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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #67517 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/67517)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Apes and Monkeys: Their Life and
-Language, by Richard Lynch Garner
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: Apes and Monkeys: Their Life and Language
-
-Author: Richard Lynch Garner
-
-Release Date: February 27, 2022 [eBook #67517]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: Tim Lindell and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
- https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
- generously made available by The Internet Archive)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK APES AND MONKEYS: THEIR LIFE
-AND LANGUAGE ***
-
-
-
- [Illustration: R. L. Garner.]
-
-
-
-
- APES AND MONKEYS
-
- _THEIR LIFE AND LANGUAGE_
-
- BY
- R. L. GARNER
-
- WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY
- EDWARD EVERETT HALE
-
- BOSTON, U.S.A., AND LONDON
- GINN & COMPANY, PUBLISHERS
- The Athenæum Press
-
-
-
-
- ENTERED AT STATIONERS’ HALL
-
- COPYRIGHT, 1900
- BY GINN & COMPANY
-
- ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
-
- 24.12
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE
-
-
-This volume is the natural product of many years devoted by the author
-to studying the speech and habits of monkeys. That naturally led him
-up to the study of the great apes. The matter contained in this work
-is chiefly a record of the tabulated facts gleaned from his special
-field of research. The aim in view is to convey to the casual reader a
-more correct idea than now prevails concerning the physical, mental,
-and social habits of apes and monkeys and to prepare him for a wider
-appreciation of animals in general.
-
-The favorable conditions under which the writer has been placed, in the
-study of these animals in the freedom of their native jungle, have not
-hitherto been enjoyed by any other student of nature.
-
-A careful aim to avoid all technical terms and scientific phraseology
-has been studiously adhered to, and the subject is treated in the
-simplest style consistent with its dignity. Tedious details are
-relieved by an ample supply of anecdotes taken from the writer’s own
-observations. Most of the acts related are those of his own pets. A
-few of them are of apes in a wild state. The author has carefully
-refrained from abstruse theories or rash deductions, but has sought
-to place the animals here treated of in the light to which their own
-conduct entitles them, allowing the reader to draw his own conclusions.
-
-The author frankly confesses to his own belief in the psychic unity of
-all animate nature. Believing in a common source of life, a common law
-of living, and a common destiny for all creatures, he feels that to
-dignify the apes is not to degrade man but rather to exalt him.
-
-Believing that a more perfect knowledge of these animals will bring
-man into closer fellowship and deeper sympathy with nature, and with
-an abiding trust that it will widen the bounds of humanity and cause
-man to realize that he and they are but common links in the one great
-chain of life, the author gives this work to the world. When once man
-is impressed with the consciousness that in some degree, however small,
-all creatures think and feel, it will lessen his vanity and ennoble his
-heart.
-
- THE AUTHOR
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
-
- PAGE
-
- INTRODUCTION xi
-
-
- CHAPTER I
-
- Monkeys, Apes, and Men--Comparative Anatomy--Skulls--The
- Law of Cranial Projection 1
-
-
- CHAPTER II
-
- Early Impression--What is Speech?--First Efforts--The Phonograph--The
- First Record of Monkey Speech--Monkey Words--Phonetics--Human
- Speech and Monkey Speech 12
-
-
- CHAPTER III
-
- Monkey Friends--Jokes--The Sound of Alarm--Jennie 24
-
-
- CHAPTER IV
-
- Monkey Ethics--Sense of Color--Monkeys Enumerate--First
- Principles of Art 30
-
-
- CHAPTER V
-
- Pedro’s Speech Recorded--Delivered to Puck through the
- Phonograph--Little Darwin Learns a New Word 38
-
-
- CHAPTER VI
-
- Five Little Brown Cousins: Mickie, McGinty, Nemo, Dodo, and
- Nigger--Nemo Apologizes to Dodo 45
-
-
- CHAPTER VII
-
- Meeting with Nellie--Nellie was my Guest--Her Speech and
- Manners--Helen Keller and Nellie--One of Nellie’s Friends--Her
- Sight and Hearing--Her Toys and how She Played with
- Them 52
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII
-
- Caged in an African Jungle--The Cage and its Contents--Its
- Location--Its Purpose--The Jungle--The Great Forest--Its
- Grandeur--Its Silence 60
-
-
- CHAPTER IX
-
- Daily Life and Scenes in the Jungle--How I Passed the Time--What
- I Had to Eat--How it was Prepared--How I Slept--My
- Chimpanzee Companion 73
-
-
- CHAPTER X
-
- The Chimpanzee--The Name--Two Species--The
- Kulu-Kamba--Distribution--Color and Complexion 85
-
-
- CHAPTER XI
-
- Physical Qualities of the Chimpanzee--His Social Habits--Mental
- Characteristics 92
-
-
- CHAPTER XII
-
- The Speech of Chimpanzees--A New System of Phonetic Symbols--Some
- Common Words--Gestures 108
-
-
- CHAPTER XIII
-
- Moses--His Capture--His Character--His Affections--His Food--His
- Daily Life--Anecdotes of Him 117
-
-
- CHAPTER XIV
-
- The Character of Moses--He Learns a Human Word--He Signs
- His Name to a Document--His Illness--Death 134
-
-
- CHAPTER XV
-
- Aaron--His Capture--Mental Powers--Acquaintance with Moses--His
- Conduct during Moses’ Illness 144
-
-
- CHAPTER XVI
-
- Aaron and Elisheba--Their Characteristics--Anecdotes--Jealousy
- of Aaron 153
-
-
- CHAPTER XVII
-
- Illness of Elisheba--Aaron’s Care of Her--Her Death--Illness
- and Death of Aaron 167
-
-
- CHAPTER XVIII
-
- Other Chimpanzees--The Village Pet--A Chimpanzee as Diner-Out--Notable
- Specimens in Captivity 175
-
-
- CHAPTER XIX
-
- Other Kulu-Kambas--A Knotty Problem--Instinct or Reason--Various
- Types 202
-
-
- CHAPTER XX
-
- The Gorilla--His Habitat--Skeleton--Skull--Color--Structural
- Peculiarities 211
-
-
- CHAPTER XXI
-
- Habits of the Gorilla--Social Traits--Government--Justice--Mode
- of Attack--Screaming and Beating--Food 231
-
-
- CHAPTER XXII
-
- Othello and Other Gorillas--Othello and Moses--Gorilla
- Visitors--Gorilla Mother and Child--Scarcity of Gorillas--Unauthentic
- Tales 247
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIII
-
- Other Apes--The Apes in History--Habitat--The Orangs--The
- Gibbon 266
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIV
-
- The Treatment of Apes in
- Captivity--Temperature--Building--Food--Occupation 278
-
-
- INDEX 287
-
-
-
-
-LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- PAGE
-
- PORTRAIT OF R. L. GARNER Frontispiece
-
- PELVIS OF THE CHIMPANZEE 5
-
- DIAGRAM NO. 1 (CRANIO-FACIAL ANGLES) 8
-
- DIAGRAM NO. 2 (CRANIO-FACIAL ANGLES) 9
-
- DIAGRAM NO. 3 (CRANIO-FACIAL ANGLES) 9
-
- DIAGRAM NO. 4 (CRANIO-FACIAL ANGLES) 10
-
- MONKEY LEARNING TO COUNT 33
-
- NATIVE VILLAGE AT GLASS GABOON 61
-
- A NATIVE CANOE 63
-
- THE EDGE OF THE JUNGLE 65
-
- IN THE JUNGLE 67
-
- WAITING AND WATCHING IN THE CAGE 69
-
- STARTING FOR A STROLL 74
-
- A PEEP AT MY CAGE 75
-
- PREPARING FOR THE NIGHT 83
-
- KANJO NTYIGO-CHIMPANZEE DANCE 103
-
- NATIVE CARRIER BOY 119
-
- A STROLL IN THE JUNGLE--MR. GARNER, MOSES, AND NATIVE
- BOY 127
-
- ELISHEBA AND AARON 169
-
- NATIVE VILLAGE, INTERIOR OF NYANZA 176
-
- CONSUL II RIDING A TRICYCLE 194
-
- MR. CROWLEY, LATE OF THE NEW YORK ZOÖLOGICAL GARDEN 199
-
- SKULLS OF GORILLAS--FRONT VIEW 220
-
- SKULLS OF GORILLAS--PROFILE VIEW 220
-
- NATIVES SKINNING A GORILLA 222
-
- YOUNG GORILLA WALKING 226
-
- SALLY JONES (YOUNG GORILLA) CAUGHT NAPPING 243
-
- GORILLA MOTHER WITH YOUNG 257
-
- PLAIN AND EDGE OF FOREST IN THE COUNTRY OF THE APES 271
-
- YOUNG ORANGS 275
-
-
-
-
-INTRODUCTION
-
-
-Mr. Garner’s book needs no introduction. By this I mean that I think
-that no intelligent person will open into it without wishing to read
-more and more. The book is its own introduction.
-
-I write these lines, not so much to explain what the book is as to
-introduce Mr. Garner himself to people who do not know him, that they
-may thank him for the step forward which he has made and is making.
-
-It is hardly half a century since one of the highest authorities in
-the Church of England told us that animals have no rights whatever,
-and that men should be kind to them simply for the reason that it was
-desirable that men should improve their own characters. If I tied a tin
-pail to a dog’s tail, I injured my character. If I patted the dog on
-the head, I improved my character. “See all things for my use,”--this
-was really the motto of a book of ethics somewhat famous in its day.
-
-Happily the world has lived beyond such a crusty selfishness as
-this,--happily, perhaps, not for mankind only. Happily for our thought
-of the universe in which we live, men have found out that they have
-duties towards animals as they have duties towards each other,--say
-that in a certain sense we are the gods of animals, to whom they look
-up as we look up to our Father in heaven; let us, at least, treat them
-as we would be treated.
-
-How shall we do this? How shall we come at some understanding of their
-life, of their needs, of their hopes and fears? How can we be just to
-them?
-
-Mr. Garner has set to work in this business with systematic
-perseverance and a real comprehension of the position. Of all the
-inferior animals, these monkeys and apes, it seems, have more machinery
-for thought, if I may use so clumsy an expression, than have any
-others. The book will tell the reader why it is easier to come at some
-notion of the language of the Capuchin monkey than it is to apprehend
-the method by which the horse communicates with the horse, or the
-blackbird with the blackbird. With scientific precision, Mr. Garner has
-availed himself of this fact, is availing himself of it at the moment
-when I write. He has selected animals, which are certainly animals and
-not men. He has selected these as those where his study can be precise,
-and where it is most easy to arrive at correct conclusions; and it is
-not in the study merely of speech and of listening; it is study of
-what I may call the principles which underlie animal life, to which
-this explorer in a new field has devoted himself. The reader of this
-book will understand why it is that he gives up years of life to such
-society as that his dear little Moses gave him; why he plunges into
-
- The multitudinous abyss
- Where nature joys in secret bliss,
-
-that he may come at some of the secrets of those beings who are at home
-there.
-
-Mr. Garner does not ask himself, and I do not propose that the reader
-shall ask, what changes may ensue in the trade of the world from his
-discovery. He does not pretend that there will be more palm oil, or
-more Manila hemp, because we understand monkeys and apes and gorillas
-and orangs better than our fathers. But he believes, and those who
-have followed him with sympathy believe, that we shall know more of
-ourselves, that we shall know more of the universe in which we live,
-that we shall know more of God, the I Am, who is the life of this
-universe, than our fathers knew, if this brave explorer is able to
-carry on farther such investigations as this book describes.
-
-May his life be prolonged for such study; it has been long enough now
-for us to owe him a large debt of gratitude for the lifelong sacrifice
-and determination with which he has prosecuted these studies thus far.
-
- EDWARD E. HALE.
-
- October 26, 1900.
-
-
-
-
- APES AND MONKEYS
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-Monkeys, Apes, and Men--Comparative Anatomy--Skulls--The Law of Cranial
-Projection
-
-
-From time immemorial monkeys have been subjects of interest to the old
-and to the young. The wise and the simple are alike impressed with
-their human looks and manners. There are no other creatures that so
-charm and fascinate the beholder as do these little effigies of the
-human race. With equal delight, patriarchs and children watch their
-actions and compare them to those of human beings. Until recent years
-monkeys have served to amuse rather than to instruct the masses. But
-now that the search-light of science is being thrown into every nook
-and crevice of nature, human interest in them is greatly increased and
-the savants of all civilized lands are wrestling with the problem of
-their possible relationship to mankind. With the desire of learning
-as much as possible concerning their habits, faculties, and mental
-resources, they are being studied from every point of view, and each
-characteristic is seriously compared in detail to the corresponding one
-in man. Concurrent with this desire, we shall note the chief points of
-resemblance and of difference between them.
-
-In order to appreciate more fully the value of the lessons to be drawn
-from the contents of this volume we must know the relative planes
-that men and monkeys occupy in the scale of nature. Within the limits
-of this work, however, we can only compare them in a general way.
-Since monkeys differ so widely among themselves, it is evident that
-all of them cannot in the same degree resemble man; and as the degree
-of interest in them is approximately measured by their likeness or
-unlikeness to man, it is apparent that all cannot be of equal interest
-as subjects of comparative study. But since each forms an integral part
-of one great scale, each one is equally important in tracing out the
-continuity of the order to which all belong.
-
-The vast family of simians has perhaps the widest range of types of
-any single family of animals. Beginning with the great apes, which
-in size, form, and structure so closely resemble man, we descend the
-scale until it ends in the lemurs, which are almost on the level of
-rodents. The descent is so gradual that it is difficult to draw a line
-of demarcation at any point between the two extremes. There is now,
-however, an effort being made to separate this family into smaller and
-more distinct groups; but the lines between them are not sharply drawn,
-and the literature of the past has a tendency to retard the effort. But
-we shall not here assume to discuss the problems with which zoölogy may
-in the future have to contend; we shall accept the current system of
-classification and proceed along that line.
-
-In the language of the masses all the varied types that belong to the
-simian family are known as _monkeys_. This term is so broad in its
-application as to include many forms which are not to be considered in
-this work, and many of them should be known under other names. Some
-of these resemble man more than they resemble each other. By the word
-_monkey_, we mean to refer only to those of the simian tribe that have
-long tails and short faces, while the word _baboon_ refers only to the
-dog-like forms having tails of medium length and long projecting faces.
-The term _ape_ will be applied only to those having no tails at all.
-While all of these animals are called simians, they are not all monkeys.
-
-The simian family is divided into two great classes, known as _old
-world monkeys_ and _new world monkeys_. The chief point of distinction
-is in the structure of the nose. All of the monkeys belonging to the
-old world stock have long, straight noses with vertical nostrils,
-separated by a narrow thin wall, or septum, and from this fact they are
-technically known as _catarrhini_. The new world stock have short, flat
-noses with oblique nostrils set wide apart, and on this account they
-are known as _platarrhini_. There are many other marks that distinguish
-genera and species, but these are the two grand divisions of the simian
-race. We shall not here attempt to classify the many genera and species
-of either of these divisions. But we shall point out some of the most
-salient anatomical features of men and apes, and then those of monkeys.
-
-Among the simians, erroneously called monkeys, are the four kinds
-that constitute the anthropoid, or manlike, group of apes. In certain
-respects they differ from each other as much as any one of them differs
-from man. The four apes here alluded to and named in the order of
-their physical resemblance to man are: the gorilla, the chimpanzee,
-the orang, and the gibbon; but if placed in the order of their mental
-and social characteristics they stand as follows: the chimpanzee,
-which is next to man, the gorilla, the gibbon, and, last, the orang.
-It is possible, however, that it may yet be found that the gibbon is
-intellectually the highest of this group.
-
-As the skeleton is the framework of the physical structure, it will
-serve for the basis upon which to build up the comparisons; and as, on
-the whole, the chimpanzee is the nearest approach to man, we select and
-use him as the standard of comparison. The skeleton of the chimpanzee
-may be said to be an exact duplicate of that of man. The assertion,
-however, should be qualified by a few facts of minor importance; but
-since they are facts, they should not be ignored. The general plan,
-purpose, and structure of the skeletons of man and chimpanzee are the
-same. There is no part of the one which is not duplicated in the other,
-and there is no function discharged by any part of the one that is not
-discharged by a like part of the other. The chief point in which they
-differ is in the structure of one bone. To this we shall pay special
-attention.
-
-Near the base of the spinal column is a large compound bone, known
-as the _sacrum_. It is a constituent part of the column, but in its
-singular form and structure it differs slightly from the corresponding
-bone in man. The general outline of this bone has the form of an
-isosceles triangle. It fits in between the two large bones that spread
-out towards the hips and articulate with the thigh bones. In man,
-about halfway between the center and the edge along each side is a row
-of four nearly round holes. Across the surface of the bone is a dim,
-transverse line, or seam, between each pair of holes, from which it is
-seen that five smaller sections of the spinal column have anchylosed,
-or grown together, to form the sacrum. The holes coincide with the
-open spaces between the transverse processes, or lateral projections,
-of the other bones of the spinal column above this. In the chimpanzee
-this bone has the same general form as in man, except that instead of
-four holes in each row it has five. They are connected by transverse
-seams the same as in man, thus indicating that six of the vertebræ,
-instead of five, are united. In compensation for this, the ape has one
-vertebra less in the portion of the spinal column just above, which is
-called the lumbar. In man there are five free lumbar vertebræ and five
-united sections of the sacrum, while in the ape there are only four
-free lumbar vertebræ and six united sections forming the sacrum. But
-regarding each section of the sacrum as a separate bone and counting
-the whole number of vertebræ in the spinal column there are found to be
-exactly the same number in each.
-
-[Illustration: Pelvis of the Chimpanzee
-
- _A, sacrum; B, fourth lumbar vertebra; C, coccyx; D, ilium or hip bone;
- E, femur or thigh bone._]
-
-Some writers have put great stress upon the difference in the
-structure of this bone, and have pointed out as impossible a common
-origin for man and ape; but one fact remains to be explained, and that
-is, that while these appear to be fixed and constant characteristics
-of man and ape there are many exceptions known in human anatomy. In
-the splendid collection of human spinal columns in the museum of the
-Harvard Medical School are no less than eighteen specimens of the human
-sacrum having six united segments; and I have found in the collections
-of various museums a total of more than thirty others. These facts
-show that this characteristic is not confined to the ape. It is true
-that in some of these abnormal specimens there remain five _lumbar_
-vertebræ. This seems to indicate that this portion of the spinal column
-is the most susceptible to variation. I have never seen an instance,
-however, of variation in the sacrum of the chimpanzee. In this respect
-he appears to be, in his structural type, more constant than man.
-
-One reason why this bone is so formed in the ape is this. At that point
-the greatest weight and strain are laid upon the spinal column, and
-the crouching habit of the animal has a tendency to depress the lowest
-lumbar vertebra between the points of the hip bones and thus arrest
-its lateral movement. Since the flexure of this part is lessened, the
-cartilage that lies between the two segments becomes rigid and then
-ossifies. The erect posture of man allows more play in the region of
-the loins, and hence this motion prevents the two bones from uniting.
-
-Another bone that may be said to vary somewhat is the sternum, or
-breastbone. It is the thin, soft bone to which the ribs are joined
-in the front of the body. In the young of both man and ape it is
-a mere cartilage. This slowly ossifies as the animal matures. The
-process appears to begin at five different segments, the first nucleus
-appearing near the top. This bone never becomes quite perfect either
-in man or ape. It always remains somewhat porous, and even in advanced
-age the outline of the lower portion is not defined by a smooth, sharp
-line, but is irregular in contour and merges into the cartilages that
-unite the ribs to it.
-
-In an adult human being this bone is usually found to be in two
-segments, while in the ape it varies. In some specimens it is the same
-as in man. In others it is sometimes found to be in three, four, or
-even five sections. But the sternum in each is regarded as one bone,
-and is developed from one continuous cartilage. The separate parts are
-not considered distinct bones. The reason, no doubt, that this bone
-remains in separate sections in the ape is due to the stooping habit
-of the animal, by which the part is constantly flexed and alternately
-straightened, and therefore discharges its function better than it
-otherwise could.
-
-With these trifling exceptions the skeletons of man and ape may be
-truly said to be exact counterparts of each other, having the same
-number of bones, of the same general model, arranged in the same order,
-articulated in the same manner, and performing the same functions.
-In other words, the corresponding bone in each is the same in design
-and purpose. The frame of the ape is, as a rule, more massive in its
-proportions than that of man; but while this is true of certain kinds
-of apes, the reverse is true of others.
-
-In man the sacrum is more curved in the plane of the hips than it is
-in the ape, while the bones of the digits in man are less curved. The
-arms of man are shorter than the legs, while in the ape the comparative
-length of these features is reversed. In the cranial types it is
-readily seen that the skull of man is more spherical and the face
-almost or quite vertical. The skull of the ape is elongated and the
-chin projects. Thus his face is at an angle from a vertical line. These
-facts deserve more notice than the mere mention.
-
-[Illustration: Diagram No. 1]
-
-In the scheme of nature there appears to be a fixed law of cranial
-projection. The cranio-facial angle in man, ABC (as shown in diagram
-No. 1), is a right angle, and the gnathic angle ADE is approximately
-the same. The line FG represents the axis of the facial plane, and
-the line HI is the cervical axis. Reckoned from the vertical line KL
-it will be seen that the angles formed by the facial axis FG and the
-cervical axis HI are about the same on opposite sides of the vertical
-line KL. It will be observed that these lines and angles are those of
-man whose posture is upright. In diagram No. 2 it will be seen that
-both the facial axis FG and the cervical axis HI form a greater angle
-from the vertical line than in man. It will also be seen that the
-cranio-facial angle ABC is increased by about one-half of the angle of
-the facial axis GML. The gnathic angle ADE is increased in about the
-same degree. These are the lines and angles of the anthropoid apes.
-
-[Illustration: Diagram No. 2]
-
-[Illustration: Diagram No. 3]
-
-Diagram No. 3 represents the lines and angles of monkeys, in which the
-angles widened in a degree measured by the tendency of the animal to
-assume a horizontal posture.
-
-In diagram No. 4 we have the lines and angles of reptiles. In these
-it will be seen that the facial axis FG and the cervical axis HI are
-almost horizontal. The cranio-facial and gnathic angles have been
-correspondingly widened.
-
-[Illustration: Diagram No. 4]
-
-Man standing erect has the greatest range of vocal powers of any
-animal. He also has the greatest control over them. In vocal range the
-apes come next in order. As we descend the scale from man through apes,
-monkeys, lemurs, and lemuroids, ultimately ending in the reptilian
-forms, we find the vocal powers restricted in scope and degraded in
-quality, until in the lowest reptiles they are lost in a mere hiss.
-
-Concurrent with the variations described, the longitudinal, vertical,
-and transverse axes of the brain also change their proportion in a like
-degree. The angles formed by the plane of the vocal cords with the axis
-of the larynx undergo a corresponding change. A just deduction from
-these facts is, that the gnathic index ADE is a true vocal index.
-
-This rough outline of the law of cranial projection does not purport
-to be a full treatment of the many lines and angles correlated to the
-powers of speech, but the suggestions may lead the craniologist into
-new fields of thought.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
- Early Impression--What is Speech--First Efforts--The Phonograph--The
- First Record of Monkey Speech--Monkey Words--Phonetics--Human Speech
- and Monkey Speech
-
-
-Among the blue hills and crystal waters of the Appalachian Mountains,
-remote from the artificialities of the great cities, the conditions of
-life under which I grew up were more primitive and less complex than
-they are in the busy centers of vast population. There nature was the
-earliest teacher of my childhood, and domestic animals were among my
-first companions. Among such environments my youth was passed, and
-among them I first conceived the idea that animals talk. As a child, I
-believed that all animals of the same kind could understand each other,
-and I recall many instances in which they really did so.
-
-My elders said that animals could communicate with each other, but
-denied that they could talk. As a boy, I could not forego the belief
-that the sounds they used were speech; and I still ask: In what respect
-are they not speech? This question leads us to ask another.
-
-What is speech? Any oral sound, voluntarily made, for the purpose of
-conveying a preconceived idea from the mind of the speaker to the
-mind of another, is speech. Any oral sound so made and so discharging
-this function in the animal economy is speech. It is true that the
-vocabularies of animals, when compared with those of man, are very
-limited; but the former are none the less real. The conception in the
-mind of an animal may not be so vivid as it is in the human mind, but
-the same conception is not always equally clear in two human minds. The
-fact of its being vague does not lessen its reality.
-
-Expression is the materialized form of thought, and speech is one mode
-of expression. Every animal is capable of expressing any thought that
-he is capable of conceiving, and such expression will be found to be
-as distinct as the thought which it expresses. It is inconsistent with
-every view of nature to suppose that any creature is endowed with the
-faculty of thought and forbidden the means of expressing it.
-
-It is true that there are some oral sounds which express emotion--such
-as pain or pleasure. These may not properly be called speech, although
-from them we may infer the state of mind attending them; but while they
-are not truly speech, they appear to be the cytula from which speech
-is developed. While emotions are not voluntary, they do not exist
-apart from mind. They are produced by external causes, and the line of
-demarcation which separates them from more definite forms of thought is
-a vague and wavering one. Thought may be involuntary, but expression
-arises from desire, and this is the sole motive of speech.
-
-It is not the purpose of this work to discuss the problems of
-psychology, except to state the grounds upon which we base the claim
-that animals possess the faculty of speech; but this is intended as a
-record of observed facts and from them the psychologist may make his
-own deductions.
-
-With the ever-present belief that animals could talk to each other, I
-observed from year to year certain things which tended to confirm it.
-About sixteen years ago an instance occurred which forever removed
-from my mind all doubt or wavering. Prior to that time I had observed
-that animals of the higher orders appeared to have the better types of
-speech and, concurrent with this belief, I tabulated many facts. In
-1884 I made a visit to the Cincinnati Zoölogical Garden, where I was
-deeply impressed with the conduct of a school of monkeys occupying a
-cage which also contained a large mandrill. This savage baboon was an
-evident source of terror to the smaller inmates of the cage. A brick
-wall separated the cage into two compartments. The one was intended
-for summer and the other for winter occupancy. Through this wall was
-a small doorway, large enough to admit the passage of the occupants.
-I observed that two or three of the monkeys kept continual watch over
-the conduct of the baboon and reported to the other monkeys every
-movement that he made. When he was lying still, the monkeys passed back
-and forth without fear, but the instant he rose to his feet or gave
-any sign of disquiet the fact was promptly reported by the monkeys
-on watch to those in the adjoining compartment, and they acted in
-accordance with the warning. I was not able to determine the exact
-thing they reported, but the nature of the report was evident, and I
-resolved to learn more fully its meaning. After spending some hours
-watching their conduct and listening to the sound which controlled it,
-I became convinced that what they said was sufficiently definite to
-guide the actions of those to whom it was addressed. In fact I should
-have been willing to intrust my own safety to those warnings. After a
-brief study of those sounds I was able to understand the attitude of
-the baboon towards his neighbors; and while the warning contained no
-elaborate detail that I could understand, the nature of his actions was
-made evident. I observed that a certain sound of warning caused them
-to act in a certain way, and a certain other sound caused them to act
-differently.
-
-From this start I determined to learn the speech of monkeys. I did not
-suspect that the task would be so great as it has proved to be. I did
-not foresee the difficulties that have since become apparent. Year
-by year, as new ideas came to me, new barriers arose and the horizon
-continually widened. Yet I was not discouraged at the poor success of
-my first efforts. From time to time I visited the various collections
-of monkeys in this country and even availed myself of those found with
-traveling shows, hand organs, and elsewhere.
-
-After some years of casual study it occurred to me that the phonograph
-would be a great aid in solving this problem. It would enable me to
-make more accurate comparisons of the sounds made by different monkeys;
-and after duly considering the matter I went to Washington and made my
-purpose known to Dr. Baker, of the Smithsonian Institution. This at
-first evoked from him a smile, but after explaining the means by which
-it was hoped to accomplish the end he looked upon the novel feat as a
-new step in the science of speech.
