her place of
|
|
refuge, a cave with a single inlet, inside which she shelters
|
|
herself against attack.
|
|
|
|
Fabulous stories are told concerning the longevity of the
|
|
animal, but the stories have never been verified, and the brevity of
|
|
the period of gestation and the rapidity of growth in the fawn would
|
|
not lead one to attribute extreme longevity to this creature.
|
|
|
|
In the mountain called Elaphoeis or Deer Mountain, which is in
|
|
Arginussa in Asia Minor-the place, by the way, where Alcibiades was
|
|
assassinated-all the hinds have the ear split, so that, if they
|
|
stray to a distance, they can be recognized by this mark; and the
|
|
embryo actually has the mark while yet in the womb of the mother.
|
|
|
|
The hind has four teats like the cow. After the hinds have
|
|
become pregnant, the males all segregate one by one, and in
|
|
consequence of the violence of their sexual passions they keep each
|
|
one to himself, dig a hole in the ground, and bellow from time to
|
|
time; in all these particulars they resemble the goat, and their
|
|
foreheads from getting wetted become black, as is also the case with
|
|
the goat. In this way they pass the time until the rain falls, after
|
|
which time they turn to pasture. The animal acts in this way owing
|
|
to its sexual wantonness and also to its obesity; for in summer-time
|
|
it becomes so exceptionally fat as to be unable to run: in fact at
|
|
this period they can be overtaken by the hunters that pursue them on
|
|
foot in the second or third run; and, by the way, in consequence of
|
|
the heat of the weather and their getting out of breath they always
|
|
make for water in their runs. In the rutting season, the flesh of
|
|
the deer is unsavoury and rank, like the flesh of the he-goat. In
|
|
winter-time the deer becomes thin and weak, but towards the approach
|
|
of the spring he is at his best for running. When on the run the
|
|
deer keeps pausing from time to time, and waits until his pursuer
|
|
draws upon him, whereupon he starts off again. This habit appears
|
|
due to some internal pain: at all events, the gut is so slender and
|
|
weak that, if you strike the animal ever so softly, it is apt to break
|
|
asunder, though the hide of the animal remains sound and uninjured.
|
|
|
|
30
|
|
|
|
Bears, as has been previously stated, do not copulate with the
|
|
male mounting the back of the female, but with the female lying down
|
|
under the male. The she-bear goes with young for thirty days. She
|
|
brings forth sometimes one cub, sometimes two cubs, and at most
|
|
five. Of all animals the newly born cub of the she bear is the
|
|
smallest in proportion to the size of the mother; that is to say, it
|
|
is larger than a mouse but smaller than a weasel. It is also smooth
|
|
and blind, and its legs and most of its organs are as yet
|
|
inarticulate. Pairing takes Place in the month of Elaphebolion, and
|
|
parturition about the time for retiring into winter quarters; about
|
|
this time the bear and the she-bear are at the fattest. After the
|
|
she-bear has reared her young, she comes out of her winter lair in the
|
|
third month, when it is already spring. The female porcupine, by the
|
|
way, hibernates and goes with young the same number of days as the
|
|
she-bear, and in all respects as to parturition resembles this animal.
|
|
When a she-bear is with young, it is a very hard task to catch her.
|
|
|
|
31
|
|
|
|
It has already been stated that the lion and lioness copulate
|
|
rearwards, and that these animals are opisthuretic. They do not
|
|
copulate nor bring forth at all seasons indiscriminately, but once
|
|
in the year only. The lioness brings forth in the spring, generally
|
|
two cubs at a time, and six at the very most; but sometimes only
|
|
one. The story about the lioness discharging her womb in the act of
|
|
parturition is a pure fable, and was merely invented to account for
|
|
the scarcity of the animal; for the animal is, as is well known, a
|
|
rare animal, and is not found in many countries. In fact, in the whole
|
|
of Europe it is only found in the strip between the rivers Achelous
|
|
and Nessus. The cubs of the lioness when newly born are exceedingly
|
|
small, and can scarcely walk when two months old. The Syrian lion
|
|
bears cubs five times: five cubs at the first litter, then four,
|
|
then three, then two, and lastly one; after this the lioness ceases to
|
|
bear for the rest of her days. The lioness has no mane, but this
|
|
appendage is peculiar to the lion. The lion sheds only the four
|
|
so-called canines, two in the upper jaw and two in the lower; and it
|
|
sheds them when it is six months old.
|
|
|
|
32
|
|
|
|
The hyena in colour resembles the wolf, but is more shaggy,
|
|
and is furnished with a mane running all along the spine. What is
|
|
recounted concerning its genital organs, to the effect that every
|
|
hyena is furnished with the organ both of the male and the female,
|
|
is untrue. The fact is that the sexual organ of the male hyena
|
|
resembles the same organ in the wolf and in the dog; the part
|
|
resembling the female genital organ lies underneath the tail, and does
|
|
to some extent resemble the female organ, but it is unprovided with
|
|
duct or passage, and the passage for the residuum comes underneath it.
|
|
The female hyena has the part that resembles the organ of the male,
|
|
and, as in the case of the male, has it underneath her tail,
|
|
unprovided with duct or passage; and after it the passage for the
|
|
residuum, and underneath this the true female genital organ. The
|
|
female hyena has a womb, like all other female animals of the same
|
|
kind. It is an exceedingly rare circumstance to meet with a female
|
|
hyena. At least a hunter said that out of eleven hyenas he had caught,
|
|
only one was a female.
|
|
|
|
33
|
|
|
|
Hares copulate in a rearward posture, as has been stated, for
|
|
the animal is opisthuretic. They breed and bear at all seasons,
|
|
superfoetate during pregnancy, and bear young every month. They do not
|
|
give birth to their young ones all together at one time, but bring
|
|
them forth at intervals over as many days as the circumstances of each
|
|
case may require. The female is supplied with milk before parturition;
|
|
and after bearing submits immediately to the male, and is capable of
|
|
conception while suckling her young. The milk in consistency resembles
|
|
sow's milk. The young are born blind, as is the case with the
|
|
greater part Of the fissipeds or toed animals.
|
|
|
|
34
|
|
|
|
The fox mounts the vixen in copulation, and the vixen bears
|
|
young like the she-bear; in fact, her young ones are even more
|
|
inarticulately formed. Before parturition she retires to sequestered
|
|
places, so that it is a great rarity for a vixen to be caught while
|
|
pregnant. After parturition she warms her young and gets them into
|
|
shape by licking them. She bears four at most at a birth.
|
|
|
|
35
|
|
|
|
The wolf resembles the dog in regard to the time of conception and
|
|
parturition, the number of the litter, and the blindness of the
|
|
newborn young. The sexes couple at one special period, and the
|
|
female brings forth at the beginning of the summer. There is an
|
|
account given of the parturition of the she-wolf that borders on the
|
|
fabulous, to the effect that she confines her lying-in to within
|
|
twelve particular days of the year. And they give the reason for
|
|
this in the form of a myth, viz. that when they transported Leto in so
|
|
many days from the land of the Hyperboreans to the island of Delos,
|
|
she assumed the form of a she-wolf to escape the anger of Here.
|
|
Whether the account be correct or not has not yet been verified; I
|
|
give it merely as it is currently told. There is no more of truth in
|
|
the current statement that the she-wolf bears once and only once in
|
|
her lifetime.
|
|
|
|
The cat and the ichneumon bear as many young as the dog, and
|
|
live on the same food; they live about six years. The cubs of the
|
|
panther are born blind like those of the wolf, and the female bears
|
|
four at the most at one birth. The particulars of conception are the
|
|
same for the thos, or civet, as for the dog; the cubs of the animal
|
|
are born blind, and the female bears two, or three, or four at a
|
|
birth. It is long in the body and low in stature; but not withstanding
|
|
the shortness of its legs it is exceptionally fleet of foot, owing
|
|
to the suppleness of its frame and its capacity for leaping.
|
|
|
|
36
|
|
|
|
There is found in Syria a so-called mule. It is not the same as
|
|
the cross between the horse and ass, but resembles it just as a wild
|
|
ass resembles the domesticated congener, and derives its name from the
|
|
resemblance. Like the wild ass, this wild mule is remarkable for its
|
|
speed. The animals of this species interbreed with one another; and
|
|
a proof of this statement may be gathered from the fact that a certain
|
|
number of them were brought into Phrygia in the time of Pharnaces, the
|
|
father of Pharnabazus, and the animal is there still. The number
|
|
originally introduced was nine, and there are three there at the
|
|
present day.
|
|
|
|
37
|
|
|
|
The phenomena of generation in regard to the mouse are the most
|
|
astonishing both for the number of the young and for the rapidity of
|
|
recurrence in the births. On one occasion a she-mouse in a state of
|
|
pregnancy was shut up by accident in a jar containing millet-seed, and
|
|
after a little while the lid of the jar was removed and upwards of one
|
|
hundred and twenty mice were found inside it.
|
|
|
|
The rate of propagation of field mice in country places, and the
|
|
destruction that they cause, are beyond all telling. In many places
|
|
their number is so incalculable that but very little of the
|
|
corn-crop is left to the farmer; and so rapid is their mode of
|
|
proceeding that sometimes a small farmer will one day observe that
|
|
it is time for reaping, and on the following morning, when he takes
|
|
his reapers afield, he finds his entire crop devoured. Their
|
|
disappearance is unaccountable: in a few days not a mouse will there
|
|
be to be seen. And yet in the time before these few days men fail to
|
|
keep down their numbers by fumigating and unearthing them, or by
|
|
regularly hunting them and turning in swine upon them; for pigs, by
|
|
the way, turn up the mouse-holes by rooting with their snouts. Foxes
|
|
also hunt them, and the wild ferrets in particular destroy them, but
|
|
they make no way against the prolific qualities of the animal and
|
|
the rapidity of its breeding. When they are super-abundant, nothing
|
|
succeeds in thinning them down except the rain; but after heavy
|
|
rains they disappear rapidly.
|
|
|
|
In a certain district of Persia when a female mouse is dissected
|
|
the female embryos appear to be pregnant. Some people assert, and
|
|
positively assert, that a female mouse by licking salt can become
|
|
pregnant without the intervention of the male.
|
|
|
|
Mice in Egypt are covered with bristles like the hedgehog. There
|
|
is also a different breed of mice that walk on their two hind-legs;
|
|
their front legs are small and their hind-legs long; the breed is
|
|
exceedingly numerous. There are many other breeds of mice than are
|
|
here referred to.
|
|
|
|
Book VII
|
|
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
As to Man's growth, first within his mother's womb and afterward
|
|
to old age, the course of nature, in so far as man is specially
|
|
concerned, is after the following manner. And, by the way, the
|
|
difference of male and female and of their respective organs has
|
|
been dealt with heretofore. When twice seven years old, in the most of
|
|
cases, the male begins to engender seed; and at the same time hair
|
|
appears upon the pubes, in like manner, so Alcmaeon of Croton remarks,
|
|
as plants first blossom and then seed. About the same time, the
|
|
voice begins to alter, getting harsher and more uneven, neither shrill
|
|
as formerly nor deep as afterward, nor yet of any even tone, but
|
|
like an instrument whose strings are frayed and out of tune; and it is
|
|
called, by way of by-word, the bleat of the billy-goat. Now this
|
|
breaking of the voice is the more apparent in those who are making
|
|
trial of their sexual powers; for in those who are prone to
|
|
lustfulness the voice turns into the voice of a man, but not so in the
|
|
continent. For if a lad strive diligently to hinder his voice from
|
|
breaking, as some do of those who devote themselves to music, the
|
|
voice lasts a long while unbroken and may even persist with little
|
|
change. And the breasts swell and likewise the private parts, altering
|
|
in size and shape. (And by the way, at this time of life those who try
|
|
by friction to provoke emission of seed are apt to experience pain
|
|
as well as voluptuous sensations.) At the same age in the female,
|
|
the breasts swell and the so-called catamenia commence to flow; and
|
|
this fluid resembles fresh blood. There is another discharge, a
|
|
white one, by the way, which occurs in girls even at a very early age,
|
|
more especially if their diet be largely of a fluid nature; and this
|
|
malady causes arrest of growth and loss of flesh. In the majority of
|
|
cases the catamenia are noticed by the time the breasts have grown
|
|
to the height of two fingers' breadth. In girls, too, about this
|
|
time the voice changes to a deeper note; for while in general the
|
|
woman's voice is higher than the man's, so also the voices of girls
|
|
are pitched in a higher key than the elder women's, just as the
|
|
boy's are higher than the men's; and the girls' voices are shriller
|
|
than the boys', and a maid's flute is tuned sharper than a lad's.
|
|
|
|
Girls of this age have much need of surveillance. For then in
|
|
particular they feel a natural impulse to make usage of the sexual
|
|
faculties that are developing in them; so that unless they guard
|
|
against any further impulse beyond that inevitable one which their
|
|
bodily development of itself supplies, even in the case of those who
|
|
abstain altogether from passionate indulgence, they contract habits
|
|
which are apt to continue into later life. For girls who give way to
|
|
wantonness grow more and more wanton; and the same is true of boys,
|
|
unless they be safeguarded from one temptation and another; for the
|
|
passages become dilated and set up a local flux or running, and
|
|
besides this the recollection of pleasure associated with former
|
|
indulgence creates a longing for its repetition.
|
|
|
|
Some men are congenitally impotent owing to structural defect;
|
|
and in like manner women also may suffer from congenital incapacity.
|
|
Both men and women are liable to constitutional change, growing
|
|
healthier or more sickly, or altering in the way of leanness,
|
|
stoutness, and vigour; thus, after puberty some lads who were thin
|
|
before grow stout and healthy, and the converse also happens; and
|
|
the same is equally true of girls. For when in boy or girl the body
|
|
is loaded with superfluous matter, then, when such superfluities are
|
|
got rid of in the spermatic or catamenial discharge, their bodies
|
|
improve in health and condition owing to the removal of what had acted
|
|
as an impediment to health and proper nutrition; but in such as are of
|
|
opposite habit their bodies become emaciated and out of health, for
|
|
then the spermatic discharge in the one case and the catamenial flow
|
|
in the other take place at the cost of natural healthy conditions.
|
|
|
|
Furthermore, in the case of maidens the condition of the breasts
|
|
is diverse in different individuals, for they are sometimes quite
|
|
big and sometimes little; and as a general rule their size depends
|
|
on whether or not the body was burthened in childhood with superfluous
|
|
material. For when the signs of womanhood are nigh but not come, the
|
|
more there be of moisture the more will it cause the breasts to swell,
|
|
even to the bursting point; and the result is that the breasts
|
|
remain during after-life of the bulk that they then acquired. And
|
|
among men, the breasts grow more conspicuous and more like to those of
|
|
women, both in young men and old, when the individual temperament is
|
|
moist and sleek and the reverse of sinewy, and all the more among
|
|
the dark-complexioned than the fair.
|
|
|
|
At the outset and till the age of one and twenty the spermatic
|
|
discharge is devoid of fecundity; afterwards it becomes fertile, but
|
|
young men and women produce undersized and imperfect progeny, as is
|
|
the case also with the common run of animals. Young women conceive
|
|
readily, but, having conceived, their labour in childbed is apt to
|
|
be difficult.
|
|
|
|
The frame fails of reaching its full development and ages
|
|
quickly in men of intemperate lusts and in women who become mothers of
|
|
many children; for it appears to be the case that growth ceases when
|
|
the woman has given birth to three children. Women of a lascivious
|
|
disposition grow more sedate and virtuous after they have borne
|
|
several children.
|
|
|
|
After the age of twenty-one women are fully ripe for
|
|
child-bearing, but men go on increasing in vigour. When the
|
|
spermatic fluid is of a thin consistency it is infertile; when
|
|
granular it is fertile and likely to produce male children, but when
|
|
thin and unclotted it is apt to produce female offspring. And it is
|
|
about this time of life that in men the beard makes its appearance.
|
|
|
|
2
|
|
|
|
The onset of the catamenia in women takes place towards the end of
|
|
the month; and on this account the wiseacres assert that the moon is
|
|
feminine, because the discharge in women and the waning of the moon
|
|
happen at one and the same time, and after the wane and the
|
|
discharge both one and the other grow whole again. (In some women
|
|
the catamenia occur regularly but sparsely every month, and more
|
|
abundantly every third month.) With those in whom the ailment lasts
|
|
but a little while, two days or three, recovery is easy; but where the
|
|
duration is longer, the ailment is more troublesome. For women are
|
|
ailing during these days; and sometimes the discharge is sudden and
|
|
sometimes gradual, but in all cases alike there is bodily distress
|
|
until the attack be over. In many cases at the commencement of the
|
|
attack, when the discharge is about to appear, there occur spasms
|
|
and rumbling noises within the womb until such time as the discharge
|
|
manifests itself.
|
|
|
|
Under natural conditions it is after recovery from these
|
|
symptoms that conception takes place in women, and women in whom the
|
|
signs do not manifest themselves for the most part remain childless.
|
|
But the rule is not without exception, for some conceive in spite of
|
|
the absence of these symptoms; and these are cases in which a
|
|
secretion accumulates, not in such a way as actually to issue forth,
|
|
but in amount equal to the residuum left in the case of
|
|
child-bearing women after the normal discharge has taken place. And
|
|
some conceive while the signs are on but not afterwards, those
|
|
namely in whom the womb closes up immediately after the discharge.
|
|
In some cases the menses persist during pregnancy up to the very last;
|
|
but the result in these cases is that the offspring are poor, and
|
|
either fail to survive or grow up weakly.
|
|
|
|
In many cases, owing to excessive desire, arising either from
|
|
youthful impetuosity or from lengthened abstinence, prolapsion of
|
|
the womb takes place and the catamenia appear repeatedly, thrice in
|
|
the month, until conception occurs; and then the womb withdraws
|
|
upwards again to its proper place...
|
|
|
|
As we have remarked above, the discharge is wont to be more
|
|
abundant in women than in the females of any other animals. In
|
|
creatures that do not bring forth their young alive nothing of the
|
|
sort manifests itself, this particular superfluity being converted
|
|
into bodily substance; and by the way, in such animals the females are
|
|
sometimes larger than the males; and moreover, the material is used up
|
|
sometimes for scutes and sometimes for scales, and sometimes for the
|
|
abundant covering of feathers, whereas in the vivipara possessed of
|
|
limbs it is turned into hair and into bodily substance (for man
|
|
alone among them is smooth-skinned), and into urine, for this
|
|
excretion is in the majority of such animals thick and copious. Only
|
|
in the case of women is the superfluity turned into a discharge
|
|
instead of being utilized in these other ways.
|
|
|
|
There is something similar to be remarked of men: for in
|
|
proportion to his size man emits more seminal fluid than any other
|
|
animal (for which reason man is the smoothest of animals),
|
|
especially such men as are of a moist habit and not over corpulent,
|
|
and fair men in greater degree than dark. It is likewise with women;
|
|
for in the stout, great part of the excretion goes to nourish the
|
|
body. In the act of intercourse, women of a fair complexion
|
|
discharge a more plentiful secretion than the dark; and furthermore, a
|
|
watery and pungent diet conduces to this phenomenon.
|
|
|
|
3
|
|
|
|
It is a sign of conception in women when the place is dry
|
|
immediately after intercourse. If the lips of the orifice be smooth
|
|
conception is difficult, for the matter slips off; and if they be
|
|
thick it is also difficult. But if on digital examination the lips
|
|
feel somewhat rough and adherent, and if they be likewise thin, then
|
|
the chances are in favour of conception. Accordingly, if conception be
|
|
desired, we must bring the parts into such a condition as we have just
|
|
described; but if on the contrary we want to avoid conception then
|
|
we must bring about a contrary disposition. Wherefore, since if the
|
|
parts be smooth conception is prevented, some anoint that part of
|
|
the womb on which the seed falls with oil of cedar, or with ointment
|
|
of lead or with frankincense, commingled with olive oil. If the seed
|
|
remain within for seven days then it is certain that conception has
|
|
taken place; for it is during that period that what is known as
|
|
effluxion takes place.
|
|
|
|
In most cases the menstrual discharge recurs for some time after
|
|
conception has taken place, its duration being mostly thirty days in
|
|
the case of a female and about forty days in the case of a male child.
|
|
After parturition also it is common for the discharge to be withheld
|
|
for an equal number of days, but not in all cases with equal
|
|
exactitude. After conception, and when the above-mentioned days are
|
|
past, the discharge no longer takes its natural course but finds its
|
|
way to the breasts and turns to milk. The first appearance of milk
|
|
in the breasts is scant in quantity and so to speak cobwebby or
|
|
interspersed with little threads. And when conception has taken place,
|
|
there is apt to be a sort of feeling in the region of the flanks,
|
|
which in some cases quickly swell up a little, especially in thin
|
|
persons, and also in the groin.
|
|
|
|
In the case of male children the first movement usually occurs
|
|
on the right-hand side of the womb and about the fortieth day, but
|
|
if the child be a female then on the left-hand side and about the
|
|
ninetieth day. However, we must by no means assume this to be an
|
|
accurate statement of fact, for there are many exceptions, in which
|
|
the movement is manifested on the right-hand side though a female
|
|
child be coming, and on the left-hand side though the infant be a
|
|
male. And in short, these and all suchlike phenomena are usually
|
|
subject to differences that may be summed up as differences of degree.
|
|
|
|
About this period the embryo begins to resolve into distinct
|
|
parts, it having hitherto consisted of a fleshlike substance without
|
|
distinction of parts.
|
|
|
|
What is called effluxion is a destruction of the embryo within
|
|
the first week, while abortion occurs up to the fortieth day; and
|
|
the greater number of such embryos as perish do so within the space of
|
|
these forty days.
|
|
|
|
In the case of a male embryo aborted at the fortieth day, if
|
|
it be placed in cold water it holds together in a sort of membrane,
|
|
but if it be placed in any other fluid it dissolves and disappears. If
|
|
the membrane be pulled to bits the embryo is revealed, as big as one
|
|
of the large kind of ants; and all the limbs are plain to see,
|
|
including the penis, and the eyes also, which as in other animals
|
|
are of great size. But the female embryo, if it suffer abortion during
|
|
the first three months, is as a rule found to be undifferentiated;
|
|
if however it reach the fourth month it comes to be subdivided and
|
|
quickly attains further differentiation. In short, while within the
|
|
womb, the female infant accomplishes the whole development of its
|
|
parts more slowly than the male, and more frequently than the
|
|
man-child takes ten months to come to perfection. But after birth, the
|
|
females pass more quickly than the males through youth and maturity
|
|
and age; and this is especially true of those that bear many children,
|
|
as indeed I have already said.
|
|
|
|
4
|
|
|
|
When the womb has conceived the seed, straightway in the
|
|
majority of cases it closes up until seven months are fulfilled; but
|
|
in the eighth month it opens, and the embryo, if it be fertile,
|
|
descends in the eighth month. But such embryos as are not fertile
|
|
but are devoid of breath at eight months old, their mothers do not
|
|
bring into the world by parturition at eight months, neither does
|
|
the embryo descend within the womb at that period nor does the womb
|
|
open. And it is a sign that the embryo is not capable of life if it be
|
|
formed without the above-named circumstances taking place.
|
|
|
|
After conception women are prone to a feeling of heaviness in
|
|
all parts of their bodies, and for instance they experience a
|
|
sensation of darkness in front of the eyes and suffer also from
|
|
headache. These symptoms appear sooner or later, sometimes as early as
|
|
the tenth day, according as the patient be more or less burthened with
|
|
superfluous humours. Nausea also and sickness affect the most of
|
|
women, and especially such as those that we have just now mentioned,
|
|
after the menstrual discharge has ceased and before it is yet turned
|
|
in the direction of the breasts.
|
|
|
|
Moreover, some women suffer most at the beginning of their
|
|
pregnancy and some at a later period when the embryo has had time to
|
|
grow; and in some women it is a common occurrence to suffer from
|
|
strangury towards the end of their time. As a general rule women who
|
|
are pregnant of a male child escape comparatively easily and retain
|
|
a comparatively healthy look, but it is otherwise with those whose
|
|
infant is a female; for these latter look as a rule paler and suffer
|
|
more pain, and in many cases they are subject to swellings of the legs
|
|
and eruptions on the body. Nevertheless the rule is subject to
|
|
exceptions.
|
|
|
|
Women in pregnancy are a prey to all sorts of longings and to
|
|
rapid changes of mood, and some folks call this the 'ivy-sickness';
|
|
and with the mothers of female infants the longings are more acute,
|
|
and they are less contented when they have got what they desired.
|
|
|
|
In a certain few cases the patient feels unusually well during
|
|
pregnancy. The worst time of all is just when the child's hair is
|
|
beginning to grow.
|
|
|
|
In pregnant women their own natural hair is inclined to grow
|
|
thin and fall out, but on the other hand hair tends to grow on parts
|
|
of the body where it was not wont to be. As a general rule, a
|
|
man-child is more prone to movement within its mother's womb than a
|
|
female child, and it is usually born sooner. And labour in the case of
|
|
female children is apt to be protracted and sluggish, while in the
|
|
case of male children it is acute and by a long way more difficult.
|
|
Women who have connexion with their husbands shortly before childbirth
|
|
are delivered all the more quickly. Occasionally women seem to be in
|
|
the pains of labour though labour has not in fact commenced, what
|
|
seemed like the commencement of labour being really the result of
|
|
the foetus turning its head.
|
|
|
|
Now all other animals bring the time of pregnancy to an end in a
|
|
uniform way; in other words, one single term of pregnancy is defined
|
|
for each of them. But in the case of mankind alone of all animals
|
|
the times are diverse; for pregnancy may be of seven months' duration,
|
|
or of eight months or of nine, and still more commonly of ten
|
|
months, while some few women go even into the eleventh month.
|
|
|
|
Children that come into the world before seven months can
|
|
under no circumstances survive. The seven-months' children are the
|
|
earliest that are capable of life, and most of them are weakly-for
|
|
which reason, by the way, it is customary to swaddle them in wool,-and
|
|
many of them are born with some of the orifices of the body
|
|
imperforate, for instance the ears or the nostrils. But as they get
|
|
bigger they become more perfectly developed, and many of them grow up.
|
|
|
|
In Egypt, and in some other places where the women are
|
|
fruitful and are wont to bear and bring forth many children without
|
|
difficulty, and where the children when born are capable of living
|
|
even if they be born subject to deformity, in these places the
|
|
eight-months' children live and are brought up, but in Greece it is
|
|
only a few of them that survive while most perish. And this being
|
|
the general experience, when such a child does happen to survive the
|
|
mother is apt to think that it was not an eight months' child after
|
|
all, but that she had conceived at an earlier period without being
|
|
aware of it.
|
|
|
|
Women suffer most pain about the fourth and the eighth months, and
|
|
if the foetus perishes in the fourth or in the eighth month the mother
|
|
also succumbs as a general rule; so that not only do the eight-months'
|
|
children not live, but when they die their mothers are in great danger
|
|
of their own lives. In like manner children that are apparently born
|
|
at a later term than eleven months are held to be in doubtful case;
|
|
inasmuch as with them also the beginning of conception may have
|
|
escaped the notice of the mother. What I mean to say is that often the
|
|
womb gets filled with wind, and then when at a later period
|
|
connexion and conception take place, they think that the former
|
|
circumstance was the beginning of conception from the similarity of
|
|
the symptoms that they experienced.
|
|
|
|
Such then are the differences between mankind and other
|
|
animals in regard to the many various modes of completion of the
|
|
term of pregnancy. Furthermore, some animals produce one and some
|
|
produce many at a birth, but the human species does sometimes the
|
|
one and sometimes the other. As a general rule and among most
|
|
nations the women bear one child a birth; but frequently and in many
|
|
lands they bear twins, as for instance in Egypt especially.
|
|
Sometimes women bring forth three and even four children, and
|
|
especially in certain parts of the world, as has already been
|
|
stated. The largest number ever brought forth is five, and such an
|
|
occurrence has been witnessed on several occasions. There was once
|
|
upon a time a certain women who had twenty children at four births;
|
|
each time she had five, and most of them grew up.
|
|
|
|
Now among other animals, if a pair of twins happen to be male
|
|
and female they have as good a chance of surviving as though both
|
|
had been males or both females; but among mankind very few twins
|
|
survive if one happen to be a boy and the other a girl.
|
|
|
|
Of all animals the woman and the mare are most inclined to
|
|
receive the commerce of the male during pregnancy; while all other
|
|
animals when they are pregnant avoid the male, save those in which the
|
|
phenomenon of superfoetation occurs, such as the hare. Unlike that
|
|
animal, the mare after once conceiving cannot be rendered pregnant
|
|
again, but brings forth one foal only, at least as a general rule;
|
|
in the human species cases of superfoetation are rare, but they do
|
|
happen now and then.
|
|
|
|
An embryo conceived some considerable time after a previous
|
|
conception does not come to perfection, but gives rise to pain and
|
|
causes the destruction of the earlier embryo; and, by the way, a
|
|
case has been known to occur where owing to this destructive influence
|
|
no less than twelve embryos conceived by superfoetation have been
|
|
discharged. But if the second conception take place at a short
|
|
interval, then the mother bears that which was later conceived, and
|
|
brings forth the two children like actual twins, as happened,
|
|
according to the legend, in the case of Iphicles and Hercules. The
|
|
following also is a striking example: a certain woman, having
|
|
committed adultery, brought forth the one child resembling her husband
|
|
and the other resembling the adulterous lover.
|
|
|
|
The case has also occurred where a woman, being pregnant of twins,
|
|
has subsequently conceived a third child; and in course of time she
|
|
brought forth the twins perfect and at full term, but the third a
|
|
five-months' child; and this last died there and then. And in
|
|
another case it happened that the woman was first delivered of a
|
|
seven-months' child, and then of two which were of full term; and of
|
|
these the first died and the other two survived.
|
|
|
|
Some also have been known to conceive while about to miscarry, and
|
|
they have lost the one child and been delivered of the other.
|
|
|
|
If women while going with child cohabit after the eighth month the
|
|
child is in most cases born covered over with a slimy fluid. Often
|
|
also the child is found to be replete with food of which the mother
|
|
had partaken.
|
|
|
|
5
|
|
|
|
When women have partaken of salt in overabundance their children
|
|
are apt to be born destitute of nails.
|
|
|
|
Milk that is produced earlier than the seventh month is unfit
|
|
for use; but as soon as the child is fit to live the milk is fit to
|
|
use. The first of the milk is saltish, as it is likewise with sheep.
|
|
Most women are sensibly affected by wine during pregnancy, for if they
|
|
partake of it they grow relaxed and debilitated.
|
|
|
|
The beginning of child-bearing in women and of the capacity to
|
|
procreate in men, and the cessation of these functions in both
|
|
cases, coincide in the one case with the emission of seed and in the
|
|
other with the discharge of the catamenia: with this qualification
|
|
that there is a lack of fertility at the commencement of these
|
|
symptoms, and again towards their close when the emissions become
|
|
scanty and weak. The age at which the sexual powers begin has been
|
|
related already. As for their end, the menstrual discharges ceases
|
|
in most women about their fortieth year; but with those in whom it
|
|
goes on longer it lasts even to the fiftieth year, and women of that
|
|
age have been known to bear children. But beyond that age there is
|
|
no case on record.
