登陆注册
25531200000073

第73章 THE RESIN-BEES.(8)

Franklin left us a maxim which is much to the point here. He said that a good workman should be able to plane with a saw and to saw with a plane. The insect is too good a workman not to follow the advice of the sage of Boston. Its industry abounds in instances where the plane takes the place of the saw, or the saw of the plane; its dexterity makes good the inadequacy of the implement. To go no further, have we not just seen different artisans collecting and using pitch, some with spoons, others with rakes, others again with pincers? Therefore, with such equipment as it possesses, the insect would be capable of abandoning cotton for leaves, leaves for resin, resin for mortar, if some predisposition of talent did not make it keep to its speciality.

These few lines, which are the outcome not of a heedless pen but of mature reflection, will set people talking of hateful paradoxes. We will let them talk and we will submit the following proposition to our adversaries: take an entomologist of the highest merit, a Latreille (Pierre Andre Latreille (1762-1833), one of the founders of modern entomological science.--Translator's Note.), for instance, versed in all the details of the structure of insects but utterly unacquainted with their habits. He knows the dead insect better than anybody, but he has never occupied himself with the living insect. As a classifier, he is beyond compare; and that is all. We ask him to examine a Bee, the first that comes to hand, and to name her trade from her tools.

Come, be honest: could he? Who would dare put him to such a test? Has personal experience not fully convinced us that the mere examination of the insect can tell us nothing about its particular industry? The baskets on its legs and the brush on its abdomen will certainly inform us that it collects honey and pollen; but its special art will remain an utter secret, notwithstanding all the scrutiny of the microscope. In our own industries, the plane denotes the joiner, the trowel the mason, the scissors the tailor, the needle the seamstress.

Are things the same in animal industry? Just show us, if you please, the trowel that is a certain sign of the mason-insect, the chisel that is a positive characteristic of the carpenter-insect, the iron that is an authentic mark of the pinking-insect; and as you show them, say:

'This one cuts leaves; that one bores wood; that other mixes cement.'

And so on, specifying the trade from the tool.

You cannot do it, no one can; the worker's speciality remains an impenetrable secret until direct observation intervenes. Does not this incapacity, even of the most expert, proclaim loudly that animal industry, in its infinite variety, is due to other causes besides the possession of tools? Certainly, each of those specialists requires implements; but they are rough and ready implements, good for all sorts of purposes, like the tool of Franklin's workman. The same notched mandible that reaps cotton, cuts leaves and moulds pitch also kneads mud, scrapes decayed wood and mixes mortar; the same tarsus that manufactures cotton and disks cut out of leaves is no less clever at the art of ****** earthen partitions, clay turrets and gravel mosaics.

What then is the reason of these thousand industries? In the light of facts, I can see but one: imagination governing matter. A primordial inspiration, a talent antecedent to the actual form, directs the tool instead of being subordinate to it. The instrument does not determine the manner of industry; the tool does not make the workman. At the beginning there is an object, a plan, in view of which the animal acts, unconsciously. Have we eyes to see with, or do we see because we have eyes? Does the function create the organ, or the organ the function? Of the two alternatives, the insect proclaims the first. It says:

'My industry is not imposed upon me by the implement which I possess;what I do is to use the implement, such as it is, for the talent with which I am gifted.'

It says to us, in its own way:

'The function has determined the organ; vision is the reason of the eye.'

In short, it repeats to us Virgil's profound reflection:

'Mens agitat molem'; 'Mind moves matter.'

同类推荐
  • 云栖法汇

    云栖法汇

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 济世神验良方

    济世神验良方

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 律抄第三卷手决

    律抄第三卷手决

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 也是录

    也是录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 大秦景教流行中国碑颂

    大秦景教流行中国碑颂

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 这次我要做魔王

    这次我要做魔王

    一场莫名的异世穿越,可以直触心灵的语言,是神明的召唤还是前世的因果,千载万世,只不过因为当年在人群里多看了你一眼
  • 科学我知道-Why地球

    科学我知道-Why地球

    本书主要讲述的是:地球与宇宙的关系、地球是怎样诞生的、“水成论”与“火成论”是如何论争的、“地槽—地台学说”等。
  • 暮雪年华

    暮雪年华

    致青春:《暮雪年华》讲述的是转校生马子晖来到新环境爱上了林雪晴,认识了一生的挚友白禹辰……
  • 爱的主题曲之独家记忆

    爱的主题曲之独家记忆

    名震中原的八八六十四式杨家枪被一个小丫鬟发挥的淋漓尽致,十二把玄铁飞刀更是削金断玉例无虚发,单枪匹马闯入辽军三十六连环营,连挑数员敌将,陷入重重包围而面不改色。令人心惊胆寒的一百四十八位军统局刺杀队竟斗不过个落魄二级建筑师,他曾沿街乞讨,后官至国民党少将,抗日年间更是荡寇无数,战功卓著。弱水三千,只取一瓢!然而,这位马踏黄河两岸,扬威百万军中的豪杰,却无法赢回乱世佳人回心转意,苦觅半生,踏遍大江南北,终不见伊人回眸笑,唯留下独家记忆!
  • 鬼之陵芜

    鬼之陵芜

    大大小小的鬼故事,有兴趣的来看看。谢谢支持!
  • 傲世无尊

    傲世无尊

    本文是穿越女尊文,主角腹黑,杀伐果断,阴险,绝美,结局过程NP,结局一对一,励志文。
  • 帝师无双

    帝师无双

    十年前的一场屠杀,让南楚的第一世家南宫家族瞬间灰飞烟灭,唯有因为拒婚私奔的少年状元南宫遥幸免于难;十年后的南宫念跟随着父亲来到北周国,为了家族使命,她女扮男装,进入宫廷,成为举世无双的少年帝师。他是被厌弃的皇子,从小住在冷宫破旧的院子里,受尽屈辱,然而命运的安排,让他遇见了改变自己一生的人——南宫念。所谓红尘有幸,于我而言,便是遇见了你。于是为了追随那人的目光,萧遇央卸下伪装,一步一算计,只因为曾经那人感叹道,万里河山,有谁堪为其主,有谁值得相辅?他想成为那个谁!(本文纯属虚构,请勿模仿。)
  • 笑傲江湖之侠行天下

    笑傲江湖之侠行天下

    本作品源于金庸小说《笑傲江湖》后续,自己创编续写。融合自己对故事的理解,和对人物的喜欢。
  • 新神始

    新神始

    有生就有死,有因就有果,因中有因,果中有果,有欢喜就有忧愁,其中趣味书中体会。
  • 麻辣校花

    麻辣校花

    “我喜欢你。”“我不需要爱情,我觉得我现在很好。”左俊囧,看着她身边各种各样的朋友恨不得将他们通通灭掉。看纯情帅哥如何追我们的麻辣校花,真是步步为营,看完全没有爱情观的校花大大如何掉进他的陷阱里。