-
-Having secured a phonograph, I repaired to the animal house then
-adjoining the Smithsonian Institution. At that time there were but two
-live monkeys there, and these were the nucleus around which has grown
-the present National Zoölogical Park at Washington. These two monkeys
-were of different species, but had for some time occupied the same
-cage. I had the female removed from the cage and carried into another
-room. Then the phonograph was placed near her cage, and by various
-means she was induced to utter a few sounds which were recorded upon
-the wax cylinder. The machine was then placed near the cage containing
-the male and the record repeated to him. His conduct plainly showed
-that he recognized the sound and understood the nature of it. He
-searched the horn from which the sounds proceeded and appeared to be
-perplexed at not finding the monkey that had made them. He traced the
-sound to its proper source, but, failing to find his mate, he thrust
-his arm into the horn and felt around the sides of it in the vain hope
-of finding her. The expression of his face was a study worthy of the
-best efforts of the physiognomist.
-
-Then a few sounds of his voice were recorded upon another cylinder and
-were delivered to the female, who showed signs of recognition; but as
-this record was very indistinct it did not evoke from her the interest
-which the other had evoked from him.
-
-This is doubtless the first instance in the history of speech that an
-attempt was ever made to reduce the speech of monkeys to record. While
-this first experiment was crude and the results were not conclusive, it
-pointed in the right direction and it inspired to further efforts to
-find the fountain head from which flows the great river of human speech.
-
-Some critic at that time declared that this experiment could be of no
-scientific value, because the monkey had been provoked to make the
-sounds recorded, and the sounds so evoked were only sounds of anger or
-profanity. It was not a matter of concern to me whether these words
-were moral or profane, so long as they were speech sounds of a monkey
-and were so recognized by other monkeys. If a monkey uses profanity, he
-doubtless has some other forms of speech.
-
-Shortly after this experiment I went to Chicago and made a record of a
-brown _Cebus_ monkey. This record was of a sound most commonly used by
-that species. I had no exact idea as to its meaning, but its frequent
-use caused me to select it as one of their most important words. Having
-secured this, I returned to New York. There I selected a monkey of the
-same species and to him reproduced the record. He instantly gave signs
-of understanding it and replied to it. Again and again this sound was
-reproduced and he repeatedly answered it. He looked at the horn from
-which it came, then at the moving instrument, and drew back from them.
-But as the sound continued to proceed from the horn his interest seemed
-to awaken. He approached the horn and cautiously peeped into it. The
-sound was repeated. He thrust his arm into the horn and peeped around
-the outside to see if he had scared the monkey out. Failing to find
-him, he again retired from the horn, but responded to the sounds. He
-appeared to regard the thing with a kind of superstition. He seemed
-conscious of the fact that there should be a monkey there, but failing
-to find it he evinced suspicion. I do not know to what extent he
-regarded this as a spook, but he evidently realized that it was some
-unusual thing.
-
-In this experiment certain facts may be observed. The record delivered
-to him nothing but the cold, mechanical sound. The elements of gesture,
-etc., were entirely eliminated as factors in the problem, so that the
-monkey had nothing to interpret except the sound. This would indicate
-that the speech sound of a monkey as well as that of man carried
-with it a fixed and constant meaning. This conclusion has since been
-confirmed by ample and varied experiments with mechanical devices of
-many kinds.
-
-Among the defects observed in this experiment was the fact that I
-had not provided a means of recording the sound made in reply to the
-record. Subsequently I secured another instrument to do this. In
-this manner I obtained a reply, and thus I had the two cylinders for
-comparison. In like manner I repeated the experiment of delivering the
-record with one machine and recording the reply with another, until
-I had secured records of the speech sounds of nearly all the monkeys
-in captivity in this country. Taking these records at my leisure, I
-carefully compared and studied them, until I was able to interpret nine
-sounds of the speech of the Capuchin monkeys, and, incidentally, a few
-sounds of a great number of other species.
-
-It is quite impossible to represent the sounds of monkey speech by
-any literal formula, and it is difficult to translate them into their
-exact equivalent of human speech; but, in order to convey some idea
-of the nature and scope of that speech, I shall describe a word or
-two. In the tongue of the brown Capuchin monkey the most important
-word somewhat resembles the word “who,” uttered like “wh-oo-w.” The
-phonetic effect is rich and musical. The vowel element which dominates
-it is a pure vocal “u.” The radical meaning of this sound is food,
-which is the central thought of every monkey’s life. It does not only
-mean food in the concrete sense, referring to the thing to be eaten,
-but it sometimes refers to the act of eating, in which sense it has
-the character of a verb. At other times it refers to the desire to
-eat or to the sensation of hunger, in which instance it may be said
-to have the character of an adjective. But grammatical values depend
-upon structure, and since the speech of monkeys is _monophrastic_ it
-cannot truly be said to have grammatical form. All the sounds of this
-species, so far as I have seen, are monosyllables; and most of them
-contain but one distinct phonetic. I have therefore described them as
-“monophonetic.” The word above described is sometimes used with the
-apparent purpose of expressing friendship, or something of that kind.
-
-Another word which refers to drink, or liquid, begins with a faint
-guttural “ch,” gliding through a sound resembling the French diphthong
-“eu,” and ending with a vanishing “y.” The sound is used with
-reference to drink in much the same way as the other sound is used with
-reference to food.
-
-So far I have not found any trace of the vowels “a,” “e,” “i,” or “o,”
-sounded long, but in one sound of alarm emitted under stress of great
-fear or in case of assault, the vowel element resembles short “i.” This
-sound is uttered in a pitch about two octaves above a human female
-voice.
-
-All of the sounds made by monkeys and, so far as I have observed, by
-other animals, refer to their natural physical wants. They are not
-capable of expressing intricate or abstract thoughts, for the animal
-himself has no such thoughts. Their simple modes of life do not require
-complex thoughts.
-
-A striking point of resemblance between human speech and that of the
-simian is found in a word that “Nellie” (one of my pets) used in
-warning me of the approach of danger. It is not that sound elsewhere
-described as the alarm sound used in case of imminent danger. This
-sound is used in case of remote danger or in announcing something
-unusual. As nearly as can be represented by letters it resembles
-“e-c-g-k.” With this word I have often been warned by these little
-friends. Nellie’s cage occupied a place near my desk. At night she
-would always stay awake as long as the light was kept burning. Having
-always kept late hours myself, I did not violate the rule of my life in
-order to give her a good night’s rest. About two o’clock one morning,
-when about to retire, I found Nellie wide awake. I drew a chair near
-her cage and sat watching her pranks. She tried to entertain me with
-bells and toys. Without letting her see it, I tied a long thread to a
-glove and placed it in the corner of the room at a distance of several
-feet away. Holding one end of the string, I drew the glove obliquely
-across the floor. When I first tightened the string, which was drawn
-across one knee and under the other, the glove slightly moved. This
-her quick eye caught at the first motion. Standing almost on tiptoe,
-her mouth half open, she cautiously peeped at the glove. Then in a
-low undertone, verging on a whisper, she uttered the sound “e-c-g-k!”
-Every second or so she repeated it, at the same time watching to see
-whether or not I was aware of the approach of this goblin. Her actions
-were very human-like. Her movements were as stealthy as those of a
-cat. As the glove came closer and closer she became more and more
-demonstrative. When at last she saw the monster climbing the leg of
-my trousers she uttered the sound in a loud voice and very rapidly.
-She tried to get to the object. She evidently thought it was a living
-thing. She detected the thread with which the glove was drawn across
-the floor, but she seemed in doubt as to what part it played in the
-matter. Her eyes several times followed the thread from my knee to the
-glove, but I do not think she discovered what caused the glove to move.
-Having repeated this a few times, with about the same result each time,
-I relieved her anxiety by allowing her to examine the glove. She did
-this with marked interest for a moment and then turned away. I tried
-the same thing again, but failed to elicit from her the slightest
-interest after she had once examined the glove.
-
-When Nellie first discovered the glove moving on the floor, she
-attempted to call my attention in a low tone. As the object approached
-she became more earnest and uttered the sound somewhat more loudly.
-When she discovered the monster--as she regarded it--climbing up my
-leg, she uttered the warning in a voice sufficiently loud for the
-distance over which the warning was conveyed. These facts indicate that
-her perception of sound was well defined. Her purpose was to warn me of
-the approaching danger without alarming the object against which the
-warning was intended. As the danger increased, the warning became more
-urgent. When she saw the danger at hand, she no longer concealed or
-restrained her alarm.
-
-Nellie was an affectionate little creature. She hated to be left alone,
-even when supplied with toys and a super-abundance of food. When she
-saw me put on my overcoat or take my hat, she foresaw that she would
-be left alone. Then she began to plead and beg and chatter. I often
-watched her through a small hole in the door. When quite alone, in
-perfect silence she played with her toys. Sometimes for hours together
-she did not utter a word. She was not an exception to the rule that
-monkeys do not talk when alone.
-
-Although their speech is inferior to human speech, yet in it there is
-an eloquence that soothes and a meaning that appeals to the human heart.
-
-Briefly stated, the speech of monkeys and human speech resemble each
-other in all essential points. The speech sounds of monkeys are
-voluntary, deliberate, and articulate. They are addressed to others
-with the evident purpose of being understood. The speaker shows that
-he is conscious of the meaning which he desires to convey through the
-medium of speech. He awaits and expects a reply. If it is not given,
-the sound is repeated. The speaker usually looks at the one addressed.
-Monkeys do not habitually utter these sounds when alone. They
-understand the sounds made by others of their own kind. They understand
-the sounds when imitated by a human being, by a phonograph, or by other
-mechanical means. They understand the sounds without the aid of signs
-or gestures. They interpret the same sound in the same way at all
-times. Their sounds are made by their vocal organs and are modulated by
-the teeth, the tongue, the palate, and the lips. Their speech is shaded
-into dialects, and the higher forms of animals have higher types of
-speech than the lower ones. The higher types are slightly more complex
-and somewhat more exact in meaning than the lower ones. The present
-state of monkey speech appears to have been reached by development
-from lower forms. Each race or species of monkey has a form of speech
-peculiar to its kind. When caged together for a time they learn the
-meaning of each other’s sounds, but seldom try to utter them. Their
-faculty of speech is commensurate with their mental and social status.
-They utter their speech sounds loud or soft as the condition requires,
-which indicates that they are conscious of the values. The more
-pronounced the gregarious habits of any species, the higher the type of
-speech it has. So far as I am able to discern, there is no intrinsic
-difference between the speech of monkeys and the speech of men.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-Monkey Friends--Jokes--The Sound of Alarm--Jennie
-
-
-A few years ago there lived in Charleston, S. C., a fine specimen of
-the brown Cebus. His name is Jokes. He was naturally shy of strangers,
-but on my first visit to him I addressed him in his native tongue, and
-he seemed to regard me very kindly. He ate from my hand and allowed me
-to handle and caress him. He watched me with evident curiosity, and
-invariably responded to the sound that I uttered in his own language.
-On one occasion I tried the effect of the peculiar sound of “alarm” or
-“assault” which I had learned from one of his species. It cannot be
-spelled or represented by letters. While he was eating from my hand I
-gave the peculiar, piercing note. He instantly sprang to a perch in the
-top of the cage, thence almost wild with fear he ran in and out of his
-sleeping apartment. As the sound was repeated his fears increased. No
-amount of coaxing would induce him to return to me or to accept from
-me any overtures of peace. I retired to the distance of a few feet
-from his cage, and his master finally induced him to descend from the
-perch; but he did so with great reluctance. I again gave the sound from
-where I stood, and it produced a similar result. The monkey gave out a
-singular sound in response to my efforts to appease him, but he refused
-to become reconciled.
-
-After the lapse of eight or ten days I had not been able to reinstate
-myself in his good graces or to induce him to accept anything from
-me. At this juncture I resorted to harsher means of bringing him to
-terms; I threatened him with a rod. At first he resented this; but
-at length he yielded, and merely through fear he came down from his
-perch. When finally induced to approach, he placed the side of his
-head on the floor, put out his tongue, and uttered a plaintive sound
-having a slightly interrogative inflection. At first this act quite
-defied interpretation; but during the same period I was visiting a
-little monkey called Jack, and in him I found a clue to the meaning
-of this conduct. For strangers, Jack and I were very good friends. He
-allowed me many liberties, which the family assured me he had uniformly
-refused to others. On a certain visit to him he displayed his temper
-and made an attack upon me, because I refused to let go a saucer from
-which he was drinking milk. I jerked him up by the chain and slapped
-him; whereupon he instantly laid the side of his head on the floor, put
-out his tongue, and made just such a sound as Jokes had made on the
-occasion mentioned. It occurred to me that it was a sign of surrender.
-Subsequent tests confirmed this opinion.
-
-Mrs. M. French Sheldon, in her journey through East Africa, shot a
-small monkey in a forest near Lake Charla. She graphically describes
-how the little fellow stood high up in the bough of a tree and
-chattered to her in a clear, musical voice until at the discharge of
-her gun he fell mortally wounded. When he was laid dying at her feet,
-he turned his bright little eyes pleadingly upon her as if to ask
-for pity. Touched by his appeal, she took the little creature in her
-arms and tried to soothe him. Again and again he touched his tongue
-to her hand as if kissing it, and seemed to wish in the hour of death
-to be caressed by the hand that had taken from him without reward
-that sweet life which could be of no value except it were spared to
-the wild forest where his kindred live. From her description of the
-actions of that monkey, his conduct was identical with that of the
-Cebus, and may justly be interpreted to mean “Pity me!” or “Spare me!”
-A Scotch naturalist, commenting on my description of this act and its
-interpretation, quite agrees with me, and states that he has observed
-the same thing in other species of monkeys.
-
-During a period of many weeks I visited Jokes almost daily; but after
-the lapse of more than two months I had not won him back nor quieted
-his suspicions against me. On my approach he usually manifested fear
-and went through the act of humiliation above described.
-
-Observing that he entertained an intense hatred for a negro boy who
-teased and vexed him, I had the boy come near the cage. Jokes fairly
-raved with anger. I took a stick and pretended to beat the boy. This
-greatly delighted Jokes. I held the boy near enough to the cage to
-allow the monkey to scratch and pull his clothes. This filled his
-little simian soul with joy. Releasing the boy, I drove him away by
-throwing wads of paper at him. This gave Jokes infinite pleasure. I
-repeated this a number of times, and by such means we again became good
-friends. After each encounter with the boy, Jokes came to the bars,
-touched my hand with his tongue, chattered, played with my fingers,
-and showed every sign of confidence and friendship. He always warned me
-of the approach of any one, and his conduct at such times was largely
-governed by my own. After this he never failed to salute me with the
-proper sound.
-
-During this time I paid a few visits to another little monkey of the
-same species. Her name was Jennie. Her master had warned me in advance
-that she was not well disposed towards strangers. At my request he had
-her chained in a small side yard, which he forbade any of the family
-entering. On approaching the little lady for the first time, I gave her
-the usual salutation, which she responded to and seemed to understand.
-I sat down by her side and fed her from my hands. She viewed me with
-evident interest and curiosity. I studied her with equal interest.
-During the process of this mutual investigation a negro girl, who
-lived with the family, stealthily entered the yard and came up within
-a few feet of us. I determined to sacrifice this girl upon the altar
-of science. Placing her between the monkey and myself, I vigorously
-sounded the “alarm” or “warning.” Jennie flew into a fury. I continued
-to sound the alarm and at the same time pretended to attack the girl
-with a club and some paper wads. The purpose was to make the monkey
-believe that the girl had uttered the alarm and made the assault.
-With a great display of violence I drove the girl from the yard. For
-days afterward she could not feed or approach the little simian. This
-further confirmed the opinion as to the meaning of this sound. This
-sound can be fairly imitated by placing the back of the hand gently
-on the mouth and kissing it with great force, prolonging the sound.
-This imitation, however, is indifferent, but the quality of the sound
-is especially noticeable when analyzed on the phonograph. The pitch
-corresponds to the highest “F” sharp on a piano, while the word “drink”
-is about two octaves lower, and the word “food” is nearly three.
-
-On one occasion I visited the Zoölogical Garden in Cincinnati, where
-I found in a cage a small Capuchin to whom I gave the name Banquo. It
-was near night and the visitors had left the house. The little monkey,
-worried out by the annoyance of visitors, sat quietly in the back of
-his cage, as though glad that another day was done. I approached the
-cage and uttered the sound which I have translated “drink.” The first
-effort caught his attention and caused him to turn and look at me. He
-rose and answered with the same word. He then came to the front of the
-cage and looked at me as if in doubt. I repeated the word. He again
-responded, and turned to a small pan in the cage. He took it up and
-placed it near the door through which the keeper passed food to him. He
-then turned to me and again uttered the word. I asked the keeper for
-some milk; but he brought me some water instead. The efforts of the
-little simian to secure the glass were very earnest, and his pleading
-manner and tone gave evidence of his thirst. I allowed him to dip his
-hand into the glass and lick the water from his fingers. When the glass
-was kept out of the reach of his hand he repeated the sound and looked
-beseechingly at me as if to say: “Please give me more.” This caused
-me to suspect that the word which I had translated “milk” also meant
-“water.” From this and other tests I finally determined that it meant
-“drink” in a broad sense and possibly also meant “thirst.” It evidently
-expressed his desire for something with which to allay his thirst. The
-sound is very difficult to imitate and quite impossible to write, but
-an idea of it is given elsewhere.
-
-On one of my visits to the Chicago Garden I stood with my side to a
-cage containing a small Capuchin. I uttered the sound which had been
-translated “milk.” It caused him to turn and look at me, and on my
-repeating the sound a few times he answered very distinctly, using the
-same sound. Picking up the pan from which he usually drank, he brought
-it to the front of the cage, set it down, came up to the bars, and
-distinctly uttered the word. He had not been shown any milk or other
-kind of food. The man in charge then brought some milk, which I gave to
-the monkey, who drank it with great delight. I again held up his pan
-and repeated the sound. He used the same sound each time when he wanted
-milk. During this visit I tried many experiments with the word which
-I am now convinced means “food” or “hunger.” I was led to the belief
-that he used the same word for apple, carrot, bread, and banana. Later
-experiments, however, have caused me to modify this view, because the
-phonograph shows slight variations of the sound, and it is probable
-that these faint inflections may indicate different kinds of food. They
-usually recognize this sound, even when poorly imitated. In this word
-may be found a clue to the great secret of speech. And while I have
-taken but one short step toward its solution, these facts point out the
-way that leads to it.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-Monkey Ethics--Sense of Color--Monkeys Enumerate--First Principles of
-Art
-
-
-Monkeys have a simple code of ethics. It is not by any means to be
-supposed that their sense of propriety or appreciation of color, form,
-dimension, or quality is of a high order; but that they have the
-rudiments upon which the higher cults of human society are based there
-is no doubt. Among the experiments that I performed along this line
-were some designed to ascertain the strength of these latent faculties
-or the degree to which these have been developed.
-
-In order to ascertain whether or not monkeys have any choice of colors,
-I selected some bright-colored balls, marbles, candies, and bits of
-ribbon. Taking a piece of pasteboard, I placed on it a few pieces of
-candy of different colors. This was offered to a monkey to see if he
-would select a certain color. In order to avoid confusing him, I used
-only two colors at a time, but frequently shifted their places. This
-was to determine whether the color was chosen merely for convenience or
-for the sake of the color itself. By repeating this with a series of
-bright colors and frequent changing of their order it was ascertained
-in many instances that certain monkeys had a distinct choice of color.
-It was found that all monkeys do not select the same color, and also
-that the same monkey does not at all times choose the same. But, as a
-rule, bright green appeared to be the favorite color of the Capuchins,
-and their second choice was white. In a few instances white appeared
-to be their preference. This experiment was not confined to candies,
-nuts, or other eatables. They appeared to use about the same taste in
-selecting their toys. From the use of artificial flowers, it appeared
-that the choice of green was possibly associated with their selection
-of food. On one occasion I kept a cup for a monkey to drink milk from.
-On one side of this was a picture of some bright flowers and green
-leaves. The monkey would sometimes quit drinking the milk and try to
-pick the flowers off the side of the cup. The fact that she could
-not remove the flowers appeared to annoy her, and she seemed not to
-understand why she could not get hold of them.
-
-In one test I used a board about two feet long, upon which were a few
-pieces of white and pink candies, mixed and arranged in four different
-places on the board. The monkey selected the white from each pile
-before taking the pink, except in one instance, in which the pink
-was taken first. In another experiment I took a white paper ball in
-one hand and a pink one in the other and held my hands out to the
-monkey. He selected the white one almost every time, although from
-time to time I changed hands with the balls. It was not a mere matter
-of convenience with the monkey, for he would sometimes reach over the
-hand containing the pink ball in order to obtain the white one. Most of
-these experiments were performed with the Capuchins, but some of them
-were made with the Rhesus. The fact that monkeys generally seem to be
-attracted by brilliant colors is doubtless due to the readiness with
-which these catch the attention; but when reduced to a choice between
-two colors, they do not seem to give preference to brilliant ones.
-
-A unique but simple experiment was made in order to ascertain whether
-or not monkeys enumerate. I placed on a small platter one nut and a
-small piece of apple or carrot cut in the shape of a cube. On another
-platter were placed two or three such articles of like color and size.
-Holding the two just out of reach of the monkey, and changing hands
-from time to time, I observed that he tried to reach the platter
-containing the greater number, thus indicating that he discerned which
-contained the greater quantity or number of articles. It was long a
-matter of doubt as to whether it was by number or by quantity that his
-choice was controlled. But by taking one piece larger than the others
-and of different shape, it was ascertained that he appreciated the
-difference of quantity. Then, by taking a platter containing one piece
-and another platter containing several similar pieces, it was seen that
-he could distinguish singular from plural.
-
-[Illustration: Monkey Learning to Count]
-
-Another experiment was to determine to what extent he was able to
-enumerate. To this end I constructed a small square box and made a
-hole in one side of it. The box was cushioned inside so that the
-contents would not rattle. In the box were placed three marbles of the
-same size and color. The hole was just large enough for the monkey to
-withdraw his hand with one marble at a time. After letting him play
-with these for a while, putting them into the box and taking them out,
-I abstracted one of the marbles and left the other two for him to play
-with. On taking them out of the box, he missed the absent one, felt in
-the box for it, rose, and looked where he had been sitting. Again he
-put his hand into the box and looked at me as if to say he had lost
-something. Failing to find it, he soon became reconciled to the loss
-and began to play with the remaining two. When he had become quite
-content with these, I abstracted a second one. Thereupon he instituted
-search and was quite unwilling to proceed without finding the lost
-marbles. He put his hand into the box, evidently in the hope of finding
-them. He would not continue to play with the one. I restored one of the
-marbles, and when he discovered that I could find the lost marble, he
-appealed to me in each instance to assist him. Then with his little,
-dirty, black fingers he insisted upon opening my lips to see if it was
-concealed in my mouth--the place where monkeys usually conceal stolen
-goods. I repeated this experiment many times, until quite convinced of
-his ability to count three. Another marble was then added to the number
-and he was allowed to play with the four until he became familiar with
-that number. But when one was taken from the four he did not appear to
-be greatly impressed with the loss. At times he seemed to be in doubt,
-but he did not worry much about it, though seeming to realize that
-something was wrong.
-
-It is not to be supposed that monkeys have names for numerals, but they
-surely have a more or less distinct conception of plurality. The same
-fact is true of birds. It is said that all birds are able to count the
-eggs in their nests. This is certainly true of those that lay only
-three or four eggs.
-
-During the time that these experiments were being made with monkeys in
-this country, the late Professor Romanes was making certain experiments
-with a chimpanzee in London. He succeeded in teaching her to count
-seven, so that she would count and deliver to him on demand any number
-from one up to seven. This she did without prompting, and usually
-without mistake.
-
-Among different specimens of monkeys there seems to be a wide range
-of tastes. In this respect they vary much the same as human beings do.
-The same is true of their mental powers in general. With some monkeys
-the choice of color is much more definite and of dimension much more
-certain than in others, and most of them appear to assign to different
-numbers a difference of value.
-
-Some monkeys are talkative and others taciturn. Some of them are
-vicious and some stolid, while others are as playful as kittens and as
-cheerful as sunshine. I regard the Cebus as the most intelligent of
-monkeys. In fact I have called him “The Caucasian of monkeys.” The new
-world monkeys seem to be more intelligent and more loquacious than the
-old world stock, but this remark does not include the anthropoid apes.
-
-As a test of the musical taste of monkeys, I took three little bells
-and suspended them by a like number of strings. The bells were all
-alike except that from two of them the clappers had been removed.
-Dropping the bells through the meshes of the cage at a distance of ten
-or twelve inches apart, the monkey was allowed to play with them. He
-soon discovered the one containing the clapper. He played with it and
-became quite absorbed with it. He was then attracted to another part of
-the cage, during which time the position of the bells was changed. On
-his return he found his favorite bell without a clapper. He then turned
-to another, and then another, until he found the one with the clapper.
-This indicated that the sound emitted by the bell was at least a part
-of its attraction.
-
-During the time that I used the phonograph in studying the monkeys,
-I repeated many musical records to them and found that some evinced
-fondness for the music, others were indifferent to it, and a few showed
-aversion to it. It appeared that the monkeys that were most attracted
-by musical sounds enjoy the repetition of a single note rather than the
-melody. It is possible that music, as we understand it, is too high an
-order of sense culture for them. The single note of a certain pitch
-seems to attract and afford pleasure to some of them, but they do not
-seem to appreciate rhythm or melody.
-
-As monkeys discern the larger of two pieces of food, they may be
-said to have the perceptive faculty which enables them to appreciate
-dimension. As they are able to discern singular from plural, and
-two from three or more, they have, in that degree, the faculty of
-enumeration. As they are able to distinguish and select colors, they
-possess the first rudiment of art as dealing with color. As they are
-attracted or repelled by musical sounds, they may be said to possess
-the first rudiment of music. It must not be understood, however, that
-any claim is made that monkeys possess a high degree of mental culture;
-but it will be admitted that they possess the germs of mathematics as
-dealing with form, dimension, and number; of art, as dealing with form
-and color; of music, as dealing with tone and time. It is not probable
-that they have any names for any of these sensations, nor that they
-have any abstract ideas that are not drawn directly from experience.
-But as the concrete must precede the abstract in the development of
-reason, it is more than probable that these creatures now occupy a
-mental horizon such as man has once passed through in the course of
-his evolution. It does not require a great effort of the mind to
-appreciate the possibility that these feeble faculties, in constant
-use and under changed conditions, may develop into a higher degree of
-strength and usefulness. In fact we find in these creatures the embryo
-of every faculty of the human being, including those of reason and
-speech, through the exercise of which are developed the higher moral
-and social traits of man. They appear to have at least the raw material
-from which are made the highest attributes of the human mind, and I
-shall not contest with them the right of exclusive possession.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-Pedro’s Speech Recorded--Delivered to Puck through the
-Phonograph--Little Darwin Learns a New Word
-
-
-In the Washington collection there was once a Capuchin monkey by the
-name of Pedro. When I first visited this bright little fellow he
-occupied a cage in common with several other monkeys of different
-kinds. All of them seemed to impose upon little Pedro, and a
-mischievous young spider-monkey found special delight in catching him
-by the tail and dragging him about the floor of the cage. I interfered
-on behalf of Pedro and drove the spider-monkey away. Pedro appreciated
-this and began to look upon me as a benefactor. When he saw me he would
-scream to attract my attention and then beg for me to come to him.
-I induced the keeper to place him by himself in a small cage. This
-seemed to please him very much. When I went to record his sounds on
-the phonograph, I held him on my arm. He took the tube into his tiny,
-black hands, held it close up to his mouth and talked into it just like
-a good little boy who knew what to do and how to do it. He sometimes
-laughed, and he frequently chattered to me as long as he could see me.
-He would sit on my hand and kiss my cheeks, put his mouth up to my ear
-and chatter just as though he knew what my ears were for. He was quite
-fond of the head-keeper and also of the director; but he entertained a
-great dislike for one of the assistant keepers. He often told me some
-very bad things about that man, though I could not understand what he
-said. I shall long remember how this dear little monkey used to cuddle
-under my chin and try to make me understand some sad story which seemed
-to be the burden of his life. He readily understood the sounds of his
-own speech when repeated to him, and I made some of the best records of
-his voice that I ever succeeded in making of any monkey. Some of them
-I preserved for a long time. They displayed a wide range of sounds,
-and I studied them with special care and pleasure, because I knew
-that they were addressed to me. Being aware that the little creature
-was uttering these sounds to me with the hope that I would understand
-them, I was more anxious to learn just what he really meant than if it
-had contained only something addressed to another. This little simian
-was born in the Amazon Valley, in Brazil, and was named for the late
-emperor, Dom Pedro.