|
|
|
|
6
|
|
|
|
Men in most cases continue to be sexually competent until they are
|
|
sixty years old, and if that limit be overpassed then until seventy
|
|
years; and men have been actually known to procreate children at
|
|
seventy years of age. With many men and many women it so happens
|
|
that they are unable to produce children to one another, while they
|
|
are able to do so in union with other individuals. The same thing
|
|
happens with regard to the production of male and female offspring;
|
|
for sometimes men and women in union with one another produce male
|
|
children or female, as the case may be, but children of the opposite
|
|
sex when otherwise mated. And they are apt to change in this respect
|
|
with advancing age: for sometimes a husband and wife while they are
|
|
young produce female children and in later life male children; and
|
|
in other cases the very contrary occurs. And just the same thing is
|
|
true in regard to the generative faculty: for some while young are
|
|
childless, but have children when they grow older; and some have
|
|
children to begin with, and later on no more.
|
|
|
|
There are certain women who conceive with difficulty, but if
|
|
they do conceive, bring the child to maturity; while others again
|
|
conceive readily, but are unable to bring the child to birth.
|
|
Furthermore, some men and some women produce female offspring and some
|
|
male, as for instance in the story of Hercules, who among all his
|
|
two and seventy children is said to have begotten but one girl.
|
|
Those women who are unable to conceive, save with the help of
|
|
medical treatment or some other adventitious circumstance, are as a
|
|
general rule apt to bear female children rather than male.
|
|
|
|
It is a common thing with men to be at first sexually
|
|
competent and afterwards impotent, and then again to revert to their
|
|
former powers.
|
|
|
|
From deformed parents come deformed children, lame from lame and
|
|
blind from blind, and, speaking generally, children often inherit
|
|
anything that is peculiar in their parents and are born with similar
|
|
marks, such as pimples or scars. Such things have been known to be
|
|
handed down through three generations; for instance, a certain man had
|
|
a mark on his arm which his son did not possess, but his grandson
|
|
had it in the same spot though not very distinct.
|
|
|
|
Such cases, however, are few; for the children of cripples are
|
|
mostly sound, and there is no hard and fast rule regarding them. While
|
|
children mostly resemble their parents or their ancestors, it
|
|
sometimes happens that no such resemblance is to be traced. But
|
|
parents may pass on resemblance after several generations, as in the
|
|
case of the woman in Elis, who committed adultery with a negro; in
|
|
this case it was not the woman's own daughter but the daughter's child
|
|
that was a blackamoor.
|
|
|
|
As a rule the daughters have a tendency to take after the
|
|
mother, and the boys after the father; but sometimes it is the other
|
|
way, the boys taking after the mother and the girls after the
|
|
father. And they may resemble both parents in particular features.
|
|
|
|
There have been known cases of twins that had no resemblance
|
|
to one another, but they are alike as a general rule. There was once
|
|
upon a time a woman who had intercourse with her husband a week
|
|
after giving birth to a child and she conceived and bore a second
|
|
child as like the first as any twin. Some women have a tendency to
|
|
produce children that take after themselves, and others children
|
|
that take after the husband; and this latter case is like that of
|
|
the celebrated mare in Pharsalus, that got the name of the Honest
|
|
Wife.
|
|
|
|
7
|
|
|
|
In the emission of sperm there is a preliminary discharge of
|
|
air, and the outflow is manifestly caused by a blast of air; for
|
|
nothing is cast to a distance save by pneumatic pressure. After the
|
|
seed reaches the womb and remains there for a while, a membrane
|
|
forms around it; for when it happens to escape before it is distinctly
|
|
formed, it looks like an egg enveloped in its membrane after removal
|
|
of the eggshell; and the membrane is full of veins.
|
|
|
|
All animals whatsoever, whether they fly or swim or walk upon
|
|
dry land, whether they bring forth their young alive or in the egg,
|
|
develop in the same way: save only that some have the navel attached
|
|
to the womb, namely the viviparous animals, and some have it
|
|
attached to the egg, and some to both parts alike, as in a certain
|
|
sort of fishes. And in some cases membranous envelopes surround the
|
|
egg, and in other cases the chorion surrounds it. And first of all the
|
|
animal develops within the innermost envelope, and then another
|
|
membrane appears around the former one, which latter is for the most
|
|
part attached to the womb, but is in part separated from it and
|
|
contains fluid. In between is a watery or sanguineous fluid, which the
|
|
women folk call the forewaters.
|
|
|
|
8
|
|
|
|
All animals, or all such as have a navel, grow by the navel. And
|
|
the navel is attached to the cotyledon in all such as possess
|
|
cotyledons, and to the womb itself by a vein in all such as have the
|
|
womb smooth. And as regards their shape within the womb, the
|
|
four-footed animals all lie stretched out, and the footless animals
|
|
lie on their sides, as for instance fishes; but two-legged animals lie
|
|
in a bent position, as for instance birds; and human embryos lie bent,
|
|
with nose between the knees and eyes upon the knees, and the ears free
|
|
at the sides.
|
|
|
|
All animals alike have the head upwards to begin with; but as
|
|
they grow and approach the term of egress from the womb they turn
|
|
downwards, and birth in the natural course of things takes place in
|
|
all animals head foremost; but in abnormal cases it may take place
|
|
in a bent position, or feet foremost.
|
|
|
|
The young of quadrupeds when they are near their full time
|
|
contain excrements, both liquid and in the form of solid lumps, the
|
|
latter in the lower part of the bowel and the urine in the bladder.
|
|
|
|
In those animals that have cotyledons in the womb the cotyledons
|
|
grow less as the embryo grows bigger, and at length they disappear
|
|
altogether. The navel-string is a sheath wrapped about blood-vessels
|
|
which have their origin in the womb, from the cotyledons in those
|
|
animals which possess them and from a blood-vessel in those which do
|
|
not. In the larger animals, such as the embryos of oxen, the vessels
|
|
are four in number, and in smaller animals two; in the very little
|
|
ones, such as fowls, one vessel only.
|
|
|
|
Of the four vessels that run into the embryo, two pass through
|
|
the liver where the so-called gates or 'portae' are, running in the
|
|
direction of the great vein, and the other two run in the direction of
|
|
the aorta towards the point where it divides and becomes two vessels
|
|
instead of one. Around each pair of blood-vessels are membranes, and
|
|
surrounding these membranes is the navel-string itself, after the
|
|
manner of a sheath. And as the embryo grows, the veins themselves tend
|
|
more and more to dwindle in size. And also as the embryo matures it
|
|
comes down into the hollow of the womb and is observed to move here,
|
|
and sometimes rolls over in the vicinity of the groin.
|
|
|
|
9
|
|
|
|
When women are in labour, their pains determine towards many
|
|
divers parts of the body, and in most cases to one or other of the
|
|
thighs. Those are the quickest to be delivered who experience severe
|
|
pains in the region of the belly; and parturition is difficult in
|
|
those who begin by suffering pain in the loins, and speedy when the
|
|
pain is abdominal. If the child about to be born be a male, the
|
|
preliminary flood is watery and pale in colour, but if a girl it is
|
|
tinged with blood, though still watery. In some cases of labour
|
|
these latter phenomena do not occur, either one way or the other.
|
|
|
|
In other animals parturition is unaccompanied by pain, and the
|
|
dam is plainly seen to suffer but moderate inconvenience. In women,
|
|
however, the pains are more severe, and this is especially the case in
|
|
persons of sedentary habits, and in those who are weak-chested and
|
|
short of breath. Labour is apt to be especially difficult if during
|
|
the process the woman while exerting force with her breath fails to
|
|
hold it in.
|
|
|
|
First of all, when the embryo starts to move and the membranes
|
|
burst, there issues forth the watery flood; then afterwards comes
|
|
the embryo, while the womb everts and the afterbirth comes out from
|
|
within.
|
|
|
|
10
|
|
|
|
The cutting of the navel-string, which is the nurse's duty, is a
|
|
matter calling for no little care and skill. For not only in cases
|
|
of difficult labour must she be able to render assistance with skilful
|
|
hand, but she must also have her wits about her in all
|
|
contingencies, and especially in the operation of tying the cord.
|
|
For if the afterbirth have come away, the navel is ligatured off
|
|
from the afterbirth with a woollen thread and is then cut above the
|
|
ligature; and at the place where it has been tied it heals up, and the
|
|
remaining portion drops off. (If the ligature come loose the child
|
|
dies from loss of blood.) But if the afterbirth has not yet come away,
|
|
but remains after the child itself is extruded, it is cut away
|
|
within after the ligaturing of the cord.
|
|
|
|
It often happens that the child appears to have been born dead
|
|
when it is merely weak, and when before the umbilical cord has been
|
|
ligatured, the blood has run out into the cord and its surroundings.
|
|
But experienced midwives have been known to squeeze back the blood
|
|
into the child's body from the cord, and immediately the child that
|
|
a moment before was bloodless came back to life again.
|
|
|
|
It is the natural rule, as we have mentioned above, for all
|
|
animals to come into the world head foremost, and children,
|
|
moreover, have their hands stretched out by their sides. And the child
|
|
gives a cry and puts its hands up to its mouth as soon as it issues
|
|
forth.
|
|
|
|
Moreover the child voids excrement sometimes at once,
|
|
sometimes a little later, but in all cases during the first day; and
|
|
this excrement is unduly copious in comparison with the size of the
|
|
child; it is what the midwives call the meconium or 'poppy-juice'.
|
|
In colour it resembles blood, extremely dark and pitch-like, but later
|
|
on it becomes milky, for the child takes at once to the breast. Before
|
|
birth the child makes no sound, even though in difficult labour it put
|
|
forth its head while the rest of the body remains within.
|
|
|
|
In cases where flooding takes place rather before its time, it
|
|
is apt to be followed by difficult parturition. But if discharge
|
|
take place after birth in small quantity, and in cases where it only
|
|
takes place at the beginning and does not continue till the fortieth
|
|
day, then in such cases women make a better recovery and are the
|
|
sooner ready to conceive again.
|
|
|
|
Until the child is forty days old it neither laughs nor weeps
|
|
during waking hours, but of nights it sometimes does both; and for the
|
|
most part it does not even notice being tickled, but passes most of
|
|
its time in sleep. As it keeps on growing, it gets more and more
|
|
wakeful; and moreover it shows signs of dreaming, though it is long
|
|
afterwards before it remembers what it dreams.
|
|
|
|
In other animals there is no contrasting difference between one
|
|
bone and another, but all are properly formed; but in children the
|
|
front part of the head is soft and late of ossifying. And by the
|
|
way, some animals are born with teeth, but children begin to cut their
|
|
teeth in the seventh month; and the front teeth are the first to
|
|
come through, sometimes the upper and sometimes the lower ones. And
|
|
the warmer the nurses' milk so much the quicker are the children's
|
|
teeth to come.
|
|
|
|
11
|
|
|
|
After parturition and the cleasing flood the milk comes in plenty,
|
|
and in some women it flows not only from the nipples but at divers
|
|
parts of the breasts, and in some cases even from the armpits. And for
|
|
some time afterwards there continue to be certain indurated parts of
|
|
the breast called strangalides, or 'knots', which occur when it so
|
|
happens that the moisture is not concocted, or when it finds no outlet
|
|
but accumulates within. For the whole breast is so spongy that if a
|
|
woman in drinking happen to swallow a hair, she gets a pain in her
|
|
breast, which ailment is called 'trichia'; and the pain lasts till the
|
|
hair either find its own way out or be sucked out with the milk. Women
|
|
continue to have milk until their next conception; and then the milk
|
|
stops coming and goes dry, alike in the human species and in the
|
|
quadrupedal vivipara. So long as there is a flow of milk the
|
|
menstrual purgations do not take place, at least as a general rule,
|
|
though the discharge has been known to occur during the period of
|
|
suckling. For, speaking generally, a determination of moisture does
|
|
not take place at one and the same time in several directions; as
|
|
for instance the menstrual purgations tend to be scanty in persons
|
|
suffering from haemorrhoids. And in some women the like happens
|
|
owing to their suffering from varices, when the fluids issue from
|
|
the pelvic region before entering into the womb. And patients who
|
|
during suppression of the menses happen to vomit blood are no whit the
|
|
worse.
|
|
|
|
12
|
|
|
|
Children are very commonly subject to convulsions, more especially
|
|
such of them as are more than ordinarily well-nourished on rich or
|
|
unusually plentiful milk from a stout nurse. Wine is bad for
|
|
infants, in that it tends to excite this malady, and red wine is worse
|
|
than white, especially when taken undiluted; and most things that tend
|
|
to induce flatulency are also bad, and constipation too is
|
|
prejudicial. The majority of deaths in infancy occur before the
|
|
child is a week old, hence it is customary to name the child at that
|
|
age, from a belief that it has now a better chance of survival. This
|
|
malady is worst at the full of the moon; and by the way, it is a
|
|
dangerous symptom when the spasms begin in the child's back.
|
|
|
|
Book VIII
|
|
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
WE have now discussed the physical characteristics of animals
|
|
and their methods of generation. Their habits and their modes of
|
|
living vary according to their character and their food.
|
|
|
|
In the great majority of animals there are traces of psychical
|
|
qualities or attitudes, which qualities are more markedly
|
|
differentiated in the case of human beings. For just as we pointed out
|
|
resemblances in the physical organs, so in a number of animals we
|
|
observe gentleness or fierceness, mildness or cross temper, courage,
|
|
or timidity, fear or confidence, high spirit or low cunning, and, with
|
|
regard to intelligence, something equivalent to sagacity. Some of
|
|
these qualities in man, as compared with the corresponding qualities
|
|
in animals, differ only quantitatively: that is to say, a man has more
|
|
or less of this quality, and an animal has more or less of some other;
|
|
other qualities in man are represented by analogous and not
|
|
identical qualities: for instance, just as in man we find knowledge,
|
|
wisdom, and sagacity, so in certain animals there exists some other
|
|
natural potentiality akin to these. The truth of this statement will
|
|
be the more clearly apprehended if we have regard to the phenomena
|
|
of childhood: for in children may be observed the traces and seeds
|
|
of what will one day be settled psychological habits, though
|
|
psychologically a child hardly differs for the time being from an
|
|
animal; so that one is quite justified in saying that, as regards
|
|
man and animals, certain psychical qualities are identical with one
|
|
another, whilst others resemble, and others are analogous to, each
|
|
other.
|
|
|
|
Nature proceeds little by little from things lifeless to
|
|
animal life in such a way that it is impossible to determine the exact
|
|
line of demarcation, nor on which side thereof an intermediate form
|
|
should lie. Thus, next after lifeless things in the upward scale comes
|
|
the plant, and of plants one will differ from another as to its amount
|
|
of apparent vitality; and, in a word, the whole genus of plants,
|
|
whilst it is devoid of life as compared with an animal, is endowed
|
|
with life as compared with other corporeal entities. Indeed, as we
|
|
just remarked, there is observed in plants a continuous scale of
|
|
ascent towards the animal. So, in the sea, there are certain objects
|
|
concerning which one would be at a loss to determine whether they be
|
|
animal or vegetable. For instance, certain of these objects are fairly
|
|
rooted, and in several cases perish if detached; thus the pinna is
|
|
rooted to a particular spot, and the solen (or razor-shell) cannot
|
|
survive withdrawal from its burrow. Indeed, broadly speaking, the
|
|
entire genus of testaceans have a resemblance to vegetables, if they
|
|
be contrasted with such animals as are capable of progression.
|
|
|
|
In regard to sensibility, some animals give no indication
|
|
whatsoever of it, whilst others indicate it but indistinctly. Further,
|
|
the substance of some of these intermediate creatures is fleshlike, as
|
|
is the case with the so-called tethya (or ascidians) and the acalephae
|
|
(or sea-anemones); but the sponge is in every respect like a
|
|
vegetable. And so throughout the entire animal scale there is a
|
|
graduated differentiation in amount of vitality and in capacity for
|
|
motion.
|
|
|
|
A similar statement holds good with regard to habits of life.
|
|
Thus of plants that spring from seed the one function seems to be
|
|
the reproduction of their own particular species, and the sphere of
|
|
action with certain animals is similarly limited. The faculty of
|
|
reproduction, then, is common to all alike. If sensibility be
|
|
superadded, then their lives will differ from one another in respect
|
|
to sexual intercourse through the varying amount of pleasure derived
|
|
therefrom, and also in regard to modes of parturition and ways of
|
|
rearing their young. Some animals, like plants, simply procreate their
|
|
own species at definite seasons; other animals busy themselves also in
|
|
procuring food for their young, and after they are reared quit them
|
|
and have no further dealings with them; other animals are more
|
|
intelligent and endowed with memory, and they live with their
|
|
offspring for a longer period and on a more social footing.
|
|
|
|
The life of animals, then, may be divided into two
|
|
acts-procreation and feeding; for on these two acts all their
|
|
interests and life concentrate. Their food depends chiefly on the
|
|
substance of which they are severally constituted; for the source of
|
|
their growth in all cases will be this substance. And whatsoever is in
|
|
conformity with nature is pleasant, and all animals pursue pleasure in
|
|
keeping with their nature.
|
|
|
|
2
|
|
|
|
Animals are also differentiated locally: that is to say, some
|
|
live upon dry land, while others live in the water. And this
|
|
differentiation may be interpreted in two different ways. Thus, some
|
|
animals are termed terrestrial as inhaling air, and others aquatic
|
|
as taking in water; and there are others which do not actually take in
|
|
these elements, but nevertheless are constitutionally adapted to the
|
|
cooling influence, so far as is needful to them, of one element or the
|
|
other, and hence are called terrestrial or aquatic though they neither
|
|
breathe air nor take in water. Again, other animals are so called from
|
|
their finding their food and fixing their habitat on land or in water:
|
|
for many animals, although they inhale air and breed on land, yet
|
|
derive their food from the water, and live in water for the greater
|
|
part of their lives; and these are the only animals to which as living
|
|
in and on two elements the term 'amphibious' is applicable. There is
|
|
no animal taking in water that is terrestrial or aerial or that
|
|
derives its food from the land, whereas of the great number of land
|
|
animals inhaling air many get their food from the water; moreover some
|
|
are so peculiarly organized that if they be shut off altogether from
|
|
the water they cannot possibly live, as for instance, the so-called
|
|
sea-turtle, the crocodile, the hippopotamus, the seal, and some of the
|
|
smaller creatures, such as the fresh-water tortoise and the frog:
|
|
now all these animals choke or drown if they do not from time to
|
|
time breathe atmospheric air: they breed and rear their young on dry
|
|
land, or near the land, but they pass their lives in water.
|
|
|
|
But the dolphin is equipped in the most remarkable way of all
|
|
animals: the dolphin and other similar aquatic animals, including
|
|
the other cetaceans which resemble it; that is to say, the whale,
|
|
and all the other creatures that are furnished with a blow-hole. One
|
|
can hardly allow that such an animal is terrestrial and terrestrial
|
|
only, or aquatic and aquatic only, if by terrestrial we mean an animal
|
|
that inhales air, and if by aquatic we mean an animal that takes in
|
|
water. For the fact is the dolphin performs both these processes: he
|
|
takes in water and discharges it by his blow-hole, and he also inhales
|
|
air into his lungs; for, by the way, the creature is furnished with
|
|
this organ and respires thereby, and accordingly, when caught in the
|
|
nets, he is quickly suffocated for lack of air. He can also live for a
|
|
considerable while out of the water, but all this while he keeps up
|
|
a dull moaning sound corresponding to the noise made by
|
|
air-breathing animals in general; furthermore, when sleeping, the
|
|
animal keeps his nose above water, and he does so that he may
|
|
breathe the air. Now it would be unreasonable to assign one and the
|
|
same class of animals to both categories, terrestrial and aquatic,
|
|
seeing that these categories are more or less exclusive of one
|
|
another; we must accordingly supplement our definition of the term
|
|
'aquatic' or 'marine'. For the fact is, some aquatic animals take in
|
|
water and discharge it again, for the same reason that leads
|
|
air-breathing animals to inhale air: in other words, with the object
|
|
of cooling the blood. Others take in water as incidental to their mode
|
|
of feeding; for as they get their food in the water they cannot but
|
|
take in water along with their food, and if they take in water they
|
|
must be provided with some organ for discharging it. Those blooded
|
|
animals, then, that use water for a purpose analogous to respiration
|
|
are provided with gills; and such as take in water when catching their
|
|
prey, with the blow-hole. Similar remarks are applicable to molluscs
|
|
and crustaceans; for again it is by way of procuring food that these
|
|
creatures take in water.
|
|
|
|
Aquatic in different ways, the differences depending on bodily
|
|
relation to external temperature and on habit of life, are such
|
|
animals on the one hand as take in air but live in water, and such
|
|
on the other hand as take in water and are furnished with gills but go
|
|
upon dry land and get their living there. At present only one animal
|
|
of the latter kind is known, the so-called cordylus or water-newt;
|
|
this creature is furnished not with lungs but with gills, but for
|
|
all that it is a quadruped and fitted for walking on dry land.
|
|
|
|
In the case of all these animals their nature appears in some
|
|
kind of a way to have got warped, just as some male animals get to
|
|
resemble the female, and some female animals the male. The fact is
|
|
that animals, if they be subjected to a modification in minute organs,
|
|
are liable to immense modifications in their general configuration.
|
|
This phenomenon may be observed in the case of gelded animals: only
|
|
a minute organ of the animal is mutilated, and the creature passes
|
|
from the male to the female form. We may infer, then, that if in the
|
|
primary conformation of the embryo an infinitesimally minute but
|
|
absolutely essential organ sustain a change of magnitude one way or
|
|
the other, the animal will in one case turn to male and in the other
|
|
to female; and also that, if the said organ be obliterated altogether,
|
|
the animal will be of neither one sex nor the other. And so by the
|
|
occurrence of modification in minute organs it comes to pass that
|
|
one animal is terrestrial and another aquatic, in both senses of these
|
|
terms. And, again, some animals are amphibious whilst other animals
|
|
are not amphibious, owing to the circumstance that in their
|
|
conformation while in the embryonic condition there got intermixed
|
|
into them some portion of the matter of which their subsequent food is
|
|
constituted; for, as was said above, what is in conformity with nature
|
|
is to every single animal pleasant and agreeable.
|
|
|
|
Animals then have been categorized into terrestrial and
|
|
aquatic in three ways, according to their assumption of air or of
|
|
water, the temperament of their bodies, or the character of their
|
|
food; and the mode of life of an animal corresponds to the category in
|
|
which it is found. That is to say, in some cases the animal depends
|
|
for its terrestrial or aquatic nature on temperament and diet
|
|
combined, as well as upon its method of respiration; and sometimes
|
|
on temperament and habits alone.
|
|
|
|
Of testaceans, some, that are incapable of motion, subsist on
|
|
fresh water, for, as the sea water dissolves into its constituents,
|
|
the fresh water from its greater thinness percolates through the
|
|
grosser parts; in fact, they live on fresh water just as they were
|
|
originally engendered from the same. Now that fresh water is contained
|
|
in the sea and can be strained off from it can be proved in a
|
|
thoroughly practical way. Take a thin vessel of moulded wax, attach
|
|
a cord to it, and let it down quite empty into the sea: in twenty-four
|
|
hours it will be found to contain a quantity of water, and the water
|
|
will be fresh and drinkable.
|
|
|
|
Sea-anemones feed on such small fishes as come in their way. The
|
|
mouth of this creature is in the middle of its body; and this fact may
|
|
be clearly observed in the case of the larger varieties. Like the
|
|
oyster it has a duct for the outlet of the residuum; and this duct
|
|
is at the top of the animal. In other words, the sea-anemone
|
|
corresponds to the inner fleshy part of the oyster, and the stone to
|
|
which the one creature clings corresponds to the shell which encases
|
|
the other.
|
|
|
|
The limpet detaches itself from the rock and goes about in quest
|
|
of food. Of shell-fish that are mobile, some are carnivorous and
|
|
live on little fishes, as for instance, the purple murex-and there can
|
|
be no doubt that the purple murex is carnivorous, as it is caught by a
|
|
bait of fish; others are carnivorous, but feed also on marine
|
|
vegetation.
|
|
|
|
The sea-turtles feed on shell-fish-for, by the way, their mouths
|
|
are extraordinarily hard; whatever object it seizes, stone or other,
|
|
it crunches into bits, but when it leaves the water for dry land it
|
|
browses on grass). These creatures suffer greatly, and oftentimes
|
|
die when they lie on the surface of the water exposed to a scorching
|
|
sun; for, when once they have risen to the surface, they find a
|
|
difficulty in sinking again.
|
|
|
|
Crustaceans feed in like manner. They are omnivorous; that is to
|
|
say, they live on stones, slime, sea-weed, and excrement-as for
|
|
instance the rock-crab-and are also carnivorous. The crawfish or
|
|
spiny-lobster can get the better of fishes even of the larger species,
|
|
though in some of them it occasionally finds more than its match.
|
|
Thus, this animal is so overmastered and cowed by the octopus that
|
|
it dies of terror if it become aware of an octopus in the same net
|
|
with itself. The crawfish can master the conger-eel, for owing to
|
|
the rough spines of the crawfish the eel cannot slip away and elude
|
|
its hold. The conger-eel, however, devours the octopus, for owing to
|
|
the slipperiness of its antagonist the octopus can make nothing of it.
|
|
The crawfish feeds on little fish, capturing them beside its hole or
|
|
dwelling place; for, by the way, it is found out at sea on rough and
|
|
stony bottoms, and in such places it makes its den. Whatever it
|
|
catches, it puts into its mouth with its pincer-like claws, like the
|
|
common crab. Its nature is to walk straight forward when it has
|
|
nothing to fear, with its feelers hanging sideways; if it be
|
|
frightened, it makes its escape backwards, darting off to a great
|
|
distance. These animals fight one another with their claws, just as
|
|
rams fight with their horns, raising them and striking their
|
|
opponents; they are often also seen crowded together in herds. So much
|
|
for the mode of life of the crustacean.
|
|
|
|
Molluscs are all carnivorous; and of molluscs the calamary and
|
|
the sepia are more than a match for fishes even of the large
|
|
species. The octopus for the most part gathers shellfish, extracts the
|
|
flesh, and feeds on that; in fact, fishermen recognize their holes
|
|
by the number of shells lying about. Some say that the octopus devours
|
|
its own species, but this statement is incorrect; it is doubtless
|
|
founded on the fact that the creature is often found with its
|
|
tentacles removed, which tentacles have really been eaten off by the
|
|
conger.
|
|
|
|
Fishes, all without exception, feed on spawn in the spawning
|
|
season; but in other respects the food varies with the varying
|
|
species. Some fishes are exclusively carnivorous, as the cartilaginous
|
|
genus, the conger, the channa or Serranus, the tunny, the bass, the
|
|
synodon or Dentex, the amia, the sea-perch, and the muraena. The red
|
|
mullet is carnivorous, but feeds also on sea-weed, on shell-fish,
|
|
and on mud. The grey mullet feeds on mud, the dascyllus on mud and
|
|
offal, the scarus or parrot-fish and the melanurus on sea-weed, the
|
|
saupe on offal and sea-weed; the saupe feeds also on zostera, and is
|
|
the only fish that is captured with a gourd. All fishes devour their
|
|
own species, with the single exception of the cestreus or mullet;
|
|
and the conger is especially ravenous in this respect. The cephalus
|
|
and the mullet in general are the only fish that eat no flesh; this
|
|
may be inferred from the facts that when caught they are never found
|
|
with flesh in their intestines, and that the bait used to catch them
|
|
is not flesh but barley-cake. Every fish of the mullet-kind lives on
|
|
sea-weed and sand. The cephalus, called by some the 'chelon', keeps
|
|
near in to the shore, the peraeas keeps out at a distance from it, and
|
|
feeds on a mucous substance exuding from itself, and consequently is
|
|
always in a starved condition. The cephalus lives in mud, and is in
|
|
consequence heavy and slimy; it never feeds on any other fish. As it
|
|
lives in mud, it has every now and then to make a leap upwards out
|
|
of the mud so as to wash the slime from off its body. There is no
|
|
creature known to prey upon the spawn of the cephalus, so that the
|
|
species is exceedingly numerous; when, however, the is full-grown it
|
|
is preyed upon by a number of fishes, and especially by the acharnas
|
|
or bass. Of all fishes the mullet is the most voracious and
|
|
insatiable, and in consequence its belly is kept at full stretch;
|
|
whenever it is not starving, it may be considered as out of condition.
|
|
When it is frightened, it hides its head in mud, under the notion that
|
|
it is hiding its whole body. The synodon is carnivorous and feeds on
|
|
molluscs. Very often the synodon and the channa cast up their stomachs
|
|
while chasing smaller fishes; for, be it remembered, fishes have their
|
|
stomachs close to the mouth, and are not furnished with a gullet.
|
|
|
|
Some fishes then, as has been stated, are carnivorous, and
|
|
carnivorous only, as the dolphin, the synodon, the gilt-head, the
|
|
selachians, and the molluscs. Other fishes feed habitually on mud or
|
|
sea-weed or sea-moss or the so-called stalk-weed or growing plants; as
|
|
for instance, the phycis, the goby, and the rock-fish; and, by the
|
|
way, the only meat that the phycis will touch is that of prawns.
|
|
Very often, however, as has been stated, they devour one another,
|
|
and especially do the larger ones devour the smaller. The proof of
|
|
their being carnivorous is the fact that they can be caught with flesh
|
|
for a bait. The mackerel, the tunny, and the bass are for the most
|
|
part carnivorous, but they do occasionally feed on sea-weed. The
|
|
sargue feeds on the leavings of the trigle or red mullet. The red
|
|
mullet burrows in the mud, when it sets the mud in motion and quits
|
|
its haunt, the sargue settles down into the place and feeds on what is
|
|
left behind, and prevents any smaller fish from settling in the
|
|
immediate vicinity.
|
|
|
|
Of all fishes the so-called scarus, or parrot, wrasse, is the
|
|
only one known to chew the cud like a quadruped.
|
|
|
|
As a general rule the larger fishes catch the smaller ones in
|
|
their mouths whilst swimming straight after them in the ordinary
|
|
position; but the selachians, the dolphin, and all the cetacea must
|
|
first turn over on their backs, as their mouths are placed down below;
|
|
this allows a fair chance of escape to the smaller fishes, and,
|
|
indeed, if it were not so, there would be very few of the little
|
|
fishes left, for the speed and voracity of the dolphin is something
|
|
marvellous.
|
|
|
|
Of eels a few here and there feed on mud and on chance morsels
|
|
of food thrown to them; the greater part of them subsist on fresh
|
|
water. Eel-breeders are particularly careful to have the water kept
|
|
perfectly clear, by its perpetually flowing on to flat slabs of
|
|
stone and then flowing off again; sometimes they coat the eel-tanks
|
|
with plaster. The fact is that the eel will soon choke if the water is
|
|
not clear as his gills are peculiarly small. On this account, when
|
|
fishing for eels, they disturb the water. In the river Strymon
|
|
eel-fishing takes place at the rising of the Pleiads, because at
|
|
this period the water is troubled and the mud raised up by contrary
|
|
winds; unless the water be in this condition, it is as well to leave
|
|
the eels alone. When dead the eel, unlike the majority of fishes,
|
|
neither floats on nor rises to the surface; and this is owing to the
|
|
smallness of the stomach. A few eels are supplied with fat, but the
|
|
greater part have no fat whatsoever. When removed from the water
|
|
they can live for five or six days; for a longer period if north winds
|
|
prevail, for a shorter if south winds. If they are removed in summer
|
|
from the pools to the tanks they will die; but not so if removed in
|
|
the winter. They are not capable of holding out against any abrupt
|
|
change; consequently they often die in large numbers when men
|
|
engaged in transporting them from one place to another dip them into
|
|
water particularly cold. They will also die of suffocation if they
|
|
be kept in a scanty supply of water. This same remark will hold good
|
|
for fishes in general; for they are suffocated if they be long
|
|
confined in a short supply of water, with the water kept
|
|
unchanged-just as animals that respire are suffocated if they be
|
|
shut up with a scanty supply of air. The eel in some cases lives for
|
|
seven or eight years. The river-eel feeds on his own species, on
|
|
grass, or on roots, or on any chance food found in the mud. Their
|
|
usual feeding-time is at night, and during the day-time they retreat
|
|
into deep water. And so much for the food of fishes.