-
-At one time I borrowed from a dealer a little Capuchin called Puck, and
-had him sent to my apartments, where I had a phonograph. I placed the
-cage in front of the machine, upon which had been adjusted the record
-of my little friend Pedro. I concealed myself in an adjoining room,
-where, through a small hole in the door, I could watch the conduct of
-Puck. A string was attached to the lever of the machine, drawn taut,
-and passed through another hole in the door. By this means the machine
-could be started without attracting the attention of the monkey through
-his seeing anything move. When everything in the room was quiet the
-machine was set in motion, and Puck was treated to a phonographic
-recital by Pedro. This speech was distinctly delivered through the
-horn to the monkey. From his actions it was evident that he recognized
-it as the voice of one of his tribe. He looked with surprise at the
-horn, made a sound or two, glanced around the room, and again uttered
-two or three sounds. Apparently somewhat afraid, he retired from the
-horn. Again the horn delivered some sounds of pure Capuchin speech.
-Puck seemed to regard them as sounds of some importance. He advanced
-cautiously and made a feeble response; but a quick, sharp sound from
-the horn startled him; and failing to find anything indicating a
-monkey, except the sound of the voice, he looked with evident suspicion
-at the horn, and scarcely ventured to answer any sound it made.
-
-When the contents of the record had been delivered to him I entered the
-room. This relieved his fear of the horn. A little later the apparatus
-was again adjusted, and a small mirror was hung just above the mouth of
-the horn. Again retiring from the room, I left him to examine his new
-surroundings. He soon discovered the monkey in the glass, and began to
-caress it and chatter to it. Again the phonograph was started by means
-of the string, and when the horn began to deliver its simian oration,
-it greatly disconcerted and perplexed Puck. He looked at the image in
-the glass and then into the horn. He retired with a feeble grunt and an
-inquisitive grin, showing his little white teeth, and acting as though
-in doubt whether to regard the affair as a joke, or to treat it as a
-grim and scientific fact. His voice and actions were like those of a
-child, declaring in words that he was not afraid, and at the same
-time betraying fear in every act. Puck did not cry, but his intense
-fear made the grin on his face rather ghastly. Again he approached the
-mirror and listened to the sounds which came from the horn. His conduct
-betrayed the conflict in his little soul. It was evident that he did
-not believe the monkey which he saw in the glass was making the sounds
-which came from the horn. He repeatedly put his mouth to the glass and
-caressed the image, but tried at the same time to avoid the monkey
-which he heard in the horn. His conduct in this instance was a source
-of surprise, as the sounds contained in the record were all uttered
-in a mood of anxious, earnest entreaty, which contained no sound of
-anger, warning, or alarm, but, on the contrary, appeared to be a kind
-of love-speech. I had not learned the exact meaning of any one of the
-sounds contained in this cylinder, but in a collective and general way
-had ascribed such meaning to them. From Puck’s conduct it was to be
-inferred that this was some kind of complaint against those monkeys
-occupying the other cage. They had made life a burden to little Pedro.
-It was evident that Puck interpreted the actions of the monkey seen in
-the glass to mean one thing, and the sounds that came from the horn to
-mean quite another.
-
-Their language is not capable of relating narratives or giving details
-in a complaint, but in general terms of grievance it may have conveyed
-to Puck the idea of a monkey in distress, and hence his desire to avoid
-it. The image in the glass presented to him a picture of a monkey in a
-happy mood, and he therefore had no cause to shun it.
-
-The speech used by monkeys is not of a high order, but it appears to
-have been developed from an inferior type. Some species among them have
-much more copious and expressive forms of speech than others. From
-many experiments with the phonograph I conclude that some have much
-higher phonetic types than others. I have found slight inflections that
-seem to modify the values of their sounds. Certain monkeys do not make
-certain inflections at all, although in other respects the phonation
-of a species is generally uniform. In some cases it appears that the
-inflections differ slightly in the same species, but long and constant
-association tends in some degree to unify these dialects much the same
-as like causes blend and unify the dialects of human speech.
-
-I observed one instance in which a Capuchin had acquired two sounds
-which strictly belonged to the tongue of the white-faced Cebus. At
-first I suspected that these sounds were common to the speech of both
-varieties; but on inquiry it was found that this brown Cebus had been
-confined for some years in a cage with the white-face, during which
-time he had acquired them.
-
-The most interesting case that I have to record is one in which a young
-white-faced Cebus acquired the Capuchin sound for food. This occurred
-under my own observation, and, being attended by such conditions as to
-show that the monkey had a motive in learning the sound, I regard it as
-most noteworthy.
-
-In the room where the monkeys were kept by a dealer in Washington,
-there was a cage containing the young Cebus in question. He was of
-rather more than average intelligence. He was a quiet, sedate, and
-thoughtful little monkey. His gray hair and beard gave him quite a
-venerable aspect, and for this reason I called him Darwin. For some
-reason he was afraid of me, and I gave him but little attention. In
-an adjacent cage lived the little brown Cebus, called Puck. The cages
-were only separated by an open wire partition, through which they could
-easily see and hear each other. For some weeks I visited Puck almost
-daily, and in response to his sound for food, I supplied him with nuts,
-bananas, or other food. I never gave him anything to eat unless he
-asked me for it in his own speech.
-
-On one occasion my attention was attracted by little Darwin, who was
-making a strange sound, such as I had never before heard one of his
-species utter. At first I did not recognize the sound, but finally
-discovered that it was intended to imitate the sound of the brown
-monkey, in response to which I always gave him some nice morsel of
-food. Darwin had observed that when Puck made this sound he was
-always rewarded with something to eat, and his own evident motive
-was to secure a like reward. After this I gave him a bit of food in
-acknowledgment of his efforts. From day to day he improved in making
-the sound, until at length it could scarcely be detected from that
-made by Puck. This was accomplished within a period of less than six
-weeks from the time of my first visit. In this instance, at least, I
-have witnessed one step taken by a monkey, in learning the speech of
-another. This was doubly interesting to me in view of the fact that I
-had long believed, and had announced the belief, that no monkey ever
-tried to acquire the sounds made by one of another species. This
-instance alone was sufficient to cause me to recede from a conclusion
-thus rendered untenable; and the short time in which the feat was
-accomplished would indicate that the difficulty is not so great as it
-had been regarded. As a rule, monkeys do not learn each other’s speech;
-but the rule is not without exceptions. I had previously observed,
-and called attention to the fact, that when two monkeys of different
-species are caged together, each one learns to understand the speech
-of the other, but does not try to speak it. When he replies at all, it
-is in his own vernacular. Monkeys do not essay to carry on a connected
-conversation. Their speech is usually limited to a single sound or
-word, and it is answered in the same manner. To suppose that they
-converse in an elaborate manner is to go beyond the bounds of reason.
-In this respect, the masses fail to understand the real nature of the
-speech of monkeys or other animals.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-Five Little Brown Cousins, Mickie, McGinty, Nemo, Dodo, and
-Nigger--Nemo Apologizes to Dodo
-
-
-During the winter of 1891 there lived in Central Park five little brown
-monkeys, all of the same kind and occupying the same cage. They were
-all of more or less interest, and all of them were my friends. I paid
-them frequent visits and spent much time with them. I have the vanity
-to believe that I was always a welcome guest. We found much pleasure in
-each other’s society. As the monkey house was open to the public after
-nine o’clock, I usually made my visits about sunrise in order to be
-alone with my little friends.
-
-One of the most cunning and happiest of all little monkeys was in this
-group. His name was Mickie, and he was the boss of the school. He was
-not very talkative except when he wished for food or drink, but he was
-very playful and we had many a merry romp. Whenever I entered the cage
-Mickie perched himself above the door to surprise me by jumping on my
-neck. He then affectionately threw his arms around my neck and licked
-my cheeks, pulled my ears, and chattered in his sweet, plaintive tones.
-The other inmates of the cage were jealous of him, but none contested
-his right to do as he pleased. I am sorry to say that Mickie was not
-always as kind to his little cousins as he might have been. He was
-like some people I have known who are selfish and sometimes cruel; but
-his habitual good nature made amends in some degree for his sudden
-fits of anger. Mickie did not belong to the park. He was only kept as
-a guest of the city during the absence of his master in Europe. He had
-a genuine sense of humor and sometimes played pranks upon the others,
-very much to their annoyance. On one occasion Mickie got the tail of
-another monkey around one of the bars of the cage. He sat down and held
-to it while its owner screamed with rage and scuffled to get away.
-During this time Mickie’s face wore a broad, satanic grin, and he did
-not release his hold until he had tired of the fun.
-
-Another one of these little cousins was named McGinty. McGinty was
-very fond of me; but he was afraid of Mickie, who was much larger
-and stronger than himself. McGinty always wanted to be counted in
-the game. He did not like to have Mickie monopolize my attentions.
-He often climbed upon my shoulders and caressed me very fondly, if
-not interrupted by Mickie; but whenever the latter came, poor little
-McGinty retired in disgust, pouted for a time, and even refused to
-accept food from me. By and by he would yield to my overtures and again
-join in the play. He seemed always to wish to find something that would
-divert my attention from Mickie.
-
-Another inmate of the cage was a fine little monkey that belonged to
-Mr. G. Scribner, of Yonkers, N. Y. At the time of my visits I did not
-know the name of this little creature nor who owned him. I called him
-Nemo. He was timid and taciturn, but quite intelligent. He was gentle
-in manner, kind in disposition, and he possessed a great amount of
-diplomacy. He was thoughtful and peaceable, but “full of guile.” He
-always sought to keep the peace with Mickie, to whom he played the
-sycophant. He would put his little arms about Mickie’s neck in a most
-affectionate manner and hang on to him like a last hope. In all broils
-that concerned Mickie, Nemo was his partisan. If Mickie was diverted,
-Nemo laughed. I have sometimes thought that he would do so if he were
-suffering with the toothache. He seemed to be as completely under the
-control of Mickie as was the curl in Mickie’s tail. When Nemo saw
-Mickie bite my fingers in play, he thought it was done in anger and he
-lost no chance of biting them; but his little teeth were not strong
-enough to hurt very much. At last he discovered that Mickie was only
-biting me in fun, and after that Nemo did it apparently as a duty.
-It scarcely seems that a monkey can be capable of such far-reaching
-purpose or of such diplomacy, but by a careful study of his actions I
-could find no other motive.
-
-One singular thing in the conduct of this monkey was his apologetic
-manner towards another inmate of the cage. Nemo had a soft musical
-voice and remarkable power of facial expression. On two occasions
-he appeared to apologize to a companion called Dodo. This was done
-in a very humble manner. I tried in vain to secure a record of this
-particular speech. His manner, voice, and face expressed contrition;
-but I was never able to learn either the exact cause or the extent of
-his humiliation. He sat in a crouching position, with the left hand
-clasped around the right wrist, and delivered his speech in a most
-energetic, though humble, manner. After each effort he made a brief
-pause and repeated what appeared to me to be the same thing. This was
-done three or four times. When he had quite finished this speech, Dodo,
-to whom it had been addressed and who had quietly listened, delivered
-with her right hand a sound blow upon the left side of the face of the
-little penitent. To this he responded with a soft cry, but without
-resentment. The keeper assured me that he had many times witnessed this
-act, but he had no idea of its meaning. As to the details of this act,
-I have no theory; but the state of mind and the purpose were evident.
-They expressed regret, penitence, or submission. I have witnessed
-something similar in other monkeys, but nothing equal in point of
-finish or pathos to that scene between Nemo and Dodo.
-
-Dodo had a bright face and a symmetrical figure. In her I witnessed one
-of the most interesting acts that I have ever seen in any monkey. Her
-combined speech and actions bordered on the histrionic. Her monologue
-was addressed to her keeper, of whom she was especially fond. At almost
-any hour of the day Dodo would stand erect and deliver to her keeper
-the most touching and impassioned address. The keeper went into the
-cage with me, to see if he could handle her. After a little coaxing
-she allowed him to take her into his arms. After he had caressed
-her for a while and assured her that no harm was meant, she put her
-slender little arms about his neck and like an injured child cuddled
-her head up under his chin. She caressed him by licking his cheeks,
-and chattered in a voice full of sympathy. Her display of affection
-was worthy of a human being. During most of this time she continued
-her pathetic speech. She was not willing he should leave her. The
-only time at which she made any show of anger or threatened me with
-assault was when I attempted to lay hands on her keeper or to release
-him from her embrace. At such times she would fly at me and attempt to
-tear my clothes off. On these occasions she would not allow any other
-inmate of the cage to approach him or to receive his caresses. The
-sounds which she uttered were at times pitiful, and the tale she told
-seemed to be full of sorrow. I have not, so far, been able to translate
-these sounds, but their import cannot be misunderstood. Her speech was
-doubtless a complaint against the other monkeys in the cage, and she
-was probably begging her keeper not to leave her alone in that great
-iron prison with all those big, bad monkeys who were so cruel to her.
-One reason for believing this to be the nature of her speech is that
-in all cases where I have heard this kind of speech and seen these
-gestures, the conditions were such as to indicate that such was their
-nature. It looks, however, very much like a love-making scene of the
-most intense kind.
-
-It is difficult to describe either the sounds or the gestures made
-on these occasions The monkey stood erect upon her feet, crossed her
-hands over her heart, and in the most touching and graceful manner went
-through a series of singular contortions. She swayed her body from side
-to side, turned her head in a coquettish manner, and moved her folded
-hands dramatically. Meanwhile her face was adorned with a broad grin,
-and the soft, rich notes of her voice were perfectly musical. She bent
-her body first into one curve and then into another, moved her feet
-with the grace of the minuet, and continued her fervent speech as long
-as the object of her adoration appeared to be touched by her appeals.
-Her voice ranged from pitch to pitch and from key to key, through the
-whole gamut of simian vocals, and with her arms folded she glided with
-the skill of a ballet girl across the floor of her cage. At times she
-stood with her eyes fixed upon her keeper, and held her face in such a
-position as not for a moment to lose sight of him. Meanwhile she turned
-her body entirely around in her tracks. This was accomplished with a
-skill such as no contortionist has ever attained. During these orations
-her eyes moistened as if in tears, showing that she felt the sentiment
-which her speech was intended to convey.
-
-These little creatures do not shed tears as human beings do; but their
-eyes moisten as a result of the same causes that move the human eyes to
-tears.
-
-These sounds appeal directly to our better feelings. What there is in
-the sound itself we do not really know, but it touches some chord in
-the human heart which vibrates in response to it. It has impressed me
-with the poetic thought that all our senses are like the strings of
-a great harp, each chord having a certain tension, so that any sound
-produced through an emotion finds a response in that chord with which
-it is in unison. Possibly our emotions and sensations are like the
-diatonic scale in music, and the organs through which they act respond
-in tones and semitones. Each multiple of any fundamental tone affects
-the chord in unison, as the strings upon a musical instrument are
-affected. The logical deduction is that our sympathies and affections
-are the chords, and our aversions the discords, of that great harp of
-passion.
-
-The last of this quintette was a frail little fellow called Nigger.
-He was not of much interest, as he was in poor health. He kept mostly
-to himself, because his companions were unkind to him and he was not
-strong enough to defend himself. He was gentle and affectionate. He
-was fond of being caressed and often evinced a sense of gratitude. He
-had a touch of humor which sometimes was very funny. He occasionally
-created a riot in the cage and then stole away to his corner and left
-the others to fight it out. He was the last of the five left in the
-park, but he was the first of them to die. The others were taken away
-by their owners; but poor little Nigger died in that dismal cage from
-whose windows he could see the beautiful trees and warm sunshine of
-springtime, though to him they were only a dream that saddened rather
-than cheered.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
- Meeting with Nellie--Nellie was my Guest--Her Speech and
- Manners--Helen Keller and Nellie--One of Nellie’s Friends--Her Sight
- and Hearing--Her Toys and how She Played with Them
-
-
-One of the most intelligent of my brown Capuchin friends was little
-Nellie. When she arrived in Washington, I was invited to visit her. I
-introduced myself by speaking to her the sound of food. To that she
-promptly replied. She was rather informal, and we were soon engaged
-in a chat on that subject--the one that above all others interests a
-monkey. On my second visit she acted like an old acquaintance, and we
-had a fine time. On a later visit she allowed me to put my hands into
-her cage to handle and caress her. On another visit I took her out of
-the cage and we had a real jolly romp. This continued for some days,
-during which time she answered me when I gave the word for food or
-drink. She had grown quite fond of me, and always recognized me when I
-entered the door.
-
-About this time there came to Washington a little girl who was deaf,
-dumb, and blind. It was little Helen Keller. She was accompanied by
-her teacher, who acted as her interpreter. A great desire of Helen’s
-life was to see a live monkey--that is, to see one with her fingers.
-The owner sent for me to come and show one to her. When any one except
-myself had put hands upon Nellie, she had growled and scolded and
-showed temper. I took her from the cage. When the little blind girl
-first put her hands on Nellie, the shy little monkey did not like it.
-I stroked the child’s hair and cheeks with my own hand and then with
-Nellie’s. She looked up at me and uttered one of those soft, flute-like
-sounds. Then she began to pull at the cheeks and ears of the child.
-Within a few minutes they were like old friends and playmates, and for
-nearly an hour they afforded each other great pleasure. At the end of
-that time they separated with reluctance. The little simian acted as
-if conscious of the sad affliction of the child, but seemed at perfect
-ease with her. She would decline the tenderest approach of others. She
-looked at the child’s eyes, and then at me, as if to indicate that
-she was aware that the child was blind. The little girl appeared not
-to be aware that monkeys could bite. It was a beautiful and touching
-scene, and one in which the lamp of instinct shed its feeble light on
-all around. Helen has now grown into womanhood. I recently paid her a
-visit, and she assured me that she still pleasantly remembered this
-dear little monkey friend.
-
-One day Nellie escaped from her cage and climbed upon a shelf occupied
-by some bird cages. As she climbed over the light wicker cages, some of
-them, with their little yellow occupants, fell to the floor. I tried
-to induce Nellie to return to me; but the falling cages, the cry of
-the birds, the screeching of the parrots, and the vociferous chatter
-of other monkeys frightened poor Nellie almost out of her wits. She,
-thinking I was the cause of all this trouble, because I was present,
-screamed with fright at my approach. Such is the rule that governs
-monkeydom. Monkeys suspect every one of doing wrong except themselves.
-I had her removed to my apartments. She was supplied with bells and
-toys, and was fed on the fat of the land. By this means we finally
-knitted together again the broken bones of our friendship. When once a
-monkey has grown suspicious of you, it seldom entirely recovers from
-aversion. In every act thereafter you are suspected of mischief. I made
-some good records of the speech of this amiable monkey and studied them
-with special care.
-
-A frequent and welcome visitor to my study was a little boy about six
-years old. For him Nellie entertained great fondness. At the sight of
-the boy, Nellie went into perfect raptures, and when leaving him she
-called him so earnestly and whined so pitifully that one could not
-refrain from sympathy. On his return she would laugh audibly and give
-every sign of extreme joy. She never tired of his company, nor gave
-any attention to others while he was present. Some children next door
-found great delight in calling to see Nellie, and she always evinced
-great pleasure at their visits. On these occasions she consciously
-entertained them and showed herself to the best advantage. In order
-to make a good record of her sounds, and especially of her laughter,
-I brought the little boy to my aid. The boy would conceal himself in
-the room, and after Nellie had called him a few times he would jump
-out and surprise her. This would cause her to laugh till she could be
-heard throughout the whole house. In this manner I secured some of the
-best records I have ever made of the laughter of monkeys. When the boy
-concealed himself again, I secured the peculiar sound which she used
-when trying to attract his attention.
-
-Nellie had spent much of her life in captivity, and had been used to
-the society of children. She rarely ever betrayed any aversion to them.
-She delighted to pat their cheeks, pull their ears, and tangle their
-hair. She took great pleasure in cleaning one’s finger-nails. She did
-this with the skill of a manicure. She found pleasure in picking the
-shreds, ravelings, or specks from one’s clothing. She was not selfish
-in selecting her friends. She was influenced neither by age nor by
-beauty.
-
-To be out of her cage and supplied with toys was all she demanded to
-make her happy. I have sometimes thought she preferred such a life to
-the freedom of her Amazon forests. It is to be regretted that monkeys
-are so destructive that one dare not turn them loose in a room where
-there is anything that can be torn or broken. They enjoy such mischief.
-Nellie often begged me so piteously to be taken from her little iron
-prison that I could not refuse her request, even at the cost of much
-trouble in preparing the room for her.
-
-As we retain these little captives against their will and treat them
-worse than slaves by keeping them in close confinement, we should at
-least try to amuse them. It is true that they do not have to toil;
-but it would be more humane to make them work in the open air than to
-confine them so closely and deprive them of every means of pleasure.
-As an act of humanity and simple justice, I would impress upon those
-who have the charge of these little pets the importance of keeping
-them supplied with toys. In this respect they are just like children.
-For a trifle one can furnish them with such toys as they need. It is
-absolutely cruel to keep these little creatures confined in solitude
-and deny them the simple pleasure they find in playing with a bell, a
-ball, or a few marbles. A trifling outlay in this way will very much
-prolong their lives. Monkeys are always happy if they have plenty to
-eat and something to play with. I recall no investment of mine which
-ever yielded a greater return in pleasure than one little pocket
-match-safe, costing twenty-five cents, which one evening I gave to
-Nellie to play with. I had put into it a small key to make it rattle,
-and also some bits of candy. She rattled the box and found much
-pleasure in the noise it made. I showed her how to press the spring in
-order to open the box; but her little black fingers were not strong
-enough to release the spring and make the lid fly open. However, she
-caught the idea and knew that the spring was the secret which held the
-box closed. When she found that she could not open it with her fingers,
-she tried it with her teeth. Failing in this, she turned to the wall,
-and standing upright on the top of her cage, she took the box in both
-hands and struck the spring against the wall until the lid flew open.
-She was perfectly delighted at the result, and for the hundredth time,
-at least, I closed the box for her to open it again. On the following
-day some friends came in to visit her. I gave her the match-safe to
-open. On this occasion she was in her cage, and through its meshes she
-could not reach the wall. She had nothing against which to strike the
-spring to force it open. After looking around her and striking the
-box a few times against the wires of her cage, she discovered a block
-of wood about six inches square. She took this and mounted her perch.
-Balancing the block on the perch, she held it with the left foot, while
-with the right foot she held to the perch. With her tail wound around
-the meshes of the cage to steady herself, she carefully adjusted the
-match-box in such a manner as to protect her fingers from the blow.
-Then she struck the spring against the block of wood and the lid flew
-open. She fairly screamed with delight and held up the box with pride.
-The lid was again closed in order that she might open it.
-
-The late hours which I kept were beginning to tell on Nellie, and from
-time to time during the day I caught her taking a nap. I determined to
-use some curtains to avoid disturbing her rest. Drawing them around
-the cage, I lapped them over and pinned them down in front. Then I
-turned down the light and kept quiet for a little while to allow her
-to go to sleep. After the lapse of a few minutes I quietly turned up
-the light and resumed writing. In an instant the curtains rustled.
-Looking around, I saw her little brown eyes peeping through the folds
-of the curtains, which she gracefully held apart with her little black
-hands. When she saw what had caused the disturbance she chattered in
-her soft, rich tones, and tried to pull the curtains farther apart. I
-arranged them so she could not look around the room. To see her holding
-the curtains apart in that coquettish manner, turning her head from
-side to side, peeping and smiling at me and talking in such low sweet
-tones, was like a real flirtation. One who has not witnessed such a
-scene cannot fully appreciate it. Only those who have experienced the
-warm and unselfish friendship of these little creatures can realize how
-strong the attachment becomes. The love of these little creatures is
-proof against gossip, and their tongues are free from it.
-
-Among the many captives of the simian race who spend their lives in
-iron prisons, adding to the wealth and gratifying the cruelty of
-man,--not to expiate any crime,--I have many little friends. I am
-attached to them. So far as I can see, their devotion to me is as warm
-and sincere as that of any human being. I must confess that I am too
-obtuse to discern in what way the love they have for me differs from my
-own for them. I cannot see in what respect their love is less sublime
-than human love. I cannot discern in what respect the affection of a
-dog for a kind master differs from that of a child for a kind parent. I
-fail to see in what respect the sense of fear of a cruel master differs
-from that of the child toward a cruel parent. It is mere sentiment
-that ascribes to the passion of a child a higher source than the same
-passion in the dog or the monkey. The dog could have loved or feared
-another master just as well. Filial love or fear reaches out its
-tendrils just as far when all the ties of kindred blood are removed.
-It has been said that for one we are able to assign a reason _why_,
-while the other feeling is a mere impulse. I am too dull to understand
-how reason actuates to love, and instinct to mere attachment. I do not
-believe that in the intrinsic nature of these passions there is any
-essential difference. Whether it be reason or instinct in man, the
-affections of the lower animals are actuated by the same motives,
-governed by the same conditions, and guided by the same reasons as
-those of man. I shall long remember some of my monkey friends, and I
-feel sure that, far away in the silent niches of their memory, some of
-them have my image enshrined. Sometimes after long months of absence I
-see them again. They always recognize me at sight and often scream with
-pleasure at my return.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
- Caged in an African Jungle--The Cage and its Contents--Its
- Location--Its Purpose--The Jungle--The Great Forest--Its Grandeur--Its
- Silence
-
-
-It will be of interest to the reader to know the manner in which I
-have pursued the study of monkeys in a state of nature, and the means
-employed to that end. I, therefore, give a brief outline of my life in
-a cage in the heart of the African jungle, where I went in order to
-watch the denizens of the forest when free from all restraint.
-
-Having for several years devoted much time to the study of the speech
-and the habits of monkeys in captivity, I formulated a plan of going to
-their native haunts to study them under more favorable conditions.
-
-In the course of my labors up to that time, I had found that monkeys of
-the highest physical types have also higher types of speech than those
-of the inferior kinds. In accordance with this fact, it was logical
-to infer that in the anthropoid apes--they being next to man in the
-scale of nature--would be found the faculty of speech developed in a
-higher degree than in the monkeys. The chief object of my study was
-to learn the language of animals. The great apes appeared to be the
-best subjects for that purpose, so I turned my attention to them. The
-gorilla was said to be the most nearly like man, and the chimpanzee
-next. There were none of the former in captivity, and but few of the
-latter; and those few were kept under conditions that forbade all
-efforts to do anything in the line of scientific study of their speech.
-As the gorilla and the chimpanzee could both be found in the same
-section of tropical Africa, that region was selected as the best field
-of operation; and, in order to carry out the task assumed, I prepared
-for a journey thither.
-
-[Illustration: NATIVE VILLAGE AT GLASS GABOON (From a Photograph.)]
-
-The locality chosen was along the equator and about two degrees south
-of it. This region is infested with fevers, insects, serpents, and wild
-beasts of divers kinds. To ignore such dangers would be folly; but
-there was no way to see these apes in their freedom, except to go and
-live among them. To lessen in a degree the dangers incurred by such an
-adventure, I devised a cage of steel wire woven into a lattice with a
-mesh one inch and a half wide. This was made in twenty-four panels,
-each three feet and three inches square, set in frames of narrow iron
-strips. Each side of the panels was provided with lugs or half hinges,
-so arranged as to fit any side of any other panel. These could be
-quickly bolted together with small iron rods, and when so joined they
-formed a cage of cubical shape, six feet and six inches square.
-
-Any one or more of the panels could be used as a door. The whole
-structure was painted a dingy green, so that when erected in the forest
-it was almost invisible in the foliage.
-
-[Illustration: A NATIVE CANOE (From a Photograph.)]
-
-While this cage was not strong enough to withstand a prolonged attack,
-it afforded a certain degree of immunity from being surprised by
-the fierce and stealthy beasts of the jungle, and would allow its
-occupant time to kill an assailant before the wires would yield to an
-assault from anything except elephants. It was not, indeed, designed
-as a protection against them; but, as they rarely attack a man unless
-provoked to it, there was little danger from that source. Besides,
-there are not many of those huge brutes in the part where this strange
-domicile was set up.
-
-Through this open fabric one could see on all sides without
-obstruction, and yet feel a certain sense of safety from being devoured
-by leopards or panthers.
-
-Over this frail fortress was spread a roof of bamboo leaves. It was
-provided with curtains of canvas, to be hung up in case of rain. The
-floor was of thin boards, steeped in tar. The structure was elevated
-about two feet from the ground and supported by nine small posts or
-stakes, firmly driven into the earth. It was furnished with a bed made
-of heavy canvas. This was supported by two poles of bamboo attached to
-its edges. One of these poles was lashed fast to the side of the cage,
-and the other was suspended at night by strong wire hooks hung from
-the top of the cage. During the day the bed was rolled up on one of
-the poles, so as to be out of the way. I had a light camp chair, which
-folded up. A table was improvised from a broad, short board hung on
-wires. When not in use this was set up by the side of the cage. To this
-outfit a small kerosene stove and a swinging shelf were added. A few
-tin cases contained my wearing apparel, blankets, a pillow, a camera
-and photographic supplies, medicines, and an ample store of canned
-meats, crackers, etc. There were also some tin platters, cups, and
-spoons. A magazine rifle, a revolver, ammunition, and a few useful
-tools, such as hammer, saw, pliers, files, and a heavy bush-knife,
-completed my stock. The tin plates served for cooking vessels and also
-for table use, instead of dishes, which are heavier and more fragile.
-
-[Illustration: THE EDGE OF THE JUNGLE (From a Photograph.)]
-
-With this equipment I sailed from New York on the 9th of July, 1892,
-_via_ England, to the port of Gaboon, the site of the colonial
-government on the French Congo. This place is within a few miles of
-the equator, and near the borders of the country in which the gorilla
-lives. I arrived there on the 19th of October of that year, and after a
-delay of some weeks in that locality I set out to find the object of my
-search.
-
-Leaving that place, I went up the Ogowé River about two hundred or two
-hundred and fifty miles, and thence through the lake region on the
-south side of it. After some weeks of travel and inquiry, I arrived on
-the south side of Lake Ferran Vaz, in the territory of the Nkami tribe.
-The lake is about thirty miles long, by ten or twelve miles wide, and
-is interspersed with a few islands of various sizes, covered with a
-dense growth of tropical vegetation. The country about the lake is
-mostly low and marshy, traversed by creeks, lagoons, and rivers. Most
-of the land is covered by a deep and dreary jungle, intersected at
-intervals by small, sandy plains, covered with a thin growth of long,
-tough grass.
-
-It is difficult to convey in words an adequate idea of what the jungle
-really is. To those who have never seen one it is almost impossible
-to describe it. But in order that you may have some conception of the
-place in which I lived so long, I shall endeavor to picture some
-characteristic spots.
-
-[Illustration: IN THE JUNGLE (From a Photograph.)]
-
-Spread over a vast extent of the low delta region near the coast is
-a growth of gigantic trees, from five to eight feet in diameter near
-the base and growing to a height of eighty or a hundred feet, having
-long, spreading boughs and broad, dark foliage. This growth of trees
-is sufficiently dense to constitute a great forest. The intertwining
-boughs and the dense leaves form an impenetrable canopy, spreading for
-miles in all directions. This is called the “great forest”. Between
-the stalks and under the boughs of this forest is another growth of
-trees varying in diameter from one to two feet at the base and reaching
-to a height of forty, fifty, or sixty feet. This growth alone would
-constitute another forest as dense as were those of North America
-before the visitation of the white man. This growth is called the
-“middle forest”. Under this is another growth, consisting of palms,
-vines, shrubs, and bushes of almost every kind. This growth is so
-dense, so matted and so intertwined as to be in places quite impassable
-by any living creature, except by slimy reptiles, small rodents,
-venomous insects, and creeping things of many kinds. This is called the
-“under forest.” The three combined growths together properly constitute
-_the jungle_. From the boughs of the taller trees hang long pendants
-of moss and vines, and from bough to bough hang graceful festoons of
-the same. These are frequently adorned with delicate ferns and great
-clusters of gorgeous orchids. So dense and luxuriant is the vegetation
-in many parts of the forest that no ray of sunlight ever penetrates
-it, and in its dark, damp grottoes, even at midday, it is almost
-like a twilight. Here and there are found places more open, and from
-these can be had better views of its grandeur. Standing alone in the
-midst of this great wilderness, one cannot fail to be impressed with
-its sublime and awful beauty. From certain points of view the banks
-of leaves rise like terraces, one above another, giving almost the
-appearance of artificial work. From other points are seen groups of
-flowering trees, rising in huge mounds almost to the top of the forest.
-So many and so beautiful are the views from various points that one
-becomes almost lost in a perfect maze of colors, lights, and shadows.
-At times not a sound of any living thing is heard, and the unspeakable
-silence only makes the scene the more impressive. While it is true that
-this great forest teems with life, there are times when it appears to
-be an endless, voiceless solitude. But, remaining for a time within its
-dreary shades, one will behold its many denizens creeping through the
-tangled meshes in quest of food.
-
-Within this vast empire of shadows the fierce wild beasts contend for
-mastery. Among its dark green bowers soar many birds of brilliant
-plumage, and through its silvan naves shriek the wild winds of the
-tornado. Within its deep shadows crouches the leopard awaiting his
-victim, and through its dismal labyrinth the stealthy serpent wends
-his tortuous way. Every breeze is laden with the effluvia of decaying
-plants, and every leaf exhales the odors of death.
-
-In the depths and the gloom of such a forest the gorilla dwells in
-safety and seclusion. In the same wilderness the chimpanzee makes his
-abode. But he is less timid and retiring.
-
-On the south side of this lake, not quite two degrees below the
-equator, and within about twenty miles of the ocean, is the place at
-which I located, in the heart of the primeval forest. Here I erected my
-little fortress and gave it the name of Fort Gorilla. On the 27th of
-April, 1893, I took up my abode in this desolate spot, and began a long
-and solitary vigil.
-
-My sole companion was a young chimpanzee that I named Moses. From time
-to time I had a native boy as a servant. But I found it better to be
-alone and, therefore, when the boy had done his chores he was dismissed
-until such time as his services might be desired.
-
-[Illustration: WAITING AND WATCHING IN THE CAGE (From a Photograph.)]
-
-Seated in this cage in the silence of the great forest, I have seen the
-gorilla in all his majesty, strolling at leisure through his sultry
-domain. Under like conditions I have seen the chimpanzee, and the
-happy, chattering monkeys in the freedom of their jungle home.
-
-In this novel hermitage I remained most of the time for one hundred and
-twelve days and nights.
-
-During this period I had opportunities of watching the animals
-following, in perfect freedom, the pursuits of their daily life. With
-such an experience I trust that I shall not be charged with vanity in
-saying that I have seen more of those animals in a state of nature than
-any other white man ever saw, and under conditions more favorable for
-a careful study of their manners and habits than could otherwise be
-possible. Hence what I have to say concerning them is the result of an
-experience which no other man can justly claim.
-
-I do not mean to ignore or impugn what others have said on this
-subject; but the sum of my labors in this field leads me to doubt much
-that has been said and accepted as true. I regret that it devolves upon
-me to controvert many of the stories told about the great apes, but
-finding no germ of truth in some of them, I cannot evade the duty of
-denying them. I regret it all the more, because many of them have been
-woven into the fabric of natural history, have become integral parts of
-our literature, and received the seal of scientific approval; but time
-will justify and sustain me in the denial. I am aware that bigots of
-certain schools will challenge me for pointing out their mistakes; and
-some will assume to know more about these apes than fishes know about
-swimming; but the simple truth should have precedence over all theories.
-
-Before proceeding with an account of the apes I shall relate some of
-the incidents of my hermitage.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
- Daily Life and Scenes in the Jungle--How I Passed the Time--What I Had
- to Eat--How it was Prepared--How I Slept--My Chimpanzee Companion
-
-
-I am so frequently asked about the details of my daily life in the
-cage, how the time was occupied, and what I saw besides the apes, that
-I deem it of interest to relate a few of the events of my sojourn in
-that wild spot. I shall, therefore, recount the incidents of a single
-day and night; but from day to day of course this routine varied.
-
-About six o’clock, as the sun first peeps into the forest, it finds
-me with a tin cup of coffee just made on a little kerosene stove. It
-is black and dreggy, but with a little sugar it is not bad. With a
-few dry crackers I break my fast of twelve hours and am now ready for
-the task of the day. My bed having been rolled up out of the way and
-Moses helped to a banana or two, I take my rifle, Moses climbs upon
-my shoulder, and we set out for a walk in the bush. When we return we
-bring from the spring, some three hundred yards away, a supply of water
-for the day. Then Moses climbs about in the bushes and amuses himself,
-while I watch for gorillas. Silence is the order of the day. And here
-I sit alone,--sometimes for hours,--in a stillness almost as great as
-that of a tomb.
-
-[Illustration: STARTING FOR A STROLL (From a Photograph.)]
-
-Presently a rustle of the leaves is heard, and a porcupine comes
-waddling into view. He pokes his nose about in search of food, but
-he has not yet discovered my presence. He comes closer. The scent or
-sight of me startles him, and away he goes. Now a civet comes stealing
-through the bush, till he observes me and hastily departs.
-
-After an hour of patient waiting the sound of clashing boughs is
-heard. A few minutes later is seen a school of monkeys, led by a
-solemn-looking old pilot, who doubtless knows every palm tree that
-bears nuts within many miles around. They are now coming to inspect my
-cage and see what new thing this is set up in monkeydom.
-
-[Illustration: A Peep at My Cage]
-
-As they draw nearer they become more cautious. They find a strong
-bough in the top of a big tree, and the grave old pilot perches himself
-far out on it in order to get a good peep at my cage. Just behind him
-sits the next in rank, resting his hands on the shoulder of the leader,
-while a dozen more occupy similar attitudes behind each other along the
-limb. Each one pushes the one just in front of him to make him move up
-a little closer, but none of them except the pilot seems to want the
-front seat.
-
-They look on in silence, occasionally turning their little heads from
-side to side, as if to be certain it is not an illusion. Again they
-nudge each other, and move up a little closer, meanwhile squinting
-their bright eyes, as if in doubt about the strange sight before them.
-They have made such calls before, but have not yet fully determined
-what kind of an animal it is that occupies the cage. At each successive
-visit they come a little nearer, until they are now not a hundred
-feet away. Now they take alarm at something and hurry off in another
-direction.
-
-Next comes a pangolin, prowling about for insects among the leaves. He
-catches a glimpse of the cage, stands motionless for a moment to see
-what it is, and then like a flash he is gone. During this time birds
-of divers kinds are flying in all directions. Some of them perch on
-the limbs near by, some pick nuts from the palm trees, while others
-scream and screech like so many tin whistles or brass horns. The most
-conspicuous among them are the noisy toucans and parrots. Many of them
-have brilliant and beautiful plumage.
-
-It is now ten o’clock. Not a breath of air stirs a leaf of the great
-forest. The heat is sweltering and oppressive. The voices of the birds
-grow less and less frequent. Even the insects do not appear to be so
-busy as they were in the earlier hours of the day. Moses has abandoned
-his rambles in the bush, and sits on a fallen tree, with his arms
-folded, as if he had finished work for the day.
-
-Along towards this hour everything in the forest seems to become
-quiet and inactive, and continues so until about two o’clock in the
-afternoon. I was impressed upon more than one occasion with this
-universal rest during the hottest part of the day, and the same thing
-seems to prevail among aquatic animals.
-
-I now prepare my repast for midday by opening a can of meat or fish,
-and warming it on a tin plate on the little stove. I have no vegetables
-or dessert, but with a few crackers broken up and stirred into the
-grease, and plenty of water to drink, I make an ample meal. When it
-is finished, Moses coils up in his little hammock, swung by my side,
-and takes his siesta. The boy, when there, stretches out on the floor
-and does likewise. During the hours about noon, few things are astir,
-though during that time I have seen some interesting sights.
-
-It must not be supposed that the change is sudden at the beginning or
-at the end of this period, for such is not the case. There is no fixed
-time for anything to cease activity. It is by slow degrees that one
-thing after another becomes quiescent, until life appears to be for a
-time almost extinct; but as the sun descends the western sky, life and
-activity revive, and by three o’clock everything is again astir. Now, a
-lone gorilla comes stalking through the bush, looking for the red fruit
-of the _batuna_, a peculiar fruit that grows near the root of the
-plant. He plucks a bud of some kind, tears it apart with his fingers,
-smells it, and then throws it aside. Now he takes hold of a tall
-sapling, looks up at its shaking branches and turns away. He pauses
-and looks around as if suspicious of danger. He listens to see if
-anything is approaching, but being reassured he resumes his search for
-food. Now he gently parts the tangled vines that intercept his way and
-creeps noiselessly through them. He hesitates, looks carefully around
-him, and then again proceeds. He is coming this way. I see his black
-face as he turns his head from side to side, looking for food. What a
-brutal visage! It has a scowl upon it, as if he were at odds with all
-his race. He is now within a few yards of the cage, but is not aware of
-my presence. He plucks a tendril from a vine, smells it, and puts it
-into his mouth. He plucks another and another. I shall note that vine
-and ascertain what it is. Now he is in a small open space where the
-bush has been cut away so as to afford a better view. He seems to know
-that this is an unusual thing to find in the jungle. He surveys it with
-caution. He comes nearer. Now he has detected me. He sits down upon the
-ground and looks at me as if in utter surprise. A moment more he turns
-aside, looks over his shoulders, and hurries away into the dense jungle.
-
-It is now four o’clock. I hear a wild pig rooting among the fallen
-leaves. I see a small rodent that looks like a diminutive hedgehog. He
-is gnawing the bark from a dead limb, possibly to capture some insect
-secreted under it. But as rodents usually live upon vegetable diet, he
-may have some other reason for this.
-
-It is five o’clock and the shadows in the forest are beginning to
-deepen. I see two little gray monkeys playing in the top of a very
-tall tree. The birds become monotonous and tiresome. Yonder is a small
-snake twined around the limb of a bushy tree. He is probably hunting
-for a nest of young birds. The low muttering sound of distant thunder
-is heard. Little by little it grows louder. It is the familiar voice of
-the coming tornado. I must prepare for it.
-
-The stove is now lighted and a shallow pan of water is set upon it.
-Into it is stirred an ounce of desiccated soup. It is heated to the
-boiling point, and is then set on the swinging table. A can of mutton
-is emptied into another pan of the same kind, and a few crackers are
-broken and stirred into the mutton. The soup is eaten while the meat
-is being warmed. This is now ready, and the flame of the stove is
-turned off. The second course of dinner is now served. It consists of
-canned mutton, crackers, and water. The dishes, consisting of three tin
-platters and a cup, are thrust into the adjacent bush. The ants and
-other insects will clean them during the night.
-
-Moses has now had his supper and has gone to his own little house, to
-find shelter from the approaching storm. The curtains are hung up on
-the side of the cage towards which the tornado is coming. The leaves
-of the forest begin to rustle. It is the first cool breath of the day,
-but it is the herald of the furious wind that is rapidly advancing.
-The tree-tops begin to sway. Now they are lashing each other as if in
-anger. The strong trees are bending from the wind. The lightning is so
-vivid that it is blinding. The thunder is terrific. One shaft after
-another, the burning bolts are hurled through the moaning forest.
-
-Down the frail wires of my cage the water runs in little rivulets.
-Acting as a prism, it refracts the vivid lightning and makes the
-whole fabric look like a latticework of molten fire trickling down
-from the overhanging boughs. Like invisible demons the shrieking
-winds rush through the bending forest, and the unceasing roar of the
-thunder reverberates from the dark recesses of the jungle. Amid the
-din of storming forces is heard the dull thud of falling trees, and
-the crackling limbs are dropping all around. All nature is in a rage.
-Every bird and every beast now seeks a place of refuge from the warring
-elements. No sign of life is visible. No sound is audible save the
-voice of the storm. How unspeakably desolate the jungle is at such
-an hour no fancy can depict. How utterly helpless against the wrath
-of nature a living creature is no one can realize, except by living
-through such an hour in such a place.
-
-On one occasion five large trees were blown down within a radius of a
-few hundred feet of my cage. Scores of limbs were broken off by the
-wind and scattered like straws. Some of them were six or eight inches
-in diameter and ten or twelve feet long. One of them broke the corner
-of the bamboo roof over my cage. The limb was broken off a huge cotton
-tree near by and fell from a height of about sixty feet. It was carried
-by the wind some yards out of a vertical line as it fell, and just
-passed far enough to spare my cage. Had it struck the body of it, the
-cage would have been partly demolished; the main stem of the bough
-was about six inches in diameter and ten feet long. This particular
-tornado lasted for nearly three hours and was the most violent of all I
-saw during the entire year.
-
-Now the storm subsides, but the darkness is impenetrable. I have no
-light of any kind, for that would alarm the inhabitants of the jungle
-and attract a vast army of insects from all quarters. Moses is fast
-asleep, while I sit listening to the many strange and weird sounds
-heard in the jungle at night. The bush crackles near by. A huge leopard
-is creeping through it. He is coming this way. Slowly, cautiously, he
-approaches. I cannot see him in the deep shadows of the foliage, but
-I can locate him by sound, and identify him by his peculiar tread.
-Perhaps when he gets near enough he will attack the cage. He is
-creeping up closer. He evidently smells prey and is bent on seizing it.
-My rifle stands by my elbow. I silently raise it and lay it across my
-lap. The brute is now crouching within a few yards of me, but I cannot
-see to shoot him. I hear him move again, as if adjusting himself to
-spring upon the cage. He surely cannot see it, but by means of scent he
-has located me. I hear a low rustling of the leaves as he swishes his
-tail preparatory to a leap. If I could only touch a button and turn on
-a bright electric light! He remains crouching near, while I sit with
-the muzzle of the rifle turned towards him. My hand is on the lock. It
-is a trying moment. If he should spring with such force as to break the
-frail network that is between us, there could be but one fate for me.
-
-In the brief space of a few seconds a thousand things run through
-one’s mind. They are not necessarily prompted by fear, but rather by
-suspense. Is it best to fire into the black shadows or to wait for the
-leopard’s attack? What is his exact pose? What does he intend? How big
-is he? Can he see me? A category of similar questions rises at this
-critical moment.
-
-A clash of bushes and he is gone; not with the stealthy, cautious steps
-with which he advanced, but in hot haste. He has taken alarm, abandoned
-his purpose, and far away can be heard the dry twigs crashing as he
-hurries to some remote nook. He flees as if he thought he was being
-pursued. He is gone, and I feel a sense of relief.
-
-It is ten o’clock. The low rumbling of distant thunder is all that
-remains of the tornado that swept over the forest a few hours ago. The
-stars are shining, but the foliage of the forest is so dense, that one
-can only see here and there a star peeping through the tangled boughs
-overhead. I hear some little waif among the dead leaves, but what it is
-or what it wants can only be surmised.
-
-Another hour has passed, and I retire for the night. The sounds of
-nocturnal birds are fewer now. I hear a strange, tremulous sound from
-the boughs of the bushes near the cage. The leaves are vibrating. The
-sound ceases and again begins at intervals. I listen with attention,
-for it is a singular sound. It is the movement of a huge python in
-search of birds. He reaches out his head, stretches his neck, grasps
-the bough of a slender bush, releases his coil from another, and by
-contraction draws his slimy body forward. The pliant bough yields to
-his heavy weight. The abrasion causes it to tremble and the leaves to
-quake.
-
-[Illustration: PREPARING FOR THE NIGHT (From a Photograph.)]
-
-I fall asleep and rest in comfort, while the dew that has fallen upon
-the leaves gathers itself into huge drops; their weight bends the
-leaves, and they fall from their lofty place, striking with a sharp,
-popping sound the big leaves far below them. The hours fly by; but in
-the stillness of early morning is heard a most unearthly scream. It is
-the voice of a king gorilla. He makes every leaf in the forest tremble
-with the sound of his piercing shrieks.
-
-Thus another night is erased from the calendar of time and another
-day begins. The dawn awakes to life the teeming forest, and all its
-denizens again go forth to join the universal chase for food.
-
-All of the incidents here cited are true in every detail, but they did
-not occur every day, nor did all of them occur on the same day, as
-might be inferred from the manner in which they are related. But this
-recital gives a fair idea of the daily routine in the bosom of the
-great forest, although this is a mere glimpse of the scenes of life in
-the jungle. By going out for a day or two at a time, hunting on the
-plains a few miles away, I often relieved the monotony. My menu was
-occasionally varied by a mess of parrot soup, a piece of goat, fish,
-or porcupine; but the general average of it was about as has been
-described.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-The Chimpanzee--The Name--Two Species--The Kulu-Kamba
-Distribution--Color and Complexion
-
-
-Next to man the chimpanzee occupies the highest plane in the scale of
-nature. His mental and social traits, together with his physical type,
-assign him to this place.
-
-In his distribution he is confined to equatorial Africa. His habitat,
-roughly outlined, is from the fourth parallel north of the equator
-to the fifth parallel south of it, along the west coast, and extends
-eastward a little more than halfway across the continent. His range
-cannot be defined with precision, for its exact limits are not yet
-known. Its boundary on the north is defined by the Cameroon valley,
-slightly curving towards the north; but its extent eastward is a matter
-of some doubt. He does not appear to be found anywhere north of that
-river, and it is quite certain that the few specimens attributed to the
-north coast of the Gulf of Guinea do not belong to that territory. On
-the south the boundary of his habitat starts from the coast, at a point
-near the fifth parallel, curves slightly northward, crosses the Congo
-near Stanley Pool, pursues a northeasterly course to about the middle
-of the Congo State, and again curves southward across the Upper Congo,
-not far from the north end of Lake Tanganyika. Its limits appear to
-conform more to isothermal lines than to the rigid lines of geography.
-Specimens are sometimes secured by collectors beyond these limits, but,
-so far as I have been able to ascertain, they have been captured within
-the territory thus bounded. There are several centers of population.
-This ape is not strictly confined to any definite topography, but
-occupies alike the upland forests or the low basin lands.
-
-In one section he is known to the natives by one name, and in another
-by a name entirely different. The name _chimpanzee_ is of native
-origin. In the Fiote tongue the name of the ape is _chimpan_, which
-is a slight corruption of the true name. It is properly a compound
-word. The first syllable is from the Fiote word _tyi_, which white
-men erroneously pronounce like “chee.” It means “small,” or inferior,
-and it is found in many of the native compounds. The last syllable is
-from _mpa_, a bushman; hence the word literally means, in the Fiote
-tongue, “a small bushman,” or inferior race. The name really implies
-the idea of a lower order of human being. Among other tribes a common
-name of the ape is _ntyigo_. The latter is derived from the Mpongwe
-word _ntyia_, blood, race, or breed, and the word _iga_, the forest. It
-literally means the “breed of the forest.” The same idea of its being
-a low type of humanity is involved in the two names. Both convey the
-oblique suggestion that the animal is more nearly allied to man than
-other animals are.
-
-There are two distinct types of this ape. They are now regarded as
-two species. One of them is distributed throughout the entire habitat
-described, while the other is only known south of the equator and
-between the second and fifth parallels north of the Congo and west
-of Stanley Pool. Both kinds are found within this district, but the
-variety which is confined to that region is called, by the tribes that
-know the ape, the _kulu-kamba_, in contradistinction from the other
-kind known as _ntyigo_. This name is derived from _kulu_, the onomatope
-of the sound made by the animal and the native verb, _kamba_, to speak;
-hence the name literally means “the thing that speaks kulu.”
-
-In certain respects the common variety differs from the _kulu-kamba_
-in a degree that would indicate that they belong to distinct species;
-but the skulls and the skeletons are so nearly alike that no one can
-identify them from the skeletons alone. In life, however, it is not
-difficult to distinguish them. The _ntyigo_ has a longer face and more
-prominent nose than the _kulu_. His complexion is of all shades of
-brown, from a light tan to a dark, dingy, mummy color. He has a thin
-coat of short, black hair, which is often erroneously described as
-brown; but that effect is due to the blending of the color of his skin
-with that of his suit. In early life his hair is quite black, but in
-advanced age the ends are tipped with a dull white, giving them a dingy
-gray color. The change is due to the same causes that produce gray
-hairs on the human body. But there is one point in which they greatly
-differ. The entire hair of the human becomes white with age, while only
-the outer end of it does so in the chimpanzee. In the human one hair
-becomes white, while others retain their natural color; but in this
-ape all the hairs appear to undergo the same change. In very aged
-specimens the outer part of the hair often assumes a dirty, brownish
-color. This is due to the want of vascular action to supply the color
-pigment. The same effect is often seen in preserved specimens, for the
-same reason that the hair of an Egyptian mummy is brown, though in life
-it had been, doubtless, a jet black. In this ape the hair is uniformly
-black, except the small tuft of white at the base of the spinal column
-and a few white hairs on the lower lip and the chin. I have examined
-about sixty living specimens, and I have never found any other color
-among them, except from the cause mentioned. The normal color of both
-sexes is the same. The _kulu_ has, as a rule, but little hair on the
-top of the head; but that on the back of it and on the neck is much
-longer than elsewhere on the body, and on these parts it is longer than
-that on other apes.
-
-Much stress is laid by some writers on the bald head of one ape and the
-parted hair on the head of another. These features cannot be relied
-upon as having any specific meaning, unless there are as many species
-as there are apes. Sometimes a specimen has no hair on the crown of the
-head, while another differs from it in this respect alone by having
-a suit of hair more or less dense; and yet in every other respect
-they are alike. Some of them have their hair growing almost down to
-the eyebrows, and all hairs appear to diverge from a common center,
-like the radii of a sphere; another of the same species may have the
-hair parted in the middle as neatly as if it had been combed; another
-may have it in wild disorder. The same thing is noticed in certain
-monkeys, and it is equally true of the human being. As a factor in
-classifying, it signifies nothing. It may be remarked that the _kulu_
-is inclined to have but little hair upon the crown of the head.
-
-Between the two species there is a close alliance. The males differ
-more than the females. This is especially true in the structure of
-certain organs. The face of the young _ntyigo_ is free from hairs, but
-in the adult state there is in both sexes a tendency to the growth of
-a light down upon the cheeks. The color of the skin is not uniform
-in all parts of the body. This is especially true of the face. Some
-specimens have patches of dark color set in a lighter ground. Sometimes
-certain parts of the face are dark and other parts light. I have seen
-one specimen quite freckled. It is said by some that the skin is light
-in color when young, and becomes darker with age; but I find no reason
-to believe that such is the case. It is true that the skin darkens a
-few shades as the cuticle hardens, but there is no transition from one
-color to another, and this slight change of shade is chiefly on the
-exposed parts.
-
-The _kulu_ has a short, round face, much like that of a human. In early
-life it is quite free from hairs, but, like the other, a slight down
-appears with age. He has on his body a heavy suit of black hair. It
-is coarser and longer than that of the _ntyigo_. It is also inclined
-to wave, thus having a fluffy aspect. The color is jet black, except
-a small tuft of white about the base of the spine. I have seen two in
-which this tuft was perfectly black. The skin varies in color less than
-in the _ntyigo_, and the darker shades are seldom found. The eyes are a
-shade darker, and in both species the parts of the eye which are white
-in man are brown in them. But this gradually shades off into a yellow
-near the base of the optic nerve. As a rule, the _kulu_ has a clear,
-open visage, with a kindly expression. It is confiding and affectionate
-to a degree beyond any other animal. It is more intelligent than its
-_confrère_, and displays the faculty of reason almost like a human
-being.
-
-One important point in which these two types of ape differ is in the
-scope and quality of their voices. The _kulu_ makes a greater range of
-vocal sounds. Some of them are soft and musical; but those uttered by
-the _ntyigo_ are fewer in number and harsher in quality. One of these
-sounds resembles the bark of a dog, and another is a sharp, screaming
-sound. The _kulu_ evinces a certain sense of gratitude, while the
-_ntyigo_ appears to be almost devoid of that sentiment. There are many
-traits in which they differ, but human beings, even within the same
-family circle, also differ in these qualities. The points in which they
-coincide are many, and, after a brief review of them, we may consider
-the question of making two species of them or assigning them to the
-same.