|
|
|
|
3
|
|
|
|
Of birds, such as have crooked talons are carnivorous without
|
|
exception, and cannot swallow corn or bread-food even if it be put
|
|
into their bills in tit-bits; as for instance, the eagle of every
|
|
variety, the kite, the two species of hawks, to wit, the dove-hawk and
|
|
the sparrow-hawk-and, by the way, these two hawks differ greatly in
|
|
size from one another-and the buzzard. The buzzard is of the same size
|
|
as the kite, and is visible at all seasons of the year. There is
|
|
also the phene (or lammergeier) and the vulture. The phene is larger
|
|
than the common eagle and is ashen in colour. Of the vulture there are
|
|
two varieties: one small and whitish, the other comparatively large
|
|
and rather more ashen-coloured than white. Further, of birds that
|
|
fly by night, some have crooked talons, such as the night-raven, the
|
|
owl, and the eagle-owl. The eagle-owl resembles the common owl in
|
|
shape, but it is quite as large as the eagle. Again, there is the
|
|
eleus, the Aegolian owl, and the little horned owl. Of these birds,
|
|
the eleus is somewhat larger than the barn-door cock, and the Aegolian
|
|
owl is of about the same size as the eleus, and both these birds
|
|
hunt the jay; the little horned owl is smaller than the common owl.
|
|
All these three birds are alike in appearance, and all three are
|
|
carnivorous.
|
|
|
|
Again, of birds that have not crooked talons some are carnivorous,
|
|
such as the swallow. Others feed on grubs, such as the chaffinch,
|
|
the sparrow, the 'batis', the green linnet, and the titmouse. Of the
|
|
titmouse there are three varieties. The largest is the
|
|
finch-titmouse--for it is about the size of a finch; the second has
|
|
a long tail, and from its habitat is called the hill-titmouse; the
|
|
third resembles the other two in appearance, but is less in size
|
|
than either of them. Then come the becca-fico, the black-cap, the
|
|
bull-finch, the robin, the epilais, the midget-bird, and the
|
|
golden-crested wren. This wren is little larger than a locust, has a
|
|
crest of bright red gold, and is in every way a beautiful and graceful
|
|
little bird. Then the anthus, a bird about the size of a finch; and
|
|
the mountain-finch, which resembles a finch and is of much the same
|
|
size, but its neck is blue, and it is named from its habitat; and
|
|
lastly the wren and the rook. The above-enumerated birds and the
|
|
like of them feed either wholly or for the most part on grubs, but the
|
|
following and the like feed on thistles; to wit, the linnet, the
|
|
thraupis, and the goldfinch. All these birds feed on thistles, but
|
|
never on grubs or any living thing whatever; they live and roost
|
|
also on the plants from which they derive their food.
|
|
|
|
There are other birds whose favourite food consists of insects
|
|
found beneath the bark of trees; as for instance, the great and the
|
|
small pie, which are nicknamed the woodpeckers. These two birds
|
|
resemble one another in plumage and in note, only that the note of the
|
|
larger bird is the louder of the two; they both frequent the trunks of
|
|
trees in quest of food. There is also the greenpie, a bird about the
|
|
size of a turtle-dove, green-coloured all over, that pecks at the bark
|
|
of trees with extraordinary vigour, lives generally on the branch of a
|
|
tree, has a loud note, and is mostly found in the Peloponnese. There
|
|
is another bird called the 'grub-picker' (or tree-creeper), about as
|
|
small as the penduline titmouse, with speckled plumage of an ashen
|
|
colour, and with a poor note; it is a variety of the woodpecker.
|
|
|
|
There are other birds that live on fruit and herbage, such as
|
|
the wild pigeon or ringdove, the common pigeon, the rock-dove, and the
|
|
turtle-dove. The ring-dove and the common pigeon are visible at all
|
|
seasons; the turtledove only in the summer, for in winter it lurks
|
|
in some hole or other and is never seen. The rock-dove is chiefly
|
|
visible in the autumn, and is caught at that season; it is larger than
|
|
the common pigeon but smaller than the wild one; it is generally
|
|
caught while drinking. These pigeons bring their young ones with
|
|
them when they visit this country. All our other birds come to us in
|
|
the early summer and build their nests here, and the greater part of
|
|
them rear their young on animal food, with the sole exception of the
|
|
pigeon and its varieties.
|
|
|
|
The whole genus of birds may be pretty well divided into such as
|
|
procure their food on dry land, such as frequent rivers and lakes, and
|
|
such as live on or by the sea.
|
|
|
|
Of water-birds such as are web-footed live actually on the
|
|
water, while such as are split-footed live by the edge of it-and, by
|
|
the way, water-birds that are not carnivorous live on water-plants,
|
|
(but most of them live on fish), like the heron and the spoonbill that
|
|
frequent the banks of lakes and rivers; and the spoonbill, by the way,
|
|
is less than the common heron, and has a long flat bill. There are
|
|
furthermore the stork and the seamew; and the seamew, by the way, is
|
|
ashen-coloured. There is also the schoenilus, the cinclus, and the
|
|
white-rump. Of these smaller birds the last mentioned is the
|
|
largest, being about the size of the common thrush; all three may be
|
|
described as 'wag-tails'. Then there is the scalidris, with plumage
|
|
ashen-grey, but speckled. Moreover, the family of the halcyons or
|
|
kingfishers live by the waterside. Of kingfishers there are two
|
|
varieties; one that sits on reeds and sings; the other, the larger
|
|
of the two, is without a note. Both these varieties are blue on the
|
|
back. There is also the trochilus (or sandpiper). The halcyon also,
|
|
including a variety termed the cerylus, is found near the seaside. The
|
|
crow also feeds on such animal life as is cast up on the beach, for
|
|
the bird is omnivorous. There are also the white gull, the cepphus,
|
|
the aethyia, and the charadrius.
|
|
|
|
Of web-footed birds, the larger species live on the banks of
|
|
rivers and lakes; as the swan, the duck, the coot, the grebe, and
|
|
the teal-a bird resembling the duck but less in size-and the
|
|
water-raven or cormorant. This bird is the size of a stork, only
|
|
that its legs are shorter; it is web-footed and is a good swimmer; its
|
|
plumage is black. It roosts on trees, and is the only one of all
|
|
such birds as these that is found to build its nest in a tree. Further
|
|
there is the large goose, the little gregarious goose, the
|
|
vulpanser, the horned grebe, and the penelops. The sea-eagle lives
|
|
in the neighbourhood of the sea and seeks its quarry in lagoons.
|
|
|
|
A great number of birds are omnivorous. Birds of prey feed on
|
|
any animal or bird, other than a bird of prey, that they may catch.
|
|
These birds never touch one of their own genus, whereas fishes often
|
|
devour members actually of their own species.
|
|
|
|
Birds, as a rule, are very spare drinkers. In fact birds of prey
|
|
never drink at all, excepting a very few, and these drink very rarely;
|
|
and this last observation is peculiarly applicable to the kestrel. The
|
|
kite has been seen to drink, but he certainly drinks very seldom.
|
|
|
|
4
|
|
|
|
Animals that are coated with tessellates-such as the lizard and
|
|
the other quadrupeds, and the serpents-are omnivorous: at all events
|
|
they are carnivorous and graminivorous; and serpents, by the way,
|
|
are of all animals the greatest gluttons.
|
|
|
|
Tessellated animals are spare drinkers, as are also all such
|
|
animals as have a spongy lung, and such a lung, scantily supplied with
|
|
blood, is found in all oviparous animals. Serpents, by the by, have an
|
|
insatiate appetite for wine; consequently, at times men hunt for
|
|
snakes by pouring wine into saucers and putting them into the
|
|
interstices of walls, and the creatures are caught when inebriated.
|
|
Serpents are carnivorous, and whenever they catch an animal they
|
|
extract all its juices and eject the creature whole. And, by the
|
|
way, this is done by all other creatures of similar habits, as for
|
|
instance the spider; only that the spider sucks out the juices of
|
|
its prey outside, and the serpent does so in its belly. The serpent
|
|
takes any food presented to him, eats birds and animals, and
|
|
swallows eggs entire. But after taking his prey he stretches himself
|
|
until he stands straight out to the very tip, and then he contracts
|
|
and squeezes himself into little compass, so that the swallowed mass
|
|
may pass down his outstretched body; and this action on his part is
|
|
due to the tenuity and length of his gullet. Spiders and snakes can
|
|
both go without food for a long time; and this remark may be
|
|
verified by observation of specimens kept alive in the shops of the
|
|
apothecaries.
|
|
|
|
5
|
|
|
|
Of viviparous quadrupeds such as are fierce and jag-toothed
|
|
are without exception carnivorous; though, by the way, it is stated of
|
|
the wolf, but of no other animal, that in extremity of hunger it
|
|
will eat a certain kind of earth. These carnivorous animals never
|
|
eat grass except when they are sick, just as dogs bring on a vomit
|
|
by eating grass and thereby purge themselves.
|
|
|
|
The solitary wolf is more apt to attack man than the wolf that
|
|
goes with a pack.
|
|
|
|
The animal called 'glanus' by some and 'hyaena' by others is
|
|
as large as a wolf, with a mane like a horse, only that the hair is
|
|
stiffer and longer and extends over the entire length of the chine. It
|
|
will lie in wait for a man and chase him, and will inveigle a dog
|
|
within its reach by making a noise that resembles the retching noise
|
|
of a man vomiting. It is exceedingly fond of putrefied flesh, and will
|
|
burrow in a graveyard to gratify this propensity.
|
|
|
|
The bear is omnivorous. It eats fruit, and is enabled by the
|
|
suppleness of its body to climb a tree; it also eats vegetables, and
|
|
it will break up a hive to get at the honey; it eats crabs and ants
|
|
also, and is in a general way carnivorous. It is so powerful that it
|
|
will attack not only the deer but the wild boar, if it can take it
|
|
unawares, and also the bull. After coming to close quarters with the
|
|
bull it falls on its back in front of the animal, and, when the bull
|
|
proceeds to butt, the bear seizes hold of the bull's horns with its
|
|
front paws, fastens its teeth into his shoulder, and drags him down to
|
|
the ground. For a short time together it can walk erect on its hind
|
|
legs. All the flesh it eats it first allows to become carrion.
|
|
|
|
The lion, like all other savage and jag-toothed animals, is
|
|
carnivorous. It devours its food greedily and fiercely, and often
|
|
swallows its prey entire without rending it at all; it will then go
|
|
fasting for two or three days together, being rendered capable of this
|
|
abstinence by its previous surfeit. It is a spare drinker. It
|
|
discharges the solid residuum in small quantities, about every other
|
|
day or at irregular intervals, and the substance of it is hard and dry
|
|
like the excrement of a dog. The wind discharged from off its
|
|
stomach is pungent, and its urine emits a strong odour, a phenomenon
|
|
which, in the case of dogs, accounts for their habit of sniffing at
|
|
trees; for, by the way, the lion, like the dog, lifts its leg to
|
|
void its urine. It infects the food it eats with a strong smell by
|
|
breathing on it, and when the animal is cut open an overpowering
|
|
vapour exhales from its inside.
|
|
|
|
Some wild quadrupeds feed in lakes and rivers; the seal is the
|
|
only one that gets its living on the sea. To the former class of
|
|
animals belong the so-called castor, the satyrium, the otter, and
|
|
the so-called latax, or beaver. The beaver is flatter than the otter
|
|
and has strong teeth; it often at night-time emerges from the water
|
|
and goes nibbling at the bark of the aspens that fringe the
|
|
riversides. The otter will bite a man, and it is said that whenever it
|
|
bites it will never let go until it hears a bone crack. The hair of
|
|
the beaver is rough, intermediate in appearance between the hair of
|
|
the seal and the hair of the deer.
|
|
|
|
6
|
|
|
|
Jag-toothed animals drink by lapping, as do also some animals
|
|
with teeth differently formed, as the mouse. Animals whose upper and
|
|
lower teeth meet evenly drink by suction, as the horse and the ox; the
|
|
bear neither laps nor sucks, but gulps down his drink. Birds, a
|
|
rule, drink by suction, but the long necked birds stop and elevate
|
|
their heads at intervals; the purple coot is the only one (of the
|
|
long-necked birds) that swallows water by gulps.
|
|
|
|
Horned animals, domesticated or wild, and all such as are not
|
|
jag-toothed, are all frugivorous and graminivorous, save under great
|
|
stress of hunger. The pig is an exception, it cares little for grass
|
|
or fruit, but of all animals it is the fondest of roots, owing to
|
|
the fact that its snout is peculiarly adapted for digging them out
|
|
of the ground; it is also of all animals the most easily pleased in
|
|
the matter of food. It takes on fat more rapidly in proportion to
|
|
its size than any other animal; in fact, a pig can be fattened for the
|
|
market in sixty days. Pig-dealers can tell the amount of flesh taken
|
|
on, by having first weighed the animal while it was being starved.
|
|
Before the fattening process begins, the creature must be starved
|
|
for three days; and, by the way, animals in general will take on fat
|
|
if subjected previously to a course of starvation; after the three
|
|
days of starvation, pig-breeders feed the animal lavishly. Breeders in
|
|
Thrace, when fattening pigs, give them a drink on the first day;
|
|
then they miss one, and then two days, then three and four, until
|
|
the interval extends over seven days. The pigs' meat used for
|
|
fattening is composed of barley, millet, figs, acorns, wild pears, and
|
|
cucumbers. These animals-and other animals that have warm
|
|
bellies-are fattened by repose. (Pigs also fatten the better by
|
|
being allowed to wallow in mud. They like to feed in batches of the
|
|
same age. A pig will give battle even to a wolf.) If a pig be
|
|
weighed when living, you may calculate that after death its flesh will
|
|
weigh five-sixths of that weight, and the hair, the blood, and the
|
|
rest will weigh the other sixth. When suckling their young,
|
|
swinelike all other animals-get attenuated. So much for these animals.
|
|
|
|
7
|
|
|
|
Cattle feed on corn and grass, and fatten on vegetables that
|
|
tend to cause flatulency, such as bitter vetch or bruised beans or
|
|
bean-stalks. The older ones also will fatten if they be fed up after
|
|
an incision has been made into their hide, and air blown thereinto.
|
|
Cattle will fatten also on barley in its natural state or on barley
|
|
finely winnowed, or on sweet food, such as figs, or pulp from the
|
|
wine-press, or on elm-leaves. But nothing is so fattening as the
|
|
heat of the sun and wallowing in warm waters. If the horns of young
|
|
cattle be smeared with hot wax, you may mold them to any shape you
|
|
please, and cattle are less subject to disease of the hoof if you
|
|
smear the horny parts with wax, pitch, or olive oil. Herded cattle
|
|
suffer more when they are forced to change their pasture ground by
|
|
frost than when snow is the cause of change. Cattle grow all the
|
|
more in size when they are kept from sexual commerce over a number
|
|
of years; and it is with a view to growth in size that in Epirus the
|
|
so-called Pyrrhic kine are not allowed intercourse with the bull until
|
|
they are nine years old; from which circumstance they are nicknamed
|
|
the 'unbulled' kine. Of these Pyrrhic cattle, by the way, they say
|
|
that there are only about four hundred in the world, that they are the
|
|
private property of the Epirote royal family, that they cannot
|
|
thrive out of Epirus, and that people elsewhere have tried to rear
|
|
them, but without success.
|
|
|
|
8
|
|
|
|
Horses, mules, and asses feed on corn and grass, but are
|
|
fattened chiefly by drink. Just in proportion as beasts of burden
|
|
drink water, so will they more or less enjoy their food, and a place
|
|
will give good or bad feeding according as the water is good or bad.
|
|
Green corn, while ripening, will give a smooth coat; but such corn
|
|
is injurious if the spikes are too stiff and sharp. The first crop
|
|
of clover is unwholesome, and so is clover over which ill-scented
|
|
water runs; for the clover is sure to get the taint of the water.
|
|
Cattle like clear water for drinking; but the horse in this respect
|
|
resembles the camel, for the camel likes turbid and thick water, and
|
|
will never drink from a stream until he has trampled it into a
|
|
turbid condition. And, by the way, the camel can go without water
|
|
for as much as four days, but after that when he drinks, he drinks
|
|
in immense quantities.
|
|
|
|
9
|
|
|
|
The elephant at the most can eat nine Macedonian medimni of fodder
|
|
at one meal; but so large an amount is unwholesome. As a general
|
|
rule it can take six or seven medimni of fodder, five medimni of
|
|
wheat, and five mareis of wine-six cotylae going to the maris. An
|
|
elephant has been known to drink right off fourteen Macedonian
|
|
metretae of water, and another metretae later in the day.
|
|
|
|
Camels live for about thirty years; in some exceptional cases
|
|
they live much longer, and instances have been known of their living
|
|
to the age of a hundred. The elephant is said by some to live for
|
|
about two hundred years; by others, for three hundred.
|
|
|
|
10
|
|
|
|
Sheep and goats are graminivorous, but sheep browse assiduously
|
|
and steadily, whereas goats shift their ground rapidly, and browse
|
|
only on the tips of the herbage. Sheep are much improved in
|
|
condition by drinking, and accordingly they give the flocks salt every
|
|
five days in summer, to the extent of one medimnus to the hundred
|
|
sheep, and this is found to render a flock healthier and fatter. In
|
|
fact they mix salt with the greater part of their food; a large amount
|
|
of salt is mixed into their bran (for the reason that they drink
|
|
more when thirsty), and in autumn they get cucumbers with a sprinkling
|
|
of salt on them; this admixture of salt in their food tends also to
|
|
increase the quantity of milk in the ewes. If sheep be kept on the
|
|
move at midday they will drink more copiously towards evening; and
|
|
if the ewes be fed with salted food as the lambing season draws near
|
|
they will get larger udders. Sheep are fattened by twigs of the
|
|
olive or of the oleaster, by vetch, and bran of every kind; and
|
|
these articles of food fatten all the more if they be first
|
|
sprinkled with brine. Sheep will take on flesh all the better if
|
|
they be first put for three days through a process of starving. In
|
|
autumn, water from the north is more wholesome for sheep than water
|
|
from the south. Pasture grounds are all the better if they have a
|
|
westerly aspect.
|
|
|
|
Sheep will lose flesh if they be kept overmuch on the move or be
|
|
subjected to any hardship. In winter time shepherds can easily
|
|
distinguish the vigorous sheep from the weakly, from the fact that the
|
|
vigorous sheep are covered with hoar-frost while the weakly ones are
|
|
quite free of it; the fact being that the weakly ones feeling
|
|
oppressed with the burden shake themselves and so get rid of it. The
|
|
flesh of all quadrupeds deteriorates in marshy pastures, and is the
|
|
better on high grounds. Sheep that have flat tails can stand the
|
|
winter better than long-tailed sheep, and short-fleeced sheep than the
|
|
shaggy-fleeced; and sheep with crisp wool stand the rigour of winter
|
|
very poorly. Sheep are healthier than goats, but goats are stronger
|
|
than sheep. (The fleeces and the wool of sheep that have been killed
|
|
by wolves, as also the clothes made from them, are exceptionally
|
|
infested with lice.)
|
|
|
|
11
|
|
|
|
Of insects, such as have teeth are omnivorous; such as have a
|
|
tongue feed on liquids only, extracting with that organ juices from
|
|
all quarters. And of these latter some may be called omnivorous,
|
|
inasmuch as they feed on every kind of juice, as for instance, the
|
|
common fly; others are blood-suckers, such as the gadfly and the
|
|
horse-fly, others again live on the juices of fruits and plants. The
|
|
bee is the only insect that invariably eschews whatever is rotten;
|
|
it will touch no article of food unless it have a sweet-tasting juice,
|
|
and it is particularly fond of drinking water if it be found
|
|
bubbling up clear from a spring underground.
|
|
|
|
So much for the food of animals of the leading genera.
|
|
|
|
12
|
|
|
|
The habits of animals are all connected with either breeding and
|
|
the rearing of young, or with the procuring a due supply of food;
|
|
and these habits are modified so as to suit cold and heat and the
|
|
variations of the seasons. For all animals have an instinctive
|
|
perception of the changes of temperature, and, just as men seek
|
|
shelter in houses in winter, or as men of great possessions spend
|
|
their summer in cool places and their winter in sunny ones, so also
|
|
all animals that can do so shift their habitat at various seasons.
|
|
|
|
Some creatures can make provision against change without
|
|
stirring from their ordinary haunts; others migrate, quitting Pontus
|
|
and the cold countries after the autumnal equinox to avoid the
|
|
approaching winter, and after the spring equinox migrating from warm
|
|
lands to cool lands to avoid the coming heat. In some cases they
|
|
migrate from places near at hand, in others they may be said to come
|
|
from the ends of the world, as in the case of the crane; for these
|
|
birds migrate from the steppes of Scythia to the marshlands south of
|
|
Egypt where the Nile has its source. And it is here, by the way,
|
|
that they are said to fight with the pygmies; and the story is not
|
|
fabulous, but there is in reality a race of dwarfish men, and the
|
|
horses are little in proportion, and the men live in caves
|
|
underground. Pelicans also migrate, and fly from the Strymon to the
|
|
Ister, and breed on the banks of this river. They depart in flocks,
|
|
and the birds in front wait for those in the rear, owing to the fact
|
|
that when the flock is passing over the intervening mountain range,
|
|
the birds in the rear lose sight of their companions in the van.
|
|
|
|
Fishes also in a similar manner shift their habitat now out of
|
|
the Euxine and now into it. In winter they move from the outer sea
|
|
in towards land in quest of heat; in summer they shift from shallow
|
|
waters to the deep sea to escape the heat.
|
|
|
|
Weakly birds in winter and in frosty weather come down to the
|
|
plains for warmth, and in summer migrate to the hills for coolness.
|
|
The more weakly an animal is the greater hurry will it be in to
|
|
migrate on account of extremes of temperature, either hot or cold;
|
|
thus the mackerel migrates in advance of the tunnies, and the quail in
|
|
advance of the cranes. The former migrates in the month of Boedromion,
|
|
and the latter in the month of Maemacterion. All creatures are
|
|
fatter in migrating from cold to heat than in migrating from heat to
|
|
cold; thus the quail is fatter when he emigrates in autumn than when
|
|
he arrives in spring. The migration from cold countries is
|
|
contemporaneous with the close of the hot season. Animals are in
|
|
better trim for breeding purposes in spring-time, when they change
|
|
from hot to cool lands.
|
|
|
|
Of birds, the crane, as has been said, migrates from one end of
|
|
the world to the other; they fly against the wind. The story told
|
|
about the stone is untrue: to wit, that the bird, so the story goes,
|
|
carries in its inside a stone by way of ballast, and that the stone
|
|
when vomited up is a touchstone for gold.
|
|
|
|
The cushat and the rock-dove migrate, and never winter in our
|
|
country, as is the case also with the turtle-dove; the common
|
|
pigeon, however, stays behind. The quail also migrates; only, by the
|
|
way, a few quails and turtle-doves may stay behind here and there in
|
|
sunny districts. Cushats and turtle-doves flock together, both when
|
|
they arrive and when the season for migration comes round again.
|
|
When quails come to land, if it be fair weather or if a north wind
|
|
is blowing, they will pair off and manage pretty comfortably; but if a
|
|
southerly wind prevail they are greatly distressed owing to the
|
|
difficulties in the way of flight, for a southerly wind is wet and
|
|
violent. For this reason bird-catchers are never on the alert for
|
|
these birds during fine weather, but only during the prevalence of
|
|
southerly winds, when the bird from the violence of the wind is unable
|
|
to fly. And, by the way, it is owing to the distress occasioned by the
|
|
bulkiness of its body that the bird always screams while flying: for
|
|
the labour is severe. When the quails come from abroad they have no
|
|
leaders, but when they migrate hence, the glottis flits along with
|
|
them, as does also the landrail, and the eared owl, and the corncrake.
|
|
The corncrake calls them in the night, and when the birdcatchers
|
|
hear the croak of the bird in the nighttime they know that the
|
|
quails are on the move. The landrail is like a marsh bird, and the
|
|
glottis has a tongue that can project far out of its beak. The eared
|
|
owl is like an ordinary owl, only that it has feathers about its ears;
|
|
by some it is called the night-raven. It is a great rogue of a bird,
|
|
and is a capital mimic; a bird-catcher will dance before it and, while
|
|
the bird is mimicking his gestures, the accomplice comes behind and
|
|
catches it. The common owl is caught by a similar trick.
|
|
|
|
As a general rule all birds with crooked talons are
|
|
short-necked, flat-tongued, and disposed to mimicry. The Indian
|
|
bird, the parrot, which is said to have a man's tongue, answers to
|
|
this description; and, by the way, after drinking wine, the parrot
|
|
becomes more saucy than ever.
|
|
|
|
Of birds, the following are migratory-the crane, the swan, the
|
|
pelican, and the lesser goose.
|
|
|
|
13
|
|
|
|
Of fishes, some, as has been observed, migrate from the outer seas
|
|
in towards shore, and from the shore towards the outer seas, to
|
|
avoid the extremes of cold and heat.
|
|
|
|
Fish living near to the shore are better eating than deep-sea
|
|
fish. The fact is they have more abundant and better feeding, for
|
|
wherever the sun's heat can reach vegetation is more abundant,
|
|
better in quality, and more delicate, as is seen in any ordinary
|
|
garden. Further, the black shore-weed grows near to shore; the other
|
|
shore-weed is like wild weed. Besides, the parts of the sea near to
|
|
shore are subjected to a more equable temperature; and consequently
|
|
the flesh of shallow-water fishes is firm and consistent, whereas
|
|
the flesh of deep-water fishes is flaccid and watery.
|
|
|
|
The following fishes are found near into the shore-the
|
|
synodon, the black bream, the merou, the gilthead, the mullet, the red
|
|
mullet, the wrasse, the weaver, the callionymus, the goby, and
|
|
rock-fishes of all kinds. The following are deep-sea fishes--the
|
|
trygon, the cartilaginous fishes, the white conger, the serranus,
|
|
the erythrinus, and the glaucus. The braize, the sea-scorpion, the
|
|
black conger, the muraena, and the piper or sea-cuckoo are found alike
|
|
in shallow and deep waters. These fishes, however, vary for various
|
|
localities; for instance, the goby and all rock-fish are fat off the
|
|
coast of Crete. Again, the tunny is out of season in summer, when it
|
|
is being preyed on by its own peculiar louse-parasite, but after the
|
|
rising of Arcturus, when the parasite has left it, it comes into
|
|
season again. A number of fish also are found in sea-estuaries; such
|
|
as the saupe, the gilthead, the red mullet, and, in point of fact, the
|
|
greater part of the gregarious fishes. The bonito also is found in
|
|
such waters, as, for instance, off the coast of Alopeconnesus; and
|
|
most species of fishes are found in Lake Bistonis. The coly-mackerel
|
|
as a rule does not enter the Euxine, but passes the summer in the
|
|
Propontis, where it spawns, and winters in the Aegean. The tunny
|
|
proper, the pelamys, and the bonito penetrate into the Euxine in
|
|
summer and pass the summer there; as do also the greater part of
|
|
such fish as swim in shoals with the currents, or congregate in shoals
|
|
together. And most fish congregate in shoals, and shoal-fishes in
|
|
all cases have leaders.
|
|
|
|
Fish penetrate into the Euxine for two reasons, and firstly for
|
|
food. For the feeding is more abundant and better in quality owing
|
|
to the amount of fresh river-water that discharges into the sea, and
|
|
moreover, the large fishes of this inland sea are smaller than the
|
|
large fishes of the outer sea. In point of fact, there is no large
|
|
fish in the Euxine excepting the dolphin and the porpoise, and the
|
|
dolphin is a small variety; but as soon as you get into the outer
|
|
sea the big fishes are on the big scale. Furthermore, fish penetrate
|
|
into this sea for the purpose of breeding; for there are recesses
|
|
there favourable for spawning, and the fresh and exceptionally sweet
|
|
water has an invigorating effect upon the spawn. After spawning,
|
|
when the young fishes have attained some size, the parent fish swim
|
|
out of the Euxine immediately after the rising of the Pleiads. If
|
|
winter comes in with a southerly wind, they swim out with more or less
|
|
of deliberation; but, if a north wind be blowing, they swim out with
|
|
greater rapidity, from the fact that the breeze is favourable to their
|
|
own course. And, by the way, the young fish are caught about this time
|
|
in the neighbourhood of Byzantium very small in size, as might have
|
|
been expected from the shortness of their sojourn in the Euxine. The
|
|
shoals in general are visible both as they quit and enter the
|
|
Euxine. The trichiae, however, only can be caught during their
|
|
entry, but are never visible during their exit; in point of fact, when
|
|
a trichia is caught running outwards in the neighbourhood of
|
|
Byzantium, the fishermen are particularly careful to cleanse their
|
|
nets, as the circumstance is so singular and exceptional. The way of
|
|
accounting for this phenomenon is that this fish, and this one only,
|
|
swims northwards into the Danube, and then at the point of its
|
|
bifurcation swims down southwards into the Adriatic. And, as a proof
|
|
that this theory is correct, the very opposite phenomenon presents
|
|
itself in the Adriatic; that is to say, they are not caught in that
|
|
sea during their entry, but are caught during their exit.
|
|
|
|
Tunny-fish swim into the Euxine keeping the shore on their
|
|
right, and swim out of it with the shore upon their left. It is stated
|
|
that they do so as being naturally weak-sighted, and seeing better
|
|
with the right eye.
|
|
|
|
During the daytime shoal-fish continue on their way, but
|
|
during the night they rest and feed. But if there be moonlight, they
|
|
continue their journey without resting at all. Some people
|
|
accustomed to sea-life assert that shoal-fish at the period of the
|
|
winter solstice never move at all, but keep perfectly still wherever
|
|
they may happen to have been overtaken by the solstice, and this lasts
|
|
until the equinox.
|
|
|
|
The coly-mackerel is caught more frequently on entering than
|
|
on quitting the Euxine. And in the Propontis the fish is at its best
|
|
before the spawning season. Shoal-fish, as a rule, are caught in
|
|
greater quantities as they leave the Euxine, and at that season they
|
|
are in the best condition. At the time of their entrance they are
|
|
caught in very plump condition close to shore, but those are in
|
|
comparatively poor condition that are caught farther out to sea.
|
|
Very often, when the coly-mackerel and the mackerel are met by a south
|
|
wind in their exit, there are better catches to the southward than
|
|
in the neighbourhood of Byzantium. So much then for the phenomenon
|
|
of migration of fishes.
|
|
|
|
Now the same phenomenon is observed in fishes as in
|
|
terrestrial animals in regard to hibernation: in other words, during
|
|
winter fishes take to concealing themselves in out of the way
|
|
places, and quit their places of concealment in the warmer season.
|
|
But, by the way, animals go into concealment by way of refuge
|
|
against extreme heat, as well as against extreme cold. Sometimes an
|
|
entire genus will thus seek concealment; in other cases some species
|
|
will do so and others will not. For instance, the shell-fish seek
|
|
concealment without exception, as is seen in the case of those
|
|
dwelling in the sea, the purple murex, the ceryx, and all such like;
|
|
but though in the case of the detached species the phenomenon is
|
|
obvious-for they hide themselves, as is seen in the scallop, or they
|
|
are provided with an operculum on the free surface, as in the case
|
|
of land snails-in the case of the non-detached the concealment is
|
|
not so clearly observed. They do not go into hiding at one and the
|
|
same season; but the snails go in winter, the purple murex and the
|
|
ceryx for about thirty days at the rising of the Dog-star, and the
|
|
scallop at about the same period. But for the most part they go into
|
|
concealment when the weather is either extremely cold or extremely
|
|
hot.
|
|
|
|
14
|
|
|
|
Insects almost all go into hiding, with the exception of such of
|
|
them as live in human habitations or perish before the completion of
|
|
the year. They hide in the winter; some of them for several days,
|
|
others for only the coldest days, as the bee. For the bee also goes
|
|
into hiding: and the proof that it does so is that during a certain
|
|
period bees never touch the food set before them, and if a bee
|
|
creeps out of the hive, it is quite transparent, with nothing
|
|
whatsoever in its stomach; and the period of its rest and hiding lasts
|
|
from the setting of the Pleiads until springtime.
|
|
|
|
Animals take their winter-sleep or summer-sleep by concealing
|
|
themselves in warm places, or in places where they have been used to
|
|
lie concealed.
|
|
|
|
15
|
|
|
|
Several blooded animals take this sleep, such as the pholidotes or
|
|
tessellates, namely, the serpent, the lizard, the gecko, and the
|
|
river. crocodile, all of which go into hiding for four months in the
|
|
depth of winter, and during that time eat nothing. Serpents in general
|
|
burrow under ground for this purpose; the viper conceals itself
|
|
under a stone.
|
|
|
|
A great number of fishes also take this sleep, and notably,
|
|
the hippurus and coracinus in winter time; for, whereas fish in
|
|
general may be caught at all periods of the year more or less, there
|
|
is this singularity observed in these fishes, that they are caught
|
|
within a certain fixed period of the year, and never by any chance out
|
|
of it. The muraena also hides, and the orphus or sea-perch, and the
|
|
conger. Rock-fish pair off, male and female, for hiding (just as for
|
|
breeding); as is observed in the case of the species of wrasse
|
|
called the thrush and the owzel, and in the perch.
|
|
|
|
The tunny also takes a sleep in winter in deep waters, and
|
|
gets exceedingly fat after the sleep. The fishing season for the tunny
|
|
begins at the rising of the Pleiads and lasts, at the longest, down to
|
|
the setting of Arcturus; during the rest of the year they are hid
|
|
and enjoying immunity. About the time of hibernation a few tunnies
|
|
or other hibernating fishes are caught while swimming about, in
|
|
particularly warm localities and in exceptionally fine weather, or
|
|
on nights of full moon; for the fishes are induced (by the warmth or
|
|
the light) to emerge for a while from their lair in quest of food.
|
|
|
|
Most fishes are at their best for the table during the summer or
|
|
winter sleep.
|
|
|
|
The primas-tunny conceals itself in the mud; this may be
|
|
inferred from the fact that during a particular period the fish is
|
|
never caught, and that, when it is caught after that period, it is
|
|
covered with mud and has its fins damaged. In the spring these tunnies
|
|
get in motion and proceed towards the coast, coupling and breeding,
|
|
and the females are now caught full of spawn. At this time they are
|
|
considered as in season, but in autumn and in winter as of inferior
|
|
quality; at this time also the males are full of milt. When the
|
|
spawn is small, the fish is hard to catch, but it is easily caught
|
|
when the spawn gets large, as the fish is then infested by its
|
|
parasite. Some fish burrow for sleep in the sand and some in mud, just
|
|
keeping their mouths outside.
|
|
|
|
Most fishes hide, then, during the winter only, but crustaceans,
|
|
the rock-fish, the ray, and the cartilaginous species hide only during
|
|
extremely severe weather, and this may be inferred from the fact
|
|
that these fishes are never by any chance caught when the weather is
|
|
extremely cold. Some fishes, however, hide during the summer, as the
|
|
glaucus or grey-back; this fish hides in summer for about sixty
|
|
days. The hake also and the gilthead hide; and we infer that the
|
|
hake hides over a lengthened period from the fact that it is only
|
|
caught at long intervals. We are led also to infer that fishes hide in
|
|
summer from the circumstance that the takes of certain fish are made
|
|
between the rise and setting of certain constellations: of the
|
|
Dog-star in particular, the sea at this period being upturned from the
|
|
lower depths. This phenomenon may be observed to best advantage in the
|
|
Bosporus; for the mud is there brought up to the surface and the
|
|
fish are brought up along with it. They say also that very often, when
|
|
the sea-bottom is dredged, more fish will be caught by the second haul
|
|
than by the first one. Furthermore, after very heavy rains numerous
|
|
specimens become visible of creatures that at other times are never
|
|
seen at all or seen only at intervals.
|
|
|
|
16
|
|
|
|
A great number of birds also go into hiding; they do not all
|
|
migrate, as is generally supposed, to warmer countries. Thus,
|
|
certain birds (as the kite and the swallow) when they are not far
|
|
off from places of this kind, in which they have their permanent
|
|
abode, betake themselves thither; others, that are at a distance
|
|
from such places, decline the trouble of migration and simply hide
|
|
themselves where they are. Swallows, for instance, have been often
|
|
found in holes, quite denuded of their feathers, and the kite on its
|
|
first emergence from torpidity has been seen to fly from out some such
|
|
hiding-place. And with regard to this phenomenon of periodic torpor
|
|
there is no distinction observed, whether the talons of a bird be
|
|
crooked or straight; for instance, the stork, the owzel, the
|
|
turtle-dove, and the lark, all go into hiding. The case of the
|
|
turtledove is the most notorious of all, for we would defy any one
|
|
to assert that he had anywhere seen a turtle-dove in winter-time; at
|
|
the beginning of the hiding time it is exceedingly plump, and during
|
|
this period it moults, but retains its plumpness. Some cushats hide;
|
|
others, instead of hiding, migrate at the same time as the swallow.
|
|
The thrush and the starling hide; and of birds with crooked talons the
|
|
kite and the owl hide for a few days.
|
|
|
|
17
|
|
|
|
Of viviparous quadrupeds the porcupine and the bear retire into
|
|
concealment. The fact that the bear hides is well established, but
|
|
there are doubts as to its motive for so doing, whether it be by
|
|
reason of the cold or from some other cause. About this period the
|
|
male and the female become so fat as to be hardly capable of motion.
|
|
The female brings forth her young at this time, and remains in
|
|
concealment until it is time to bring the cubs out; and she brings
|
|
them out in spring, about three months after the winter solstice.
|
|
The bear hides for at least forty days; during fourteen of these
|
|
days it is said not to move at all, but during most of the
|
|
subsequent days it moves, and from time to time wakes up. A she-bear
|
|
in pregnancy has either never been caught at all or has been caught
|
|
very seldom. There can be no doubt but that during this period they
|
|
eat nothing; for in the first place they never emerge from their
|
|
hiding-place, and further, when they are caught, their belly and
|
|
intestines are found to be quite empty. It is also said that from no
|
|
food being taken the gut almost closes up, and that in consequence the
|
|
animal on first emerging takes to eating arum with the view of opening
|
|
up and distending the gut.
|
|
|
|
The dormouse actually hides in a tree, and gets very fat at that
|
|
period; as does also the white mouse of Pontus.
|
|
|
|
(Of animals that hide or go torpid some slough off what is
|
|
called their 'old-age'. This name is applied to the outermost skin,
|
|
and to the casing that envelops the developing organism.)
|
|
|
|
In discussing the case of terrestrial vivipara we stated that
|
|
the reason for the bear's seeking concealment is an open question.
|
|
We now proceed to treat of the tessellates. The tessellates for the
|
|
most part go into hiding, and if their skin is soft they slough off
|
|
their 'old-age', but not if the skin is shell-like, as is the shell of
|
|
the tortoise-for, by the way, the tortoise and the fresh water
|
|
tortoise belong to the tessellates. Thus, the old-age is sloughed
|
|
off by the gecko, the lizard, and above all, by serpents; and they
|
|
slough off the skin in springtime when emerging from their torpor, and
|
|
again in the autumn. Vipers also slough off their skin both in
|
|
spring and in autumn, and it is not the case, as some aver, that
|
|
this species of the serpent family is exceptional in not sloughing.
|
|
When the serpent begins to slough, the skin peels off at first from
|
|
the eyes, so that any one ignorant of the phenomenon would suppose the
|
|
animal were going blind; after that it peels off the head, and so
|
|
on, until the creature presents to view only a white surface all over.
|
|
The sloughing goes on for a day and a night, beginning with the head
|
|
and ending with the tail. During the sloughing of the skin an inner
|
|
layer comes to the surface, for the creature emerges just as the
|
|
embryo from its afterbirth.
|
|
|
|
All insects that slough at all slough in the same way; as the
|
|
silphe, and the empis or midge, and all the coleoptera, as for
|
|
instance the cantharus-beetle. They all slough after the period of
|
|
development; for just as the afterbirth breaks from off the young of
|
|
the vivipara so the outer husk breaks off from around the young of the
|
|
vermipara, in the same way both with the bee and the grasshopper.
|
|
The cicada the moment after issuing from the husk goes and sits upon
|
|
an olive tree or a reed; after the breaking up of the husk the
|
|
creature issues out, leaving a little moisture behind, and after a
|
|
short interval flies up into the air and sets a. chirping.
|
|
|
|
Of marine animals the crawfish and the lobster slough sometimes in
|
|
the spring, and sometimes in autumn after parturition. Lobsters have
|
|
been caught occasionally with the parts about the thorax soft, from
|
|
the shell having there peeled off, and the lower parts hard, from
|
|
the shell having not yet peeled off there; for, by the way, they do
|
|
not slough in the same manner as the serpent. The crawfish hides for
|
|
about five months. Crabs also slough off their old-age; this is
|
|
generally allowed with regard to the soft-shelled crabs, and it is
|
|
said to be the case with the testaceous kind, as for instance with the
|
|
large 'granny' crab. When these animals slough their shell becomes
|
|
soft all over, and as for the crab, it can scarcely crawl. These
|
|
animals also do not cast their skins once and for all, but over and
|
|
over again.
|
|
|
|
So much for the animals that go into hiding or torpidity, for
|
|
the times at which, and the ways in which, they go; and so much also
|
|
for the animals that slough off their old-age, and for the times at
|
|
which they undergo the process.
|
|
|
|
18
|
|
|
|
Animals do not all thrive at the same seasons, nor do they
|
|
thrive alike during all extremes of weather. Further animals of
|
|
diverse species are in a diverse way healthy or sickly at certain
|
|
seasons; and, in point of fact, some animals have ailments that are
|
|
unknown to others. Birds thrive in times of drought, both in their
|
|
general health and in regard to parturition, and this is especially
|
|
the case with the cushat; fishes, however, with a few exceptions,
|
|
thrive best in rainy weather; on the contrary rainy seasons are bad
|
|
for birds-and so by the way is much drinking-and drought is bad for
|
|
fishes. Birds of prey, as has been already stated, may in a general
|
|
way be said never to drink at all, though Hesiod appears to have
|
|
been ignorant of the fact, for in his story about the siege of Ninus
|
|
he represents the eagle that presided over the auguries as in the
|
|
act of drinking; all other birds drink, but drink sparingly, as is the
|
|
case also with all other spongy-lunged oviparous animals. Sickness
|
|
in birds may be diagnosed from their plumage, which is ruffled when
|
|
they are sickly instead of lying smooth as when they are well.
|
|
|
|
19
|
|
|
|
The majority of fishes, as has been stated, thrive best in rainy
|
|
seasons. Not only have they food in greater abundance at this time,
|
|
but in a general way rain is wholesome for them just as it is for
|
|
vegetation-for, by the way, kitchen vegetables, though artificially
|
|
watered, derive benefit from rain; and the same remark applies even to
|
|
reeds that grow in marshes, as they hardly grow at all without a
|
|
rainfall. That rain is good for fishes may be inferred from the fact
|
|
that most fishes migrate to the Euxine for the summer; for owing to
|
|
the number of the rivers that discharge into this sea its water is
|
|
exceptionally fresh, and the rivers bring down a large supply of food.
|
|
Besides, a great number of fishes, such as the bonito and the
|
|
mullet, swim up the rivers and thrive in the rivers and marshes. The
|
|
sea-gudgeon also fattens in the rivers, and, as a rule, countries
|
|
abounding in lagoons furnish unusually excellent fish. While most
|
|
fishes, then, are benefited by rain, they are chiefly benefited by
|
|
summer rain; or we may state the case thus, that rain is good for
|
|
fishes in spring, summer, and autumn, and fine dry weather in
|
|
winter. As a general rule what is good for men is good for fishes
|
|
also.
|
|
|
|
Fishes do not thrive in cold places, and those fishes suffer
|
|
most in severe winters that have a stone in their head, as the
|
|
chromis, the basse, the sciaena, and the braize; for owing to the
|
|
stone they get frozen with the cold, and are thrown up on shore.
|
|
|
|
Whilst rain is wholesome for most fishes, it is, on the
|
|
contrary, unwholesome for the mullet, the cephalus, and the
|
|
so-called marinus, for rain superinduces blindness in most of these
|
|
fishes, and all the more rapidly if the rainfall be superabundant. The
|
|
cephalus is peculiarly subject to this malady in severe winters; their
|
|
eyes grow white, and when caught they are in poor condition, and
|
|
eventually the disease kills them. It would appear that this disease
|
|
is due to extreme cold even more than to an excessive rainfall; for
|
|
instance, in many places and more especially in shallows off the coast
|
|
of Nauplia, in the Argolid, a number of fishes have been known to be
|
|
caught out at sea in seasons of severe cold. The gilthead also suffers
|
|
in winter; the acharnas suffers in summer, and loses condition. The
|
|
coracine is exceptional among fishes in deriving benefit from drought,
|
|
and this is due to the fact that heat and drought are apt to come
|
|
together.
|
|
|
|
Particular places suit particular fishes; some are naturally
|
|
fishes of the shore, and some of the deep sea, and some are at home in
|
|
one or the other of these regions, and others are common to the two
|
|
and are at home in both. Some fishes will thrive in one particular
|
|
spot, and in that spot only. As a general rule it may be said that
|
|
places abounding in weeds are wholesome; at all events, fishes
|
|
caught in such places are exceptionally fat: that is, such fishes a
|
|
a habit all sorts of localities as well. The fact is that
|
|
weed-eating fishes find abundance of their special food in such
|
|
localities, and carnivorous fish find an unusually large number of
|
|
smaller fish. It matters also whether the wind be from the north or
|
|
south: the longer fish thrive better when a north wind prevails, and
|
|
in summer at one and the same spot more long fish will be caught
|
|
than flat fish with a north wind blowing.
|
|
|
|
The tunny and the sword-fish are infested with a parasite
|
|
about the rising of the Dog-star; that is to say, about this time both
|
|
these fishes have a grub beside their fins that is nicknamed the
|
|
'gadfly'. It resembles the scorpion in shape, and is about the size of
|
|
the spider. So acute is the pain it inflicts that the sword-fish
|
|
will often leap as high out of the water as a dolphin; in fact, it
|
|
sometimes leaps over the bulwarks of a vessel and falls back on the
|
|
deck. The tunny delights more than any other fish in the heat of the
|
|
sun. It will burrow for warmth in the sand in shallow waters near to
|
|
shore, or will, because it is warm, disport itself on the surface of
|
|
the sea.
|
|
|
|
The fry of little fishes escape by being overlooked, for it is
|
|
only the larger ones of the small species that fishes of the large
|
|
species will pursue. The greater part of the spawn and the fry of
|
|
fishes is destroyed by the heat of the sun, for whatever of them the
|
|
sun reaches it spoils.
|
|
|
|
Fishes are caught in greatest abundance before sunrise and after
|
|
sunset, or, speaking generally, just about sunset and sunrise.
|
|
Fishermen haul up their nets at these times, and speak of the hauls
|
|
then made as the 'nick-of-time' hauls. The fact is, that at these
|
|
times fishes are particularly weak-sighted; at night they are at rest,
|
|
and as the light grows stronger they see comparatively well.
|
|
|
|
We know of no pestilential malady attacking fishes, such as
|
|
those which attack man, and horses and oxen among the quadrupedal
|
|
vivipara, and certain species of other genera, domesticated and
|
|
wild; but fishes do seem to suffer from sickness; and fishermen
|
|
infer this from the fact that at times fishes in poor condition, and
|
|
looking as though they were sick, and of altered colour, are caught in
|
|
a large haul of well-conditioned fish of their own species. So much
|
|
for sea-fishes.
|
|
|
|
20
|
|
|
|
River-fish and lake-fish also are exempt from diseases of a
|
|
pestilential character, but certain species are subject to special and
|
|
peculiar maladies. For instance, the sheat-fish just before the rising
|
|
of the Dog-star, owing to its swimming near the surface of the
|
|
water, is liable to sunstroke, and is paralysed by a loud peal of
|
|
thunder. The carp is subject to the same eventualities but in a
|
|
lesser degree. The sheatfish is destroyed in great quantities in
|
|
shallow waters by the serpent called the dragon. In the balerus and
|
|
tilon a worm is engendered about the rising of the Dog-star, that
|
|
sickens these fish and causes them to rise towards the surface,
|
|
where they are killed by the excessive heat. The chalcis is subject to
|
|
a very violent malady; lice are engendered underneath their gills in
|
|
great numbers, and cause destruction among them; but no other
|
|
species of fish is subject to any such malady.
|
|
|
|
If mullein be introduced into water it will kill fish in its
|
|
vicinity. It is used extensively for catching fish in rivers and
|
|
ponds; by the Phoenicians it is made use of also in the sea.
|
|
|
|
There are two other methods employed for catch-fish. It is a
|
|
known fact that in winter fishes emerge from the deep parts of
|
|
rivers and, by the way, at all seasons fresh water is tolerably
|
|
cold. A trench accordingly is dug leading into a river, and wattled at
|
|
the river end with reeds and stones, an aperture being left in the
|
|
wattling through which the river water flows into the trench; when the
|
|
frost comes on the fish can be taken out of the trench in weels.
|
|
Another method is adopted in summer and winter alike. They run
|
|
across a stream a dam composed of brushwood and stones leaving a small
|
|
open space, and in this space they insert a weel; they then coop the
|
|
fish in towards this place, and draw them up in the weel as they
|
|
swim through the open space.
|
|
|
|
Shell-fish, as a rule, are benefited by rainy weather. The
|
|
purple murex is an exception; if it be placed on a shore near to where
|
|
a river discharges, it will die within a day after tasting the fresh
|
|
water. The murex lives for about fifty days after capture; during this
|
|
period they feed off one another, as there grows on the shell a kind
|
|
of sea-weed or sea-moss; if any food is thrown to them during this
|
|
period, it is said to be done not to keep them alive, but to make them
|
|
weigh more.
|
|
|
|
To shell-fish in general drought is unwholesome. During dry
|
|
weather they decrease in size and degenerate in quality; and it is
|
|
during such weather that the red scallop is found in more than usual
|
|
abundance. In the Pyrrhaean Strait the clam was exterminated, partly
|
|
by the dredging-machine used in their capture, and partly by
|
|
long-continued droughts. Rainy weather is wholesome to the
|
|
generality of shellfish owing to the fact that the sea-water then
|
|
becomes exceptionally sweet. In the Euxine, owing to the coldness of
|
|
the climate, shellfish are not found: nor yet in rivers, excepting a
|
|
few bivalves here and there. Univalves, by the way, are very apt to
|
|
freeze to death in extremely cold weather. So much for animals that
|
|
live in water.
|
|
|
|
21
|
|
|
|
To turn to quadrupeds, the pig suffers from three diseases, one of
|
|
which is called branchos, a disease attended with swellings about
|
|
the windpipe and the jaws. It may break out in any part of the body;
|
|
very often it attacks the foot, and occasionally the ear; the
|
|
neighbouring parts also soon rot, and the decay goes on until it
|
|
reaches the lungs, when the animal succumbs. The disease develops with
|
|
great rapidity, and the moment it sets in the animal gives up
|
|
eating. The swineherds know but one way to cure it, namely, by
|
|
complete excision, when they detect the first signs of the disease.
|
|
There are two other diseases, which are both alike termed craurus. The
|
|
one is attended with pain and heaviness in the head, and this is the
|
|
commoner of the two, the other with diarrhoea. The latter is
|
|
incurable, the former is treated by applying wine fomentations to
|
|
the snout and rinsing the nostrils with wine. Even this disease is
|
|
very hard to cure; it has been known to kill within three or four
|
|
days. The animal is chiefly subject to branchos when it gets extremely
|
|
fat, and when the heat has brought a good supply of figs. The
|
|
treatment is to feed on mashed mulberries, to give repeated warm
|
|
baths, and to lance the under part of the tongue.
|
|
|
|
Pigs with flabby flesh are subject to measles about the legs,
|
|
neck, and shoulders, for the pimples develop chiefly in these parts.
|
|
If the pimples are few in number the flesh is comparatively sweet, but
|
|
if they be numerous it gets watery and flaccid. The symptoms of
|
|
measles are obvious, for the pimples show chiefly on the under side of
|
|
the tongue, and if you pluck the bristles off the chine the skin
|
|
will appear suffused with blood, and further the animal will be unable
|
|
to keep its hind-feet at rest. Pigs never take this disease while they
|
|
are mere sucklings. The pimples may be got rid of by feeding on this
|
|
kind of spelt called tiphe; and this spelt, by the way, is very good
|
|
for ordinary food. The best food for rearing and fattening pigs is
|
|
chickpeas and figs, but the one thing essential is to vary the food as
|
|
much as possible, for this animal, like animals in general lights in a
|
|
change of diet; and it is said that one kind of food blows the
|
|
animal out, that another superinduces flesh, and that another puts
|
|
on fat, and that acorns, though liked by the animal, render the
|
|
flesh flaccid. Besides, if a sow eats acorns in great quantities, it
|
|
will miscarry, as is also the case with the ewe; and, indeed, the
|
|
miscarriage is more certain in the case of the ewe than in the case of
|
|
the sow. The pig is the only animal known to be subject to measles.
|
|
|
|
22
|
|
|
|
Dogs suffer from three diseases; rabies, quinsy, and sore feet.
|
|
Rabies drives the animal mad, and ary animal whatever, excepting
|
|
man, will take the disease if bitten by a dog so afflicted; the
|
|
disease is fatal to the dog itself, and to any animal it may bite, man
|
|
excepted. Quinsy also is fatal to dogs; and only a few recover from
|
|
disease of the feet. The camel, like the dog, is subject to rabies.
|
|
The elephant, which is reputed to enjoy immunity from all other
|
|
illnesses, is occasionally subject to flatulency.
|
|
|
|
23
|
|
|
|
Cattle in herds are liable to two diseases, foot, sickness and
|
|
craurus. In the former their feet suffer from eruptions, but the
|
|
animal recovers from the disease without even the loss of the hoof. It
|
|
is found of service to smear the horny parts with warm pitch. In
|
|
craurus, the breath comes warm at short intervals; in fact, craurus in
|
|
cattle answers to fever in man. The symptoms of the disease are
|
|
drooping of the ears and disinclination for food. The animal soon
|
|
succumbs, and when the carcase is opened the lungs are found to be
|
|
rotten.
|
|
|
|
24
|
|
|
|
Horses out at pasture are free from all diseases excepting disease
|
|
of the feet. From this disease they sometimes lose their hooves: but
|
|
after losing them they grow them soon again, for as one hoof is
|
|
decaying it is being replaced by another. Symptoms of the malady are a
|
|
sinking in and wrinkling of the lip in the middle under the
|
|
nostrils, and in the case of the male, a twitching of the right
|
|
testicle.
|
|
|
|
Stall-reared horses are subject to very numerous forms of disease.
|
|
They are liable to disease called 'eileus'. Under this disease the
|
|
animal trails its hind-legs under its belly so far forward as almost
|
|
to fall back on its haunches; if it goes without food for several days
|
|
and turns rabid, it may be of service to draw blood, or to castrate
|
|
the male. The animal is subject also to tetanus: the veins get
|
|
rigid, as also the head and neck, and the animal walks with its legs
|
|
stretched out straight. The horse suffers also from abscesses. Another
|
|
painful illness afflicts them called the 'barley-surfeit'. The are a
|
|
softening of the palate and heat of the breath; the animal may recover
|
|
through the strength of its own constitution, but no formal remedies
|
|
are of any avail.
|
|
|
|
There is also a disease called nymphia, in which the animal is
|
|
said to stand still and droop its head on hearing flute-music; if
|
|
during this ailment the horse be mounted, it will run off at a
|
|
gallop until it is pulled. Even with this rabies in full force, it
|
|
preserves a dejected spiritless appearance; some of the symptoms are a
|
|
throwing back of the ears followed by a projection of them, great
|
|
languor, and heavy breathing. Heart-ache also is incurable, of which
|
|
the symptom is a drawing in of the flanks; and so is displacement of
|
|
the bladder, which is accompanied by a retention of urine and a
|
|
drawing up of the hooves and haunches. Neither is there any cure if
|
|
the animal swallow the grape-beetle, which is about the size of the
|
|
sphondyle or knuckle-beetle. The bite of the shrewmouse is dangerous
|
|
to horses and other draught animals as well; it is followed by
|
|
boils. The bite is all the more dangerous if the mouse be pregnant
|
|
when she bites, for the boils then burst, but do not burst
|
|
otherwise. The cicigna-called 'chalcis' by some, and 'zignis' by
|
|
others-either causes death by its bite or, at all events, intense
|
|
pain; it is like a small lizard, with the colour of the blind snake.
|
|
In point of fact, according to experts, the horse and the sheep have
|
|
pretty well as many ailments as the human species. The drug known
|
|
under the name of 'sandarace' or realgar, is extremely injurious to
|
|
a horse, and to all draught animals; it is given to the animal as a
|
|
medicine in a solution of water, the liquid being filtered through a
|
|
colander. The mare when pregnant apt to miscarry when disturbed by the
|
|
odour of an extinguished candle; and a similar accident happens
|
|
occasionally to women in their pregnancy. So much for the diseases
|
|
of the horse.
|
|
|
|
The so-called hippomanes grows, as has stated, on the foal,
|
|
and the mare nibbles it off as she licks and cleans the foal. All
|
|
the curious stories connected with the hippomanes are due to old wives
|
|
and to the venders of charms. What is called the 'polium' or foal's
|
|
membrane, is, as all the accounts state, delivered by the mother
|
|
before the foal appears.
|
|
|
|
A horse will recognize the neighing of any other horse with
|
|
which it may have fought at any previous period. The horse delights in
|
|
meadows and marshes, and likes to drink muddy water; in fact, if water
|
|
be clear, the horse will trample in it to make it turbid, will then
|
|
drink it, and afterwards will wallow in it. The animal is fond of
|
|
water in every way, whether for drinking or for bathing purposes;
|
|
and this explains the peculiar constitution of the hippopotamus or
|
|
river-horse. In regard to water the ox is the opposite of the horse;
|
|
for if the water be impure or cold, or mixed up with alien matter,
|
|
it will refuse to drink it.
|
|
|
|
25
|
|
|
|
The ass suffers chiefly from one particular disease which they
|
|
call 'melis'. It arises first in the head, and a clammy humour runs
|
|
down the nostrils, thick and red; if it stays in the head the animal
|
|
may recover, but if it descends into the lungs the animal will die. Of
|
|
all animals on its of its kind it is the least capable of enduring
|
|
extreme cold, which circumstance will account for the fact that the
|
|
animal is not found on the shores of the Euxine, nor in Scythia.
|
|
|
|
26
|
|
|
|
Elephants suffer from flatulence, and when thus afflicted can void
|
|
neither solid nor liquid residuum. If the elephant swallow earth-mould
|
|
it suffers from relaxation; but if it go on taking it steadily, it
|
|
will experience no harm. From time to time it takes to swallowing
|
|
stones. It suffers also from diarrhoea: in this case they administer
|
|
draughts of lukewarm water or dip its fodder in honey, and either
|
|
one or the other prescription will prove a costive. When they suffer
|
|
from insomnia, they will be restored to health if their shoulders be
|
|
rubbed with salt, olive-oil, and warm water; when they have aches in
|
|
their shoulders they will derive great benefit from the application of
|
|
roast pork. Some elephants like olive oil, and others do not. If there
|
|
is a bit of iron in the inside of an elephant it is said that it
|
|
will pass out if the animal takes a drink of olive-oil; if the
|
|
animal refuses olive-oil, they soak a root in the oil and give it
|
|
the root to swallow. So much, then, for quadrupeds.
|
|
|
|
27
|
|
|
|
Insects, as a general rule, thrive best in the time of year in
|
|
which they come into being, especially if the season be moist and
|
|
warm, as in spring.
|
|
|
|
In bee-hives are found creatures that do great damage to the
|
|
combs; for instance, the grub that spins a web and ruins the
|
|
honeycomb: it is called the 'cleros'. It engenders an insect like
|
|
itself, of a spider-shape, and brings disease into the swarm. There is
|
|
another insect resembling the moth, called by some the 'pyraustes',
|
|
that flies about a lighted candle: this creature engenders a brood
|
|
full of a fine down. It is never stung by a bee, and can only be got
|
|
out of a hive by fumigation. A caterpillar also is engendered in
|
|
hives, of a species nicknamed the teredo, or 'borer', with which
|
|
creature the bee never interferes. Bees suffer most when flowers are
|
|
covered with mildew, or in seasons of drought.
|
|
|
|
All insects, without exception, die if they be smeared over with
|
|
oil; and they die all the more rapidly if you smear their head with
|
|
the oil and lay them out in the sun.
|
|
|
|
28
|
|
|
|
Variety in animal life may be produced by variety of locality:
|
|
thus in one place an animal will not be found at all, in another it
|
|
will be small, or short-lived, or will not thrive. Sometimes this sort
|
|
of difference is observed in closely adjacent districts. Thus, in
|
|
the territory of Miletus, in one district cicadas are found while
|
|
there are none in the district close adjoining; and in Cephalenia
|
|
there is a river on one side of which the cicada is found and not on
|
|
the other. In Pordoselene there is a public road one side of which the
|
|
weasel is found but not on the other. In Boeotia the mole is found
|
|
in great abundance in the neighbourhood of Orchomenus, but there are
|
|
none in Lebadia though it is in the immediate vicinity, and if a
|
|
mole be transported from the one district to the other it will
|
|
refuse to burrow in the soil. The hare cannot live in Ithaca if
|
|
introduced there; in fact it will be found dead, turned towards the
|
|
point of the beach where it was landed. The horseman-ant is not
|
|
found in Sicily; the croaking frog has only recently appeared in the
|
|
neighbourhood of Cyrene. In the whole of Libya there is neither wild
|
|
boar, nor stag, nor wild goat; and in India, according to Ctesias-no
|
|
very good authority, by the way-there are no swine, wild or tame,
|
|
but animals that are devoid of blood and such as go into hiding or
|
|
go torpid are all of immense size there. In the Euxine there are no
|
|
small molluscs nor testaceans, except a few here and there; but in the
|
|
Red Sea all the testaceans are exceedingly large. In Syria the sheep
|
|
have tails a cubit in breadth; the goats have ears a span and a palm
|
|
long, and some have ears that flap down to the ground; and the
|
|
cattle have humps on their shoulders, like the camel. In Lycia goats
|
|
are shorn for their fleece, just as sheep are in all other
|
|
countries. In Libya the long-horned ram is born with horns, and not
|
|
the ram only, as Homer' words it, but the ewe as well; in Pontus, on
|
|
the confines of Scythia, the ram is without horns.