-
-The skeletons--as we have noted--are the same in form, size, and
-proportion. Their muscular, nervous, and veinous systems are for the
-most part the same. The character of their food and the mode of eating
-are the same in each. In captivity they appear to regard each other as
-one of their own kind; but whether they inter-cross or not remains to
-be learned.
-
-Such is the sum of the likenesses and the differences between the two
-extreme types of this genus. With so many points in common, and so
-few in which they differ, it is a matter of serious doubt whether they
-can be said to constitute two distinct species or only two varieties
-of a common species. This doubt is further emphasized by the fact that
-all the way between these two extremes are gradations of intermediate
-types, so that it is next to impossible to say where one ends and
-another begins.
-
-In view of all these facts, I believe them to be two well-defined
-varieties of the same species. They are the white man and the negro
-of a common stock. They are the patrician and the plebeian of one
-race, or the nobility and the yeomanry of one tribe. They are like
-different phases of the same moon. The _kulu-kamba_ is simply a high
-order of chimpanzee. It is quite true that two varieties of one species
-usually have the same vocal characteristics, and this appears to be the
-strongest point in favor of assigning them to separate species, but it
-is not impossible that even this may be waived. Leaving this question
-for others to decide as they find the evidence to sustain them, we
-shall for the present regard them as one kind, and consider their
-physical, social, and mental characteristics.
-
-Whether they are all of one species, or divided into many, the same
-habits, traits, and modes of life prevail throughout the entire group,
-so that one description will apply to all, so far as we have to deal
-with them as a whole. Elsewhere will be related certain incidents which
-apply to individuals of the two kinds mentioned; but in treating of
-them collectively the term _chimpanzee_ is meant to include the whole
-group, except where it is otherwise specified.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-Physical Qualities of the Chimpanzee--His Social Habits--Mental
-Characteristics
-
-
-Physically considered, the chimpanzee very closely resembles man, but
-there are certain points in which he differs both from man and from
-other apes. We may notice a few of these points. The model of the
-ear of the chimpanzee closely resembles that of man, but the organ
-is larger in size and thinner in proportion. It is very sensitive to
-sound, but dull to touch. The surface is not well provided with nerves.
-He cannot erect his ear, as most animals do, by the use of the muscles
-at the base; but, like the human ear, the muscles are useless, and in
-this respect the ear is fixed and helpless.
-
-The hand of the chimpanzee is long and narrow. The finger bones are
-larger, in proportion to their size, than those of the human hand. One
-thing peculiar to the hand of the chimpanzee is that the tendons inside
-of the hand (those called the flexors), which are designed to close the
-finders, are shorter than the line of the bones. On this account the
-fingers of the ape are always held in a curve. He cannot straighten
-them. This is probably due to the habit of climbing, in which he
-indulges to such a great extent. He also indulges in the practice of
-hanging suspended by the hands. In making his way through the bush
-he often swings himself by the arms from bough to bough. Sometimes he
-suspends himself by one arm, while he uses the other to pluck and eat
-fruit. This characteristic is transmitted to the young, and is found in
-the first stages of infancy. The thumb is not truly opposable, but is
-inclined to close towards the palm of the hand. It is of little use to
-him. His nails are thick, dark in color, and not quite so flat as those
-of man.
-
-The great toe, instead of being in line with the others, projects at
-an angle from the side of the foot, something after the manner of the
-human thumb. The foot itself is quite flexible and has great prehensile
-power. In climbing, and in many other ways, it is used as a hand. The
-tendons in the sole of the foot are equal in length to the line of the
-bones, and the digits of the foot can be straightened; but from the
-habitual use of them in climbing, the ape is predisposed to close the
-digits, wherefore the foot is naturally inclined to curve into an arch,
-especially in the line of the first and second digits.
-
-His habit of walking is peculiar. The greater part of the weight is
-borne upon the legs. The sole of the foot is placed almost flat on the
-ground, but the pressure is greatest along the outer edge, in the line
-of the last digit. This is easily noticed where he walks over plastic
-ground. In the act of walking he always uses the hands, but he does
-not place the palms on the ground. He uses the backs of the fingers
-instead. Sometimes only the first joints or phalanges, resting upon the
-nails, are placed on the ground. At other times the first and second
-joints are used. I have seen one specimen that, when walking, employed
-the backs of all his fingers, from the knuckles to the nails. The
-integument on these parts is not callous, like that of the palm. The
-color pigment is distributed the same as on other exposed parts of the
-body. These facts show that the weight of the body is not borne on the
-fore limbs, as it is in the case of a true quadruped, but indicate that
-the hand is only used to balance the body while in the act of walking
-and to shift the weight from foot to foot. The weight is, therefore,
-not equally distributed between the hands and the feet, and the animal
-cannot truly be said to be a quadruped in habit.
-
-His waddling gait is caused by his short legs, stooping habit, and
-heavy body. All animals having stout bodies and short legs are
-predisposed to a waddling motion, which is due to the wide angle
-between the weight and the changing center of gravity. This motion
-is more conspicuous in bipeds than in quadrupeds, because the base
-supporting the weight is reduced to a single point.
-
-The chimpanzee is neither a true quadruped nor a true biped, but
-combines the habits of both. It appears to be a transition state from
-the former to the latter. Vestiges of this mixed habit are still to be
-found in man. In the act of walking his arms alternate in motion with
-his legs. This suggests the idea that he may have had, at some time, a
-similar habit of locomotion. Such a fact does not necessarily show that
-he was ever an ape, but it does point to the belief that he has once
-occupied a horizon in nature like that now occupied by the ape, and
-that having emerged from it, he still retains traces of the habit. This
-peculiarity is still more easily observed in children than in adults.
-In early infancy all children are inclined to be bow-legged. In their
-first efforts at walking they invariably press most of their weight on
-the outer edge of the foot and curve the toes inward, as if to grasp
-the surface on which the foot is placed. The instinct of prehension
-cannot be mistaken. It differs in degree in different races, and is
-vastly more pronounced in negro infants than in white ones.
-
-There is another peculiar feature in the walk of the chimpanzee. The
-arms and legs do not alternate in motion with the same degree of
-regularity that they do in man or quadrupeds. This ape uses his arms
-more like crutches. They are moved forward, not quite, but almost at
-the same instant, and the motion of the legs is not at equal intervals.
-To be more explicit: the hands are placed almost opposite each other;
-the right foot is advanced about three times its length; the left
-foot is then placed about one length in front of the right; the arms
-are again moved; the right foot is again advanced about three lengths
-forward of the left; and the left again brought about one length in
-front of that. The same animal does not always use the same foot to
-make the long stride. It will be seen by this that each foot moves
-through the same space, and that, in a line, the tracks of either foot
-are the same distance apart; but the distance from the track of the
-right foot to that of the left is about three times as great as the
-distance from the track of the left foot to that of the right. Or the
-reverse may be the case. The distance from the track of either foot to
-the succeeding track of the other is never the same between the right
-and left tracks, except where the animal is walking at great leisure.
-
-There is, perhaps, no animal more awkward than the chimpanzee, when he
-attempts to run. He sometimes swings his body with such force between
-his arms as to lose his balance and fall backward on the ground.
-Sometimes when he rights himself again, he is half his length backward
-of his starting point.
-
-The chimpanzee is doubtless a better climber than the gorilla. He finds
-much of his food in trees; but he is not, in the proper sense of the
-term, arboreal. To be arboreal, the animal must be able to sleep in a
-tree or on a perch. The chimpanzee cannot do so. He sleeps the same as
-a human being does. He lies down on his back or side, and frequently
-uses his arms for a pillow. I do not believe it possible for him to
-sleep on a perch. He may sometimes doze in that way, but the grasp of
-his foot is only brought into use when he is conscious. I have often
-known Moses to climb down from the trees and lie upon the ground to
-take a nap. I never saw him so much as doze in any other position.
-
-I may here call attention to one fact concerning the arboreal habit.
-There appears to be a rule to which this habit conforms. Among apes
-and monkeys the habit is in keeping with the size of the animal. The
-largest monkeys are found only among the lowest trees, and the small
-monkeys among the taller trees. It is a rare thing to see a large
-monkey in the top of a tall tree. He may venture there for food or
-to make his escape, but it is not his proper element. The same rule
-appears to hold good among the apes. The gibbon has the arboreal
-habit in a more pronounced degree than any other true ape. The orang
-appears to be next; the chimpanzee comes in for third place, and the
-gorilla last. It must not be understood that all of these apes do not
-frequently climb, even to the tops of the highest trees; but that is
-not their normal mode of life, any more than the top of a mast is the
-habitual place for a sailor on a ship.
-
-The chimpanzee is nomadic in habit, and, like the gorilla, seldom or
-never passes two nights in the same spot. As to his building huts or
-nests in trees or elsewhere, I am not prepared to believe that he ever
-does that. For months I hunted in vain and made diligent inquiry in
-several tribes, but failed to find a specimen of any kind of shelter
-built by an ape. I do not assert that it is absolutely untrue that he
-does this, but I have never been able to obtain any evidence of it,
-except the statement of the natives. On the contrary, certain facts
-point to the opposite belief. If the ape built himself a permanent
-home, the natives would soon discover it and there would be no
-difficulty in having it pointed out. If he built a new one every night,
-however rude and primitive it might be, there would be so many of them
-in the forest that there would be no difficulty in finding them. The
-nomadic habit plainly shows that he does not build the former kind, and
-the utter absence of them shows that he does not build the latter kind.
-The whole story appears to be without foundation.
-
-In addition to these facts, one thing to be noticed is that few or none
-of the mammals of the tropics ever build any kind of home. The animals
-that in other climates have the habit of burrowing do not appear to
-do so in the tropics, This is due, no doubt, to the warm climate, in
-which they are not in need of shelter. Of course birds and other
-oviparous animals build nests, as they do elsewhere. The period of
-incubation makes this necessary.
-
-The longevity of these apes is largely a matter of conjecture, but
-from a cursory study of their dentition and other facts of their
-development, it appears that the male reaches the adult stage at an
-age ranging from eight to ten years, while the female matures between
-six and eight. These appear to be the periods at which they pass from
-the state of adolescence. Some of them live to be perhaps forty years
-of age, or upwards, but the average life is probably not more than
-twenty-one to twenty-three years. The average of life is, doubtless,
-more uniform with them than with man. These figures are not mere
-guesswork, but are deduced from reliable data.
-
-The period of gestation in both these apes is a matter that cannot be
-stated with certainty. Some of the natives say that it is nine months,
-while others believe that it is seven months or less. There are some
-facts to support each of these claims, but nothing is quite conclusive.
-The sum of the evidence that I could find rather points to a term of
-four and a half months, or thereabouts, as the true period. During
-the months of January and February the male gorillas are vociferous
-in their screaming, the young adults separate from the families, and
-other things indicate that this is the season of pairing and breeding.
-They may not be strictly confined to this period, but the inference
-that they are so is well founded. It is quite certain that the season
-of bearing the young is from the beginning of May to the end of June.
-It is about this time that the dry season begins, and it continues
-for four months. It would appear that nature has selected this period
-of the year because it is more favorable for rearing the young. During
-this season food is more abundant and can be secured with less effort.
-The lowlands are drier, and this enables the mother to retire with her
-young to the dense jungle, where she is less exposed to danger than
-she would be in the more open forest. It is uncertain whether or not
-the periods are the same with both apes. Native reports differ on this
-point. But it is probable that they are the same. The average of this
-season is about four and a half moons, or eighteen weeks.
-
-From a social point of view the chimpanzee appears to be of a little
-higher caste than other apes. In his marital ideas he is polygamous,
-but is in a certain degree loyal to his family. The paternal instinct
-is a trifle more refined in him than in other simians. He seems to
-appreciate better the relationship of parent and child and to retain
-it longer than others do. Most male animals become estranged from
-their young and discard them at a very early age. The chimpanzee keeps
-his children with him until they are old enough to go away and rear
-families of their own.
-
-The family of the chimpanzee frequently consists of three or four wives
-and ten or twelve children, with one adult male. There are known cases
-in which two or three adult males have been seen in the same family,
-but each one having his own wives and children. In such an event there
-seems to be one who is supreme. This fact suggests the idea that
-among them a form of patriarchal government prevails. The wives and
-children do not apparently question the authority of the patriarch or
-rebel against it. The male parent often plays with his children and is
-seemingly very fond of them.
-
-There is one universal error that I desire here to correct. It is the
-common idea that animals are so strongly possessed of the paternal
-instinct that they nobly sacrifice their own lives in defense of their
-young. I do not wish to dispel any belief that tends to dignify or
-ennoble animals, for I am their friend and champion. But truth demands
-that this statement be qualified. It is quite true that many have
-lost their lives in such acts of defense, but it was not a voluntary
-sacrifice. It is not alone in the defense of their young, but in many
-cases it is an act of self-defense. In other instances it is from a
-lack of judgment. These apes have often been frightened away from
-their young and the latter captured while the parents were fleeing
-from the scene. This may have been the result of sagacity rather than
-of depravity; but the parental instinct in both sexes and in many
-instances has failed to restrain them from flight. If it be a foe
-that appears to come within the measure of their own power, they will
-defend their young, and this sometimes results in the loss of their own
-lives; but if it be one of such formidable aspect as to appear quite
-invincible, the parents leave the young to their fate. This is true of
-all animals, including mankind.
-
-I have no desire to detract from the heroic quality of this instinct
-or to dim the glory it sheds upon the noble deeds ascribed to it, but
-the fact that a parent incurs the risk of its own life in the defense
-of its young is not a true test of the strength or quality of this
-instinct. It is only in the few isolated cases of a voluntary sacrifice
-of the parent, foreknowing the result, that it can be said the act was
-due to instinct. In most such cases the parent acts under a belief
-in its own ability to rescue the one in danger, the parent not being
-wholly aware of its own peril. I doubt if any animal except man ever
-deliberately offered its own life as a ransom for that of another. Such
-instances in human history are so rare as to immortalize the actor.
-
-To whatever extent the instinct may be found, it is much stronger in
-the female than in the male, and it appears to be stronger in domestic
-animals than in wild ones. To what extent this is due to their contact
-with man, it is difficult to say. The germ may be inherent, but it
-responds to culture.
-
-The fact that the ape deserts its offspring under certain conditions
-may be taken as an evidence of superior intelligence affording it a
-higher appreciation of life and danger, rather than a low, brutish
-impulse. It is the exercise of superior judgment that causes man to act
-with more prudence than other animals. It does not detract from his
-nobleness.
-
-Within the family circle of the chimpanzee the father is supreme;
-but he does not degrade his royalty by being a tyrant. Each member
-of the family seems to have certain rights that are not impugned by
-others. Possession is the right of ownership. When one ape procures
-a certain article of food, the others do not try to dispossess him.
-It is probably from this source that man inherits the idea of private
-ownership. It is the same principle, amplified, by which nations claim
-the right of territory. Nations often violate this right, and so do
-chimpanzees, when not held in check by something more potent than a
-mere abstract sense of justice. With all due respect, I do not think
-the ape so much abuses the right by urging his claim beyond his real
-needs as nations sometimes do.
-
-When a member of a family of apes is ill, the others are quite
-conscious of the fact and evince a certain amount of solicitude. Their
-conduct indicates that they have, in a small degree, the passion of
-sympathy, but the emotion is feeble and wavering. So far as I know,
-they do not essay any treatment, except to soothe and comfort the
-sufferer. They surely have some definite idea of what death is, and
-I have sometimes had reason to believe that they have a name for it.
-They do not readily abandon their sick, but when one of them is unable
-to travel with the band the others rove about for days, keeping within
-call of it; but they do not minister to its wants. It is said that if
-one of them is wounded the others will rescue it if possible and convey
-it to a place of safety. I cannot vouch for this, as such an incident
-has never come within my own experience.
-
-One of the most remarkable of all the social habits of the chimpanzee
-is the _kanjo_, as it is called in the native tongue. The word does
-not mean “dance” in the sense of saltatory gyrations, but it implies
-more the idea of “carnival.” It is believed that more than one family
-take part in these festivities. Here and there in the jungle is found
-a small spot of sonorous earth. It is irregular in shape and about two
-feet across. The surface is of clay and is artificial. The clay is
-superimposed upon a kind of peat bed, which, being porous, acts as a
-resonance cavity and intensifies the sound. This constitutes a kind of
-drum. It yields rather a dead sound, but this is of considerable volume.
-
-[Illustration: KANJO NTYIGO-CHIMPANZEE DANCE]
-
-This queer drum is thus made by the chimpanzees. They secure the clay
-along the banks of some stream in the vicinity. They carry it by hand,
-deposit it while in a plastic state, spread it over the place selected,
-and let it dry. I have placed in the museum of Buffalo, N. Y., a part
-of one of these drums that I brought home with me from the Nkami
-forest. It shows the finger-prints of the apes. They were impressed in
-it while the mud was yet soft.
-
-After the drum is quite dry, the chimpanzees assemble by night in great
-numbers and the carnival begins. One or two of them beat violently on
-this dry clay, while others jump up and down in a wild and grotesque
-manner. Some of them utter long, rolling sounds, as if trying to sing.
-When one tires of beating the drum, another relieves him, and in this
-fashion the festivities continue for hours. I know of nothing like this
-in the social system of any other animal, but what it signifies or what
-its origin was is quite beyond my knowledge. They do not indulge in
-this _kanjo_ in all parts of their domain, nor does it occur at regular
-intervals.
-
-The chimpanzee is averse to solitude. He is fond of the society of man
-and is, therefore, easily domesticated. If allowed to go at liberty,
-he is well disposed, and is strongly attached to man. If confined, he
-becomes vicious and ill-tempered. All animals, including man, have the
-same tendency. Mentally the chimpanzee occupies a high plane within
-his own sphere of life, but within those limits the faculties of the
-mind are not called into frequent exercise and, therefore, they are not
-so active as they are in man.
-
-It is difficult to compare the mental status of the ape to that of
-man, because there is no common basis upon which the two rest. Their
-modes of life are so unlike as to afford no common unit of measure.
-Their faculties are developed along different lines. The two have but
-few problems in common to solve. While the scope of the human mind
-is vastly wider than that of the ape, it does not follow that it can
-act in all things with more precision. There are, perhaps, instances
-in which the mind of the ape excels that of man by reason of its
-adaptation to certain conditions. It is not a safe and infallible guide
-to measure all things by the standard of man’s opinion of himself.
-It is quite true that, by such a unit of measure, the comparison is
-much in favor of man; but the conclusion is neither just nor adequate.
-It is a problem of great interest, however, to compare them in this
-manner, and the result indicates that a fair specimen of adult ape
-is in about the same mental horizon as a child of one year old. But
-if the operation were reversed and man were placed under the natural
-conditions of the ape, the comparison would prove much less in favor of
-man. There is no common mental unit between them.
-
-On problems that concern his own comfort or safety the chimpanzee
-exercises the faculty of reason with a fair degree of precision. He
-is quick to interpret motives or to discern intents, and he is a rare
-judge of character. He is inquisitive, but not so imitative as monkeys
-are. He is more observant of the relations of cause and effect. In his
-actions he is controlled by more definite motives. He is docile and
-quickly learns anything that lies within the range of his own mental
-plane.
-
-The opinion has long prevailed that these apes subsist upon a vegetable
-diet. That is a mistake. In this respect their habits are much the same
-as those of man, except that the latter has learned to cook, but the
-former eats his food raw. Their natural tastes are greatly diversified,
-and they are not all equally fond of the same articles of food. Most
-of them are partial to the wild mango, which grows in abundance in
-certain localities in the forest. This is often available when other
-kinds of food are scarce. It thus becomes, as it were, a staple article
-of food. There are many kinds of nuts to be found in their domain, but
-the nut of the oil palm is a great favorite. They sometimes eat the
-kola nut, but they are not partial to it. Several kinds of small fruits
-and berries also form part of their diet. They eat the stalks of some
-plants, the tender buds of others, and the tendrils of certain vines.
-The names of these vines I do not know.
-
-Most of the fruits and plants that are relished by them are either
-acidulous or bitter in taste. They are not especially fond of sweet
-fruits. They prefer those having the flavors mentioned. They eat
-bananas, pineapples, or other sweet fruits, but rarely do so from
-choice. Most of them appear to prefer a lime to an orange, a plantain
-to a banana, a kola nut to a sweet mango. In captivity they acquire a
-taste for sweet foods of all kinds.
-
-In addition to these articles they devour birds, lizards, and small
-rodents. They rob birds of their eggs and their young. They make havoc
-of many kinds of large insects. Those that I have owned were fond of
-cooked meats and salt fish, either raw or cooked.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-The Speech of Chimpanzees--A New System of Phonetic Symbols--Some
-Common Words--Gestures
-
-
-The speech of chimpanzees (as of other simians) is limited to a few
-sounds, and these chiefly relate to their natural wants. The entire
-vocabulary of their language embraces perhaps not more than twenty-five
-or thirty words. Many of them are vague or ambiguous, but they express
-the concept of the ape with as much precision as it is defined to his
-mind, and quite distinctly enough for his purpose.
-
-During my researches I have learned ten words of the speech of this
-ape, so that I can understand them and make myself understood by them.
-In tone, pitch, and modulation most of the sounds are within the
-compass of the human voice. Two of them are much greater in volume than
-it is possible for the human lungs to reach, and one of them rises to
-a pitch more than an octave higher than a human voice of middle pitch.
-These two sounds are audible at a great distance, but they do not
-properly fall within the limits of speech.
-
-The vocal organs of the chimpanzee resemble those of man as closely
-as other physical features have been shown to resemble. They differ
-slightly in one respect that is worthy of notice. Just above the
-opening called the glottis (which is the opening between the vocal
-cords) are two small sacs or ventricles. In the ape these are larger
-and more flexible than in man. In the act of speaking they are inflated
-by the air passing out of the lungs into the long tube called the
-larynx. The function of these ventricles is to control and modify the
-sound by increasing or decreasing the pressure of the air that is
-jetted through the tube. They serve at the same time as a reservoir and
-as a gauge.
-
-In the louder sounds uttered by the chimpanzee these ventricles greatly
-distend. This intensifies the voice or increases its volume. It is
-partly due to these little sacs that the ape is able to make such a
-loud and piercing scream. But the pitch and volume of his voice cannot
-be alone due to this cause, for the gorilla (in which these ventricles
-are much smaller) can make a vastly louder sound. We may be mistaken,
-however, about the sound commonly ascribed to him.
-
-Although the sounds made by the chimpanzee can be imitated by the
-human voice, they cannot be expressed or represented by any system of
-phonetic symbols in use among men. Alphabets have been deduced from
-pictographs, and the conventional symbol that is used to represent a
-given sound has no reference to the organs of speech that produced it.
-The few rigid lines that have survived and that now form the alphabets
-are within themselves meaningless, but they have been so long used to
-represent the elementary sounds of speech that it would be difficult to
-supplant them with others.
-
-As no literal formula can be made to represent the phonetic elements
-of the speech of chimpanzees, I have taken a new step in the art of
-writing. I suggest a system of symbols which is rational in method and
-simple in device.
-
-The organs of speech always act in harmony. A certain movement of the
-lips is always attended by a certain movement of the internal organs of
-speech. This is true of the ape as well as of man. In order to utter
-the same sounds, each would employ the same organs and use them in the
-same manner.
-
-By this means deaf-mutes are able to distinguish the sounds of speech
-and to reproduce them, although they do not hear them. By close study
-and long practice they learn to distinguish the most delicate shades of
-sound.
-
-In this plain fact lies the clue to the method I offer for
-consideration. As yet it is only in the infant stage, but it is
-possible to be made, with a very few symbols, to represent the whole
-range of vocal sounds made by man or other animals.
-
-The chief symbols I employ are the parentheses used in common print.
-The two curved lines placed with the convex sides opposite, thus, (),
-represent the open glottis, in which position the voice utters the
-broad sound of “A,” as in “father.” The glottis about half closed
-utters the sound of “O.” To represent this sound a period is inserted
-between the two curved lines, thus, (.). When the aperture is still
-more contracted it produces the sound of “U,” like “[=oo]” in “woo.”
-To represent this sound a colon is placed between the lines, thus,
-(:). When the aperture is restricted to a still smaller compass the
-sound of “U” short is uttered, as in “but.” To represent this sound an
-apostrophe is placed between the lines, thus, (.). When the vocal cords
-are brought to a greater tension, and the aperture is almost closed,
-it utters the short sound of “E,” as in “met.” To represent this sound
-a hyphen is inserted between the lines, thus, (-). These are the
-main vowel sounds of all animals, although in man they are sometimes
-modified, and to them is added the sound of “E” long, while in the ape
-the long sounds of “O” and “E” are rarely heard.
-
-From this vowel basis all other sounds may be developed, and by the use
-of diacritics to indicate the movements of the organs of speech the
-consonant elements are indicated.
-
-A single parenthesis, with the concave side to the left, will represent
-the initial sound of “W,” which sometimes occurs in the sounds of
-animals. When used, it is placed on the left side of the leading
-symbol, thus,)(), and this symbol, as it stands, is pronounced nearly
-like “O-A,” the “O” being suppressed until almost inaudible. Turning
-the concave side to the right, and placing it on the right side of
-the symbol, thus, ()(, it represents the vanishing sound of “W.”
-This symbol reads “A-O,” with the latter vocal suppressed into the
-terminal sound of “O.” The apostrophe placed before or after the symbol
-will represent “F” or “V.” The grave accent, thus, è, represents the
-breathing sound of “H,” whether placed before or after the symbol, and
-the acute accent, thus, é, represents the aspirate sound of that letter.
-
-When the symbol is written with a numeral exponent, it indicates the
-degree of pitch. If there is no figure, the sound is such as would be
-made by the human voice in ordinary speech. The letter “X” indicates a
-repetition of the sound, and the numeral placed after it will show the
-number of times repeated, instead of the pitch. For example, we will
-write the sound (.), which is equivalent to long “O,” made in a normal
-tone; the same symbol written thus (.)^2 indicates that the sound is
-made with greater energy, and about five semitones higher. To write
-it thus, (.)^2X, indicates that the sound is five semitones above the
-normal pitch of the human voice and is once repeated.
-
-I shall not subject the reader to the tedium of elaborate details
-of the system here outlined. This brief _exposé_ of the method of
-representing the sounds of animals is sufficient to convey an idea of
-the means by which it is possible to write the sounds of all animals,
-so that the student of phonetics will recognize at once the character
-of the sound, even if he cannot reproduce it by natural means.
-
-It may be of interest to describe the character and use of some of
-the sounds uttered by the chimpanzee. The most frequent sound made by
-animals is that referring to food, and therefore it may claim the first
-attention. This word in the language of the chimpanzee begins with the
-short sound of the vowel “U,” which blends into a strong breathing
-sound of “H.” The lips are compressed at the sides, and the aperture of
-the mouth is nearly round. It is not difficult to imitate, and the ape
-readily understands it even when poorly made. By the method of writing
-above described it is expressed thus, (^I)`.
-
-A sound that is of frequent use among them is that used for calling.
-The vowel element is “[=U]” long, slightly sharpened. It merges into
-a distinct vanishing “W.” Expressed in symbols, it is (:)(. The food
-sound is often repeated two or three times in succession, but the call
-is rarely repeated, except at long intervals.
-
-One sound which is rather soft and musical is an expression of
-friendship or amity. It appears to soften in tone and lengthen in
-duration in a degree commensurate with the intensity of the sentiment.
-The vowel element is a long “U.” It blends into an aspirated “H.” It is
-fairly represented by the symbol (:)´.
-
-The most complex sound that I have so far heard made by them is the one
-elsewhere described as meaning “good.” They often use it in very much
-the same sense as man uses the expression “thanks,” or “thank you.” It
-is not probable that they use it as a polite term, yet the same idea is
-present.