|
|
|
|
In Egypt animals, as a rule, are larger than their congeners
|
|
in Greece, as the cow and the sheep; but some are less, as the dog,
|
|
the wolf, the hare, the fox, the raven, and the hawk; others are of
|
|
pretty much the same size, as the crow and the goat. The difference,
|
|
where it exists, is attributed to the food, as being abundant in one
|
|
case and insufficient in another, for instance for the wolf and the
|
|
hawk; for provision is scanty for the carnivorous animals, small birds
|
|
being scarce; food is scanty also for the hare and for all frugivorous
|
|
animals, because neither the nuts nor the fruit last long.
|
|
|
|
In many places the climate will account for peculiarities;
|
|
thus in Illyria, Thrace, and Epirus the ass is small, and in Gaul
|
|
and in Scythia the ass is not found at all owing to the coldness of
|
|
the climate of these countries. In Arabia the lizard is more than a
|
|
cubit in length, and the mouse is much larger than our field-mouse,
|
|
with its hind-legs a span long and its front legs the length of the
|
|
first finger-joint. In Libya, according to all accounts, the length of
|
|
the serpents is something appalling; sailors spin a yarn to the effect
|
|
that some crews once put ashore and saw the bones of a number of oxen,
|
|
and that they were sure that the oxen had been devoured by serpents,
|
|
for, just as they were putting out to sea, serpents came chasing their
|
|
galleys at full speed and overturned one galley and set upon the crew.
|
|
Again, lions are more numerous in Libya, and in that district of
|
|
Europe that lies between the Achelous and the Nessus; the leopard is
|
|
more abundant in Asia Minor, and is not found in Europe at all. As a
|
|
general rule, wild animals are at their wildest in Asia, at their
|
|
boldest in Europe, and most diverse in form in Libya; in fact, there
|
|
is an old saying, 'Always something fresh in Libya.'
|
|
|
|
It would appear that in that country animals of diverse
|
|
species meet, on account of the rainless climate, at the
|
|
watering-places, and there pair together; and that such pairs will
|
|
often breed if they be nearly of the same size and have periods of
|
|
gestation of the same length. For it is said that they are tamed
|
|
down in their behaviour towards each other by extremity of thirst.
|
|
And, by the way, unlike animals elsewhere, they require to drink
|
|
more in wintertime than in summer: for they acquire the habit of not
|
|
drinking in summer, owing to the circumstance that there is usually no
|
|
water then; and the mice, if they drink, die. Elsewhere also
|
|
bastard-animals are born to heterogeneous pairs; thus in Cyrene the
|
|
wolf and the bitch will couple and breed; and the Laconian hound is
|
|
a cross between the fox and the dog. They say that the Indian dog is a
|
|
cross between the tiger and the bitch, not the first cross, but a
|
|
cross in the third generation; for they say that the first cross is
|
|
a savage creature. They take the bitch to a lonely spot and tie her
|
|
up: if the tiger be in an amorous mood he will pair with her; if not
|
|
he will eat her up, and this casualty is of frequent occurrence.
|
|
|
|
29
|
|
|
|
Locality will differentiate habits also: for instance, rugged
|
|
highlands will not produce the same results as the soft lowlands.
|
|
The animals of the highlands look fiercer and bolder, as is seen in
|
|
the swine of Mount Athos; for a lowland boar is no match even for a
|
|
mountain sow.
|
|
|
|
Again, locality is an important element in regard to the bite of
|
|
an animal. Thus, in Pharos and other places, the bite of the
|
|
scorpion is not dangerous; elsewhere-in Caria, for instances-where
|
|
scorpions are venomous as well as plentiful and of large size, the
|
|
sting is fatal to man or beast, even to the pig, and especially to a
|
|
black pig, though the pig, by the way, is in general most singularly
|
|
indifferent to the bite of any other creature. If a pig goes into
|
|
water after being struck by the scorpion of Caria, it will surely die.
|
|
|
|
There is great variety in the effects produced by the bites of
|
|
serpents. The asp is found in Libya; the so-called 'septic' drug is
|
|
made from the body of the animal, and is the only remedy known for the
|
|
bite of the original. Among the silphium, also, a snake is found,
|
|
for the bite or which a certain stone is said to be a cure: a stone
|
|
that is brought from the grave of an ancient king, which stone is
|
|
put into water and drunk off. In certain parts of Italy the bite of
|
|
the gecko is fatal. But the deadliest of all bites of venomous
|
|
creatures is when one venomous animal has bitten another; as, for
|
|
instance, a viper's after it has bitten a scorpion. To the great
|
|
majority of such creatures man's is fatal. There is a very little
|
|
snake, by some entitled the 'holy-snake', which is dreaded by even the
|
|
largest serpents. It is about an ell long, and hairy-looking; whenever
|
|
it bites an animal, the flesh all round the wound will at once
|
|
mortify. There is in India a small snake which is exceptional in
|
|
this respect, that for its bite no specific whatever is known.
|
|
|
|
30
|
|
|
|
Animals also vary as to their condition of health in connexion
|
|
with their pregnancy.
|
|
|
|
Testaceans, such as scallops and all the oyster-family, and
|
|
crustaceans, such as the lobster family, are best when with spawn.
|
|
Even in the case of the testacean we speak of spawning (or pregnancy);
|
|
but whereas the crustaceans may be seen coupling and laying their
|
|
spawn, this is never the case with testaceans. Molluscs are best in
|
|
the breeding time, as the calamary, the sepia, and the octopus.
|
|
|
|
Fishes, when they begin to breed, are nearly all good for the
|
|
table; but after the female has gone long with spawn they are good
|
|
in some cases, and in others are out of season. The maenis, for
|
|
instance, is good at the breeding time. The female of this fish is
|
|
round, the male longer and flatter; when the female is beginning to
|
|
breed the male turns black and mottled, and is quite unfit for the
|
|
table; at this period he is nicknamed the 'goat'.
|
|
|
|
The wrasses called the owzel and the thrush, and the smaris have
|
|
different colours at different seasons, as is the case with the
|
|
plumage of certain birds; that is to say, they become black in the
|
|
spring and after the spring get white again. The phycis also changes
|
|
its hue: in general it is white, but in spring it is mottled; it is
|
|
the only sea-fish which is said make a bed for itself, and the
|
|
female lays her spawn in this bed or nest. The maenis, as was
|
|
observed, changes its colour as does the smaris, and in summer-time
|
|
changes back from whitish to black, the change being especially marked
|
|
about the fins and gills. The coracine, like the maenis, is in best
|
|
condition at breeding time; the mullet, the basse, and scaly fishes in
|
|
general are in bad condition at this period. A few fish are in much
|
|
the same condition at all times, whether with spawn or not, as the
|
|
glaucus. Old fishes also are bad eating; the old tunny is unfit even
|
|
for pickling, as a great part of its flesh wastes away with age, and
|
|
the same wasting is observed in all old fishes. The age of a scaly
|
|
fish may be told by the size and the hardness of its scales. An old
|
|
tunny has been caught weighing fifteen talents, with the span of its
|
|
tail two cubits and a palm broad.
|
|
|
|
River-fish and lake-fish are best after they have discharged the
|
|
spawn in the case of the female and the milt in the case of the
|
|
male: that is, when they have fully recovered from the exhaustion of
|
|
such discharge. Some are good in the breeding time, as the saperdis,
|
|
and some bad, as the sheat-fish. As a general rule, the male fish is
|
|
better eating than the female; but the reverse holds good of the
|
|
sheat-fish. The eels that are called females are the best for the
|
|
table: they look as though they were female, but they really are not
|
|
so.
|
|
|
|
Book IX
|
|
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
OF the animals that are comparatively obscure and short-lived
|
|
the characters or dispositions are not so obvious to recognition as
|
|
are those of animals that are longer-lived. These latter animals
|
|
appear to have a natural capacity corresponding to each of the
|
|
passions: to cunning or simplicity, courage or timidity, to good
|
|
temper or to bad, and to other similar dispositions of mind.
|
|
|
|
Some also are capable of giving or receiving instruction-of
|
|
receiving it from one another or from man: those that have the faculty
|
|
of hearing, for instance; and, not to limit the matter to audible
|
|
sound, such as can differentiate the suggested meanings of word and
|
|
gesture.
|
|
|
|
In all genera in which the distinction of male and female is
|
|
found, Nature makes a similar differentiation in the mental
|
|
characteristics of the two sexes. This differentiation is the most
|
|
obvious in the case of human kind and in that of the larger animals
|
|
and the viviparous quadrupeds. In the case of these latter the
|
|
female softer in character, is the sooner tamed, admits more readily
|
|
of caressing, is more apt in the way of learning; as, for instance, in
|
|
the Laconian breed of dogs the female is cleverer than the male. Of
|
|
the Molossian breed of dogs, such as are employed in the chase are
|
|
pretty much the same as those elsewhere; but sheep-dogs of this
|
|
breed are superior to the others in size, and in the courage with
|
|
which they face the attacks of wild animals.
|
|
|
|
Dogs that are born of a mixed breed between these two kinds
|
|
are remarkable for courage and endurance of hard labour.
|
|
|
|
In all cases, excepting those of the bear and leopard, the
|
|
female is less spirited than the male; in regard to the two
|
|
exceptional cases, the superiority in courage rests with the female.
|
|
With all other animals the female is softer in disposition than the
|
|
male, is more mischievous, less simple, more impulsive, and more
|
|
attentive to the nurture of the young: the male, on the other hand, is
|
|
more spirited than the female, more savage, more simple and less
|
|
cunning. The traces of these differentiated characteristics are more
|
|
or less visible everywhere, but they are especially visible where
|
|
character is the more developed, and most of all in man.
|
|
|
|
The fact is, the nature of man is the most rounded off and
|
|
complete, and consequently in man the qualities or capacities above
|
|
referred to are found in their perfection. Hence woman is more
|
|
compassionate than man, more easily moved to tears, at the same time
|
|
is more jealous, more querulous, more apt to scold and to strike.
|
|
She is, furthermore, more prone to despondency and less hopeful than
|
|
the man, more void of shame or self-respect, more false of speech,
|
|
more deceptive, and of more retentive memory. She is also more
|
|
wakeful, more shrinking, more difficult to rouse to action, and
|
|
requires a smaller quantity of nutriment.
|
|
|
|
As was previously stated, the male is more courageous than the
|
|
female, and more sympathetic in the way of standing by to help. Even
|
|
in the case of molluscs, when the cuttle-fish is struck with the
|
|
trident the male stands by to help the female; but when the male is
|
|
struck the female runs away.
|
|
|
|
There is enmity between such animals as dwell in the same
|
|
localities or subsist on the food. If the means of subsistence run
|
|
short, creatures of like kind will fight together. Thus it is said
|
|
that seals which inhabit one and the same district will fight, male
|
|
with male, and female with female, until one combatant kills the
|
|
other, or one is driven away by the other; and their young do even
|
|
in like manner.
|
|
|
|
All creatures are at enmity with the carnivores, and the
|
|
carnivores with all the rest, for they all subsist on living
|
|
creatures. Soothsayers take notice of cases where animals keep apart
|
|
from one another, and cases where they congregate together; calling
|
|
those that live at war with one another 'dissociates', and those
|
|
that dwell in peace with one another 'associates'. One may go so far
|
|
as to say that if there were no lack or stint of food, then those
|
|
animals that are now afraid of man or are wild by nature would be tame
|
|
and familiar with him, and in like manner with one another. This is
|
|
shown by the way animals are treated in Egypt, for owing to the fact
|
|
that food is constantly supplied to them the very fiercest creatures
|
|
live peaceably together. The fact is they are tamed by kindness, and
|
|
in some places crocodiles are tame to their priestly keeper from being
|
|
fed by him. And elsewhere also the same phenomenon is to be observed.
|
|
|
|
The eagle and the snake are enemies, for the eagle lives on
|
|
snakes; so are the ichneumon and the venom-spider, for the ichneumon
|
|
preys upon the latter. In the case of birds, there is mutual enmity
|
|
between the poecilis, the crested lark, the woodpecker (?), and the
|
|
chloreus, for they devour one another's eggs; so also between the crow
|
|
and the owl; for, owing to the fact that the owl is dim-sighted by
|
|
day, the crow at midday preys upon the owl's eggs, and the owl at
|
|
night upon the crow's, each having the whip-hand of the other, turn
|
|
and turn about, night and day.
|
|
|
|
There is enmity also between the owl and the wren; for the
|
|
latter also devours the owl's eggs. In the daytime all other little
|
|
birds flutter round the owl-a practice which is popularly termed
|
|
'admiring him'-buffet him, and pluck out his feathers; in
|
|
consequence of this habit, bird-catchers use the owl as a decoy for
|
|
catching little birds of all kinds.
|
|
|
|
The so-called presbys or 'old man' is at war with the weasel and
|
|
the crow, for they prey on her eggs and her brood; and so the
|
|
turtle-dove with the pyrallis, for they live in the same districts and
|
|
on the same food; and so with the green wood pecker and the libyus;
|
|
and so with kite and the raven, for, owing to his having the advantage
|
|
from stronger talons and more rapid flight the former can steal
|
|
whatever the latter is holding, so that it is food also that makes
|
|
enemies of these. In like manner there is war between birds that get
|
|
their living from the sea, as between the brenthus, the gull, and
|
|
the harpe; and so between the buzzard on one side and the toad and
|
|
snake on the other, for the buzzard preys upon the eggs of the two
|
|
others; and so between the turtle-dove and the chloreus; the
|
|
chloreus kills the dove, and the crow kills the so-called
|
|
drummer-bird.
|
|
|
|
The aegolius, and birds of prey in general, prey upon the
|
|
calaris, and consequently there is war between it and them; and so
|
|
is there war between the gecko-lizard and the spider, for the former
|
|
preys upon the latter; and so between the woodpecker and the heron,
|
|
for the former preys upon the eggs and brood of the latter. And so
|
|
between the aegithus and the ass, owing to the fact that the ass, in
|
|
passing a furze-bush, rubs its sore and itching parts against the
|
|
prickles; by so doing, and all the more if it brays, it topples the
|
|
eggs and the brood out of the nest, the young ones tumble out in
|
|
fright, and the mother-bird, to avenge this wrong, flies at the
|
|
beast and pecks at his sore places.
|
|
|
|
The wolf is at war with the ass, the bull, and the fox, for as
|
|
being a carnivore, he attacks these other animals; and so for the same
|
|
reason with the fox and the circus, for the circus, being
|
|
carnivorous and furnished with crooked talons, attacks and maims the
|
|
animal. And so the raven is at war with the bull and the ass, for it
|
|
flies at them, and strikes them, and pecks at their eyes; and so
|
|
with the eagle and the heron, for the former, having crooked talons,
|
|
attacks the latter, and the latter usually succumbs to the attack; and
|
|
so the merlin with the vulture; and the crex with the eleus-owl, the
|
|
blackbird, and the oriole (of this latter bird, by the way, the
|
|
story goes that he was originally born out of a funeral pyre): the
|
|
cause of warfare is that the crex injures both them and their young.
|
|
The nuthatch and the wren are at war with the eagle; the nuthatch
|
|
breaks the eagle's eggs, so the eagle is at war with it on special
|
|
grounds, though, as a bird of prey, it carries on a general war all
|
|
round. The horse and the anthus are enemies, and the horse will
|
|
drive the bird out of the field where he is grazing: the bird feeds on
|
|
grass, and sees too dimly to foresee an attack; it mimics the
|
|
whinnying of the horse, flies at him, and tries to frighten him
|
|
away; but the horse drives the bird away, and whenever he catches it
|
|
he kills it: this bird lives beside rivers or on marsh ground; it
|
|
has pretty plumage, and finds its without trouble. The ass is at
|
|
enmity with the lizard, for the lizard sleeps in his manger, gets into
|
|
his nostril, and prevents his eating.
|
|
|
|
Of herons there are three kinds: the ash coloured, the white,
|
|
and the starry heron (or bittern). Of these the first mentioned
|
|
submits with reluctance to the duties of incubation, or to union of
|
|
the sexes; in fact, it screams during the union, and it is said
|
|
drips blood from its eyes; it lays its eggs also in an awkward manner,
|
|
not unattended with pain. It is at war with certain creatures that
|
|
do it injury: with the eagle for robbing it, with the fox for worrying
|
|
it at night, and with the lark for stealing its eggs.
|
|
|
|
The snake is at war with the weasel and the pig; with the weasel
|
|
when they are both at home, for they live on the same food; with the
|
|
pig for preying on her kind. The merlin is at war with the fox; it
|
|
strikes and claws it, and, as it has crooked talons, it kills the
|
|
animal's young. The raven and the fox are good friends, for the
|
|
raven is at enmity with the merlin; and so when the merlin assails the
|
|
fox the raven comes and helps the animal. The vulture and the merlin
|
|
are mutual enemies, as being both furnished with crooked talons. The
|
|
vulture fights with the eagle, and so, by the way, does does swan; and
|
|
the swan is often victorious: moreover, of all birds swans are most
|
|
prone to the killing of one another.
|
|
|
|
In regard to wild creatures, some sets are at enmity with
|
|
other sets at all times and under all circumstances; others, as in the
|
|
case of man and man, at special times and under incidental
|
|
circumstances. The ass and the acanthis are enemies; for the bird
|
|
lives on thistles, and the ass browses on thistles when they are young
|
|
and tender. The anthus, the acanthis, and the aegithus are at enmity
|
|
with one another; it is said that the blood of the anthus will not
|
|
intercommingle with the blood of the aegithus. The crow and the
|
|
heron are friends, as also are the sedge-bird and lark, the laedus and
|
|
the celeus or green woodpecker; the woodpecker lives on the banks of
|
|
rivers and beside brakes, the laedus lives on rocks and bills, and
|
|
is greatly attached to its nesting-place. The piphinx, the harpe,
|
|
and the kite are friends; as are the fox and the snake, for both
|
|
burrow underground; so also are the blackbird and the turtle-dove. The
|
|
lion and the thos or civet are enemies, for both are carnivorous and
|
|
live on the same food. Elephants fight fiercely with one another,
|
|
and stab one another with their tusks; of two combatants the beaten
|
|
one gets completely cowed, and dreads the sound of his conqueror's
|
|
voice. These animals differ from one another an extraordinary extent
|
|
in the way of courage. Indians employ these animals for war
|
|
purposes, irrespective of sex; the females, however, are less in
|
|
size and much inferior in point of spirit. An elephant by pushing with
|
|
his big tusks can batter down a wall, and will butt with his
|
|
forehead at a palm until he brings it down, when he stamps on it and
|
|
lays it in orderly fashion on the ground. Men hunt the elephant in the
|
|
following way: they mount tame elephants of approved spirit and
|
|
proceed in quest of wild animals; when they come up with these they
|
|
bid the tame brutes to beat the wild ones until they tire the latter
|
|
completely. Hereupon the driver mounts a wild brute and guides him
|
|
with the application of his metal prong; after this the creature
|
|
soon becomes tame, and obeys guidance. Now when the driver is on their
|
|
back they are all tractable, but after he has dismounted, some are
|
|
tame and others vicious; in the case of these latter, they tie their
|
|
front-legs with ropes to keep them quiet. The animal is hunted whether
|
|
young or full grown.
|
|
|
|
Thus we see that in the case of the creatures above mentioned
|
|
their mutual friendship or the is due to the food they feed on and the
|
|
life they lead.
|
|
|
|
2
|
|
|
|
Of fishes, such as swim in shoals together are friendly to one
|
|
another; such as do not so swim are enemies. Some fishes swarm
|
|
during the spawning season; others after they have spawned. To state
|
|
the matter comprehensively, we may say that the following are shoaling
|
|
fish: the tunny, the maenis, the sea-gudgeon, the bogue, the
|
|
horse-mackerel, the coracine, the synodon or dentex, the red mullet,
|
|
the sphyraena, the anthias, the eleginus, the atherine, the
|
|
sarginus, the gar-fish, (the squid,) the rainbow-wrasse, the
|
|
pelamyd, the mackerel, the coly-mackerel. Of these some not only
|
|
swim in shoals, but go in pairs inside the shoal; the rest without
|
|
exception swim in pairs, and only swim in shoals at certain periods:
|
|
that is, as has been said, when they are heavy with spawn or after
|
|
they have spawned.
|
|
|
|
The basse and the grey mullet are bitter enemies, but they swarm
|
|
together at certain times; for at times not only do fishes of the same
|
|
species swarm together, but also those whose feeding-grounds are
|
|
identical or adjacent, if the food-supply be abundant. The grey mullet
|
|
is often found alive with its tail lopped off, and the conger with all
|
|
that part of its body removed that lies to the rear of the vent; in
|
|
the case of the mullet the injury is wrought by the basse, in that
|
|
of the conger-eel by the muraena. There is war between the larger
|
|
and the lesser fishes: for the big fishes prey on the little ones.
|
|
So much on the subject of marine animals.
|
|
|
|
3
|
|
|
|
The characters of animals, as has been observed, differ in respect
|
|
to timidity, to gentleness, to courage, to tameness, to
|
|
intelligence, and to stupidity.
|
|
|
|
The sheep is said to be naturally dull and stupid. Of all
|
|
quadrupeds it is the most foolish: it will saunter away to lonely
|
|
places with no object in view; oftentimes in stormy weather it will
|
|
stray from shelter; if it be overtaken by a snowstorm, it will stand
|
|
still unless the shepherd sets it in motion; it will stay behind and
|
|
perish unless the shepherd brings up the rams; it will then follow
|
|
home.
|
|
|
|
If you catch hold of a goat's beard at the extremity-the beard
|
|
is of a substance resembling hair-all the companion goats will stand
|
|
stock still, staring at this particular goat in a kind of
|
|
dumbfounderment.
|
|
|
|
You will have a warmer bed in amongst the goats than among the
|
|
sheep, because the goats will be quieter and will creep up towards
|
|
you; for the goat is more impatient of cold than the sheep.
|
|
|
|
Shepherds train sheep to close in together at a clap of their
|
|
hands, for if, when a thunderstorm comes on, a ewe stays behind
|
|
without closing in, the storm will kill it if it be with young;
|
|
consequently if a sudden clap or noise is made, they close in together
|
|
within the sheepfold by reason of their training.
|
|
|
|
Even bulls, when they are roaming by themselves apart from the
|
|
herd, are killed by wild animals.
|
|
|
|
Sheep and goats lie crowded together, kin by kin. When the sun
|
|
turns early towards its setting, the goats are said to lie no longer
|
|
face to face, but back to back.
|
|
|
|
4
|
|
|
|
Cattle at pasture keep together in their accustomed herds, and
|
|
if one animal strays away the rest will follow; consequently if the
|
|
herdsmen lose one particular animal, they keep close watch on all
|
|
the rest.
|
|
|
|
When mares with their colts pasture together in the same field,
|
|
if one dam dies the others will take up the rearing of the colt. In
|
|
point of fact, the mare appears to be singularly prone by nature to
|
|
maternal fondness; in proof whereof a barren mare will steal the
|
|
foal from its dam, will tend it with all the solicitude of a mother,
|
|
but, as it will be unprovided with mother's milk, its solicitude
|
|
will prove fatal to its charge.
|
|
|
|
5
|
|
|
|
Among wild quadrupeds the hind appears to be pre-eminently
|
|
intelligent; for example, in its habit of bringing forth its young
|
|
on the sides of public roads, where the fear of man forbids the
|
|
approach of wild animals. Again, after parturition, it first
|
|
swallows the afterbirth, then goes in quest of the seseli shrub, and
|
|
after eating of it returns to its young. The mother takes its young
|
|
betimes to her lair, so leading it to know its place of refuge in time
|
|
of danger; this lair is a precipitous rock, with only one approach,
|
|
and there it is said to hold its own against all comers. The male when
|
|
it gets fat, which it does in a high degree in autumn, disappears,
|
|
abandoning its usual resorts, apparently under an idea that its
|
|
fatness facilitates its capture. They shed their horns in places
|
|
difficult of access or discovery, whence the proverbial expression
|
|
of 'the place where the stag sheds his horns'; the fact being that, as
|
|
having parted with their weapons, they take care not to be seen. The
|
|
saying is that no man has ever seen the animal's left horn; that the
|
|
creature keeps it out of sight because it possesses some medicinal
|
|
property.
|
|
|
|
In their first year stags grow no horns, but only an excrescence
|
|
indicating where horns will be, this excrescence being short and
|
|
thick. In their second year they grow their horns for the first
|
|
time, straight in shape, like pegs for hanging clothes on; and on this
|
|
account they have an appropriate nickname. In the third year the
|
|
antlers are bifurcate; in the fourth year they grow trifurcate; and so
|
|
they go on increasing in complexity until the creature is six years
|
|
old: after this they grow their horns without any specific
|
|
differentiation, so that you cannot by observation of them tell the
|
|
animal's age. But the patriarchs of the herd may be told chiefly by
|
|
two signs; in the first place they have few teeth or none at all, and,
|
|
in the second place, they have ceased to grow the pointed tips to
|
|
their antlers. The forward-pointing tips of the growing horns (that is
|
|
to say the brow antlers), with which the animal meets attack, are
|
|
technically termed its 'defenders'; with these the patriarchs are
|
|
unprovided, and their antlers merely grow straight upwards. Stags shed
|
|
their horns annually, in or about the month of May; after shedding,
|
|
they conceal themselves, it is said, during the daytime, and, to avoid
|
|
the flies, hide in thick copses; during this time, until they have
|
|
grown their horns, they feed at night-time. The horns at first grow in
|
|
a kind of skin envelope, and get rough by degrees; when they reach
|
|
their full size the animal basks in the sun, to mature and dry them.
|
|
When they need no longer rub them against tree-trunks they quit
|
|
their hiding places, from a sense of security based upon the
|
|
possession of arms defensive and offensive. An Achaeine stag has
|
|
been caught with a quantity of green ivy grown over its horns, it
|
|
having grown apparently, as on fresh green wood, when the horns were
|
|
young and tender. When a stag is stung by a venom-spider or similar
|
|
insect, it gathers crabs and eats them; it is said to be a good
|
|
thing for man to drink the juice, but the taste is disagreeable. The
|
|
hinds after parturition at once swallow the afterbirth, and it is
|
|
impossible to secure it, for the hind catches it before it falls to
|
|
the ground: now this substance is supposed to have medicinal
|
|
properties. When hunted the creatures are caught by singing or
|
|
pipe-playing on the part of the hunters; they are so pleased with
|
|
the music that they lie down on the grass. If there be two hunters,
|
|
one before their eyes sings or plays the pipe, the other keeps out
|
|
of sight and shoots, at a signal given by the confederate. If the
|
|
animal has its ears cocked, it can hear well and you cannot escape its
|
|
ken; if its ears are down, you can.
|
|
|
|
6
|
|
|
|
When bears are running away from their pursuers they push their
|
|
cubs in front of them, or take them up and carry them; when they are
|
|
being overtaken they climb up a tree. When emerging from their
|
|
winter-den, they at once take to eating cuckoo-pint, as has been said,
|
|
and chew sticks of wood as though they were cutting teeth.
|
|
|
|
Many other quadrupeds help themselves in clever ways. Wild goats
|
|
in Crete are said, when wounded by arrows, to go in search of dittany,
|
|
which is supposed to have the property of ejecting arrows in the body.
|
|
Dogs, when they are ill, eat some kind of grass and produce
|
|
vomiting. The panther, after eating panther's-bane, tries to find some
|
|
human excrement, which is said to heal its pain. This panther's-bane
|
|
kills lions as well. Hunters hang up human excrement in a vessel
|
|
attached to the boughs of a tree, to keep the animal from straying
|
|
to any distance; the animal meets its end in leaping up to the
|
|
branch and trying to get at the medicine. They say that the panther
|
|
has found out that wild animals are fond of the scent it emits;
|
|
that, when it goes a-hunting, it hides itself; that the other
|
|
animals come nearer and nearer, and that by this stratagem it can
|
|
catch even animals as swift of foot as stags.
|
|
|
|
The Egyptian ichneumon, when it sees the serpent called the asp,
|
|
does not attack it until it has called in other ichneumons to help; to
|
|
meet the blows and bites of their enemy the assailants beplaster
|
|
themselves with mud, by first soaking in the river and then rolling on
|
|
the ground.
|
|
|
|
When the crocodile yawns, the trochilus flies into his mouth and
|
|
cleans his teeth. The trochilus gets his food thereby, and the
|
|
crocodile gets ease and comfort; it makes no attempt to injure its
|
|
little friend, but, when it wants it to go, it shakes its neck in
|
|
warning, lest it should accidentally bite the bird.
|
|
|
|
The tortoise, when it has partaken of a snake, eats marjoram; this
|
|
action has been actually observed. A man saw a tortoise perform this
|
|
operation over and over again, and every time it plucked up some
|
|
marjoram go back to partake of its prey; he thereupon pulled the
|
|
marjoram up by the roots, and the consequence was the tortoise died.
|
|
The weasel, when it fights with a snake, first eats wild rue, the
|
|
smell of which is noxious to the snake. The dragon, when it eats
|
|
fruit, swallows endive-juice; it has been seen in the act. Dogs,
|
|
when they suffer from worms, eat the standing corn. Storks, and all
|
|
other birds, when they get a wound fighting, apply marjoram to the
|
|
place injured.
|
|
|
|
Many have seen the locust, when fighting with the snake get a
|
|
tight hold of the snake by the neck. The weasel has a clever way of
|
|
getting the better of birds; it tears their throats open, as wolves do
|
|
with sheep. Weasels fight desperately with mice-catching snakes, as
|
|
they both prey on the same animal.
|
|
|
|
In regard to the instinct of hedgehogs, it has been observed
|
|
in many places that, when the wind is shifting from north to south,
|
|
and from south to north, they shift the outlook of their
|
|
earth-holes, and those that are kept in domestication shift over
|
|
from one wall to the other. The story goes that a man in Byzantium got
|
|
into high repute for foretelling a change of weather, all owing to his
|
|
having noticed this habit of the hedgehog.
|
|
|
|
The polecat or marten is about as large as the smaller breed of
|
|
Maltese dogs. In the thickness of its fur, in its look, in the white
|
|
of its belly, and in its love of mischief, it resembles the weasel; it
|
|
is easily tamed; from its liking for honey it is a plague to
|
|
bee-hives; it preys on birds like the cat. Its genital organ, as has
|
|
been said, consists of bone: the organ of the male is supposed to be a
|
|
cure for strangury; doctors scrape it into powder, and administer it
|
|
in that form.
|
|
|
|
7
|
|
|
|
In a general way in the lives of animals many resemblances to
|
|
human life may be observed. Pre-eminent intelligence will be seen more
|
|
in small creatures than in large ones, as is exemplified in the case
|
|
of birds by the nest building of the swallow. In the same way as men
|
|
do, the bird mixes mud and chaff together; if it runs short of mud, it
|
|
souses its body in water and rolls about in the dry dust with wet
|
|
feathers; furthermore, just as man does, it makes a bed of straw,
|
|
putting hard material below for a foundation, and adapting all to suit
|
|
its own size. Both parents co-operate in the rearing of the young;
|
|
each of the parents will detect, with practised eye, the young one
|
|
that has had a helping, and will take care it is not helped twice
|
|
over; at first the parents will rid the nest of excrement, but, when
|
|
the young are grown, they will teach their young to shift their
|
|
position and let their excrement fall over the side of the nest.
|
|
|
|
Pigeons exhibit other phenomena with a similar likeness to the
|
|
ways of humankind. In pairing the same male and the same female keep
|
|
together; and the union is only broken by the death of one of the
|
|
two parties. At the time of parturition in the female the
|
|
sympathetic attentions of the male are extraordinary; if the female is
|
|
afraid on account of the impending parturition to enter the nest,
|
|
the male will beat her and force her to come in. When the young are
|
|
born, he will take and masticate pieces of suitable food, will open
|
|
the beaks of the fledglings, and inject these pieces, thus preparing
|
|
them betimes to take food. (When the male bird is about to expel the
|
|
the young ones from the nest he cohabits with them all.) As a
|
|
general rule these birds show this conjugal fidelity, but occasionally
|
|
a female will cohabit with other than her mate. These birds are
|
|
combative, and quarrel with one another, and enter each other's nests,
|
|
though this occurs but seldom; at a distance from their nests this
|
|
quarrelsomeness is less marked, but in the close neighbourhood of
|
|
their nests they will fight desperately. A peculiarity common to the
|
|
tame pigeon, the ring-dove and the turtle-dove is that they do not
|
|
lean the head back when they are in the act of drinking, but only when
|
|
they have fully quenched their thirst. The turtle-dove and the
|
|
ring-dove both have but one mate, and let no other come nigh; both
|
|
sexes co-operate in the process of incubation. It is difficult to
|
|
distinguish between the sexes except by an examination of their
|
|
interiors. Ring-doves are long-lived; cases have been known where such
|
|
birds were twenty-five years old, thirty years old, and in some
|
|
cases forty. As they grow old their claws increase in size, and
|
|
pigeon-fanciers cut the claws; as far as one can see, the birds suffer
|
|
no other perceptible disfigurement by their increase in age.
|
|
Turtle-doves and pigeons that are blinded by fanciers for use as
|
|
decoys, live for eight years. Partridges live for about fifteen years.
|
|
Ring-doves and turtle-doves always build their nests in the same place
|
|
year after year. The male, as a general rule, is more long-lived
|
|
than the female; but in the case of pigeons some assert that the
|
|
male dies before the female, taking their inference from the
|
|
statements of persons who keep decoy-birds in captivity. Some
|
|
declare that the male sparrow lives only a year, pointing to the
|
|
fact that early in spring the male sparrow has no black beard, but has
|
|
one later on, as though the blackbearded birds of the last year had
|
|
all died out; they also say that the females are the longer lived,
|
|
on the grounds that they are caught in amongst the young birds and
|
|
that their age is rendered manifest by the hardness about their beaks.
|
|
Turtle-doves in summer live in cold places, (and in warm places during
|
|
the winter); chaffinches affect warm habitations in summer and cold
|
|
ones in winter.
|
|
|
|
8
|
|
|
|
Birds of a heavy build, such as quails, partridges, and the
|
|
like, build no nests; indeed, where they are incapable of flight, it
|
|
would be of no use if they could do so. After scraping a hole on a
|
|
level piece of ground-and it is only in such a place that they lay
|
|
their eggs-they cover it over with thorns and sticks for security
|
|
against hawks and eagles, and there lay their eggs and hatch them;
|
|
after the hatching is over, they at once lead the young out from the
|
|
nest, as they are not able to fly afield for food for them. Quails and
|
|
partridges, like barn-door hens, when they go to rest, gather their
|
|
brood under their wings. Not to be discovered, as might be the case if
|
|
they stayed long in one spot, they do not hatch the eggs where they
|
|
laid them. When a man comes by chance upon a young brood, and tries to
|
|
catch them, the hen-bird rolls in front of the hunter, pretending to
|
|
be lame: the man every moment thinks he is on the point of catching
|
|
her, and so she draws him on and on, until every one of her brood
|
|
has had time to escape; hereupon she returns to the nest and calls the
|
|
young back. The partridge lays not less than ten eggs, and often
|
|
lays as many as sixteen. As has been observed, the bird has
|
|
mischievous and deceitful habits. In the spring-time, a noisy
|
|
scrimmage takes place, out of which the male-birds emerge each with
|
|
a hen. Owing to the lecherous nature of the bird, and from a dislike
|
|
to the hen sitting, the males, if they find any eggs, roll them over
|
|
and over until they break them in pieces; to provide against this
|
|
the female goes to a distance and lays the eggs, and often, under
|
|
the stress of parturition, lays them in any chance spot that offers;
|
|
if the male be near at hand, then to keep the eggs intact she refrains
|
|
from visiting them. If she be seen by a man, then, just as with her
|
|
fledged brood, she entices him off by showing herself close at his
|
|
feet until she has drawn him to a distance. When the females have
|
|
run away and taken to sitting, the males in a pack take to screaming
|
|
and fighting; when thus engaged, they have the nickname of 'widowers'.
|
|
The bird who is beaten follows his victor, and submits to be covered
|
|
by him only; and the beaten bird is covered by a second one or by
|
|
any other, only clandestinely without the victor's knowledge; this
|
|
is so, not at all times, but at a particular season of the year, and
|
|
with quails as well as with partridges. A similar proceeding takes
|
|
place occasionally with barn-door cocks: for in temples, where cocks
|
|
are set apart as dedicate without hens, they all as a matter of course
|
|
tread any new-comer. Tame partridges tread wild birds, pecket their
|
|
heads, and treat them with every possible outrage. The leader of the
|
|
wild birds, with a counter-note of challenge, pushes forward to attack
|
|
the decoy-bird, and after he has been netted, another advances with
|
|
a similar note. This is what is done if the decoy be a male; but if it
|
|
be a female that is the decoy and gives the note, and the leader of
|
|
the wild birds give a counter one, the rest of the males set upon
|
|
him and chase him away from the female for making advances to her
|
|
instead of to them; in consequence of this the male often advances
|
|
without uttering any cry, so that no other may hear him and come and
|
|
give him battle; and experienced fowlers assert that sometimes the
|
|
male bird, when he approaches the female, makes her keep silence, to
|
|
avoid having to give battle to other males who might have heard him.
|
|
The partridge has not only the note here referred to, but also a
|
|
thin shrill cry and other notes. Oftentimes the hen-bird rises from
|
|
off her brood when she sees the male showing attentions to the
|
|
female decoy; she will give the counter note and remain still, so as
|
|
to be trodden by him and divert him from the decoy. The quail and
|
|
the partridge are so intent upon sexual union that they often come
|
|
right in the way of the decoy-birds, and not seldom alight upon
|
|
their heads. So much for the sexual proclivities of the partridge, for
|
|
the way in which it is hunted, and the general nasty habits of the
|
|
bird.
|
|
|
|
As has been said, quails and partridges build their nests upon
|
|
the ground, and so also do some of the birds that are capable of
|
|
sustained flight. Further, for instance, of such birds, the lark and
|
|
the woodcock, as well as the quail, do not perch on a branch, but
|
|
squat upon the ground.
|
|
|
|
9
|
|
|
|
The woodpecker does not squat on the ground, but pecks at the bark
|
|
of trees to drive out from under it maggots and gnats; when they
|
|
emerge, it licks them up with its tongue, which is large and flat.
|
|
It can run up and down a tree in any way, even with the head
|
|
downwards, like the gecko-lizard. For secure hold upon a tree, its
|
|
claws are better adapted than those of the daw; it makes its way by
|
|
sticking these claws into the bark. One species of woodpecker is
|
|
smaller than a blackbird, and has small reddish speckles; a second
|
|
species is larger than the blackbird, and a third is not much
|
|
smaller than a barn-door hen. It builds a nest on trees, as has been
|
|
said, on olive trees amongst others. It feeds on the maggots and
|
|
ants that are under the bark: it is so eager in the search for maggots
|
|
that it is said sometimes to hollow a tree out to its downfall. A
|
|
woodpecker once, in course of domestication, was seen to insert an
|
|
almond into a hole in a piece of timber, so that it might remain
|
|
steady under its pecking; at the third peck it split the shell of
|
|
the fruit, and then ate the kernel.
|
|
|
|
10
|
|
|
|
Many indications of high intelligence are given by cranes. They
|
|
will fly to a great distance and up in the air, to command an
|
|
extensive view; if they see clouds and signs of bad weather they fly
|
|
down again and remain still. They, furthermore, have a leader in their
|
|
flight, and patrols that scream on the confines of the flock so as
|
|
to be heard by all. When they settle down, the main body go to sleep
|
|
with their heads under their wing, standing first on one leg and
|
|
then on the other, while their leader, with his head uncovered,
|
|
keeps a sharp look out, and when he sees anything of importance
|
|
signals it with a cry.
|
|
|
|
Pelicans that live beside rivers swallow the large smooth
|
|
mussel-shells: after cooking them inside the crop that precedes the
|
|
stomach, they spit them out, so that, now when their shells are
|
|
open, they may pick the flesh out and eat it.
|
|
|
|
11
|
|
|
|
Of wild birds, the nests are fashioned to meet the exigencies of
|
|
existence and ensure the security of the young. Some of these birds
|
|
are fond of their young and take great care of them, others are
|
|
quite the reverse; some are clever in procuring subsistence, others
|
|
are not so. Some of these birds build in ravines and clefts, and on
|
|
cliffs, as, for instance, the so-called charadrius, or stone-curlew;
|
|
this bird is in no way noteworthy for plumage or voice; it makes an
|
|
appearance at night, but in the daytime keeps out of sight.
|
|
|
|
The hawk also builds in inaccessible places. Although a ravenous
|
|
bird, it will never eat the heart of any bird it catches; this has
|
|
been observed in the case of the quail, the thrush, and other birds.
|
|
They modify betimes their method of hunting, for in summer they do not
|
|
grab their prey as they do at other seasons.
|
|
|
|
Of the vulture, it is said that no one has ever seen either
|
|
its young or its nest; on this account and on the ground that all of a
|
|
sudden great numbers of them will appear without any one being able to
|
|
tell from whence they come, Herodorus, the father of Bryson the
|
|
sophist, says that it belongs to some distant and elevated land. The
|
|
reason is that the bird has its nest on inaccessible crags, and is
|
|
found only in a few localities. The female lays one egg as a rule, and
|
|
two at the most.
|
|
|
|
Some birds live on mountains or in forests, as the hoopoe and
|
|
the brenthus; this latter bird finds his food with ease and has a
|
|
musical voice. The wren lives in brakes and crevices; it is
|
|
difficult of capture, keeps out of sight, is gentle of disposition,
|
|
finds its food with ease, and is something of a mechanic. It goes by
|
|
the nickname of 'old man' or 'king'; and the story goes that for
|
|
this reason the eagle is at war with him.
|
|
|
|
12
|
|
|
|
Some birds live on the sea-shore, as the wagtail; the bird is of a
|
|
mischievous nature, hard to capture, but when caught capable of
|
|
complete domestication; it is a cripple, as being weak in its hinder
|
|
quarters.
|
|
|
|
Web-footed birds without exception live near the sea or rivers
|
|
or pools, as they naturally resort to places adapted to their
|
|
structure. Several birds, however, with cloven toes live near pools or
|
|
marshes, as, for instance, the anthus lives by the side of rivers; the
|
|
plumage of this bird is pretty, and it finds its food with ease. The
|
|
catarrhactes lives near the sea; when it makes a dive, it will keep
|
|
under water for as long as it would take a man to walk a furlong; it
|
|
is less than the common hawk. Swans are web-footed, and live near
|
|
pools and marshes; they find their food with ease, are
|
|
good-tempered, are fond of their young, and live to a green old age.
|
|
If the eagle attacks them they will repel the attack and get the
|
|
better of their assailant, but they are never the first to attack.
|
|
They are musical, and sing chiefly at the approach of death; at this
|
|
time they fly out to sea, and men, when sailing past the coast of
|
|
Libya, have fallen in with many of them out at sea singing in mournful
|
|
strains, and have actually seen some of them dying.
|
|
|
|
The cymindis is seldom seen, as it lives on mountains; it is
|
|
black in colour, and about the size of the hawk called the
|
|
'dove-killer'; it is long and slender in form. The Ionians call the
|
|
bird by this name; Homer in the Iliad mentions it in the line:
|
|
|
|
Chalcis its name with those of heavenly birth,
|
|
|
|
But called Cymindis by the sons of earth.
|
|
|
|
The hybris, said by some to be the same as the eagle-owl, is
|
|
never seen by daylight, as it is dim-sighted, but during the night
|
|
it hunts like the eagle; it will fight the eagle with such desperation
|
|
that the two combatants are often captured alive by shepherds; it lays
|
|
two eggs, and, like others we have mentioned, it builds on rocks and
|
|
in caverns. Cranes also fight so desperately among themselves as to be
|
|
caught when fighting, for they will not leave off; the crane lays
|
|
two eggs.
|
|
|
|
13
|
|
|
|
The jay has a great variety of notes: indeed, might almost say
|
|
it had a different note for every day in the year. It lays about
|
|
nine eggs; builds its nest on trees, out of hair and tags of wool;
|
|
when acorns are getting scarce, it lays up a store of them in hiding.
|
|
|
|
It is a common story of the stork that the old birds are fed
|
|
by their grateful progeny. Some tell a similar story of the bee-eater,
|
|
and declare that the parents are fed by their young not only when
|
|
growing old, but at an early period, as soon as the young are
|
|
capable of feeding them; and the parent-birds stay inside the nest.
|
|
The under part of the bird's wing is pale yellow; the upper part is
|
|
dark blue, like that of the halcyon; the tips of the wings are About
|
|
autumn-time it lays six or seven eggs, in overhanging banks where
|
|
the soil is soft; there it burrows into the ground to a depth of six
|
|
feet.
|
|
|
|
The greenfinch, so called from the colour of its belly, is as
|
|
large as a lark; it lays four or five eggs, builds its nest out of the
|
|
plant called comfrey, pulling it up by the roots, and makes an
|
|
under-mattress to lie on of hair and wool. The blackbird and the jay
|
|
build their nests after the same fashion. The nest of the penduline
|
|
tit shows great mechanical skill; it has the appearance of a ball of
|
|
flax, and the hole for entry is very small.
|
|
|
|
People who live where the bird comes from say that there
|
|
exists a cinnamon bird which brings the cinnamon from some unknown
|
|
localities, and builds its nest out of it; it builds on high trees
|
|
on the slender top branches. They say that the inhabitants attach
|
|
leaden weights to the tips of their arrows and therewith bring down
|
|
the nests, and from the intertexture collect the cinnamon sticks.
|
|
|
|
14
|
|
|
|
The halcyon is not much larger than the sparrow. Its colour is
|
|
dark blue, green, and light purple; the whole body and wings, and
|
|
especially parts about the neck, show these colours in a mixed way,
|
|
without any colour being sharply defined; the beak is light green,
|
|
long and slender: such, then, is the look of the bird. Its nest is
|
|
like sea-balls, i.e. the things that by the name of halosachne or
|
|
seafoam, only the colour is not the same. The colour of the nest is
|
|
light red, and the shape is that of the long-necked gourd. The nests
|
|
are larger than the largest sponge, though they vary in size; they are
|
|
roofed over, and great part of them is solid and great part hollow. If
|
|
you use a sharp knife it is not easy to cut the nest through; but if
|
|
you cut it, and at the same time bruise it with your hand, it will
|
|
soon crumble to pieces, like the halosachne. The opening is small,
|
|
just enough for a tiny entrance, so that even if the nest upset the
|
|
sea does not enter in; the hollow channels are like those in
|
|
sponges. It is not known for certain of what material the nest is
|
|
constructed; it is possibly made of the backbones of the gar-fish;
|
|
for, by the way, the bird lives on fish. Besides living on the
|
|
shore, it ascends fresh-water streams. It lays generally about five
|
|
eggs, and lays eggs all its life long, beginning to do so at the age
|
|
of four months.
|
|
|
|
15
|
|
|
|
The hoopoe usually constructs its nest out of human excrement.
|
|
It changes its appearance in summer and in winter, as in fact do the
|
|
great majority of wild birds. (The titmouse is said to lay a very
|
|
large quantity of eggs: next to the ostrich the blackheaded tit is
|
|
said by some to lay the largest number of eggs; seventeen eggs have
|
|
been seen; it lays, however, more than twenty; it is said always to
|
|
lay an odd number. Like others we have mentioned, it builds in
|
|
trees; it feeds on caterpillars.) A peculiarity of this bird and of
|
|
the nightingale is that the outer extremity of the tongue is not
|
|
sharp-pointed.
|
|
|
|
The aegithus finds its food with ease, has many young, and walks
|
|
with a limp. The golden oriole is apt at learning, is clever at making
|
|
a living, but is awkward in flight and has an ugly plumage.
|
|
|
|
16
|
|
|
|
The reed-warbler makes its living as easily as any other bird,
|
|
sits in summer in a shady spot facing the wind, in winter in a sunny
|
|
and sheltered place among reeds in a marsh; it is small in size,
|
|
with a pleasant note. The so-called chatterer has a pleasant note,
|
|
beautiful plumage, makes a living cleverly, and is graceful in form;
|
|
it appears to be alien to our country; at all events it is seldom seen
|
|
at a distance from its own immediate home.
|
|
|
|
17
|
|
|
|
The crake is quarrelsome, clever at making a living, but in
|
|
other ways an unlucky bird. The bird called sitta is quarrelsome,
|
|
but clever and tidy, makes its living with ease, and for its
|
|
knowingness is regarded as uncanny; it has a numerous brood, of
|
|
which it is fond, and lives by pecking the bark of trees. The
|
|
aegolius-owl flies by night, is seldom seen by day; like others we
|
|
have mentioned, it lives on cliffs or in caverns; it feeds on two
|
|
kinds of food; it has a strong hold on life and is full of resource.
|
|
The tree-creeper is a little bird, of fearless disposition; it lives
|
|
among trees, feeds on caterpillars, makes a living with ease, and
|
|
has a loud clear note. The acanthis finds its food with difficulty;
|
|
its plumage is poor, but its note is musical.
|
|
|
|
18
|
|
|
|
Of the herons, the ashen-coloured one, as has been said, unites
|
|
with the female not without pain; it is full of resource, carries
|
|
its food with it, is eager in the quest of it, and works by day; its
|
|
plumage is poor, and its excrement is always wet. Of the other two
|
|
species-for there are three in all-the white heron has handsome
|
|
plumage, unites without harm to itself with the female, builds a
|
|
nest and lays its eggs neatly in trees; it frequents marshes and lakes
|
|
and Plains and meadow land. The speckled heron, which is nicknamed
|
|
'the skulker', is said in folklore stories to be of servile origin,
|
|
and, as its nickname implies, it is the laziest bird of the three
|
|
species. Such are the habits of herons. The bird that is called the
|
|
poynx has this peculiarity, that it is more prone than any other
|
|
bird to peck at the eyes of an assailant or its prey; it is at war
|
|
with the harpy, as the two birds live on the same food.
|
|
|
|
19
|
|
|
|
There are two kinds of owsels; the one is black, and is found
|
|
everywhere, the other is quite white, about the same size as the
|
|
other, and with the same pipe. This latter is found on Cyllene in
|
|
Arcadia, and is found nowhere else. The laius, or blue-thrush, is like
|
|
the black owsel, only a little smaller; it lives on cliffs or on
|
|
tile roofings; it has not a red beak as the black owsel has.
|
|
|
|
20
|
|
|
|
Of thrushes there are three species. One is the misselthrush; it
|
|
feeds only on mistletoe and resin; it is about the size of the jay.
|
|
A second is the song-thrush; it has a sharp pipe, and is about the
|
|
size of the owsel. There is another species called the Illas; it is
|
|
the smallest species of the three, and is less variegated in plumage
|
|
than the others.
|
|
|
|
21
|
|
|
|
There is a bird that lives on rocks, called the blue-bird from its
|
|
colour. It is comparatively common in Nisyros, and is somewhat less
|
|
than the owsel and a little bigger than the chaffinch. It has large
|
|
claws, and climbs on the face of the rocks. It is steel-blue all over;
|
|
its beak is long and slender; its legs are short, like those of the
|
|
woodpecker.
|
|
|
|
22
|
|
|
|
The oriole is yellow all over; it is not visible during winter,
|
|
but puts in an appearance about the time of the summer solstice, and
|
|
departs again at the rising of Arcturus; it is the size of the
|
|
turtle-dove. The so-called soft-head (or shrike) always settles on one
|
|
and the same branch, where it falls a prey to the birdcatcher. Its
|
|
head is big, and composed of gristle; it is a little smaller than
|
|
the thrush; its beak is strong, small, and round; it is ashen-coloured
|
|
all over; is fleet of foot, but slow of wing. The bird-catcher usually
|
|
catches it by help of the owl.
|
|
|
|
23
|
|
|
|
There is also the pardalus. As a rule, it is seen in flocks and
|
|
not singly; it is ashen-coloured all over, and about the size of the
|
|
birds last described; it is fleet of foot and strong of wing, and
|
|
its pipe is loud and high-pitched. The collyrion (or fieldfare)
|
|
feeds on the same food as the owsel; is of the same size as the
|
|
above mentioned birds; and is trapped usually in the winter. All these
|
|
birds are found at all times. Further, there are the birds that live
|
|
as a rule in towns, the raven and the crow. These also are visible
|
|
at all seasons, never shift their place of abode, and never go into
|
|
winter quarters.
|
|
|
|
24
|
|
|
|
Of daws there are three species. One is the chough; it is as large
|
|
as the crow, but has a red beak. There is another, called the
|
|
'wolf'; and further there is the little daw, called the 'railer'.
|
|
There is another kind of daw found in Lybia and Phrygia, which is
|
|
web-footed.
|
|
|
|
25
|
|
|
|
Of larks there are two kinds. One lives on the ground and has a
|
|
crest on its head; the other is gregarious, and not sporadic like
|
|
the first; it is, however, of the same coloured plumage, but is
|
|
smaller, and has no crest; it is an article of human food.
|
|
|
|
26
|
|
|
|
The woodcock is caught with nets in gardens. It is about the
|
|
size of a barn-door hen; it has a long beak, and in plumage is like
|
|
the francolin-partridge. It runs quickly, and is pretty easily
|
|
domesticated. The starling is speckled; it is of the same size as
|
|
the owsel.
|
|
|
|
27
|
|
|
|
Of the Egyptian ibis there are two kinds, the white and the black.
|
|
The white ones are found over Egypt, excepting in Pelusium; the
|
|
black ones are found in Pelusium, and nowhere else in Egypt.
|
|
|
|
28
|
|
|
|
Of the little horned owls there are two kinds, and one is
|
|
visible at all seasons, and for that reason has the nickname of
|
|
'all-the-year-round owl'; it is not sufficiently palatable to come
|
|
to table; another species makes its appearance sometimes in the
|
|
autumn, is seen for a single day or at the most for two days, and is
|
|
regarded as a table delicacy; it scarcely differs from the first
|
|
species save only in being fatter; it has no note, but the other
|
|
species has. With regard to their origin, nothing is known from ocular
|
|
observation; the only fact known for certain is that they are first
|
|
seen when a west wind is blowing.
|
|
|
|
29
|
|
|
|
The cuckoo, as has been said elsewhere, makes no nest, but
|
|
deposits its eggs in an alien nest, generally in the nest of the
|
|
ring-dove, or on the ground in the nest of the hypolais or lark, or on
|
|
a tree in the nest of the green linnet. it lays only one egg and
|
|
does not hatch it itself, but the mother-bird in whose nest it has
|
|
deposited it hatches and rears it; and, as they say, this mother bird,
|
|
when the young cuckoo has grown big, thrusts her own brood out of
|
|
the nest and lets them perish; others say that this mother-bird
|
|
kills her own brood and gives them to the alien to devour, despising
|
|
her own young owing to the beauty of the cuckoo. Personal observers
|
|
agree in telling most of these stories, but are not in agreement as to
|
|
the instruction of the young. Some say that the mother-cuckoo comes
|
|
and devours the brood of the rearing mother; others say that the young
|
|
cuckoo from its superior size snaps up the food brought before the
|
|
smaller brood have a chance, and that in consequence the smaller brood
|
|
die of hunger; others say that, by its superior strength, it
|
|
actually kills the other ones whilst it is being reared up with
|
|
them. The cuckoo shows great sagacity in the disposal of its
|
|
progeny; the fact is, the mother cuckoo is quite conscious of her
|
|
own cowardice and of the fact that she could never help her young
|
|
one in an emergency, and so, for the security of the young one, she
|
|
makes of him a supposititious child in an alien nest. The truth is,
|
|
this bird is pre-eminent among birds in the way of cowardice; it
|
|
allows itself to be pecked at by little birds, and flies away from
|
|
their attacks.
|
|
|
|
30
|
|
|
|
It has already been stated that the footless bird, which some term
|
|
the cypselus, resembles the swallow; indeed, it is not easy to
|
|
distinguish between the two birds, excepting in the fact that the
|
|
cypselus has feathers on the shank. These birds rear their young in
|
|
long cells made of mud, and furnished with a hole just big enough
|
|
for entry and exit; they build under cover of some roofing-under a
|
|
rock or in a cavern-for protection against animals and men.
|
|
|
|
The so-called goat-sucker lives on mountains; it is a little
|
|
larger than the owsel, and less than the cuckoo; it lays two eggs,
|
|
or three at the most, and is of a sluggish disposition. It flies up to
|
|
the she-goat and sucks its milk, from which habit it derives its name;
|
|
it is said that, after it has sucked the teat of the animal, the
|
|
teat dries up and the animal goes blind. It is dim-sighted in the
|
|
day-time, but sees well enough by night.
|
|
|
|
31
|
|
|
|
In narrow circumscribed districts where the food would be
|
|
insufficient for more birds than two, ravens are only found in
|
|
isolated pairs; when their young are old enough to fly, the parent
|
|
couple first eject them from the nest, and by and by chase them from
|
|
the neighbourhood. The raven lays four or five eggs. About the time
|
|
when the mercenaries under Medius were slaughtered at Pharsalus, the
|
|
districts about Athens and the Peloponnese were left destitute of
|
|
ravens, from which it would appear that these birds have some means of
|
|
intercommunicating with one another.
|
|
|
|
32
|
|
|
|
Of eagles there are several species. One of them, called 'the
|
|
white-tailed eagle', is found on low lands, in groves, and in the
|
|
neighbourhood of cities; some call it the 'heron-killer'. It is bold
|
|
enough to fly to mountains and the interior of forests. The other
|
|
eagles seldom visit groves or low-lying land. There is another species
|
|
called the 'plangus'; it ranks second in point of size and strength;
|
|
it lives in mountain combes and glens, and by marshy lakes, and goes
|
|
by the name of 'duck-killer' and 'swart-eagle.' It is mentioned by
|
|
Homer in his account of the visit made by Priam to the tent of
|
|
Achilles. There is another species with black Plumage, the smallest
|
|
but boldest of all the kinds. It dwells on mountains or in forests,
|
|
and is called 'the black-eagle' or 'the hare-killer'; it is the only
|
|
eagle that rears its young and thoroughly takes them out with it. It
|
|
is swift of flight, is neat and tidy in its habits, too proud for
|
|
jealousy, fearless, quarrelsome; it is also silent, for it neither
|
|
whimpers nor screams. There is another species, the percnopterus, very
|
|
large, with white head, very short wings, long tail-feathers, in
|
|
appearance like a vulture. It goes by the name of 'mountain-stork'
|
|
or 'half-eagle'. It lives in groves; has all the bad qualities of
|
|
the other species, and none of the good ones; for it lets itself be
|
|
chased and caught by the raven and the other birds. It is clumsy in
|
|
its movements, has difficulty in procuring its food, preys on dead
|
|
animals, is always hungry, and at all times whining and screaming.
|
|
There is another species, called the 'sea-eagle' or 'osprey'. This
|
|
bird has a large thick neck, curved wings, and broad tailfeathers;
|
|
it lives near the sea, grasps its prey with its talons, and often,
|
|
from inability to carry it, tumbles down into the water. There is
|
|
another species called the 'true-bred'; people say that these are
|
|
the only true-bred birds to be found, that all other birds-eagles,
|
|
hawks, and the smallest birds-are all spoilt by the interbreeding of
|
|
different species. The true-bred eagle is the largest of all eagles;
|
|
it is larger than the phene; is half as large again as the ordinary
|
|
eagle, and has yellow plumage; it is seldom seen, as is the case
|
|
with the so-called cymindis. The time for an eagle to be on the wing
|
|
in search of prey is from midday to evening; in the morning until
|
|
the market-hour it remains on the nest. In old age the upper beak of
|
|
the eagle grows gradually longer and more crooked, and the bird dies
|
|
eventually of starvation; there is a folklore story that the eagle
|
|
is thus punished because it once was a man and refused entertainment
|
|
to a stranger. The eagle puts aside its superfluous food for its
|
|
young; for owing to the difficulty in procuring food day by day, it at
|
|
times may come back to the nest with nothing. If it catch a man
|
|
prowling about in the neighbourhood of its nest, it will strike him
|
|
with its wings and scratch him with its talons. The nest is built
|
|
not on low ground but on an elevated spot, generally on an
|
|
inaccessible ledge of a cliff; it does, however, build upon a tree.
|
|
The young are fed until they can fly; hereupon the parent-birds topple
|
|
them out of the nest, and chase them completely out of the locality.
|
|
The fact is that a pair of eagles demands an extensive space for its
|
|
maintenance, and consequently cannot allow other birds to quarter
|
|
themselves in close neighbourhood. They do not hunt in the vicinity of
|
|
their nest, but go to a great distance to find their prey. When the
|
|
eagle has captured a beast, it puts it down without attempting to
|
|
carry it off at once; if on trial it finds the burden too heavy, it
|
|
will leave it. When it has spied a hare, it does not swoop on it at
|
|
once, but lets it go on into the open ground; neither does it
|
|
descend to the ground at one swoop, but goes gradually down from
|
|
higher flights to lower and lower: these devices it adopts by way of
|
|
security against the stratagem of the hunter. It alights on high
|
|
places by reason of the difficulty it experiences in soaring up from
|
|
the level ground; it flies high in the air to have the more
|
|
extensive view; from its high flight it is said to be the only bird
|
|
that resembles the gods. Birds of prey, as a rule, seldom alight
|
|
upon rock, as the crookedness of their talons prevents a stable
|
|
footing on hard stone. The eagle hunts hares, fawns, foxes, and in
|
|
general all such animals as he can master with ease. It is a
|
|
long-lived bird, and this fact might be inferred from the length of
|
|
time during which the same nest is maintained in its place.
|
|
|
|
33
|
|
|
|
In Scythia there is found a bird as large as the great bustard.
|
|
The female lays two eggs, but does not hatch them, but hides them in
|
|
the skin of a hare or fox and leaves them there, and, when it is not
|
|
in quest of prey, it keeps a watch on them on a high tree; if any
|
|
man tries to climb the tree, it fights and strikes him with its
|
|
wing, just as eagles do.