-
-One of the words of warning or alarm contains a vowel element closely
-resembling the short sound of “E.” It terminates with the breathing
-sound of “H.” It is used to announce the approach of anything that the
-animal is familiar with, and not afraid of. If the warning is intended
-to apprise you of the approach of an enemy, or something strange, the
-same vowel element is used, but terminates with the aspirate sound
-of “H” pronounced with energy and distinctness. The vowel element is
-the same in both words, but they differ in the time required to utter
-them, and the final breathing and aspirate effects. There is also a
-difference in the manner of the speaker in the act of delivering the
-word. It plainly indicates that he knows the use and value of the
-sounds. At the approach of danger the latter word is often given
-almost in a whisper, and at long intervals apart, increasing in
-loudness as the danger approaches. The other word is usually spoken
-distinctly, and frequently repeated. It is worthy of note that the
-natives use a similar word in the same manner and for the same purpose.
-
-There are other sounds which are easily identified but difficult to
-describe, such as that used to signify “cold” or “discomfort”; another
-for “drink” or “thirst,” another referring to “illness,” and still
-another which I have reason to believe means “dead” or “death.” There
-are perhaps a dozen more words that can readily be distinguished, but
-as yet I have not been able to determine their exact meanings. I have
-an opinion concerning some of them, but have not yet reached a final
-conclusion about them.
-
-The chimpanzee makes use of a few signs which may be regarded as
-auxiliary factors of expression. He makes a negative sign by moving
-the head from side to side in the same manner as man does, but the
-gesture is not frequent or pronounced. Another negative sign, which is
-more common, is a wave-like motion of the hand from the body towards
-the person or thing addressed. This sign is sometimes made with great
-emphasis. There is no question as to its meaning. The manner of making
-this sign is not uniform. Sometimes it is done by an urgent motion of
-the hand. Bringing it from his opposite side, with the back forward, it
-is thrust towards the person or thing approaching. The interpretation
-is, that the ape objects to the approach. The same sign is often made
-as a refusal of anything offered him. Another way of making this sign
-is with the arm extended forward, the hand hanging down, and the back
-towards the person approaching or the thing refused. In addition to
-these negative signs there is one which may be regarded as affirmative.
-It is made simply by extending one arm towards the person or thing
-desired. It sometimes serves the purpose of beckoning. In this act
-there is no motion of the hand. These signs appear to be innate, and
-are very similar in character to those used by men to signify the same
-idea.
-
-It must not be inferred from this small list of words and signs that
-there is nothing left to learn. So far only the first step, as it
-were, has been taken in the study of the speech of apes. As we grow
-more familiar with their sounds, the difficulty of understanding them
-becomes correspondingly less. I have not been disappointed in what I
-hoped to learn from these animals. The total number of words that I
-have been able to distinguish up to this time is about one hundred.
-Of these I have interpreted about thirty. Of late I have given no
-attention to the small monkeys. I shall resume the study of them at
-some future day, as it forms an essential part of the task which I have
-assumed. The fact that animals are able to interpret human speech is
-of itself proof that they possess the speech instinct. But a careful
-study of their habits reveals the further proof that they possess
-and exercise the faculty of speech. In addition to these facts they
-sometimes acquire new speech sounds. This is progress. If an ape can
-take one step in the development of speech, why may he not take two?
-One instance which is cited in the chapter treating of Moses, my ape
-companion, I regard as the climax of all my efforts in the study or
-training of apes, and that is the fact that I succeeded in teaching him
-one word of human speech. This alone is sufficient to demonstrate that
-the animal has within him the resources of speech.
-
-In conclusion I again assert that the sounds uttered by these apes
-have the characteristics of human speech. The speaker is conscious of
-the meaning of the sound used. The pitch and volume of the voice are
-regulated to suit the condition under which it is used. The ape knows
-the value of sound as a medium of conveying thought. These and many
-other facts show that their sounds are truly speech.
-
-To compare the mental faculties of the wild ape to the domesticated dog
-is not a fair standard by which to measure their respective abilities.
-The dog has acquired much by his long and intimate association with
-man. If the ape were placed under domestication, and kept there as long
-as the dog has been, he would be as far superior to the dog in point of
-sagacity as he is by nature above the wild progenitors of the canine
-race.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII
-
-Moses--His Capture--His Character--His Affections--His Food--His Daily
-Life--Anecdotes of Him
-
-
-During my sojourn in the forest I had a fine young chimpanzee, which
-was of ordinary intelligence, and he was of more than ordinary
-interest, because of his history. I gave him the name Moses,--not in
-derision of the historic Israelite of that name, but owing to the
-circumstances of his capture and his life. He was found all alone in
-a wild papyrus swamp of the Ogowé River. No one knew who his parents
-were. The low bush in which he was crouched when discovered was
-surrounded by water, and thus the poor little waif was cut off from the
-adjacent dry land. As the native approached to capture him, the timid
-little ape tried to climb up among the vines above him and escape;
-but the agile hunter seized him. At first the chimpanzee screamed and
-struggled to get away, because he had perhaps never before seen a man;
-but when he found that he was not going to be hurt, he put his frail
-arms around his captor and clung to him as a friend. Indeed, he seemed
-glad to be rescued from such a dreary place, even by such a strange
-creature as a man. For a moment the man feared that the cries of his
-young prisoner might call its mother to the rescue, and possibly a
-band of others; but if she heard, she did not respond; so he tied the
-baby captive with a thong of bark, put him into a canoe, and brought
-him away to the village. There he supplied him with food and made him
-quite cosy. The next day he was sold to a trader. About this time I
-passed up the river on my way to the jungle in search of the gorilla
-and other apes. Stopping at the station of the trader, I bought the
-young chimpanzee and took him along with me. We soon became the best of
-friends and constant companions.
-
-It was supposed that the mother chimpanzee had left her babe in the
-tree while she went off in search of food, and had wandered so far away
-that she lost her bearings and could not again find him. He appeared
-to have been for a long time without food, and may have been crouching
-there in the forks of that tree for a day or two; but this was only
-inferred from his hunger, as there was no way to determine how long he
-had remained, or even how he got there.
-
-I designed to bring Moses up in the way that good chimpanzees ought to
-be brought up; so I began to teach him good manners, in the hope that
-some day he would be a shining light to his race, and aid me in my work
-among them. To that end I took great care of him, and devoted much time
-to the study of his natural manners, and to improving them as much as
-his nature would allow.
-
-I built him a neat little house within a few feet of my cage. It was
-enclosed with a thin cloth, and at the door I hung a curtain to keep
-out mosquitoes and other insects. It was supplied with plenty of soft,
-clean leaves, and some canvas bed-clothing. It was covered over with
-a bamboo roof, and was suspended a few feet from the ground, so as to
-keep out the ants.
-
-Moses soon learned to adjust the curtain and go to bed without my
-aid. He would lie in bed in the morning until he heard me or the boy
-stirring about the cage, when he would poke his little black head out
-and begin to jabber for his breakfast. Then he would climb out and come
-to the cage to see what was going on. He was not confined at all, but
-quite at liberty to go about in the forest, climb the trees and bushes,
-and have a good time of it. He was jealous of the boy, and the boy
-was jealous of him, especially when it came to a question of eating.
-Neither of them seemed to want the other to eat anything that they
-mutually liked, and I had to act as umpire in many of their disputes
-on that grave subject, which seemed to be the central thought of both
-of them. I frequently allowed Moses to dine with me, and I never knew
-him to refuse, or to be late in coming, on such occasions; but his
-table etiquette was not of the best order. I gave him a tin plate and
-a wooden spoon. He did not like to use the latter, but seemed to think
-that it was pure affectation for any one to eat with such an awkward
-thing. He always held it in one hand while he ate with the other or
-drank his soup out of the plate. It was such a task to get washing done
-in that part of the world, that I resorted to all means of economy in
-that matter, and for a tablecloth I used a leaf of newspaper, when I
-had one. To tear that paper afforded Moses an amount of pleasure that
-nothing else would, and in this act his conduct was more like that of
-a naughty child than in anything else he did, When he would first
-take his place at the table, he would behave in a nice and becoming
-manner; but having eaten till he was quite satisfied, he usually became
-rude and saucy. He would slyly put his foot up over the edge of the
-table, and catch hold of the corner of the paper, meanwhile watching
-me closely, to see if I was going to scold him. If I remained quiet,
-he would tear the paper just a little and wait to see the result. If
-no notice was taken of that, he would tear it a little more, but keep
-watching my face to see when I observed him. If I raised my finger
-to him, he quickly let go, drew his foot down, and began to eat. If
-nothing more was done to stop him, the instant my finger and eyes were
-dropped, that dexterous foot was back on the table and the mischief
-was resumed with more audacity than before. When he carried his fun
-too far, I made him get down from the table and sit on the floor. This
-humiliation he did not like, at best; but when the boy grinned at him
-for it, he would resent it with as much temper as if he had been poked
-with a stick. He certainly was sensitive on this point, and evinced an
-undoubted dislike to being laughed at.
-
-[Illustration: NATIVE CARRIER BOY (From a Photograph.)]
-
-Another habit that Moses had was putting his fingers in the dish to
-help himself. He had to be watched all the time to prevent this, and
-seemed unable to grasp any reason why he should not be allowed to do
-so. He always appeared to think my spoon, knife, and fork were better
-than his own. On one occasion he persisted in begging for my fork until
-I gave it to him. He dipped it into his soup, held it up, and looked
-at it as if disappointed. He again stuck it into his soup. Then he
-examined it, as if to see how I lifted my food with it. He did not
-seem to notice that I used it in lifting meat instead of soup. After
-repeating this three or four times he licked the fork, smelt it, and
-then deliberately threw it on the floor,--as if to say, “That’s a
-failure.” He then leaned over and drank his soup from the plate.
-
-The only thing that he cared much to play with was a tin can in which
-I kept some nails. For this he had a kind of mania. He never tired of
-trying to remove the lid. When given the hammer and a nail, he knew
-what they were for, and would set to work to drive the nail into the
-floor of the cage or into the table; but he hurt his fingers a few
-times, and after that he stood the nail on its flat head, removed
-his fingers, and struck it with the hammer; but of course he never
-succeeded in driving it into anything.
-
-A bunch of sugarcane was kept for Moses to eat when he wanted it. To
-aid him in tearing the hard shell away from it, I kept a club to bruise
-it. Sometimes he would go and select a stalk of cane, carry it to the
-block, take the club in both hands, and try to mash the cane; but as
-the jar of the stroke often hurt his hands, he learned to avoid this by
-letting go as the club descended. He never succeeded in crushing the
-cane, but would continue his efforts until some one came to his aid. At
-other times he would drag a stalk of the cane to the cage and poke it
-through the wires, then bring the club and poke it through to get me to
-mash the cane for him.
-
-From time to time I received newspapers sent me from home. Moses could
-not understand what induced me to sit holding that thing before me,
-but he wished to try it and see. He would take a leaf of it, and hold
-it up before him with both hands, just as he saw me do; but instead of
-looking at the paper, he kept his eyes, most of the time, on me. When
-I turned my paper over, he did the same thing with his, but half the
-time it was upside down. He did not appear to care for the pictures, or
-notice them, except a few times he tried to pick them off the paper.
-One large cut of a dog’s head, when held at a short distance from him,
-he appeared to regard with a little interest, as if he recognized it as
-that of an animal of some kind; but I cannot say just what his ideas
-concerning it really were.
-
-Chimpanzees are not usually so playful or so funny as monkeys, but they
-have a certain degree of mirth in their nature, and at times display
-a marked sense of humor. Moses was fond of playing peek-a-boo. He
-did not try to conceal his body from view, but put his head behind a
-box or something to hide his eyes. Then he would cautiously peep at
-me. He would often put his head behind one of the large tin boxes in
-the cage, leaving his whole body visible. In this attitude he would
-utter a peculiar sound, then draw his head out and look to see if I
-were watching him. If not, he would repeat the act a few times and
-then resort to some other means of amusing himself. But if he could
-gain attention the romp began. He found great pleasure in this simple
-pastime. He would roll over, kick up his heels, and grin with evident
-delight. His favorite hour for this sport was in the early part of the
-afternoon. I spent much time in entertaining him in this way and in
-many others, feeling amply repaid by the gratification it afforded him.
-I could not resist his overtures to play, as he was my only companion;
-and, living in that solitary manner, we found mutual pleasure in such
-diversions.
-
-Another occasion on which he used to peep at me was when he lay down to
-take his midday nap. For this I had made him a little hammock. It was
-suspended by wires hooked in the top of my cage, so as to be removable
-when not in use. I always hung this near me, so I could swing him to
-sleep like a child. He liked this very much, and I liked equally well
-to indulge him in it. When he was laid in this little hammock, he was
-usually covered up with a small piece of canvas, and in spreading it
-over him I sometimes laid the edge of it over his eyes. But this caused
-him to suspect me of having some motive in doing so. Then he would
-reach his finger up, catch the edge of the cloth and gently draw it
-down, so as to see what I was doing. If he found that he was detected,
-he quickly released the cloth, and cuddled down as though he had drawn
-it down by accident; but the little rogue knew just as well as I did
-that it was not fair to peep.
-
-I also made him another hammock, which was hung a few yards from the
-cage. It was intended that he should get into this without bothering
-me. But he did not seem to care for it, until I brought a young gorilla
-to live with us in our jungle home. As Moses had never used this
-hammock, I assigned it to the new member of the household. Whenever
-the gorilla got into the hammock there was a small row about it. Moses
-would never allow him to occupy it in peace. He seemed to know that it
-was his own by right, and the gorilla was regarded as an intruder. He
-would push and shove the gorilla, grunt and whine and quarrel until he
-got him out of it. But after doing so he would leave the hammock and
-climb up into the bushes, or go scouting about, hunting something to
-eat. He only wanted to dispossess the intruder, for whom he nursed an
-inordinate jealousy. He never went about the gorilla’s little house,
-which was near another side of my cage. Even after the gorilla died
-Moses kept aloof from its house.
-
-As a rule, I took Moses with me in my rambles into the forest, and I
-found him to be quite useful in one way. His eyes were like the lens
-of a camera; nothing escaped them. When he discovered anything in the
-jungle, he always made it known by a peculiar sound. He could not point
-it out with his finger, but by watching his eyes the object could often
-be located. Frequently during these tours the ape rode on my shoulders.
-At other times the boy carried him; but occasionally he was put down
-on the ground to walk. If we traveled at a very slow pace, and allowed
-him to stroll along at leisure, he was content to do so; but if hurried
-beyond a certain gait, he always made a display of temper. He would
-turn on the boy and attack him if possible; but if the boy escaped, the
-angry little ape would throw himself down on the ground, scream, kick,
-and beat the earth with his own head and hands, in the most violent and
-persistent manner. He sometimes did the same way when not allowed to
-have what he wanted. His conduct was exactly like that of a spoiled or
-ugly child.
-
-He had a certain amount of ingenuity, and often evinced a degree of
-reason which was rather unexpected. It was not a rare thing for him to
-solve some problem that involved a study of cause and effect, but this
-was always in a limited degree. I would not be understood to mean that
-he could work out any abstract problem, such as belongs to the realm of
-mathematics, but only simple, concrete problems, the object of which
-was present.
-
-On one occasion while walking through the forest, we came to a small
-stream of water. The boy and myself stepped across it, leaving Moses
-to get over without help. He disliked getting his feet wet, and paused
-to be lifted across. We walked a few steps away and waited. He looked
-up and down the branch to see if there was any way to avoid it. He
-walked back and forth a few yards, but found no way to cross. He sat
-down on the bank and declined to wade. After a few moments he waddled
-along the bank about ten or twelve feet to a clump of tall, slender
-bushes growing by the edge of the stream. Here he halted, whined, and
-looked up thoughtfully into them. At length he began to climb one of
-them that leaned over the water. As he climbed up, the stalk bent with
-his weight, and in an instant he was swung safely across the little
-brook. He let go the plant, and came hobbling along to me with a look
-of triumph on his face that plainly indicated he was fully conscious of
-having performed a very clever feat.
-
-[Illustration: A STROLL IN THE JUNGLE--MR. GARNER, MOSES, AND NATIVE BOY
-
-(From a Photograph.)]
-
-One dark, rainy night I felt something pulling at my blanket and
-mosquito bar. I could not for a moment imagine what it was, but knew
-that it was something on the outside of my cage. I lay for a few
-seconds, and then I felt another strong pull. In an instant some cold,
-damp, rough thing touched my face. I found it was his hand poked
-through the meshes and groping about for something. I spoke to him,
-and he replied with a series of plaintive sounds which assured me that
-something must be wrong. I rose and lighted a candle. His little brown
-face was pressed up against the wires, and wore a sad, weary look. He
-could not tell me in words what troubled him, but every sign, look, and
-gesture bespoke trouble. Taking the candle in one hand and my revolver
-in the other, I stepped out of the cage and went to his domicile. There
-I discovered that a colony of ants had invaded his quarters. These ants
-are a great pest when they attack anything, and when they make a raid
-on a house the only thing to be done is to leave it until they have
-devoured everything about it that they can eat. When they leave a house
-there is not a roach, rat, bug, or insect left in it. As the house of
-Moses was so small, it was not difficult to dispossess the ants by
-saturating it with kerosene. This was quickly done, and the little
-occupant was allowed to return and go to bed. He watched the procedure
-with evident interest, and seemed perfectly aware that I could rid
-him of his savage assailants. In a wild state he would doubtless have
-abandoned his claim and fled to some other place, without an attempt to
-drive the ants away; but in this instance he had acquired the idea of
-the rights of possession.
-
-Moses was especially fond of corned beef and sardines, and would
-recognize a can of either as far away as he could see it. He also
-knew the instrument used in opening the cans. But he did not appear
-to appreciate the fact that when the contents had once been taken out
-it was useless to open the can again; so he often brought the empty
-cans that had been thrown into the bush, got the can-opener down, and
-wanted me to use it for him! I never saw him try to open a can himself
-otherwise than with his fingers. Sometimes, when about to prepare my
-own meals, I would open the case in which I kept stored a supply of
-canned meats and allow Moses to select a can for the purpose. He never
-failed to pull out one of the cans of beef bearing the blue label. If I
-put it back, he would again select the same kind, and he could not be
-deceived in his choice. It was not accidental, because he would hunt
-until he found the right sort. I don’t know what he thought when his
-choice was not served for dinner. I often exchanged it for another kind
-without consulting him.
-
-I kept my supply of water in a large jug, which was placed in the shade
-of the bushes near the cage. I also kept a small pan for Moses to drink
-out of. He would sometimes ask for water by using his own word for it.
-He would place his pan by the side of the jug and repeat the sound a
-few times. If he was not attended to, he proceeded to help himself. He
-could take the cork out of the jug quite as well as I could. He would
-then put his eye to the mouth of the vessel and look down into it to
-see if there was any water. Of course the shadow of his head would
-darken the interior of the jug so that he could not see anything. Then,
-removing his eye from the mouth of it, he would poke his hand into it.
-But I reproved him for this until I broke him of the habit. After a
-careful examination of the jug he would try to pour the water out. He
-knew how it ought to be done, but was not able to handle the vessel.
-He always placed the pan on the lower side of the jug; then he leaned
-the jug towards the pan and let go. He would rarely ever get the water
-into the pan, but always turned the jug with the neck down grade. As a
-hydraulic engineer he was not a great success, but he certainly knew
-the first principles of the science.
-
-I tried to teach Moses to be cleanly, but it was a hard task. He would
-listen to my precepts as if they had made a deep impression, but he
-would not wash his hands of his own accord. He would permit me or the
-boy to wash them, but when it came to taking a bath or even wetting
-his face, he was a rank heretic on the subject, and no amount of logic
-would convince him that he needed it. When he was given a bath he would
-scream and fight during the whole process. When it was finished he
-would climb upon the roof of the cage and spread himself out in the
-sun. These were the only occasions on which I ever knew him to get upon
-the roof. I don’t know why he disliked the bath so much. He did not
-mind getting wet in the rain, but rather seemed to like that.
-
-He had a great dislike for ants and certain large bugs. Whenever one
-such came near him he would talk like a magpie, and brush at the insect
-with his hands until he got rid of it. He always used a certain sound
-for this kind of annoyance; it differed slightly from those I have
-described as warning.
-
-Moses tried to be honest, but he was affected with a species of
-kleptomania and could not resist the temptation to purloin anything
-that came in his way. The small stove upon which I prepared my food was
-placed on a shelf in one corner of the cage, about halfway between the
-floor and the top. Whenever anything was set on the stove to cook, he
-had to be watched to keep him from climbing up the side of the cage,
-reaching his arm through the meshes, and stealing the food. He was
-sometimes very persevering in this matter. One day I set a tin can of
-water on the stove to heat, in order to make some coffee. He silently
-climbed up, reached his hand through, stuck it in the can, and began to
-search for anything it might contain. I threw out the water, refilled
-the can, and drove him away. In a few minutes he returned and repeated
-the act. I had a piece of canvas hung up on the outside of the cage
-to keep him away. The can of water was placed on the stove for the
-third time, but within a minute he found his way by climbing up under
-the curtain, and between that and the cage. I determined to teach him
-a lesson. He was allowed to explore the can, but finding nothing, he
-withdrew his hand and sat there clinging to the side of the cage.
-Again he tried, but found nothing. The water was getting warmer, but
-was still not hot. At length, for the third or fourth time, he stuck
-his hand in it up to the wrist. By this time the water was so hot that
-it scalded his hand. It was not severe enough to do him any harm, but
-quite enough so for a good lesson. He jerked his hand out with such
-violence that he threw the cup over and spilt the water all over that
-side of the cage. From that time to the end of his life he always
-refused anything that had steam or smoke about it. If anything having
-steam or smoke was offered him at the table, he would climb down at
-once and retire from the scene. Poor little Moses! I knew beforehand
-what would happen. I did not wish to see him hurt, but nothing else
-would serve to impress him with the danger and keep him out of mischief.
-
-Anything that he saw me eat he never failed to beg. No matter what
-he had himself, he wanted to try everything else that he saw me eat.
-One thing in which these apes appear to be wiser than man is, that
-when they eat or drink enough to satisfy their wants they quit. Men
-sometimes do not. Apes never drink water or anything else during their
-meal, but having finished eating, they want, as a rule, something to
-drink. The native custom is the same. I have never known the native
-African to use any kind of diet drink, but always when he has finished
-eating he takes a draught of water.
-
-Moses knew the use of nearly all the tools that I carried with me in
-the jungle. He could not use them for the purpose for which they were
-intended, and I do not know to what extent he appreciated their use;
-but he knew quite well the manner of using them. I have mentioned the
-incident of his using the hammer and nails; but he also knew the way
-to use the saw; however, he always applied the back of it, because the
-teeth were too rough; but he gave it the motion. When allowed to have
-it, he would put the back of it across a stick and saw with the energy
-of a man on a big salary. When given a file, he would file everything
-that came in his way. If he had applied himself in learning to talk
-human words as closely and with as much zeal as he tried to use my
-pliers, he would have succeeded in a very short time.
-
-Whether these creatures are actuated by reason or by instinct in such
-acts as I have mentioned, the caviller may settle for himself; but the
-actions accomplish the purpose of the actors in a logical and practical
-manner, and they are perfectly conscious of the fact.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV
-
-The Character of Moses--He Learns a Human Word--He Signs His Name to a
-Document--His Illness--Death
-
-
-I know of nothing in the way of affection and loyalty among animals
-that can exceed the devotion of my Moses. Not only was he tame and
-tractable, but he never tired of caressing me and being caressed by
-me. For hours together he would cling to my neck, play with my ears,
-lips, and nose, bite my cheek, and hug me like a last hope. He was
-never willing for me to put him down from my lap, never willing for me
-to leave my cage without him, never willing for me to caress anything
-else but himself, and never willing for me to discontinue caressing
-him. He would cry and fret for me whenever we were separated; and I
-must confess that my absence from him during a journey of three weeks
-hastened his sad and untimely death.
-
-From the second day after we became associated he appeared to regard
-me as the one in authority. He would not resent anything I did to him.
-I could take his food out of his hands, but he would permit no one
-else to do so. He would follow me and cry after me like a child. As
-time went by, his attachment grew stronger and stronger. He gave every
-evidence of pleasure at my attentions, and evinced a certain degree of
-appreciation and gratitude in return. He would divide any morsel of
-food with me. This is, perhaps, the highest test of the affection of
-any animal. I cannot affirm that such an act was genuine benevolence,
-or an earnest of affection in a true sense of the term; but nothing
-except deep affection or abject fear impels such actions in animals;
-and certainly fear was not his motive.
-
-There were others whom he liked and made himself familiar with; there
-were some that he feared, and others that he hated; but his manner
-towards me was that of deep affection. It was not alone in return for
-the food he received, for my boy gave him food more frequently than
-I did, and many others from time to time fed him. His attachment was
-like an infatuation that had no apparent motive; it was unselfish and
-supreme.
-
-The chief purpose of my living among the animals being to study the
-sounds they utter, I gave strict attention to those made by Moses.
-For a time it was difficult to detect more than two or three distinct
-sounds, but as I grew more and more familiar with them I could detect a
-variety of them, and by constantly watching his actions and associating
-them with his sounds I learned to interpret certain ones to mean
-certain things.
-
-In the course of my sojourn with him I learned one sound that he always
-uttered when he saw anything that he was familiar with,--such as a man
-or a dog,--but he could not tell me which of the two it was. If he
-saw anything strange to him, he could tell me; but not so that I knew
-whether it was a snake, or a leopard, or a monkey; yet I knew that it
-was some strange creature. I learned a certain word for food, hunger,
-eating, etc., but he could not go into any details about it, except
-that a certain sound indicated “good” or “satisfaction,” and another
-meant the opposite.
-
-Among the sounds that I learned was one that is used by a chimpanzee
-in calling another to come to it. Some of the natives assured me that
-the mothers always use it in calling their young to them. When Moses
-wandered away from the cage into the jungle, he would sometimes call me
-with this sound. I cannot express it in letters of the alphabet, nor
-describe it so as to give a very clear idea of its character. It is a
-single sound, or word of one syllable, and can be easily imitated by
-the human voice. At any time that I wanted Moses to come to me I used
-this word, and the fact that he always obeyed it by coming confirmed my
-opinion as to its meaning. I do not think that when he addressed it to
-me he expected me to come to him, but he perhaps wanted to locate me in
-order to be guided back to the cage by means of the sound. As he grew
-more familiar with the surrounding forest he used it less frequently,
-but he always employed it in calling me or the boy. When he was called
-by it he answered with the same sound; but one fact that we noticed
-was, that if he could see the one who called he never made any reply.
-He would obey the call, but not answer. He probably thought that if
-he could see the one who called he could be seen by him, and it was
-therefore useless to reply.
-
-The speech of these animals is very limited, but it is sufficient
-for their purpose. It is none the less real because of its being
-restricted, but it is more difficult for man to learn, because his
-modes of thought are so much more ample and distinct. Yet when one is
-reduced to the necessity of making his wants known in a strange tongue
-he can express many things in a very few words. I was once thrown among
-a tribe of whose language I knew less than fifty words, but with little
-difficulty I succeeded in conversing with them on two or three topics.
-Much depends upon necessity, and more upon practice. In talking to
-Moses I used his own language mostly, and was surprised at times to
-see how readily we understood each other. I could repeat about all the
-sounds he made except one or two, but I was not able in the time we
-were together to interpret all of them. These sounds were more than a
-mere series of grunts or whines, and he never confused them in their
-meaning. When any one of them was properly delivered to him, he clearly
-understood and acted upon it.
-
-It had never been any part of my purpose to teach a monkey to talk;
-but after I became familiar with the qualities and range of the voice
-of Moses, I determined to see if he might not be taught to speak a
-few simple words of human speech. To effect this in the easiest way
-and shortest time, I carefully observed the movements of his lips and
-vocal organs in order to select such words for him to try as were best
-adapted to his ability.
-
-I selected the word _mamma_, which may be considered almost a universal
-word of human speech; the French word _feu_, fire; the German word
-_wie_, how; and the native Nkami word _nkgwe_, mother. Every day I
-took him on my lap and tried to induce him to say one or more of these
-words. For a long time he made no effort to learn them; but after
-some weeks of persistent labor and a bribe of corned beef, he began
-to see dimly what I wanted him to do. The native word quoted is very
-similar to one of the sounds of his own speech, which means “good” or
-“satisfaction.” The vowel element differs in them, and he was not able
-in the time he was under tuition to change them; but he distinguished
-them from other words.
-
-In his attempt to say _mamma_ he worked his lips without making any
-sound, although he really tried to do so. I believe that in the course
-of time he would have succeeded. He observed the movement of my lips
-and tried to imitate it, but he seemed to think that the lips alone
-produced the sound. With _feu_ he succeeded fairly well, except that
-the consonant element, as he uttered it, resembled “v” more than “f,”
-so that the sound was more like _vu_, making the “u” short as in “nut.”
-It was quite as nearly perfect as most people of other tongues ever
-learn to speak the same word in French, and, if it had been uttered in
-a sentence, any one knowing that language would recognize it as meaning
-fire. In his efforts to pronounce _wie_ he always gave the vowel
-element like German “u” with the _umlaut_, but the “w” element was more
-like the English than the German sound of that letter.
-
-Taking into consideration the fact that he was only a little more than
-a year old, and was in training less than three months, his progress
-was all that could have been desired, and vastly more than had been
-hoped for. It is my belief that, had he lived until this time, he
-would have mastered these and other words of human speech to the
-satisfaction of the most exacting linguist. If he had only learned one
-word in a whole lifetime, he would have shown at least that the race is
-capable of being improved and elevated in some degree.
-
-Another experiment that I tried with him was one that I had used before
-in testing the ability of a monkey to distinguish forms. I cut a round
-hole in one end of a board and a square hole in the other, and made a
-block to fit into each one of them. The blocks were then given to him
-to see if he could fit them into the proper holes. After being shown a
-few times how to do this, he fitted the blocks in without difficulty;
-but when he was not rewarded for the task by receiving a morsel of
-corned beef or a sardine, he did not attempt it. He did not care to
-work for the fun alone.
-
-In colors he had but little choice, unless it was something to eat; but
-he could distinguish them with ease if the shades were pronounced. I
-had no means of testing his taste for music or sense of musical sounds.
-
-I must here take occasion to mention one incident in the life of Moses,
-such as perhaps never before occurred in the life of any chimpanzee.
-While it may not be of scientific value, it is at least amusing.
-
-While living in the jungle I received a letter enclosing a contract to
-be signed by myself and a witness. Having no means of finding a witness
-to sign the paper, I called Moses from the bushes, placed him at the
-table, gave him a pen, and had him sign the document as witness. He did
-not write his name himself, as he had not mastered the art of writing;
-but he made his cross mark between the names, as many a good man had
-done before him. I wrote in the blank the name,
-
- _His_
- “MOSES X NTYIGO”
- _mark_
-
-(the cross mark being omitted), and had him with his own hand make the
-cross as it is legally done by persons who cannot write. With this
-signature the contract was returned in good faith to stand the test
-of the law courts of civilization; and thus for the first time in the
-history of the race a chimpanzee signed his name.
-
- * * * * *
-
-When I prepared to start on a journey across the Esyira country, it was
-not practicable for me to take Moses along, so I arranged to leave him
-in charge of a missionary. Shortly after my departure the man was taken
-with fever, and the chimpanzee was left to the care of a native boy
-belonging to the mission. The little prisoner was kept confined by a
-small rope attached to his cage. This was done in order to keep him out
-of mischief. It was during the dry season, when the dews are heavy and
-the nights chilly; and the winds at that season are fresh and frequent.
-
-Within a week after I had left him he contracted a severe cold. This
-soon developed into acute pulmonary troubles of a complex type, and
-he began to decline. After an absence of three weeks and three days I
-returned and found him in a condition beyond the reach of treatment.
-He was emaciated to a living skeleton; his eyes were sunken deep into
-their orbits, and his steps were feeble and tottering; his voice
-was hoarse and piping; his appetite was gone, and he was utterly
-indifferent to everything around him.
-
-During my journey I had secured a companion for him, and when I
-disembarked from the canoe I hastened to him with this new addition to
-our little family. I had not been told that he was ill, and, of course,
-was not prepared to see him looking so ghastly. When he discovered me
-approaching, he rose up and began to call me, as he had been wont to
-do before I left him; but his weak voice was like a death-knell to my
-ears. My heart sunk within me as I saw him trying to reach out his
-long, bony arms to welcome my return. Poor, faithful Moses! I could not
-repress the tears of pity and regret at this sudden change, for to me
-it seemed the work of a moment. I had last seen him in the vigor of a
-strong and robust youth, but now I beheld him in the decrepitude of a
-feeble senility. What a transformation!
-
-I diagnosed his case as well as I was able and began to treat him, but
-it was evident that he was so far gone that I could not expect him to
-recover. My conscience smote me for having left him, yet I felt that I
-had not done wrong. It was not neglect or cruelty for me to leave him
-while I went in pursuit of the chief object of my search, and I had
-no cause to reproach myself for having done so. But emotions that are
-stirred by such incidents are not to be controlled by reason or hushed
-by argument, and the pain caused me was more than I can tell.
-
-If I had done wrong, the only restitution possible for me to make was
-to nurse him patiently and tenderly to the end, or till health and
-strength should return. This was conscientiously done, and I have the
-comfort of knowing that the last sad days of his life were soothed
-by every care that kindness could suggest. Hour after hour during
-that time he lay silent and content upon my lap. That appeared to be
-a panacea to all his pains. He would roll up his dark brown eyes and
-look into my face, as if to be assured that I had been restored to
-him. With his long fingers he stroked my face as if to say that he
-was again happy. He took the medicines I gave him as if he knew their
-purpose and effect. His suffering was not intense, and he bore it like
-a philosopher. He seemed to have some vague idea of his own condition,
-but I do not know that he foresaw the result. He lingered on from
-day to day for a whole week, slowly sinking and growing feebler; but
-his love for me was manifest to the last, and I dare confess that I
-returned it with all my heart.
-
-Is it wrong that I should requite such devotion and fidelity with
-reciprocal emotion? No. I should not deserve the love of any creature
-if I were indifferent to the love of Moses. That affectionate little
-creature had lived with me in the dismal shadows of that primeval
-forest for many long days and dreary nights; had romped and played with
-me when far away from the pleasures of home; and had been a constant
-friend, alike through sunshine and storm. To say that I did not love
-him would be to confess myself an ingrate and unworthy of my race.
-
-The last spark of life passed away in the night. Death was not attended
-by acute pain or struggling; but, falling into a deep and quiet sleep,
-he woke no more.
-
-Moses will live in history. He deserves to do so, because he was the
-first of his race that ever spoke a word of human speech; because he
-was the first that ever conversed in his own language with a human
-being; and because he was the first that ever signed his name to any
-document. Fame will not deny him a niche in her temple among the heroes
-who have led the races of the world.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV
-
-Aaron--His Capture--Mental Powers--Acquaintance with Moses--His Conduct
-during Moses’ Illness
-
-
-Having arranged my affairs in Ferran Vaz so as to make a journey across
-the great forest that lies to the south of the Nkami country and
-separates it from that of the Esyira tribe, I set out by canoe to a
-point on the Rembo about three days’ journey from the place where I had
-so long lived in my cage. At a village called Tyimba I disembarked and,
-after a journey of five days and a delay of three more days, caused by
-an attack of fever, I arrived at a trading station near the head of a
-small river called Noogo. It empties into the sea at Sette Kama, about
-four degrees south of the equator. The trading post is about a hundred
-miles inland, at a native village called Ntyi-ne-nye-ni,--which,
-strange to say, means, in the native tongue, “Some Other Place.”
-
-About the time I reached the trading post, two Esyira hunters arrived
-from a distant village and brought with them a smart young chimpanzee
-of the kind known in that country as the kulu-kamba. He was quite the
-finest specimen of his race that I have ever seen. His frank, open
-countenance, big brown eyes, and shapely physique, free from mark or
-blemish of any kind, would attract the notice of any one not absolutely
-stupid. It is not derogatory to the memory of Moses that I should say
-this, nor does it lessen my affection for him. Our passions are not
-moved by visible forces nor measured by fixed units. They disdain all
-laws of logic, spurn the narrow bounds of reason, and conform to no
-theory of action.
-
-As soon as I saw this little ape I expressed a desire to own him. So
-the trader in charge bought him and presented him to me. As it had
-been intended that he should be the friend and ally of Moses, although
-not his brother, I conferred upon him the name of Aaron. The two names
-are so intimately associated in history that the mention of one always
-suggests the other.
-
-Aaron was captured in the Esyira jungle by the hunters, about one day’s
-journey from the place where I secured him; and with this event began a
-series of sad scenes in the brief but varied life of this little hero
-such as seldom come within the experience of any creature.
-
-At the time of his capture his mother was killed in the act of
-defending him from the cruel hunters. When she fell to the earth,
-mortally wounded, this brave little fellow stood by her trembling body
-defending it against her slayers, until he was overcome by superior
-force, seized by his captors, bound with strips of bark, and carried
-away into captivity. No human can refrain from admiring his conduct in
-this act, whether it was prompted by the instinct of self-preservation
-or by a sentiment of loyalty to his mother, for he was exercising that
-prime law of nature which actuates all creatures to defend themselves
-against attack, and his wild, young heart throbbed with sensations like
-to those of a human under similar ordeal.
-
-I do not wish to appear sentimental by offering a rebuke to those who
-indulge in the sport of hunting; but much cruelty could be obviated
-without losing any of the pleasure of the hunt. I have always made
-it a rule to spare the mother with her young. Whether or not animals
-feel the same degree of mental and physical pain as man, they do,
-in these tragic moments, evince for one another a certain amount of
-concern. This imparts a tinge of sympathy that must appeal to any one
-who is not devoid of every sense of mercy. It is true that it is often
-difficult--and sometimes impossible--to secure the young by other
-means; but the manner of getting them often mars the pleasure of having
-them; and while Aaron was to me a charming pet and a valuable subject
-for study, I confess the story of his capture always touched me in a
-tender spot.
-
-I may here mention that the few chimpanzees that reach the civilized
-parts of the world are but a small percentage of the great number that
-are captured. Some die on their way to the coast, others die after
-reaching it, and scores of them die on board the ships to which they
-have been consigned for various ports of Europe and other countries.
-Death results not often from neglect or cruelty, but usually from a
-change of food, climate, or condition; yet the creature suffers just
-the same whether the cause is from design or accident. One fruitful
-source of death among them is pulmonary trouble of various types.
-
-One look at the portrait of Aaron will impress any one with the high
-mental qualities of this little captive; but to see and study them in
-life would convince a heretic of his superior character. In every look
-and gesture there was a touch of the human that no one could fail to
-observe. The range of facial expression surpassed that of any other
-animal I have ever studied. In repose his quaint face wore a look of
-wisdom becoming to a sage; while in play it was crowned with a grin
-of genuine mirth. The deep, searching look he gave to a stranger was
-a study for the psychologist. The serious, earnest look of inquiry
-when he was perplexed would have amused a stoic. All these changing
-moods were depicted in his mobile face with such intensity as to leave
-no room to doubt the activity of certain faculties of the mind to a
-degree far beyond that of animals in general; and his conduct in many
-instances showed the exercise of mental powers of a higher order than
-that limited agency known as instinct. In addition to these facts, his
-voice was of better quality and more flexible than that of any other
-specimen I have ever known. It was clear and smooth in uttering sounds
-of any pitch within its scope, while the voices of most of them are
-inclined to be harsh or husky, especially in sounds of high pitch.
-
-Before leaving the village where I secured him, I made a kind of sling
-for him to be carried in. It consisted of a short canvas sack, having
-two holes cut in the bottom for his legs to pass through. To the top
-of this was attached a broad band of the same cloth by which to hang
-it over the head of the carrier boy to whom the little prisoner was
-consigned. This afforded the ape a comfortable seat, and at the same
-time reduced the labor of carrying him. It left his arms and legs free,
-so he could change his position and rest, while it also allowed the boy
-the use of his own hands in passing any difficult place in the jungle
-along the way.
-
-From the trading post to the Rembo was a journey of five days on foot.
-Along the way were a few straggling villages; but most of the route lay
-through a wild and desolate forest, traversed by low, broad marshes,
-through which wind shallow sloughs of filthy, greenish water, seeking
-its way among bending roots and fallen leaves. From the foul bosom of
-these marshes rise the effluvia of decaying plants, breeding pestilence
-and death. Here and there across the dreary tracts is found the trail
-of elephants, where the great beasts have broken their tortuous way
-through the dense barriers of bush and vine. These trails serve as
-roads for the native traveler and afford the only way of crossing
-these otherwise trackless jungles. The only means of passing the
-dismal swamps is to wade through the thin, slimy mud, often more than
-knee-deep, and sometimes extending many hundred feet in width. The
-traveler is intercepted at almost every step by the tangled roots of
-mangrove trees under foot or clusters of vines hanging from the boughs
-overhead.
-
-Such was the route we came. But Aaron did not realize how severe was
-the task of his carrier in trudging his way through such places, and
-the little rogue often added to the labor by seizing hold of limbs
-or vines that hung within his reach in passing. Thus he retarded the
-progress of the boy, who strongly protested against the ape’s amusing
-himself in this manner. The latter seemed to know of no reason why
-he should not do so, and the former did not deign to give one. So
-the quarrel went on until we reached the river; but by that time
-each of them had imbibed a hatred for the other that nothing in the
-future ever allayed. Neither of them ever forgot it while they were
-associated, and both of them evinced their aversion on all occasions.
-The boy gave vent to his dislike by making ugly faces at the ape, and
-the latter showed his resentment by screaming and trying to bite him.
-Aaron refused to eat any food given him by the boy, and the boy would
-not give him a morsel except when required to do so. At times the feud
-became ridiculous. It ended only with their final separation. The last
-time I ever saw the boy, I asked him if he wanted to go with me to my
-country to take care of Aaron; but he shook his head and said: “He’s
-a bad man.” This was the only person for whom I ever knew Aaron to
-conceive a deep and bitter dislike, but the boy he hated with his whole
-heart.
-
-On my return to Ferran Vaz, where I had left Moses, I found him in a
-feeble state of health, as related elsewhere. When Aaron was set down
-before him, he merely gave the little stranger a casual glance, but
-held out his long, lean arms for me to take him in mine. His wish was
-gratified, and I indulged him in a long stroll. When we returned I
-set him down by the side of his new friend, who evinced every sign of
-pleasure and interest. He was like a small boy when there is a new baby
-in the house. He cuddled up close to Moses and made many overtures to
-become friends; but, while the latter did not repel them, he treated
-them with indifference. Aaron tried in many ways to attract the
-attention of Moses, or to elicit from him some sign of approval, but it
-was in vain.
-
-No doubt Moses’ manners were due to his sickness, and Aaron seemed to
-realize it. He sat for a long time holding a banana in his hand and
-looking with evident concern into the face of his little sick cousin.
-At length he lifted the fruit to the lips of the invalid and uttered a
-low sound; but the kindness was not accepted. The act was purely one of
-his own volition, to which he was not prompted by any suggestion from
-others. Every look and motion indicated a desire to relieve or comfort
-his friend. His manner was gentle and humane, and his face was an image
-of pity.
-
-Failing to get any sign of attention from Moses, Aaron moved up closer
-to his side and put his arms around him in the manner that is shown
-in the picture of him with Elisheba. During the days that followed,
-he sat hour after hour in the same attitude, and refused to allow any
-one except myself to touch his patient; but on my approach he always
-resigned him to me, while he watched with interest to see what I did
-for him.
-
-Among other things, I gave Moses twice a day a tabloid of quinine and
-iron. This was dissolved in a little water and given to him in a small
-tin cup kept for the purpose. When not in use, the cup was hung upon
-a tall post. Aaron soon learned to know the use of it, and whenever I
-went to Moses, Aaron would climb up the post and bring me the cup to
-administer the medicine. It is not to be inferred that he knew anything
-about the nature or effect of the medicine, but he knew the use, and
-the only use, to which that cup was put.
-
-Aaron displayed a marked interest during the act of administering
-the dose, and seemed to realize that it was intended for the good of
-the patient. He would sit close up to one side of the sick one and
-watch every movement of his face, as if to see what effect was being
-produced, while the changing expressions of his own visage plainly
-showed that he was not indifferent to the actions of the patient.
-
-While I was present with the sick one, Aaron appeared to feel a certain
-sense of relief from the care of him, and frequently went climbing
-about as if to rest and recreate himself by a change of routine.
-Whenever I took Moses for a walk, or sat with him on my lap, his little
-nurse was perfectly content; but the instant they were left alone,
-Aaron would again fold him in his arms, as if he felt it a duty to do
-so.
-
-It was only natural that Moses, in such a state of health, should be
-cross and peevish at times, as human beings in a like condition are;
-but I never once saw Aaron resent anything Moses did, or display the
-least ill-temper towards him. On the contrary, his conduct was so
-patient and forbearing that it was hard to forego the belief that it
-was prompted by the same motives of kindness and sympathy that move
-the human heart to deeds of tenderness and mercy. At night, when they
-were put to rest, they lay cuddled up in each other’s arms, and in the
-morning they were always found in the same close embrace.
-
-But on the morning Moses died the conduct of Aaron was unlike anything
-I had observed before. When I approached their snug little house and
-drew aside the curtain, I found him sitting in one corner of the cage.
-His face wore a look of concern, as if he were aware that something
-awful had occurred. When I opened the door he neither moved nor uttered
-any sound. I do not know whether or not apes have any name for death,
-but they surely know what it is.
-
-Moses was dead. His cold body lay in its usual place; but it was
-entirely covered over with the piece of canvas kept in the cage for
-bed-clothing. I do not know whether or not Aaron had covered him up,
-but he seemed to realize the situation. I took him by the hand and
-lifted him out of the cage, but he was reluctant. I had the body
-removed and placed on a bench about thirty feet away, in order to
-dissect it and prepare the skin and the skeleton for preservation.
-
-When I proceeded to do this, I had Aaron confined to the cage, lest he
-should annoy and hinder me at the work; but he cried and fretted until
-he was released. It is not meant that he shed tears over the loss of
-his companion, for the lachrymal glands and ducts are not developed in
-these apes; but they manifest concern and regret, which are motives of
-the passion of sorrow. But being left alone was the cause of Aaron’s
-sorrow. When released he came and took his seat near the dead body,
-where he sat the whole day long and watched the operation.
-
-After this Aaron was never quiet for a moment if he could see or hear
-me, until I secured another of his kind as a companion for him; then
-his interest in me abated in a measure, but his affection for me
-remained intact. His conduct towards Moses always impressed me with the
-belief that he appreciated the fact that the sick one was in distress
-or pain, and while he may not have foreseen the result, when he saw
-death he certainly knew what it was. Whether it is instinct or reason
-that causes man to shrink from death, the same influence works to the
-same end in the ape; and the demeanor of this ape towards his later
-companion, Elisheba, only confirmed this opinion.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI
-
-Aaron and Elisheba--Their Characteristics--Anecdotes--Jealousy of Aaron
-
-
-Four days after the death of Moses I secured passage on a trading
-boat that came into the lake. The boat was a small affair, intended
-for towing canoes, and not in any way prepared to carry passengers
-or cargo; but I found room in one of the canoes to set the cage I
-had provided for Aaron, stowed the rest of my effects wherever space
-permitted, and embarked for the coast.
-
-Our progress was slow and the journey tedious. The only passage out of
-the lake at that season is through a long, narrow, winding creek beset
-by sand bars, rocks, logs, and snags, and in some places overhung by
-low, bending trees. But the wild, weird scenery is grand and beautiful.
-Long lines of bamboo, broken here and there by groups of pendanus or
-stately palms; islands of lilies, and long sweeps of papyrus spreading
-away from the banks on either side; the gorgeous foliage of aquatic
-plants, drooping along the margin like a massive fringe and relieved by
-clumps of tall, waving grass, forms a perfect Eden for the birds and
-the monkeys that dwell among those scenes of eternal summer.
-
-After a delay of eight days at Cape Lopez, we secured passage on a
-small French gunboat called the _Komo_, by which we came to Gaboon.
-There I found another kulu-kamba. She was in the hands of a generous
-friend, Mr. Adolph Strohm, who presented her to me. I gave her to Aaron
-as a wife and called her Elisheba,--after the name of the wife of the
-great high-priest. Elisheba had been captured on the head-waters of the
-Nguni River, in about the same latitude that Aaron was found in, but
-more than a hundred miles to the east of that point and a few minutes
-north of it. I did not learn the history of her capture.
-
-It would be difficult to find any two human beings more unlike in
-taste and temperament than these two apes were. Aaron was one of the
-most amiable of creatures; he was affectionate and faithful to those
-who treated him kindly; he was merry and playful by nature, and often
-evinced a marked sense of humor; he was fond of human society and
-strongly averse to solitude or confinement.
-
-Elisheba was a perfect shrew. She often reminded me of certain women
-that I have seen who had soured on the world. She was treacherous,
-ungrateful, and cruel in every thought and act; she was utterly devoid
-of affection; she was selfish, sullen, and morose at all times; she was
-often vicious and always obstinate; she was indifferent to caresses,
-and quite as well content when alone as in the best of company. It is
-true that she was in poor health, and had been badly treated before she
-fell into my hands; but she was by nature endowed with a bad temper and
-depraved instincts.
-
-It is not at all rare to see a vast difference of manners,
-intelligence, and temperament among specimens that belong to one
-species. In these respects they vary as much in proportion to their
-mental scope as human beings do; but I have never seen, in any two
-apes of the same species, the two extremes so widely removed from one
-another.
-
-While waiting at Gaboon for a steamer I had my own cage erected for the
-apes to live in, as it was large and gave them ample room for play and
-exercise. In one corner of it was suspended a small, cosy house for
-them to sleep in. It was furnished with a good supply of clean straw
-and some pieces of canvas for bedclothes. In the center of the cage was
-a swing, or trapeze, for them to use at their pleasure. Aaron found
-this a means of amusement, and often indulged in a series of gymnastics
-that might evoke the envy of a king of athletic sports.
-
-Elisheba had no taste for such pastime, but her depravity could never
-resist the impulse to interrupt Aaron in his jolly exercise. She would
-climb up and contend for possession of the swing, until she would drive
-him away. Then she would perch herself on it and sit there for a time
-in stolid content; but she would neither swing nor play. Frequently
-during the day, when Aaron was lying quietly on the straw, she would
-go into the snug little house and raise a row with him by pulling the
-straw from under him, a handful at a time, and throwing it out of the
-box till there was none left in it. No matter what kind or quantity of
-food was given them, she always wanted the piece he had, and would fuss
-with him to get it; but having got it, she would sit holding it in her
-hand without eating it; for there were some things that he liked which
-she would not eat at all.
-
-When we went out for a walk, no matter which way we started, Elisheba
-always contended to go some other way. If I yielded, she would again
-change her mind and start off in some other direction. If forced to
-submit, she would scream and struggle as if for life. I cannot forego
-the belief that these freaks were due to a base and perverse nature,
-and I could find no higher motive in her stubborn conduct.
-
-Aaron was very fond of her and rarely ever opposed her inflexible will.
-He clung to her and let her lead the way. I have often felt vexed at
-him because he complied so readily with her wishes. The only case in
-which he took sides against her was in her conduct towards me.
-
-When I first secured her she had the temper of a demon, and with the
-smallest pretext she would assault me and try to bite me or tear my
-clothes. In these attacks Aaron was always with me, and the loyal
-little champion would fly at her in the greatest fury. He would strike
-her over the head and back with his hands, and bite her and flog her
-till she desisted. If she returned the blow he would grasp her hand and
-bite it, or strike her in the face. He would continue to fight till she
-submitted. Then he would celebrate his victory by jumping up and down
-in a most grotesque fashion, stamping his feet, slapping his hands on
-the ground, and grinning like a mask. He seemed as conscious of what he
-had done and as proud of it as any human could have been; but no matter
-what she did to others, he was always on her side of the question. If
-any one else annoyed her, he would always resent it with violence.
-
-About the premises there were natives all the time passing to and fro,
-and these two little captives were objects of special interest to
-them. They would stand by the cage hour after hour and watch them. The
-ruling impulse of nearly all natives appears to be cruelty, and they
-cannot resist the temptation to tease and torture anything that is
-not able to retaliate. They were so persistent in poking sticks at my
-chimpanzees that I had to keep a boy on watch all the time to prevent
-it; but the boy could not be trusted, so I had to watch _him_.
-
-In the rear of the room that I occupied was a window through which,
-from time to time, I watched the boy and the natives, and when
-anything went wrong I would call out to the boy. Aaron soon observed
-this and found that he could get my attention himself by calling out
-when any one annoyed him, and he also knew that the boy was put there
-as a protector. Whenever any of the natives came about the cage he
-would call for me in his peculiar manner, which I well understood and
-promptly responded to. The boy also knew what the call meant and would
-rush to the rescue. If I were away from the house and the boy were
-aware of the fact, he was apt to be tardy in coming to the relief of
-the ape, and sometimes he did not come at all. In the latter event the
-two would crawl into their house and pull down the curtain so that they
-could not be seen. Here they would remain until the natives had left or
-some one came to their aid.
-
-Neither of the apes ever resented anything the natives did to them,
-unless they could see me about; but whenever I came in sight they
-would make battle with their tormentors, and, if liberated from the
-big cage, they would chase the last one of them out of the yard. Aaron
-knew perfectly well that they were not allowed to molest him or his
-companion; and when he knew that he had my support he was ready to
-carry on the war to a finish. But it was really funny to see how meek
-and patient he was when left to defend himself alone against the native
-with a stick, and then to note the change in him when he knew that he
-was backed up by a friend upon whom he could rely.
-
-Mr. Strohm, the trader, previously mentioned, with whom I found
-hospitality at this place, kept a cow in the lot where the cage was.
-She was a small black animal, the first cow that Aaron had ever seen.
-He never ceased to contemplate her with wonder and with fear. If she
-came near the cage when no one was about, he hurried into his box and
-from there peeped out in silence until she went away. The cow was
-equally amazed at the cage and its strange occupants, though she was
-less afraid than they, and frequently came near to inspect them. She
-would stand a few yards away with her head lifted high, her eyes arched
-and her ears thrown forward, waiting for them to come out of that
-mysterious box. But they would not venture out of their asylum while
-she remained. At last, tired of waiting, she would switch her tail,
-shake her head, and turn away.
-
-When taken out of the cage Aaron had special delight in driving the cow
-away; and if she was around he would grasp me by the hand and start
-towards her. He would stamp the ground with his foot, strike with all
-force with his long arm, slap the ground with his hand, and scream at
-her at the top of his voice. If she moved away, he would let go my hand
-and rush towards her as though he intended to tear her up; but if the
-cow turned suddenly towards him, the little fraud would run to me,
-grasp my leg, and scream with fright. The cow was afraid of a man, and
-as long as she was followed by one she would continue to go; but when
-she discovered the ape to be alone in the pursuit, she would turn and
-look as if trying to determine what manner of thing it was. Elisheba
-never seemed to take any special notice of the cow except when she
-approached too near the cage, and then it was due to the conduct of
-Aaron that she made any fuss about it.
-
-On board the steamer in which we sailed for home there was a young
-elephant that had been sent by a trader, for sale. He was kept on
-deck in a strong stall built for his quarters. There were wide cracks
-between the boards, and the elephant had the habit of reaching his
-trunk through them in search of anything he might find. With his long,
-flexible proboscis extended, he would twist and coil it in all manner
-of writhing forms. This was the crowning terror of the lives of those
-two apes; it was the bogie-man of their existence, and nothing could
-induce either of them to go near it. If they saw me approach it, they
-would scream and yell until I came away. If Aaron could get hold of me
-without getting too near the elephant, he clung to me until he almost
-tore my clothes, to keep me away from it. It was the one thing that
-Elisheba was afraid of, and the only one against which she ever gave me
-warning.
-
-They did not manifest the same concern for others, but sat watching
-them without offering any protest. Even the stowaway who fed them and
-attended to their cage was permitted to approach the elephant; but
-their solicitude for me was remarked by every man on board. I was never
-able to tell what their opinion of the thing was. They were much less
-afraid of the elephant when they could see all of him, than they were
-of the trunk when they saw that alone. They may have thought the latter
-to be a big snake; but this is only a conjecture.
-
-At the beginning of the voyage I took six panels of my own cage and
-made a small cage for them. I taught them to drink water from a beer
-bottle with a long neck that could be put through a mesh of the wires.