|
|
|
|
34
|
|
|
|
The owl and the night-raven and all the birds see poorly in the
|
|
daytime seek their prey in the night, but not all the night through,
|
|
but at evening and dawn. Their food consists of mice, lizards, chafers
|
|
and the like little creatures. The so-called phene, or lammergeier, is
|
|
fond of its young, provides its food with ease, fetches food to its
|
|
nest, and is of a kindly disposition. It rears its own young and those
|
|
of the eagle as well; for when the eagle ejects its young from the
|
|
nest, this bird catches them up as they fall and feeds them. For the
|
|
eagle, by the way, ejects the young birds prematurely, before they are
|
|
able to feed themselves, or to fly. It appears to do so from jealousy;
|
|
for it is by nature jealous, and is so ravenous as to grab furiously
|
|
at its food; and when it does grab at its food, it grabs it in large
|
|
morsels. It is accordingly jealous of the young birds as they approach
|
|
maturity, since they are getting good appetites, and so it scratches
|
|
them with its talons. The young birds fight also with one another,
|
|
to secure a morsel of food or a comfortable position, whereupon the
|
|
mother-bird beats them and ejects them from the nest; the young ones
|
|
scream at this treatment, and the phene hearing them catches them as
|
|
they fall. The phene has a film over its eyes and sees badly, but
|
|
the sea-eagle is very keen-sighted, and before its young are fledged
|
|
tries to make them stare at the sun, and beats the one that refuses to
|
|
do so, and twists him back in the sun's direction; and if one of
|
|
them gets watery eyes in the process, it kills him, and rears the
|
|
other. It lives near the sea, and feeds, as has been said, on
|
|
sea-birds; when in pursuit of them it catches them one by one,
|
|
watching the moment when the bird rises to the surface from its
|
|
dive. When a sea-bird, emerging from the water, sees the sea-eagle, he
|
|
in terror dives under, intending to rise again elsewhere; the eagle,
|
|
however, owing to its keenness of vision, keeps flying after him until
|
|
he either drowns the bird or catches him on the surface. The eagle
|
|
never attacks these birds when they are in a swarm, for they keep
|
|
him off by raising a shower of water-drops with their wings.
|
|
|
|
35
|
|
|
|
The cepphus is caught by means of sea-foam; the bird snaps at
|
|
the foam, and consequently fishermen catch it by sluicing with showers
|
|
of sea-water. These birds grow to be plump and fat; their flesh has
|
|
a good odour, excepting the hinder quarters, which smell of shoreweed.
|
|
|
|
36
|
|
|
|
Of hawks, the strongest is the buzzard; the next in point of
|
|
courage is the merlin; and the circus ranks third; other diverse kinds
|
|
are the asterias, the pigeon-hawk, and the pternis; the broaded-winged
|
|
hawk is called the half-buzzard; others go by the name of
|
|
hobby-hawk, or sparrow-hawk, or 'smooth-feathered', or 'toad-catcher'.
|
|
Birds of this latter species find their food with very little
|
|
difficulty, and flutter along the ground. Some say that there are
|
|
ten species of hawks, all differing from one another. One hawk, they
|
|
say, will strike and grab the pigeon as it rests on the ground, but
|
|
never touch it while it is in flight; another hawk attacks the
|
|
pigeon when it is perched upon a tree or any elevation, but never
|
|
touches it when it is on the ground or on the wing; other hawks attack
|
|
their prey only when it is on the wing. They say that pigeons can
|
|
distinguish the various species: so that, when a hawk is an assailant,
|
|
if it be one that attacks its prey when the prey is on the wing, the
|
|
pigeon will sit still; if it be one that attacks sitting prey, the
|
|
pigeon will rise up and fly away.
|
|
|
|
In Thrace, in the district sometimes called that of Cedripolis,
|
|
men hunt for little birds in the marshes with the aid of hawks. The
|
|
men with sticks in their hands go beating at the reeds and brushwood
|
|
to frighten the birds out, and the hawks show themselves overhead
|
|
and frighten them down. The men then strike them with their sticks and
|
|
capture them. They give a portion of their booty to the hawks; that
|
|
is, they throw some of the birds up in the air, and the hawks catch
|
|
them.
|
|
|
|
In the neighbourhood of Lake Maeotis, it is said, wolves act
|
|
in concert with the fishermen, and if the fishermen decline to share
|
|
with them, they tear their nets in pieces as they lie drying on the
|
|
shore of the lake.
|
|
|
|
37
|
|
|
|
So much for the habits of birds.
|
|
|
|
In marine creatures, also, one In marine creatures, also, one
|
|
may observe many ingenious devices adapted to the circumstances of
|
|
their lives. For the accounts commonly given of the so-called
|
|
fishing-frog are quite true; as are also those given of the torpedo.
|
|
The fishing-frog has a set of filaments that project in front of its
|
|
eyes; they are long and thin like hairs, and are round at the tips;
|
|
they lie on either side, and are used as baits. Accordingly, when
|
|
the animal stirs up a place full of sand and mud and conceals itself
|
|
therein, it raises the filaments, and, when the little fish strike
|
|
against them, it draws them in underneath into its mouth. The
|
|
torpedo narcotizes the creatures that it wants to catch,
|
|
overpowering them by the power of shock that is resident in its
|
|
body, and feeds upon them; it also hides in the sand and mud, and
|
|
catches all the creatures that swim in its way and come under its
|
|
narcotizing influence. This phenomenon has been actually observed in
|
|
operation. The sting-ray also conceals itself, but not exactly in
|
|
the same way. That the creatures get their living by this means is
|
|
obvious from the fact that, whereas they are peculiarly inactive, they
|
|
are often caught with mullets in their interior, the swiftest of
|
|
fishes. Furthermore, the fishing-frog is unusually thin when he is
|
|
caught after losing the tips of his filaments, and the torpedo is
|
|
known to cause a numbness even in human beings. Again, the hake, the
|
|
ray, the flat-fish, and the angelfish burrow in the sand, and after
|
|
concealing themselves angle with the filaments on their mouths, that
|
|
fishermen call their fishing-rods, and the little creatures on which
|
|
they feed swim up to the filaments taking them for bits of sea-weed,
|
|
such as they feed upon.
|
|
|
|
Wherever an anthias-fish is seen, there will be no dangerous
|
|
creatures in the vicinity, and sponge-divers will dive in security,
|
|
and they call these signal-fishes 'holy-fish'. It is a sort of
|
|
perpetual coincidence, like the fact that wherever snails are
|
|
present you may be sure there is neither pig nor partridge in the
|
|
neighbourhood; for both pig and partridge eat up the snails.
|
|
|
|
The sea-serpent resembles the conger in colour and shape, but is
|
|
of lesser bulk and more rapid in its movements. If it be caught and
|
|
thrown away, it will bore a hole with its snout and burrow rapidly
|
|
in the sand; its snout, by the way, is sharper than that of ordinary
|
|
serpents. The so-called sea-scolopendra, after swallowing the hook,
|
|
turns itself inside out until it ejects it, and then it again turns
|
|
itself outside in. The sea-scolopendra, like the land-scolopendra,
|
|
will come to a savoury bait; the creature does not bite with its
|
|
teeth, but stings by contact with its entire body, like the
|
|
so-called sea-nettle. The so-called fox-shark, when it finds it has
|
|
swallowed the hook, tries to get rid of it as the scolopendra does,
|
|
but not in the same way; in other words, it runs up the
|
|
fishing-line, and bites it off short; it is caught in some districts
|
|
in deep and rapid waters, with night-lines.
|
|
|
|
The bonitos swarm together when they espy a dangerous
|
|
creature, and the largest of them swim round it, and if it touches one
|
|
of the shoal they try to repel it; they have strong teeth. Amongst
|
|
other large fish, a lamia-shark, after falling in amongst a shoal, has
|
|
been seen to be covered with wounds.
|
|
|
|
Of river-fish, the male of the sheat-fish is remarkably
|
|
attentive to the young. The female after parturition goes away; the
|
|
male stays and keeps on guard where the spawn is most abundant,
|
|
contenting himself with keeping off all other little fishes that might
|
|
steal the spawn or fry, and this he does for forty or fifty days,
|
|
until the young are sufficiently grown to make away from the other
|
|
fishes for themselves. The fishermen can tell where he is on guard:
|
|
for, in warding off the little fishes, he makes a rush in the water
|
|
and gives utterance to a kind of muttering noise. He is so earnest
|
|
in the performance of his parental duties that the fishermen at times,
|
|
if the eggs be attached to the roots of water-plants deep in the
|
|
water, drag them into as shallow a place as possible; the male fish
|
|
will still keep by the young, and, if it so happen, will be caught
|
|
by the hook when snapping at the little fish that come by; if,
|
|
however, he be sensible by experience of the danger of the hook, he
|
|
will still keep by his charge, and with his extremely strong teeth
|
|
will bite the hook in pieces.
|
|
|
|
All fishes, both those that wander about and those that are
|
|
stationary, occupy the districts where they were born or very
|
|
similar places, for their natural food is found there. Carnivorous
|
|
fish wander most; and all fish are carnivorous with the exception of a
|
|
few, such as the mullet, the saupe, the red mullet, and the chalcis.
|
|
The so-called pholis gives out a mucous discharge, which envelops
|
|
the creature in a kind of nest. Of shell-fish, and fish that are
|
|
finless, the scallop moves with greatest force and to the greatest
|
|
distance, impelled along by some internal energy; the murex or
|
|
purple-fish, and others that resemble it, move hardly at all. Out of
|
|
the lagoon of Pyrrha all the fishes swim in winter-time, except the
|
|
sea-gudgeon; they swim out owing to the cold, for the narrow waters
|
|
are colder than the outer sea, and on the return of the early summer
|
|
they all swim back again. In the lagoon no scarus is found, nor
|
|
thritta, nor any other species of the spiny fish, no spotted
|
|
dogfish, no spiny dogfish, no sea-crawfish, no octopus either of the
|
|
common or the musky kinds, and certain other fish are also absent; but
|
|
of fish that are found in the lagoon the white gudgeon is not a marine
|
|
fish. Of fishes the oviparous are in their prime in the early summer
|
|
until the spawning time; the viviparous in the autumn, as is also
|
|
the case with the mullet, the red mullet, and all such fish. In the
|
|
neighbourhood of Lesbos, the fishes of the outer sea, or of the
|
|
lagoon, bring forth their eggs or young in the lagoon; sexual union
|
|
takes place in the autumn, and parturition in the spring. With
|
|
fishes of the cartilaginous kind, the males and females swarm together
|
|
in the autumn for the sake of sexual union; in the early summer they
|
|
come swimming in, and keep apart until after parturition; the two
|
|
sexes are often taken linked together in sexual union.
|
|
|
|
Of molluscs the sepia is the most cunning, and is the only
|
|
species that employs its dark liquid for the sake of concealment as
|
|
well as from fear: the octopus and calamary make the discharge
|
|
solely from fear. These creatures never discharge the pigment in its
|
|
entirety; and after a discharge the pigment accumulates again. The
|
|
sepia, as has been said, often uses its colouring pigment for
|
|
concealment; it shows itself in front of the pigment and then retreats
|
|
back into it; it also hunts with its long tentacles not only little
|
|
fishes, but oftentimes even mullets. The octopus is a stupid creature,
|
|
for it will approach a man's hand if it be lowered in the water; but
|
|
it is neat and thrifty in its habits: that is, it lays up stores in
|
|
its nest, and, after eating up all that is eatable, it ejects the
|
|
shells and sheaths of crabs and shell-fish, and the skeletons of
|
|
little fishes. It seeks its prey by so changing its colour as to
|
|
render it like the colour of the stones adjacent to it; it does so
|
|
also when alarmed. By some the sepia is said to perform the same
|
|
trick; that is, they say it can change its colour so as to make it
|
|
resemble the colour of its habitat. The only fish that can do this
|
|
is the angelfish, that is, it can change its colour like the
|
|
octopus. The octopus as a rule does not live the year out. It has a
|
|
natural tendency to run off into liquid; for, if beaten and
|
|
squeezed, it keeps losing substance and at last disappears. The female
|
|
after parturition is peculiarly subject to this colliquefaction; it
|
|
becomes stupid; if tossed about by waves, it submits impassively; a
|
|
man, if he dived, could catch it with the hand; it gets covered over
|
|
with slime, and makes no effort to catch its wonted prey. The male
|
|
becomes leathery and clammy. As a proof that they do not live into a
|
|
second year there is the fact that, after the birth of the little
|
|
octopuses in the late summer or beginning of autumn, it is seldom that
|
|
a large-sized octopus is visible, whereas a little before this time of
|
|
year the creature is at its largest. After the eggs are laid, they say
|
|
that both the male and the female grow so old and feeble that they are
|
|
preyed upon by little fish, and with ease dragged from their holes;
|
|
and that this could not have been done previously; they say also
|
|
that this is not the case with the small and young octopus, but that
|
|
the young creature is much stronger than the grown-up one. Neither
|
|
does the sepia live into a second year. The octopus is the only
|
|
mollusc that ventures on to dry land; it walks by preference on
|
|
rough ground; it is firm all over when you squeeze it, excepting in
|
|
the neck. So much for the mollusca.
|
|
|
|
It is also said that they make a thin rough shell about them
|
|
like a hard sheath, and that this is made larger and larger as the
|
|
animal grows larger, and that it comes out of the sheath as though out
|
|
of a den or dwelling place.
|
|
|
|
The nautilus (or argonaut) is a poulpe or octopus, but one
|
|
peculiar both in its nature and its habits. It rises up from deep
|
|
water and swims on the surface; it rises with its shell down-turned in
|
|
order that it may rise the more easily and swim with it empty, but
|
|
after reaching the surface it shifts the position of the shell. In
|
|
between its feelers it has a certain amount of web-growth,
|
|
resembling the substance between the toes of web-footed birds; only
|
|
that with these latter the substance is thick, while with the nautilus
|
|
it is thin and like a spider's web. It uses this structure, when a
|
|
breeze is blowing, for a sail, and lets down some of its feelers
|
|
alongside as rudder-oars. If it be frightened it fills its shell
|
|
with water and sinks. With regard to the mode of generation and the
|
|
growth of the shell knowledge from observation is not yet
|
|
satisfactory; the shell, however, does not appear to be there from the
|
|
beginning, but to grow in their cases as in that of other
|
|
shell-fish; neither is it ascertained for certain whether the animal
|
|
can live when stripped of the shell.
|
|
|
|
38
|
|
|
|
Of all insects, one may also say of all living creatures, the most
|
|
industrious are the ant, the bee, the hornet, the wasp, and in point
|
|
of fact all creatures akin to these; of spiders some are more
|
|
skilful and more resourceful than others. The way in which ants work
|
|
is open to ordinary observation; how they all march one after the
|
|
other when they are engaged in putting away and storing up their food;
|
|
all this may be seen, for they carry on their work even during
|
|
bright moonlight nights.
|
|
|
|
39
|
|
|
|
Of spiders and phalangia there are many species. Of the venomous
|
|
phalangia there are two; one that resembles the so-called wolf-spider,
|
|
small, speckled, and tapering to a point; it moves with leaps, from
|
|
which habit it is nicknamed 'the flea': the other kind is large, black
|
|
in colour, with long front legs; it is heavy in its movements, walks
|
|
slowly, is not very strong, and never leaps. (Of all the other species
|
|
wherewith poison-vendors supply themselves, some give a weak bite, and
|
|
others never bite at all. There is another kind, comprising the
|
|
so-called wolf-spiders.) Of these spiders the small one weaves no web,
|
|
and the large weaves a rude and poorly built one on the ground or on
|
|
dry stone walls. It always builds its web over hollow places inside of
|
|
which it keeps a watch on the end-threads, until some creature gets
|
|
into the web and begins to struggle, when out the spider pounces.
|
|
The speckled kind makes a little shabby web under trees.
|
|
|
|
There is a third species of this animal, preeminently clever and
|
|
artistic. It first weaves a thread stretching to all the exterior ends
|
|
of the future web; then from the centre, which it hits upon with great
|
|
accuracy, it stretches the warp; on the warp it puts what
|
|
corresponds to the woof, and then weaves the whole together. It sleeps
|
|
and stores its food away from the centre, but it is at the centre that
|
|
it keeps watch for its prey. Then, when any creature touches the web
|
|
and the centre is set in motion, it first ties and wraps the
|
|
creature round with threads until it renders it helpless, then lifts
|
|
it and carries it off, and, if it happens to be hungry, sucks out
|
|
the life-juices--for that is the way it feeds; but, if it be not
|
|
hungry, it first mends any damage done and then hastens again to its
|
|
quest of prey. If something comes meanwhile into the net, the spider
|
|
at first makes for the centre, and then goes back to its entangled
|
|
prey as from a fixed starting point. If any one injures a portion of
|
|
the web, it recommences weaving at sunrise or at sunset, because it is
|
|
chiefly at these periods that creatures are caught in the web. It is
|
|
the female that does the weaving and the hunting, but the male takes a
|
|
share of the booty captured.
|
|
|
|
Of the skilful spiders, weaving a substantial web, there are two
|
|
kinds, the larger and the smaller. The one has long legs and keeps
|
|
watch while swinging downwards from the web: from its large size it
|
|
cannot easily conceal itself, and so it keeps underneath, so that
|
|
its prey may not be frightened off, but may strike upon the web's
|
|
upper surface; the less awkwardly formed one lies in wait on the
|
|
top, using a little hole for a lurking-place. Spiders can spin webs
|
|
from the time of their birth, not from their interior as a superfluity
|
|
or excretion, as Democritus avers, but off their body as a kind of
|
|
tree-bark, like the creatures that shoot out with their hair, as for
|
|
instance the porcupine. The creature can attack animals larger than
|
|
itself, and enwrap them with its threads: in other words, it will
|
|
attack a small lizard, run round and draw threads about its mouth
|
|
until it closes the mouth up; then it comes up and bites it.
|
|
|
|
40
|
|
|
|
So much for the spider. Of insects, there is a genus that has no
|
|
one name that comprehends all the species, though all the species
|
|
are akin to one another in form; it consists of all the insects that
|
|
construct a honeycomb: to wit, the bee, and all the insects that
|
|
resemble it in form.
|
|
|
|
There are nine varieties, of which six are gregarious-the bee, the
|
|
king-bee, the drone bee, the annual wasp, and, furthermore, the
|
|
anthrene (or hornet), and the tenthredo (or ground-wasp); three are
|
|
solitary-the smaller siren, of a dun colour, the larger siren, black
|
|
and speckled, and the third, the largest of all, that is called the
|
|
humble-bee. Now ants never go a-hunting, but gather up what is ready
|
|
to hand; the spider makes nothing, and lays up no store, but simply
|
|
goes a-hunting for its food; while the bee--for we shall by and by
|
|
treat of the nine varieties--does not go a-hunting, but constructs its
|
|
food out of gathered material and stores it away, for honey is the
|
|
bee's food. This fact is shown by the beekeepers' attempt to remove
|
|
the combs; for the bees, when they are fumigated, and are suffering
|
|
great distress from the process, then devour the honey most
|
|
ravenously, whereas at other times they are never observed to be so
|
|
greedy, but apparently are thrifty and disposed to lay by for their
|
|
future sustenance. They have also another food which is called
|
|
bee-bread; this is scarcer than honey and has a sweet figlike taste;
|
|
this they carry as they do the wax on their legs.
|
|
|
|
Very remarkable diversity is observed in their methods of
|
|
working and their general habits. When the hive has been delivered
|
|
to them clean and empty, they build their waxen cells, bringing in the
|
|
juice of all kinds of flowers and the 'tears' or exuding sap of trees,
|
|
such as willows and elms and such others as are particularly given
|
|
to the exudation of gum. With this material they besmear the
|
|
groundwork, to provide against attacks of other creatures; the
|
|
bee-keepers call this stuff 'stop-wax'. They also with the same
|
|
material narrow by side-building the entrances to the hive if they are
|
|
too wide. They first build cells for themselves; then for the
|
|
so-called kings and the drones; for themselves they are always
|
|
building, for the kings only when the brood of young is numerous,
|
|
and cells for the drones they build if a superabundance of honey
|
|
should suggest their doing so. They build the royal cells next to
|
|
their own, and they are of small bulk; the drones' cells they build
|
|
near by, and these latter are less in bulk than the bee's cells.
|
|
|
|
They begin building the combs downwards from the top of the
|
|
hive, and go down and down building many combs connected together
|
|
until they reach the bottom. The cells, both those for the honey and
|
|
those also for the grubs, are double-doored; for two cells are
|
|
ranged about a single base, one pointing one way and one the other,
|
|
after the manner of a double (or hour-glass-shaped) goblet. The
|
|
cells that lie at the commencement of the combs and are attached to
|
|
the hives, to the extent of two or three concentric circular rows, are
|
|
small and devoid of honey; the cells that are well filled with honey
|
|
are most thoroughly luted with wax. At the entry to the hive the
|
|
aperture of the doorway is smeared with mitys; this substance is a
|
|
deep black, and is a sort of dross or residual by-product of wax; it
|
|
has a pungent odour, and is a cure for bruises and suppurating
|
|
sores. The greasy stuff that comes next is pitch-wax; it has a less
|
|
pungent odour and is less medicinal than the mitys. Some say that
|
|
the drones construct combs by themselves in the same hive and in the
|
|
same comb that they share with the bees; but that they make no
|
|
honey, but subsist, they and their grubs also, on the honey made by
|
|
the bees. The drones, as a rule, keep inside the hive; when they go
|
|
out of doors, they soar up in the air in a stream, whirling round
|
|
and round in a kind of gymnastic exercise; when this is over, they
|
|
come inside the hive and feed to repletion ravenously. The kings never
|
|
quit the hive, except in conjunction with the entire swarm, either for
|
|
food or for any other reason. They say that, if a young swarm go
|
|
astray, it will turn back upon its route and by the aid of scent
|
|
seek out its leader. It is said that if he is unable to fly he is
|
|
carried by the swarm, and that if he dies the swarm perishes; and
|
|
that, if this swarm outlives the king for a while and constructs
|
|
combs, no honey is produced and the bees soon die out.
|
|
|
|
Bees scramble up the stalks of flowers and rapidly gather the
|
|
bees-wax with their front legs; the front legs wipe it off on to the
|
|
middle legs, and these pass it on to the hollow curves of the
|
|
hind-legs; when thus laden, they fly away home, and one may see
|
|
plainly that their load is a heavy one. On each expedition the bee
|
|
does not fly from a flower of one kind to a flower of another, but
|
|
flies from one violet, say, to another violet, and never meddles
|
|
with another flower until it has got back to the hive; on reaching the
|
|
hive they throw off their load, and each bee on his return is
|
|
accompanied by three or four companions. One cannot well tell what
|
|
is the substance they gather, nor the exact process of their work.
|
|
Their mode of gathering wax has been observed on olive-trees, as owing
|
|
to the thickness of the leaves the bees remain stationary for a
|
|
considerable while. After this work is over, they attend to the grubs.
|
|
There is nothing to prevent grubs, honey, and drones being all found
|
|
in one and the same comb. As long as the leader is alive, the drones
|
|
are said to be produced apart by themselves; if he be no longer
|
|
living, they are said to be reared by the bees in their own cells, and
|
|
under these circumstances to become more spirited: for this reason
|
|
they are called 'sting-drones', not that they really have stings,
|
|
but that they have the wish without the power, to use such weapons.
|
|
The cells for the drones are larger than the others; sometimes the
|
|
bees construct cells for the drones apart, but usually they put them
|
|
in amongst their own; and when this is the case the bee-keepers cut
|
|
the drone-cells out of the combs.
|
|
|
|
There are several species of bees, as has been said; two of
|
|
'kings', the better kind red, the other black and variegated, and
|
|
twice as big as the working-bee. The best workingbee is small,
|
|
round, and speckled: another kind is long and like an anthrene wasp;
|
|
another kind is what is called the robber-bee, black and flat-bellied;
|
|
then there is the drone, the largest of all, but devoid of sting,
|
|
and lazy. There is a difference between the progeny of bees that
|
|
inhabit cultivated land and of those from the mountains: the
|
|
forest-bees are more shaggy, smaller, more industrious and more
|
|
fierce. Working-bees make their combs all even, with the superficial
|
|
covering quite smooth. Each comb is of one kind only: that is, it
|
|
contains either bees only, or grubs only, or drones only; if it
|
|
happen, however, that they make in one and the same comb all these
|
|
kinds of cells, each separate kind will be built in a continuous row
|
|
right through. The long bees build uneven combs, with the lids of
|
|
the cells protuberant, like those of the anthrene; grubs and
|
|
everything else have no fixed places, but are put anywhere; from these
|
|
bees come inferior kings, a large quantity of drones, and the
|
|
so-called robber-bee; they produce either no honey at all, or honey in
|
|
very small quantities. Bees brood over the combs and so mature them;
|
|
if they fail to do so, the combs are said to go bad and to get covered
|
|
with a sort of spider's web. If they can keep brooding over the part
|
|
undamaged, the damaged part simply eats itself away; if they cannot so
|
|
brood, the entire comb perishes; in the damaged combs small worms
|
|
are engendered, which take on wings and fly away. When the combs
|
|
keep settling down, the bees restore the level surface, and put
|
|
props underneath the combs to give themselves free passage-room; for
|
|
if such free passage be lacking they cannot brood, and the cobwebs
|
|
come on. When the robber-bee and the drone appear, not only do they do
|
|
no work themselves, but they actually damage the work of the other
|
|
bees; if they are caught in the act, they are killed by the
|
|
working-bees. These bees also kill without mercy most of their
|
|
kings, and especially kings of the inferior sort; and this they do for
|
|
fear a multiplicity of kings should lead to a dismemberment of the
|
|
hive. They kill them especially when the hive is deficient in grubs,
|
|
and a swarm is not intended to take place; under these circumstances
|
|
they destroy the cells of the kings if they have been prepared, on the
|
|
ground that these kings are always ready to lead out swarms. They
|
|
destroy also the combs of the drones if a failure in the supply be
|
|
threatening and the hive runs short of provisions; under such
|
|
circumstances they fight desperately with all who try to take their
|
|
honey, and eject from the hive all the resident drones; and oftentimes
|
|
the drones are to be seen sitting apart in the hive. The little bees
|
|
fight vigorously with the long kind, and try to banish them from the
|
|
hives; if they succeed, the hive will be unusually productive, but
|
|
if the bigger bees get left mistresses of the field they pass the time
|
|
in idleness, and no good at all but die out before the autumn.
|
|
Whenever the working-bees kill an enemy they try to do so out of
|
|
doors; and whenever one of their own body dies, they carry the dead
|
|
bee out of doors also. The so-called robber-bees spoil their own
|
|
combs, and, if they can do so unnoticed, enter and spoil the combs
|
|
of other bees; if they are caught in the act they are put to death. It
|
|
is no easy task for them to escape detection, for there are
|
|
sentinels on guard at every entry; and, even if they do escape
|
|
detection on entering, afterwards from a surfeit of food they cannot
|
|
fly, but go rolling about in front of the hive, so that their
|
|
chances of escape are small indeed. The kings are never themselves
|
|
seen outside the hive except with a swarm in flight: during which time
|
|
all the other bees cluster around them. When the flight of a swarm
|
|
is imminent, a monotonous and quite peculiar sound made by all the
|
|
bees is heard for several days, and for two or three days in advance a
|
|
few bees are seen flying round the hive; it has never as yet been
|
|
ascertained, owing to the difficulty of the observation, whether or no
|
|
the king is among these. When they have swarmed, they fly away and
|
|
separate off to each of the kings; if a small swarm happens to
|
|
settle near to a large one, it will shift to join this large one,
|
|
and if the king whom they have abandoned follows them, they put him to
|
|
death. So much for the quitting of the hive and the swarmflight.
|
|
Separate detachments of bees are told off for diverse operations; that
|
|
is, some carry flower-produce, others carry water, others smooth and
|
|
arrange the combs. A bee carries water when it is rearing grubs. No
|
|
bee ever settles on the flesh of any creature, or ever eats animal
|
|
food. They have no fixed date for commencing work; but when their
|
|
provender is forthcoming and they are in comfortable trim, and by
|
|
preference in summer, they set to work, and when the weather is fine
|
|
they work incessantly.
|
|
|
|
The bee, when quite young and in fact only three days old, after
|
|
shedding its chrysalis-case, begins to work if it be well fed. When
|
|
a swarm is settling, some bees detach themselves in search of food and
|
|
return back to the swarm. In hives that are in good condition the
|
|
production of young bees is discontinued only for the forty days
|
|
that follow the winter solstice. When the grubs are grown, the bees
|
|
put food beside them and cover them with a coating of wax; and, as
|
|
soon as the grub is strong enough, he of his own accord breaks the lid
|
|
and comes out. Creatures that make their appearance in hives and spoil
|
|
the combs the working-bees clear out, but the other bees from sheer
|
|
laziness look with indifference on damage done to their produce.
|
|
When the bee-masters take out the combs, they leave enough food behind
|
|
for winter use; if it be sufficient in quantity, the occupants of
|
|
the hive will survive; if it be insufficient, then, if the weather
|
|
be rough, they die on the spot, but if it be fair, they fly away and
|
|
desert the hive. They feed on honey summer and winter; but they
|
|
store up another article of food resembling wax in hardness, which
|
|
by some is called sandarace, or bee-bread. Their worst enemies are
|
|
wasps and the birds named titmice, and furthermore the swallow and the
|
|
bee-eater. The frogs in the marsh also catch them if they come in
|
|
their way by the water-side, and for this reason bee-keepers chase the
|
|
frogs from the ponds from which the bees take water; they destroy also
|
|
wasps' nests, and the nests of swallows, in the neighbourhood of the
|
|
hives, and also the nests of bee-eaters. Bees have fear only of one
|
|
another. They fight with one another and with wasps. Away from the
|
|
hive they attack neither their own species nor any other creature, but
|
|
in the close proximity of the hive they kill whatever they get hold
|
|
of. Bees that sting die from their inability to extract the sting
|
|
without at the same time extracting their intestines. True, they often
|
|
recover, if the person stung takes the trouble to press the sting out;
|
|
but once it loses its sting the bee must die. They can kill with their
|
|
stings even large animals; in fact, a horse has been known to have
|
|
been stung to death by them. The kings are the least disposed to
|
|
show anger or to inflict a sting. Bees that die are removed from the
|
|
hive, and in every way the creature is remarkable for its cleanly
|
|
habits; in point of fact, they often fly away to a distance to void
|
|
their excrement because it is malodorous; and, as has been said,
|
|
they are annoyed by all bad smells and by the scent of perfumes, so
|
|
much so that they sting people that use perfumes.
|
|
|
|
They perish from a number of accidental causes, and when their
|
|
kings become too numerous and try each to carry away a portion of
|
|
the swarm.
|
|
|
|
The toad also feeds on bees; he comes to the doorway of the
|
|
hive, puffs himself out as he sits on the watch, and devours the
|
|
creatures as they come flying out; the bees can in no way retaliate,
|
|
but the bee-keeper makes a point of killing him.
|
|
|
|
As for the class of bee that has been spoken of as inferior or
|
|
good-for-nothing, and as constructing its combs so roughly, some
|
|
bee-keepers say that it is the young bees that act so from
|
|
inexperience; and the bees of the current year are termed young. The
|
|
young bees do not sting as the others do; and it is for this reason
|
|
that swarms may be safely carried, as it is of young bees that they
|
|
are composed. When honey runs short they expel the drones, and the
|
|
bee-keepers supply the bees with figs and sweet-tasting articles of
|
|
food. The elder bees do the indoor work, and are rough and hairy
|
|
from staying indoors; the young bees do the outer carrying, and are
|
|
comparatively smooth. They kill the drones also when in their work
|
|
they are confined for room; the drones, by the way, live in the
|
|
innermost recess of the hive. On one occasion, when a hive was in a
|
|
poor condition, some of the occupants assailed a foreign hive; proving
|
|
victorious in a combat they took to carrying off the honey; when the
|
|
bee-keeper tried to kill them, the other bees came out and tried to
|
|
beat off the enemy but made no attempt to sting the man.
|
|
|
|
The diseases that chiefly attack prosperous hives are first of all
|
|
the clerus-this consists in a growth of little worms on the floor,
|
|
from which, as they develop, a kind of cobweb grows over the entire
|
|
hive, and the combs decay; another diseased condition is indicated
|
|
in a lassitude on the part of the bees and in malodorousness of the
|
|
hive. Bees feed on thyme; and the white thyme is better than the
|
|
red. In summer the place for the hive should be cool, and in winter
|
|
warm. They are very apt to fall sick if the plant they are at work
|
|
on be mildewed. In a high wind they carry a stone by way of ballast to
|
|
steady them. If a stream be near at hand, they drink from it and
|
|
from it only, but before they drink they first deposit their load;
|
|
if there be no water near at hand, they disgorge their honey as they
|
|
drink elsewhere, and at once make off to work. There are two seasons
|
|
for making honey, spring and autumn; the spring honey is sweeter,
|
|
whiter, and in every way better than the autumn honey. Superior
|
|
honey comes from fresh comb, and from young shoots; the red honey is
|
|
inferior, and owes its inferiority to the comb in which it is
|
|
deposited, just as wine is apt to be spoiled by its cask;
|
|
consequently, one should have it looked to and dried. When the thyme
|
|
is in flower and the comb is full, the honey does not harden. The
|
|
honey that is golden in hue is excellent. White honey does not come
|
|
from thyme pure and simple; it is good as a salve for sore eyes and
|
|
wounds. Poor honey always floats on the surface and should be
|
|
skimmed off; the fine clear honey rests below. When the floral world
|
|
is in full bloom, then they make wax; consequently you must then
|
|
take the wax out of the hive, for they go to work on new wax at
|
|
once. The flowers from which they gather honey are as follows: the
|
|
spindle-tree, the melilot-clover, king's-spear, myrtle,
|
|
flowering-reed, withy, and broom. When they work at thyme, they mix in
|
|
water before sealing up the comb. As has been already stated, they all
|
|
either fly to a distance to discharge their excrement or make the
|
|
discharge into one single comb. The little bees, as has been said, are
|
|
more industrious than the big ones; their wings are battered; their
|
|
colour is black, and they have a burnt-up aspect. Gaudy and showy
|
|
bees, like gaudy and showy women, are good-for-nothings.
|
|
|
|
Bees seem to take a pleasure in listening to a rattling noise; and
|
|
consequently men say that they can muster them into a hive by rattling
|
|
with crockery or stones; it is uncertain, however, whether or no
|
|
they can hear the noise at all and also whether their procedure is due
|
|
to pleasure or alarm. They expel from the hive all idlers and
|
|
unthrifts. As has been said, they differentiate their work; some
|
|
make wax, some make honey, some make bee-bread, some shape and mould
|
|
combs, some bring water to the cells and mingle it with the honey,
|
|
some engage in out-of-door work. At early dawn they make no noise,
|
|
until some one particular bee makes a buzzing noise two or three times
|
|
and thereby awakes the rest; hereupon they all fly in a body to
|
|
work. By and by they return and at first are noisy; then the noise
|
|
gradually decreases, until at last some one bee flies round about,
|
|
making a buzzing noise, and apparently calling on the others to go
|
|
to sleep; then all of a sudden there is a dead silence.
|
|
|
|
The hive is known to be in good condition if the noise heard
|
|
within it is loud, and if the bees make a flutter as they go out and
|
|
in; for at this time they are constructing brood-cells. They suffer
|
|
most from hunger when they recommence work after winter. They become
|
|
somewhat lazy if the bee-keeper, in robbing the hive, leave behind too
|
|
much honey; still one should leave cells numerous in proportion to the
|
|
population, for the bees work in a spiritless way if too few combs are
|
|
left. They become idle also, as being dispirited, if the hive be too
|
|
big. A hive yields to the bee-keeper six or nine pints of honey; a
|
|
prosperous hive will yield twelve or fifteen pints, exceptionally good
|
|
hives eighteen. Sheep and, as has been said, wasps are enemies to
|
|
the bees. Bee-keepers entrap the latter, by putting a flat dish on the
|
|
ground with pieces of meat on it; when a number of the wasps settle on
|
|
it, they cover them with a lid and put the dish and its contents on
|
|
the fire. It is a good thing to have a few drones in a hive, as
|
|
their presence increases the industry of the workers. Bees can tell
|
|
the approach of rough weather or of rain; and the proof is that they
|
|
will not fly away, but even while it is as yet fine they go fluttering
|
|
about within a restricted space, and the bee-keeper knows from this
|
|
that they are expecting bad weather. When the bees inside the hive
|
|
hang clustering to one another, it is a sign that the swarm is
|
|
intending to quit; consequently, occasion, when a bee-keepers, on
|
|
seeing this, besprinkle the hive with sweet wine. It is advisable to
|
|
plant about the hives pear-trees, beans, Median-grass, Syrian-grass,
|
|
yellow pulse, myrtle, poppies, creeping-thyme, and almond-trees.
|
|
Some bee-keepers sprinkle their bees with flour, and can distinguish
|
|
them from others when they are at work out of doors. If the spring
|
|
be late, or if there be drought or blight, then grubs are all the
|
|
fewer in the hives. So much for the habits of bees.
|
|
|
|
41
|
|
|
|
Of wasps, there are two kinds. Of these kinds one is wild and
|
|
scarce, lives on the mountains, engenders grubs not underground but on
|
|
oak-trees, is larger, longer, and blacker than the other kind, is
|
|
invariably speckled and furnished with a sting, and is remarkably
|
|
courageous. The pain from its sting is more severe than that caused by
|
|
the others, for the instrument that causes the pain is larger, in
|
|
proportion to its own larger size. These wild live over into a
|
|
second year, and in winter time, when oaks have been in course of
|
|
felling, they may be seen coming out and flying away. They lie
|
|
concealed during the winter, and live in the interior of logs of wood.
|
|
Some of them are mother-wasps and some are workers, as with the
|
|
tamer kind; but it is by observation of the tame wasps that one may
|
|
learn the varied characteristics of the mothers and the workers. For
|
|
in the case of the tame wasps also there are two kinds; one consists
|
|
of leaders, who are called mothers, and the other of workers. The
|
|
leaders are far larger and milder-tempered than the others. The
|
|
workers do not live over into a second year, but all die when winter
|
|
comes on; and this can be proved, for at the commencement of winter
|
|
the workers become drowsy, and about the time of the winter solstice
|
|
they are never seen at all. The leaders, the so-called mothers, are
|
|
seen all through the winter, and live in holes underground; for men
|
|
when ploughing or digging in winter have often come upon mother-wasps,
|
|
but never upon workers. The mode of reproduction of wasps is as
|
|
follows. At the approach of summer, when the leaders have found a
|
|
sheltered spot, they take to moulding their combs, and construct the
|
|
so-called sphecons,-little nests containing four cells or thereabouts,
|
|
and in these are produced working-wasps but not mothers. When these
|
|
are grown up, then they construct other larger combs upon the first,
|
|
and then again in like manner others; so that by the close of autumn
|
|
there are numerous large combs in which the leader, the so-called
|
|
mother, engenders no longer working-wasps but mothers. These develop
|
|
high up in the nest as large grubs, in cells that occur in groups of
|
|
four or rather more, pretty much in the same way as we have seen the
|
|
grubs of the king-bees to be produced in their cells. After the
|
|
birth of the working-grubs in the cells, the leaders do nothing and
|
|
the workers have to supply them with nourishment; and this is inferred
|
|
from the fact that the leaders (of the working-wasps) no longer fly
|
|
out at this time, but rest quietly indoors. Whether the leaders of
|
|
last year after engendering new leaders are killed by the new brood,
|
|
and whether this occurs invariably or whether they can live for a
|
|
longer time, has not been ascertained by actual observation; neither
|
|
can we speak with certainty, as from observation, as to the age
|
|
attained by the mother-wasp or by the wild wasps, or as to any other
|
|
similar phenomenon. The mother-wasp is broad and heavy, fatter and
|
|
larger than the ordinary wasp, and from its weight not very strong
|
|
on the wing; these wasps cannot fly far, and for this reason they
|
|
always rest inside the nest, building and managing its indoor
|
|
arrangements. The so-called mother-wasps are found in most of the
|
|
nests; it is a matter of doubt whether or no they are provided with
|
|
stings; in all probability, like the king-bees, they have stings,
|
|
but never protrude them for offence. Of the ordinary wasps some are
|
|
destitute of stings, like the drone-bees, and some are provided with
|
|
them. Those unprovided therewith are smaller and less spirited and
|
|
never fight, while the others are big and courageous; and these
|
|
latter, by some, are called males, and the stingless, females. At
|
|
the approach of winter many of the wasps that have stings appear to
|
|
lose them; but we have never met an eyewitness of this phenomenon.
|
|
Wasps are more abundant in times of drought and in wild localities.
|
|
They live underground; their combs they mould out of chips and
|
|
earth, each comb from a single origin, like a kind of root. They
|
|
feed on certain flowers and fruits, but for the most part on animal
|
|
food. Some of the tame wasps have been observed when sexually
|
|
united, but it was not determined whether both, or neither, had
|
|
stings, or whether one had a sting and the other had not; wild wasps
|
|
have been seen under similar circumstances, when one was seen to
|
|
have a sting but the case of the other was left undetermined. The
|
|
wasp-grub does not appear to come into existence by parturition, for
|
|
at the outset the grub is too big to be the offspring of a wasp. If
|
|
you take a wasp by the feet and let him buzz with the vibration of his
|
|
wings, wasps that have no stings will fly toward it, and wasps that
|
|
have stings will not; from which fact it is inferred by some that
|
|
one set are males and the other females. In holes in the ground in
|
|
winter-time wasps are found, some with stings, and some without.
|
|
Some build cells, small and few in number; others build many and large
|
|
ones. The so-called mothers are caught at the change of season, mostly
|
|
on elm-trees, while gathering a substance sticky and gumlike. A
|
|
large number of mother-wasps are found when in the previous year wasps
|
|
have been numerous and the weather rainy; they are captured in
|
|
precipitous places, or in vertical clefts in the ground, and they
|
|
all appear to be furnished with stings.
|
|
|
|
42
|
|
|
|
So much for the habits of wasps.
|
|
|
|
Anthrenae do not subsist by culling from flowers as bees do, but
|
|
for the most part on animal food: for this reason they hover about
|
|
dung; for they chase the large flies, and after catching them lop
|
|
off their heads and fly away with the rest of the carcases; they are
|
|
furthermore fond of sweet fruits. Such is their food. They have also
|
|
kings or leaders like bees and wasps; and their leaders are larger
|
|
in proportion to themselves than are wasp-kings to wasps or
|
|
bee-kings to bees. The anthrena-king, like the wasp-king, lives
|
|
indoors. Anthrenae build their nests underground, scraping out the
|
|
soil like ants; for neither anthrenae nor wasps go off in swarms as
|
|
bees do, but successive layers of young anthrenae keep to the same
|
|
habitat, and go on enlarging their nest by scraping out more and
|
|
more of soil. The nest accordingly attains a great size; in fact, from
|
|
a particularly prosperous nest have been removed three and even four
|
|
baskets full of combs. They do not, like bees, store up food, but pass
|
|
the winter in a torpid condition; the greater part of them die in
|
|
the winter, but it is uncertain whether that can be said of them
|
|
all, In the hives of bees several kings are found and they lead off
|
|
detachments in swarms, but in the anthrena's nest only one king is
|
|
found. When individual anthrenae have strayed from their nest, they
|
|
cluster on a tree and construct combs, as may be often seen
|
|
above-ground, and in this nest they produce a king; when the king is
|
|
full-grown, he leads them away and settles them along with himself
|
|
in a hive or nest. With regard to their sexual unions, and the
|
|
method of their reproduction, nothing is known from actual
|
|
observation. Among bees both the drones and the kings are stingless,
|
|
and so are certain wasps, as has been said; but anthrenae appear to be
|
|
all furnished with stings: though, by the way, it would well be
|
|
worth while to carry out investigation as to whether the anthrena-king
|
|
has a sting or not.
|
|
|
|
43
|
|
|
|
Humble-bees produce their young under a stone, right on the
|
|
ground, in a couple of cells or little more; in these cells is found
|
|
an attempt at honey, of a poor description. The tenthredon is like the
|
|
anthrena, but speckled, and about as broad as a bee. Being epicures as
|
|
to their food, they fly, one at a time, into kitchens and on to slices
|
|
of fish and the like dainties. The tenthredon brings forth, like the
|
|
wasp, underground, and is very prolific; its nest is much bigger and
|
|
longer than that of the wasp. So much for the methods of working and
|
|
the habits of life of the bee, the wasp, and all the other similar
|
|
insects.
|
|
|
|
44
|
|
|
|
As regards the disposition or temper of animals, as has been
|
|
previously observed, one may detect great differences in respect to
|
|
courage and timidity, as also, even among wild animals, in regard to
|
|
tameness and wildness. The lion, while he is eating, is most
|
|
ferocious; but when he is not hungry and has had a good meal, he is
|
|
quite gentle. He is totally devoid of suspicion or nervous fear, is
|
|
fond of romping with animals that have been reared along with him
|
|
and to whom he is accustomed, and manifests great affection towards
|
|
them. In the chase, as long as he is in view, he makes no attempt to
|
|
run and shows no fear, but even if he be compelled by the multitude of
|
|
the hunters to retreat, he withdraws deliberately, step by step, every
|
|
now and then turning his head to regard his pursuers. If, however,
|
|
he reach wooded cover, then he runs at full speed, until he comes to
|
|
open ground, when he resumes his leisurely retreat. When, in the open,
|
|
he is forced by the number of the hunters to run while in full view,
|
|
he does run at the top of his speed, but without leaping and bounding.
|
|
This running of his is evenly and continuously kept up like the
|
|
running of a dog; but when he is in pursuit of his prey and is close
|
|
behind, he makes a sudden pounce upon it. The two statements made
|
|
regarding him are quite true; the one that he is especially afraid
|
|
of fire, as Homer pictures him in the line-'and glowing torches,
|
|
which, though fierce he dreads,'-and the other, that he keeps a steady
|
|
eye upon the hunter who hits him, and flings himself upon him. If a
|
|
hunter hit him, without hurting him, then if with a bound he gets hold
|
|
of him, he will do him no harm, not even with his claws, but after
|
|
shaking him and giving him a fright will let him go again. They invade
|
|
the cattle-folds and attack human beings when they are grown old and
|
|
so by reason of old age and the diseased condition of their teeth
|
|
are unable to pursue their wonted prey. They live to a good old age.
|
|
The lion who was captured when lame, had a number of his teeth broken;
|
|
which fact was regarded by some as a proof of the longevity of
|
|
lions, as he could hardly have been reduced to this condition except
|
|
at an advanced age. There are two species of lions, the plump,
|
|
curly-maned, and the long-bodied, straight maned; the latter kind is
|
|
courageous, and the former comparatively timid; sometimes they run
|
|
away with their tail between their legs, like a dog. A lion was once
|
|
seen to be on the point of attacking a boar, but to run away when
|
|
the boar stiffened his bristles in defence. It is susceptible of
|
|
hurt from a wound in the flank, but on any other part of its frame
|
|
will endure any number of blows, and its head is especially hard.
|
|
Whenever it inflicts a wound, either by its teeth or its claws,
|
|
there flows from the wounded parts suppurating matter, quite yellow,
|
|
and not to be stanched by bandage or sponge; the treatment for such
|
|
a wound is the same as that for the bite of a dog.
|
|
|
|
The thos, or civet, is fond of man's company; it does him no
|
|
harm and is not much afraid of him, but it is an enemy to the dog
|
|
and the lion, and consequently is not found in the same habitat with
|
|
them. The little ones are the best. Some say that there are two
|
|
species of the animal, and some say, three; there are probably not
|
|
more than three, but, as is the case with certain of the fishes,
|
|
birds, and quadrupeds, this animal changes in appearance with the
|
|
change of season. His colour in winter is not the same as it is in
|
|
summer; in summer the animal is smooth-haired, in winter he is clothed
|
|
in fur.
|
|
|
|
45
|
|
|
|
The bison is found in Paeonia on Mount Messapium, which
|
|
separates Paeonia from Maedica; and the Paeonians call it the monapos.
|
|
It is the size of a bull, but stouter in build, and not long in the
|
|
body; its skin, stretched tight on a frame, would give sitting room
|
|
for seven people. In general it resembles the ox in appearance, except
|
|
that it has a mane that reaches down to the point of the shoulder,
|
|
as that of the horse reaches down to its withers; but the hair in
|
|
its mane is softer than the hair in the horse's mane, and clings
|
|
more closely. The colour of the hair is brown-yellow; the mane reaches
|
|
down to the eyes, and is deep and thick. The colour of the body is
|
|
half red, half ashen-grey, like that of the so-called chestnut
|
|
horse, but rougher. It has an undercoat of woolly hair. The animal
|
|
is not found either very black or very red. It has the bellow of a
|
|
bull. Its horns are crooked, turned inwards towards each other and
|
|
useless for purposes of self-defence; they are a span broad, or a
|
|
little more, and in volume each horn would hold about three pints of
|
|
liquid; the black colour of the horn is beautiful and bright. The tuft
|
|
of hair on the forehead reaches down to the eyes, so that the animal
|
|
sees objects on either flank better than objects right in front. It
|
|
has no upper teeth, as is the case also with kine and all other horned
|
|
animals. Its legs are hairy; it is cloven-footed, and the tail,
|
|
which resembles that of the ox, seems not big enough for the size of
|
|
its body. It tosses up dust and scoops out the ground with its hooves,
|
|
like the bull. Its skin is impervious to blows. Owing to the savour of
|
|
its flesh it is sought for in the chase. When it is wounded it runs
|
|
away, and stops only when thoroughly exhausted. It defends itself
|
|
against an assailant by kicking and projecting its excrement to a
|
|
distance of eight yards; this device it can easily adopt over and over
|
|
again, and the excrement is so pungent that the hair of hunting-dogs
|
|
is burnt off by it. It is only when the animal is disturbed or alarmed
|
|
that the dung has this property; when the animal is undisturbed it has
|
|
no blistering effect. So much for the shape and habits of the
|
|
animal. When the season comes for parturition the mothers give birth
|
|
to their young in troops upon the mountains. Before dropping their
|
|
young they scatter their dung in all directions, making a kind of
|
|
circular rampart around them; for the animal has the faculty of
|
|
ejecting excrement in most extraordinary quantities.
|
|
|
|
46
|
|
|
|
Of all wild animals the most easily tamed and the gentlest is
|
|
the elephant. It can be taught a number of tricks, the drift and
|
|
meaning of which it understands; as, for instance, it can taught to
|
|
kneel in presence of the king. It is very sensitive, and possessed
|
|
of an intelligence superior to that of other animals. When the male
|
|
has had sexual union with the female, and the female has conceived,
|
|
the male has no further intercourse with her.
|
|
|
|
Some say that the elephant lives for two hundred years;
|
|
others, for one hundred and twenty; that the female lives nearly as
|
|
long as the male; that they reach their prime about the age of
|
|
sixty, and that they are sensitive to inclement weather and frost. The
|
|
elephant is found by the banks of rivers, but he is not a river
|
|
animal; he can make his way through water, as long as the tip of his
|
|
trunk can be above the surface, for he blows with his trunk and
|
|
breathes through it. The animal is a poor swimmer owing to the heavy
|
|
weight of his body.
|
|
|
|
47
|
|
|
|
The male camel declines intercourse with its mother; if his keeper
|
|
tries compulsion, he evinces disinclination. On one occasion, when
|
|
intercourse was being declined by the young male, the keeper covered
|
|
over the mother and put the young male to her; but, when after the
|
|
intercourse the wrapping had been removed, though the operation was
|
|
completed and could not be revoked, still by and by he bit his
|
|
keeper to death. A story goes that the king of Scythia had a
|
|
highly-bred mare, and that all her foals were splendid; that wishing
|
|
to mate the best of the young males with the mother, he had him
|
|
brought to the stall for the purpose; that the young horse declined;
|
|
that, after the mother's head had been concealed in a wrapper he, in
|
|
ignorance, had intercourse; and that, when immediately afterwards
|
|
the wrapper was removed and the head of the mare was rendered visible,
|
|
the young horse ran way and hurled himself down a precipice.
|
|
|
|
48
|
|
|
|
Among the sea-fishes many stories are told about the dolphin,
|
|
indicative of his gentle and kindly nature, and of manifestations of
|
|
passionate attachment to boys, in and about Tarentum, Caria, and other
|
|
places. The story goes that, after a dolphin had been caught and
|
|
wounded off the coast of Caria, a shoal of dolphins came into the
|
|
harbour and stopped there until the fisherman let his captive go free;
|
|
whereupon the shoal departed. A shoal of young dolphins is always,
|
|
by way of protection, followed by a large one. On one occasion a shoal
|
|
of dolphins, large and small, was seen, and two dolphins at a little
|
|
distance appeared swimming in underneath a little dead dolphin when it
|
|
was sinking, and supporting it on their backs, trying out of
|
|
compassion to prevent its being devoured by some predaceous fish.
|
|
Incredible stories are told regarding the rapidity of movement of this
|
|
creature. It appears to be the fleetest of all animals, marine and
|
|
terrestrial, and it can leap over the masts of large vessels. This
|
|
speed is chiefly manifested when they are pursuing a fish for food;
|
|
then, if the fish endeavours to escape, they pursue him in their
|
|
ravenous hunger down to deep waters; but, when the necessary return
|
|
swim is getting too long, they hold in their breath, as though
|
|
calculating the length of it, and then draw themselves together for an
|
|
effort and shoot up like arrows, trying to make the long ascent
|
|
rapidly in order to breathe, and in the effort they spring right
|
|
over the a ship's masts if a ship be in the vicinity. This same
|
|
phenomenon is observed in divers, when they have plunged into deep
|
|
water; that is, they pull themselves together and rise with a speed
|
|
proportional to their strength. Dolphins live together in pairs,
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|
male and female. It is not known for what reason they run themselves
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aground on dry land; at all events, it is said that they do so at
|
|
times, and for no obvious reason.
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49
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|
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|
Just as with all animals a change of action follows a change
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of circumstance, so also a change of character follows a change of
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|
action, and often some portions of the physical frame undergo a
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|
change, occurs in the case of birds. Hens, for instance, when they
|
|
have beaten the cock in a fight, will crow like the cock and endeavour
|
|
to tread him; the crest rises up on their head and the tail-feathers
|
|
on the rump, so that it becomes difficult to recognize that they are
|
|
hens; in some cases there is a growth of small spurs. On the death
|
|
of a hen a cock has been seen to undertake the maternal duties,
|
|
leading the chickens about and providing them with food, and so intent
|
|
upon these duties as to cease crowing and indulging his sexual
|
|
propensities. Some cock-birds are congenitally so feminine that they
|
|
will submit patiently to other males who attempt to tread them.
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|
|
|
50
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|
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|
Some animals change their form and character, not only at
|
|
certain ages and at certain seasons, but in consequence of being
|
|
castrated; and all animals possessed of testicles may be submitted
|
|
to this operation. Birds have their testicles inside, and oviparous
|
|
quadrupeds close to the loins; and of viviparous animals that walk
|
|
some have them inside, and most have them outside, but all have them
|
|
at the lower end of the belly. Birds are castrated at the rump at
|
|
the part where the two sexes unite in copulation. If you burn this
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|
twice or thrice with hot irons, then, if the bird be full-grown, his
|
|
crest grows sallow, he ceases to crow, and foregoes sexual passion;
|
|
but if you cauterize the bird when young, none of these male
|
|
attributes propensities will come to him as he grows up. The case is
|
|
the same with men: if you mutilate them in boyhood, the
|
|
later-growing hair never comes, and the voice never changes but
|
|
remains high-pitched; if they be mutilated in early manhood, the
|
|
late growths of hair quit them except the growth on the groin, and
|
|
that diminishes but does not entirely depart. The congenital growths
|
|
of hair never fall out, for a eunuch never grows bald. In the case
|
|
of all castrated or mutilated male quadrupeds the voice changes to the
|
|
feminine voice. All other quadrupeds when castrated, unless the
|
|
operation be performed when they are young, invariably die; but in the
|
|
case of boars, and in their case only, the age at which the
|
|
operation is performed produces no difference. All animals, if
|
|
operated on when they are young, become bigger and better looking than
|
|
their unmutilated fellows; if they be mutilated when full-grown,
|
|
they do not take on any increase of size. If stags be mutilated, when,
|
|
by reason of their age, they have as yet no horns, they never grow
|
|
horns at all; if they be mutilated when they have horns, the horns
|
|
remain unchanged in size, and the animal does not lose them. Calves
|
|
are mutilated when a year old; otherwise, they turn out uglier and
|
|
smaller. Steers are mutilated in the following way: they turn the
|
|
animal over on its back, cut a little off the scrotum at the lower
|
|
end, and squeeze out the testicles, then push back the roots of them
|
|
as far as they can, and stop up the incision with hair to give an
|
|
outlet to suppurating matter; if inflammation ensues, they cauterize
|
|
the scrotum and put on a plaster. If a full-grown bull be mutilated,
|
|
he can still to all appearance unite sexually with the cow. The
|
|
ovaries of sows are excised with the view of quenching in them
|
|
sexual appetites and of stimulating growth in size and fatness. The
|
|
sow has first to be kept two days without food, and, after being
|
|
hung up by the hind legs, it is operated on; they cut the lower belly,
|
|
about the place where the boars have their testicles, for it is
|
|
there that the ovary grows, adhering to the two divisions (or horns)
|
|
of the womb; they cut off a little piece and stitch up the incision.
|
|
Female camels are mutilated when they are wanted for war purposes, and
|
|
are mutilated to prevent their being got with young. Some of the
|
|
inhabitants of Upper Asia have as many as three thousand camels:
|
|
when they run, they run, in consequence of the length of their stride,
|
|
much quicker than the horses of Nisaea. As a general rule, mutilated
|
|
animals grow to a greater length than the unmutilated.
|
|
|
|
All animals that ruminate derive profit and pleasure from the
|
|
process of rumination, as they do from the process of eating. It is
|
|
the animals that lack the upper teeth that ruminate, such as kine,
|
|
sheep, and goats. In the case of wild animals no observation has
|
|
been possible; save in the case of animals that are occasionally
|
|
domesticated, such as the stag, and it, we know, chews the cud. All
|
|
animals that ruminate generally do so when lying down on the ground.
|
|
They carry on the process to the greatest extent in winter, and
|
|
stall-fed ruminants carry it on for about seven months in the year;
|
|
beasts that go in herds, as they get their food out of doors, ruminate
|
|
to a lesser degree and over a lesser period. Some, also, of the
|
|
animals that have teeth in both jaws ruminate; as, for instance, the
|
|
Pontic mice, and the fish which from the habit is by some called
|
|
'the Ruminant', (as well as other fish).
|
|
|
|
Long-limbed animals have loose faeces, and broad-chested animals
|
|
vomit with comparative facility, and these remarks are, in a general
|
|
way, applicable to quadrupeds, birds, and men.
|
|
|
|
49B
|
|
|
|
A considerable number of birds change according to season the
|
|
colour of their plumage and their note; as, for instance, the owsel
|
|
becomes yellow instead of black, and its note gets altered, for in
|
|
summer it has a musical note and in winter a discordant chatter. The
|
|
thrush also changes its colour; about the throat it is marked in
|
|
winter with speckles like a starling, in summer distinctly spotted:
|
|
however, it never alters its note. The nightingale, when the hills are
|
|
taking on verdure, sings continually for fifteen days and fifteen
|
|
nights; afterwards it sings, but not continuously. As summer
|
|
advances it has a different song, not so varied as before, nor so
|
|
deep, nor so intricately modulated, but simple; it also changes its
|
|
colour, and in Italy about this season it goes by a different name. It
|
|
goes into hiding, and is consequently visible only for a brief period.
|
|
|
|
The erithacus (or redbreast) and the so-called redstart change into
|
|
one another; the former is a winter bird, the latter a summer one, and
|
|
the difference between them is practically limited to the coloration
|
|
of their plumage. In the same way with the beccafico and the blackcap;
|
|
these change into one another. The beccafico appears about autumn, and
|
|
the blackcap as soon as autumn has ended. These birds, also, differ
|
|
from one another only in colour and note; that these birds, two in
|
|
name, are one in reality is proved by the fact that at the period when
|
|
the change is in progress each one has been seen with the change as
|
|
yet incomplete. It is not so very strange that in these cases there is
|
|
a change in note and in plumage, for even the ring-dove ceases to
|
|
coo in winter, and recommences cooing when spring comes in; in winter,
|
|
however, when fine weather has succeeded to very stormy weather,
|
|
this bird has been known to give its cooing note, to the
|
|
astonishment of such as were acquainted with its usual winter silence.
|
|
As a general rule, birds sing most loudly and most diversely in the
|
|
pairing season. The cuckoo changes its colour, and its note is not
|
|
clearly heard for a short time previous to its departure. It departs
|
|
about the rising of the Dog-star, and it reappears from springtime
|
|
to the rising of the Dog-star. At the rise of this star the bird
|
|
called by some oenanthe disappears, and reappears when it is
|
|
setting: thus keeping clear at one time of extreme cold, and at
|
|
another time of extreme heat. The hoopoe also changes its colour and
|
|
appearance, as Aeschylus has represented in the following lines:-
|
|
|
|
The Hoopoe, witness to his own distress,
|
|
|
|
Is clad by Zeus in variable dress:-
|
|
|
|
Now a gay mountain-bird, with knightly crest,
|
|
|
|
Now in the white hawk's silver plumage drest,
|
|
|
|
For, timely changing, on the hawk's white wing
|
|
|
|
He greets the apparition of the Spring.
|
|
|
|
Thus twofold form and colour are conferred,
|
|
|
|
In youth and age, upon the selfsame bird.
|
|
|
|
The spangled raiment marks his youthful days,
|
|
|
|
The argent his maturity displays;
|
|
|
|
And when the fields are yellow with ripe corn
|
|
|
|
Again his particoloured plumes are worn.
|
|
|
|
But evermore, in sullen discontent,
|
|
|
|
He seeks the lonely hills, in self-sought banishment.
|
|
|
|
Of birds, some take a dust-bath by rolling in dust, some take
|
|
a water-bath, and some take neither the one bath nor the other.
|
|
Birds that do not fly but keep on the ground take the dust-bath, as
|
|
for instance the hen, the partridge, the francolin, the crested
|
|
lark, the pheasant; some of the straight-taloned birds, and such as
|
|
live on the banks of a river, in marshes, or by the sea, take a
|
|
water-bath; some birds take both the dust-bath and the waterbath, as
|
|
for instance the pigeon and the sparrow; of the crooked-taloned
|
|
birds the greater part take neither the one bath nor the other. So
|
|
much for the ways of the above-mentioned, but some birds have a
|
|
peculiar habit of making a noise at their hinder quarters, as, for
|
|
instance, the turtle-dove; and they make a violent movement of their
|
|
tails at the same time that they produce this peculiar sound.
|
|
|
|
-THE END-
|
|
.
|