-They preferred this mode of drinking and appeared to look upon it as an
-advanced idea. Elisheba always insisted on being served first; being
-a female, her wish was complied with. When she had finished, Aaron
-would climb up by the wires and take his turn. There is a certain
-sound, or word, which the chimpanzee always uses to express “good” or
-“satisfaction,” and he made frequent use of it. He would drink a few
-swallows of the water and then utter the sound, whereupon Elisheba
-would climb up again and taste. She seemed to think it something better
-than she was drinking, but finding it the same as she had had, she
-would again give way for him. Every time he used the sound she would
-take another taste and turn away; but she never failed to try it if he
-uttered the sound.
-
-The boy who cared for them on the voyage was disposed to play tricks on
-them. One of these ugly pranks was to turn the bottle up so that when
-they had finished drinking and took their lips away, the water would
-spill out and run down over them. Several times they declined to drink
-from the bottle while he was holding it, but when he let it go, it hung
-in such a position that they could not get the water out of it at all.
-At length Aaron solved the problem by climbing up one side of the cage
-and getting on a level with the bottle; then he reached across the
-angle formed by the two sides of the cage and drank. In this position
-it was no matter to him how much the water ran out; it couldn’t touch
-him. Elisheba watched him until she quite grasped the idea; then she
-climbed up in the same manner and slaked her thirst. I scolded the
-boy for serving them with such cruel tricks; but it taught me another
-lesson of value concerning the mental resources of the chimpanzee, for
-no philosopher could have found a much better scheme to obviate the
-trouble than did this cunning little sage in the hour of necessity.
-
-I have never regarded the training of animals as the true measure of
-their mental powers. The real test is to reduce the animal to his own
-resources, and see how he will conduct himself under conditions that
-present new problems. Animals may be taught to do many things in a
-mechanical way, and without any motive that relates to the action; but
-when they can work out the solution without the aid of man, it is only
-the faculty of reason that can guide them.
-
-One thing that Aaron could never figure out was--what became of the
-chimpanzee that he saw in a mirror. I have seen him hunt for that
-mysterious ape an hour at a time. He once broke a piece off a mirror I
-had in trying to find the other fellow, but he never succeeded. I have
-held the glass firmly before him, while he put his face up close to
-it--sometimes almost in contact. He would quietly gaze at the image and
-then reach his hand around the glass to feel for it. Not finding it, he
-would peep around the side of the glass and then look into it again. He
-would take hold of it and turn it around, lay it on the ground, look at
-the image again, and put his hand under the edge of the glass. The look
-of inquiry in that quaint face was so striking as to make one pity him.
-But he was hard to discourage. He resumed the search whenever he had
-the mirror.
-
-Elisheba never worried herself much about it. When she saw the image in
-the glass she seemed to recognize it as one of her kind; but when it
-vanished she let it go without trying to find it. In fact, she often
-turned away from it as though she did not admire it. She rarely ever
-took hold of the glass, and she never felt behind it for the other ape.
-
-Altogether Elisheba was an odd specimen of her tribe--eccentric and
-whimsical beyond anything I have ever known among animals; yet, with
-all her freaks, Aaron was fond of her and she afforded him company; but
-he was extremely jealous of her, and permitted no stranger to take any
-liberties with her with impunity. He did not object to their doing so
-with him. He rarely took offense at any degree of familiarity, for he
-would make friends with any one who was gentle with him; but he could
-not tolerate their attentions to her. She betrayed no sign of affection
-for him except when some one annoyed or vexed him; but in that event
-she never failed to take his part against all odds. At such times she
-became frantic with rage, and if the cause was prolonged, she often
-for hours afterwards refused to eat.
-
-On the voyage homeward there was on board another chimpanzee, belonging
-to a sailor who was bringing him home for sale. This one was about
-two years older than Aaron and fully twice as large. He was tame and
-gentle, but was kept in a close cage by himself. He saw the others
-roaming about the deck and tried to make up with them; but they evinced
-no desire to become intimate with one who was confined in such a manner.
-
-One bright Sunday morning, as we rode the calm waters near the Canary
-Islands, I induced the sailor to release his prisoner on the main deck
-with my own, to see how they would act towards each other. He did so,
-and in a moment the big ape came ambling along the deck towards Aaron
-and Elisheba, who were sitting on the top of a hatch, absorbed in
-gnawing some turkey bones.
-
-As the stranger came near he slackened his pace and gazed earnestly
-at the others. Aaron ceased eating and stared at the visitor with a
-look of surprise, but Elisheba barely noticed him. He scanned Aaron
-from head to foot, and Aaron did the same with him. He advanced until
-his nose almost touched that of Aaron, and in this position the two
-remained for some seconds. Then the big one proceeded to salute
-Elisheba in the same manner, but she gave him little attention. She
-continued to gnaw the bone in her hand, and he had no reason to feel
-flattered at the impression he appeared to have made on her. Aaron
-watched him with deep concern, but without uttering a sound.
-
-Turning again to Aaron, the big ape reached out for his turkey bone;
-but the hospitality of the little host was not equal to the demand.
-He drew back with a shrug of his shoulder, holding the bone closer to
-himself, and then he resumed eating. Then a steward gave a bone to the
-visitor. He climbed upon the hatch and took a seat on the right of
-Elisheba, Aaron being seated at her left. As soon as the big one had
-taken his seat, Aaron resigned his place and crowded himself in between
-them. The three sat for a few moments in this order, till the big one
-got up and deliberately walked around to the other side of Elisheba and
-sat down again beside her. Again Aaron forced himself in between them.
-
-This act was repeated six or eight times; then Elisheba left the hatch
-and took a seat on a spar that lay on deck. The big ape immediately
-moved over and sat down near her; but by the time he was seated Aaron
-again got in between them, and as he did so he struck his rival a smart
-blow on the back. They sat in this manner for a minute or so. Then
-Aaron drew back his hand and struck again. He continued his blows, all
-the while increasing them in force and frequency; but the other did
-not resent them. His manner was one of dignified contempt, as if he
-regarded the inferior strength of his assailant unworthy of his own
-prowess. It would be absurd to suppose that he was constrained by any
-principle of honor, but his demeanor was patronizing and forbearing,
-like that of a considerate man towards a small boy.
-
-One amusing feature of the affair was the half-serious and half-jocular
-manner of Aaron. When striking, he did not turn his face to look at
-his rival, and the instant the blow was delivered he withdrew his hand
-as if to avoid being detected. He gave no sign of anger though he made
-no effort to conceal his jealousy; and the other seemed to be aware of
-the cause of his disquietude. The smirk of indifference on the little
-lover’s face belied the state of mind that impelled his action, and it
-was patent to all who witnessed the tilt that Aaron was jealous of his
-guest. From time to time Elisheba would change her seat. Then a similar
-scene would ensue.
-
-The whole affair was so comical and yet so real that one could not
-repress the laughter it evoked. It was the drama of “love’s young
-dream” in real life, in which every man, at some period of his young
-career, has played each part the same as these two rivals played. Every
-detail of plot and line was the duplicate of a like incident in the
-experience of boyhood.
-
-Elisheba did not seem to encourage the suit of this simian beau, but
-she did not rebuff him as a true and faithful spouse should do, and I
-never blamed Aaron for not liking it. She had no right to tolerate the
-attentions of a total stranger; but she was feminine, and, perhaps,
-endowed with all the vanity of her sex, and fond of adulation. However,
-my sympathies for the devoted little Aaron were too strong for me to
-permit him to be imposed upon by a rival twice as big and three times
-as strong as himself; so I took him and Elisheba away to the after
-deck, where they had a good time alone.
-
-Elisheba was never very much devoted to me, but in the early part of
-her career she began to realize the fact that I was her master and her
-friend. She had no gratitude in her nature, but she had sense enough
-to see that all her food and comfort were due to me, and as a matter
-of policy she became submissive; but she was never tractable. She was
-doubtless a plebeian among her own race and was not capable of being
-brought up to a high standard of culture. She could not be controlled
-by kindness alone, for she was by nature sordid and perverse. I was
-never cruel or severe in dealing with her, but it was necessary to be
-strict and firm. Her poor health, however, often caused me to indulge
-her in whims that otherwise would have brought her under a more rigid
-discipline. The patient conduct of Aaron appeared to be tempered by the
-same consideration.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII
-
-Illness of Elisheba--Aaron’s Care of Her--Her Death--Illness and Death
-of Aaron
-
-
-At the end of forty-two long days at sea we arrived at Liverpool. It
-was near the end of autumn. The weather was cold and foggy. Elisheba
-was failing in health, as I feared she would do, having come from the
-warm, humid climate along the equator, and, at the same time, having
-undergone a change of food.
-
-On arriving at the end of our long and arduous voyage, I secured
-quarters for the apes and quickly had them stowed away in a warm,
-sunny cage. Elisheba began to recover from the fatigue and worry of
-the journey, and for a while was more cheerful than she had been at
-any time since I had known her. Her appetite returned, the symptoms of
-fever passed away, and she seemed benefited rather than injured by the
-voyage. Aaron was in the best of health and had shown no signs of any
-evil results from the trip.
-
-On reaching the landing-stage in Liverpool, some friends who met us
-there expressed a desire to see the apes, and for that purpose I opened
-their cage in the waiting-room. When they beheld the throng of huge
-figures with white faces, long skirts, and big coats, they were almost
-frantic with fear. They had never before seen anything like it, and
-they crouched back in the corner of the cage, clinging to each other
-and screaming in terror. When they saw me standing by them, they rushed
-to me, seized me by the legs, and climbed up to my arms. Finding they
-were safe here, they stared for a moment, as if amazed at the crowd;
-then Elisheba buried her face under my chin and refused to look at any
-one. They were both trembling with fright, and I could scarcely get
-them into their cage again; but after they were installed in their
-quarters with Dr. Cross, who was to have charge of them, they became
-reconciled to the sight of strangers in such costumes. In their own
-country they had never seen anything like it, for the natives, to whom
-they were accustomed, wear, as a rule, no clothing except a small piece
-of cloth tied round the waist, and the few white men they had seen
-were mostly dressed in white; but here was a great crowd of creatures
-in skirts and overcoats, and I have no doubt that to them it was a
-startling sight when seen for the first time.
-
-During the first two weeks after arriving at Liverpool, Elisheba
-improved in health and temper, until she was not like the same
-creature; but about the end of that time she contracted a severe cold.
-A deep, dry cough, attended by pains in the chest and sides, together
-with a piping hoarseness, betrayed the nature of her disease and gave
-just cause for apprehension. During frequent paroxysms of coughing she
-pressed her hands upon her breast or side, to arrest the shock and thus
-lessen the pain it caused. When quiet, she sat holding her hands on her
-throat, her head bowed down and her eyes drooping or closed. Day by day
-the serpent of disease drew his deadly coils closer and closer about
-her wasting form; but she bore it with a patience worthy of a human
-being.
-
-[Illustration: ELISHEBA AND AARON (From a Photograph.)]
-
-The sympathy and forbearance of Aaron were again called into action,
-and the demand was not in vain. Hour after hour he sat holding her
-locked in his arms, as he is seen in the portrait given herewith. He
-was not posing for a picture, nor was he aware how deeply his manners
-touched the human heart. Even the brawny men who work about the place
-paused to watch him in his tender offices to her, and his staid keeper
-was moved to pity by his kindness and his patience. For days she
-lingered on the verge of death. She became too feeble to sit up; but
-as she lay on her bed of straw, he sat by her side, resting his folded
-arms upon her and refusing to allow any one to touch her. His look of
-deep concern showed that he felt the gravity of her case in a degree
-that bordered on grief. He was grave and silent, as if he foresaw the
-sad end that was near at hand. My frequent visits were a source of
-comfort to him, and he evinced a pleasure in my coming that bespoke his
-confidence in me and his faith in my ability to relieve his suffering
-companion; but, alas! she was beyond the aid of human skill.
-
-On the morning of her decease I found him sitting by her as usual.
-At my approach he quietly rose to his feet and advanced to the front
-of the cage. Opening the door, I put my arm in and caressed him. He
-looked into my face and then at the prostrate form of his mate. The
-last dim sparks of life were not yet gone out, as the slight motion of
-the breast betrayed; but the limbs were cold and limp. While I leaned
-over to examine more closely, he crouched down by her side and watched
-with deep concern to see the result. I laid my hand upon her heart to
-ascertain if the last hope was gone; he looked at me, and then placed
-his own hand by the side of mine, and held it there as if he knew the
-purport of the act. Of course to him this had no real meaning, but it
-was an index to the desire which prompted it. He seemed to think that
-anything that I did would be good for her, and his purpose, doubtless,
-was to aid me. When I removed my hand, he removed his; when I returned
-mine, he did the same; and to the last he gave evidence of his faith in
-my friendship and good intentions. His ready approval of anything I did
-showed that he had a vague idea of my purpose.
-
-At length the breast grew still, and the feeble beating of the heart
-ceased. The lips were parted, and the dim eyes were halfway closed;
-but he sat by as if she were asleep. The sturdy keeper came to remove
-the body from the cage; but Aaron clung to it and refused to allow him
-to touch it. I took the little mourner in my arms, but he watched the
-keeper jealously and did not want him to remove or disturb the body. It
-was laid on a bunch of straw in front of the cage, and he was returned
-to his place; but he clung to me so firmly that it was difficult to
-release his hold. He cried in a piteous tone and fretted and worried,
-as if he fully realized the worst. The body was then removed from view,
-but poor little Aaron was not consoled. How I pitied him! How I wished
-that he was again in his native land, where he might find friends of
-his own race!
-
-After this he grew more attached to me than ever. When I went to visit
-him he was happy and cheerful in my presence; but the keeper said that
-while I was away he was often gloomy and morose. As long as he could
-see me or hear my voice, he would fret and cry for me to come to him.
-When I had left him, he would scream as long as he had any hope of
-inducing me to return.
-
-A few days after the death of Elisheba the keeper put a young monkey
-in the cage with him, for company. This gave him some relief from the
-monotony of his own society, but never quite filled the place of the
-lost one. With this little friend, however, he amused himself in many
-ways. He nursed it so zealously and hugged it so tightly that the poor
-little monkey was often glad to escape from him in order to have a
-rest. But the task of catching it again afforded him almost as much
-pleasure as he found in nursing it.
-
-Thus for a few weeks he passed his time; then he was seized by a sudden
-cold, which in a few days developed into an acute type of pneumonia.
-I was in London at the time and was not aware of his sickness; but
-feeling anxious about him, I wrote to Dr. Cross, in whose care he was
-left, and received a note in reply, stating that Aaron was very ill
-and not expected to live. I prepared to go to visit him the next day,
-but just before I left the hotel I received a telegram stating that he
-was dead. The news contained in the letter was a greater shock to me
-than that in the telegram, for which in part the former had prepared
-me; but no one can imagine how deeply these evil tidings affected me. I
-could not bring myself to a full sense of the fact. I was unwilling to
-believe that I had been thus deprived of my devoted friend. I could not
-realize that fate could be so cruel to me; but, alas! it was true.
-
-Not having been present during his short illness or at the time of
-his death, I cannot relate any of the scenes accompanying them; but
-the kind old keeper who attended him declares that he never became
-reconciled to the death of Elisheba, and that his loneliness preyed
-upon him almost as much as the disease. When I looked upon his cold,
-lifeless body, I felt that I was indeed bereft of one of the dearest
-and most loyal pets that any mortal had ever known. His fidelity to me
-had been shown in a hundred ways, and his affections had never wavered.
-How could any one requite such integrity with anything unkind?
-
-To those who possess the higher instincts of humanity it will not be
-thought absurd in me to confess that the conduct of these creatures
-awoke in me a feeling more exalted than a mere sense of kindness. It
-touched some chord of nature that yields a richer tone. But only those
-who have known such pets as I have known them can feel towards them as
-I have felt.
-
-I have no desire to bias the calm judgment or bribe the sentiment of
-him who scorns the love of nature, by clothing these humble creatures
-in the garb of human dignity; but to him who is not so imbued with
-self-conceit as to be blind to all evidence and deaf to all reason,
-it must appear that they are gifted with faculties and passions like
-to those of man; differing in degree, but not in kind. Moved by such
-conviction, who could fail to pity that poor, lone captive in his iron
-cell, far from his native land, slowly dying? It may be a mere freak of
-sentiment that I regret not having been with him to soothe and comfort
-his last hours, but I do regret it deeply. He had the right to expect
-it of me, as a duty.
-
-Poor little Aaron! In the brief span of half a year he had seen his own
-mother die at the hands of the cruel hunters; he had been seized and
-sold into captivity; he had seen the lingering torch of life go out
-of the frail body of Moses; he had watched the demon of death binding
-his cold shackles on Elisheba; and now he had himself passed through
-the deep shadows of that ordeal. What a sad and vast experience for
-one short year! He had shared with me the toils and the dangers of sea
-and land over many a weary mile. He seemed to feel that the death of
-his two friends had been a common loss to us; and if there is any one
-thing which more than another knits the web of sympathy about two alien
-hearts, it is the experience of a common grief.
-
-Thus ended the career of my kulu-kamba friend, the last of my
-chimpanzee pets. In him were centered many cherished hopes; but they
-did not perish with him, for I shall some day find another one of his
-kind in whom I may realize all that I had hoped for in him. I cannot
-expect to find a specimen of superior qualities, for he was certainly
-one of the jolliest and one of the wisest of his race. However fine and
-intelligent his successor may be, he can never supplant either Moses or
-Aaron in my affections; for these two little heroes shared with me so
-many of the sad vicissitudes of time and fortune that I should be an
-ingrate to forget them or allow the deeds of others to dim the glory of
-their memory. I have all of them preserved, and when I look at them the
-past comes back to me, and I recall so vividly the scenes in which they
-played the leading _rôles_; it is like the panorama of their lives.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII
-
-Other Chimpanzees--The Village Pet--A Chimpanzee as Diner-Out--Notable
-Specimens in Captivity
-
-
-Among the number of chimpanzees that I have seen are some whose actions
-are worthy of record; but as many of them were the repetitions of
-similar acts of other specimens which are elsewhere described, I shall
-omit mention of them and relate only such other acts as may tend to
-widen the circle of our knowledge, and more fully illustrate the mental
-range of this interesting tribe of apes.
-
-In passing through the country of the Esyira tribe I came to a small
-village, where I halted for a rest. On entering the open space between
-two rows of bamboo huts, I saw a group of native children at the
-opposite end of the space, and among them was a fine big chimpanzee,
-sharing in their play. When they discovered the presence of a white
-man in the town, they left their sport and came to inspect me. The ape
-also came, and he showed as much interest in the matter as any one else
-did. I was seated in a native chair in front of the king’s hut, and the
-people, as usual, stood around me at a respectful distance, looking on
-as if I had been some wild beast captured in the jungle.
-
-The ape was aware that I was not a familiar kind of thing, and he
-appeared in doubt as to how he should act towards me. He sat down on
-the ground among the people and stared at me in surprise, from time to
-time glancing at those around him as if to ascertain what they thought
-of me. As they became satisfied with looking they retired one by one
-from the scene, until most of them had gone; but the ape remained.
-He changed his place a few times, but only to get a better view. The
-people were amused at his manner, but no one molested him.
-
-[Illustration: Native Village, Interior of Nyanza (From a Photograph.)]
-
-At length I spoke to him in his own language, using the sound which
-they use for calling one another. He looked as if he knew what it
-meant, but made no reply. I repeated the sound, and he rose up and
-stood on his feet, as if he intended to come to me. Again I uttered
-it, and he came a few feet closer, but shied to one side as if to
-flank my position and get behind me. He stopped again to look, and I
-repeated the word, in response to which he came up near my right side
-and began to examine my clothing. He plucked at my coat sleeve a few
-times, then at the leg of my trousers and at the top of my boot. He
-was getting rather familiar for a stranger; but I felt myself to blame
-for having given him the license to do so. For a while he continued
-his investigations, then he deliberately put his left hand on my right
-shoulder, his right foot on my knee, and climbed into my lap. He now
-began to examine my helmet, ears, nose, chin, and mouth. He became a
-little rough, and I tried to get him down out of my lap, but he was not
-disposed to go. Finally I told my boy--who acted as interpreter--to
-tell the native lads to come and take the ape away. This amused them
-very much, for they saw that I was bigger than the ape, and they
-thought I ought, therefore, to manage him myself. They complied,
-however; but his apeship declined to go until one of the men of the
-town interfered and compelled him to do so.
-
-As he got down from my lap one of the boys bantered him to play. He
-accepted the challenge and ran after the lad until they reached the
-end of the open space between the houses, when the boy fell upon the
-ground, and the ape fell on him. They rolled and wallowed on the ground
-for a time. Then the ape released himself and ran away to the other end
-of the opening, the boy pursuing him. When they reached the end of the
-street they again fell upon each other, and another scuffle ensued.
-It was plain to be seen that the boy could run much faster than the
-ape, but the ape did not try to elude him. The other children crowded
-around them or followed them, looking on, laughing and shouting in the
-greatest glee. First one boy and then another took his turn in the
-play, but the ape did not lose interest in me. He stopped from time to
-time to take another survey, but did not try again to get upon my lap.
-
-After a long time at this sport the ape quit playing and sat down by
-the wall of a house, with his back against it; the children tried in
-vain to induce him to resume; but he firmly declined, and sat there
-like a tired athlete, picking his teeth with a bamboo splinter which
-he had pulled off the side of the house. His conduct was so much like
-that of the children with whom he was playing that one could not have
-distinguished him from them except by his physique. He enjoyed the
-game as much as they did and showed that he knew how to gain or use an
-advantage over his adversary. In a scuffle he was stronger and more
-active than the boys, but in the race they were the more fleet. He
-screamed and yelled with delight, and in every way appeared to enter
-into the spirit of the fun.
-
-This ape was about five years old, and his history, as it was given to
-me, showed that he had been captured, when quite young, in the forest
-near that place and ever since that time had lived in the village.
-He had been the constant playmate of the children, ate with them,
-and slept in the same houses with them. He was perfectly tame and
-harmless; he knew by name every one in the village, and knew his own
-name.
-
-The king’s son--to whom he belonged--assured me that the ape could
-talk, and that he himself could understand what the animal said; but
-he declined to gratify my request to hear it. However, he called the
-ape by name, telling him to come, and the ape obeyed. The man then gave
-him a long-necked gourd and told him to go to the spring and bring
-some water. The animal hesitated, but after the command had been two
-or three times repeated he reluctantly obeyed. After a few minutes he
-returned with the gourd about half filled with water. In carrying the
-vessel he held it by the neck, but this deprived him of the use of one
-hand. He waddled along on his feet, using the other hand, but now and
-then he set the gourd on the ground, still holding to it, and using it
-something after the manner of a short stick. On delivering the gourd
-of water to his master, he gave evidence of knowing that he had done a
-clever thing.
-
-I expressed a desire to see him fill the gourd at the spring. The
-water was then emptied out, and the gourd was again given to him. On
-this occasion we followed him to the place where he got the water.
-On arriving he leaned over the spring and pressed the gourd into the
-water, but the mouth of it was turned down so that the water could
-not flow into it. As he lifted the gourd out it turned to one side,
-and a small quantity flowed into it. He repeated the act a number of
-times and seemed to know how it ought to be done, although he was very
-awkward in trying to do it. Whenever the water in the mouth of the
-gourd bubbled, he dipped it back again and was evidently aware that it
-was not filled. Finally, raising the vessel, he turned and offered it
-to his master, who declined to relieve him of it. We turned to go back
-into the town, and the ape followed us with the gourd; but all the way
-along he continued to mutter a sound of complaint.
-
-He was next sent into the edge of the forest to bring firewood. He had
-been gone only a few minutes when he returned with a small branch of
-dead wood which he had picked up from the ground. He was again sent,
-together with three or four children. When he returned on this occasion
-he had three sticks in his hand. The man explained to me that when the
-ape went alone he would never bring but one twig at a time, and this
-was sometimes not bigger than a lead pencil; but if the children went
-with him and brought wood, he would bring as much as he could grasp in
-one hand. He also told me that the animal would sit down on the ground
-and lay the sticks across one arm in the same manner as the children
-did, but he invariably dropped them when he rose up. Then he would
-seize what he could hold in one hand and bring it along. The man also
-said that, in carrying a single stick, the ape always used only the
-hand in which he held it; but that if he had three or four pieces he
-always curved his arm inwards, holding the wood against his side, and
-hobbled along with his feet and the other hand.
-
-The next thing with which the man entertained me was sending the ape
-to call some one in the village. He first sent him to bring a certain
-one of the man’s wives. She was several doors away from where we sat.
-The ape went to one house, sat down at the door for a moment, looking
-inside, and then moved slowly along to the next, which he entered.
-Within a minute he appeared at the door, holding the cloth that the
-woman wore tied around her, and in this manner led her to his master.
-He was next sent to bring a certain boy. This he did in a similar
-manner, except that the boy had on no clothing of any kind, and the ape
-held him by the leg.
-
-During all these feats the man talked to him, as far as I could tell,
-in the native language only; though he declared to me that some of the
-words that he had used were those of the ape’s own speech. However,
-he said that many words that the ape knew were of the native speech,
-and that the ape had no such words in his language. One thing that
-especially impressed me was a sound which I have elsewhere described
-as meaning “good” or “satisfaction,” which this man said was the word
-which these apes use to mean “mother.” My own servant had told me the
-same thing, but I am still of the opinion that they are mistaken in
-the meaning of the sound, although it is almost exactly the same as
-the word for mother in the native speech. The difference being in the
-vowel element only, it is possible, I grant, that the word may have
-both meanings. A little later one of the women came to the door of
-a house and said, in the native language, that something was ready
-to eat; whereupon the children and the ape at once started. In the
-mean time she set in front of the house an earthen pot, containing
-boiled plantains, from which all the children and the ape alike
-helped themselves. In brief, the ape was a part of the family and was
-so regarded by all in the town. I do not know to what extent those
-natives may have played upon my credulity, but so far as I could
-discern, their statements concerning the animal were verified.
-
-I proposed to buy the ape, but the price asked was nearly twice that
-of a slave. I could have bought any child in the town at a smaller
-cost. I have never seen any other chimpanzee that I so much coveted.
-When standing in an upright position, he was quite four feet in height,
-strongly built and well proportioned. He was in a fine, healthy
-condition and in the very prime of his life. He was not handsome in the
-face, but his coat of hair was of good color and texture. He was of the
-common variety, but a fine specimen.
-
-Mr. Otto Handmann, formerly the German consul at Gaboon, had a very
-fair specimen of this same species of chimpanzee. He was a rough, burly
-creature, but was well disposed and had in his face a look of wisdom
-that was almost comical. He had been for some months a captive in a
-native town, during which time he had become quite tame and docile. By
-nature he was not humorous, but he appeared to acquire a sense of fun
-as he grew older and became more familiar with the manners of men.
-
-On my return from the interior I was invited by the consul to take
-breakfast with himself and a few friends; but owing to a prior
-engagement, I was not able to be present. It was proposed by some one
-of the guests that my vacant seat at the table should be filled by the
-chimpanzee. He was brought into the room and permitted to occupy the
-seat. He behaved himself with becoming gravity and was not abashed
-in the presence of so many guests. He was served with such things as
-were best suited to his liking, and his demeanor was such as to amuse
-all present. On the proposal of a toast all the guests beat with their
-hands upon the table, and in this the chimpanzee joined with apparent
-pleasure. After a few rounds of this kind, one of the guests occupying
-the seat next to the chimpanzee failed to respond with the usual
-beating; the chimpanzee observed the fact, turned upon the guest, and
-began to claw, scream, and pound him on the back and arm until the
-gentleman proceeded to beat; whereupon the ape resumed his place and
-joined in the applause. On this occasion he acquitted himself with
-credit; but an hour later he had fallen into disgrace by drinking beer
-until he was actually drunk, when he awkwardly climbed off the chair,
-crawled under the table, and went to sleep.
-
-One of the clerks in the employ of the consul had a fair specimen of
-this species. It was a female, perhaps two years younger than the one
-just described, but equally addicted to the habit of drinking beer. It
-is the custom among people on the coast to offer to a guest something
-to drink, and on these occasions this young lady ape always expected to
-partake with the others. If she was overlooked in pouring out the beer,
-she always set up a complaint until she got her glass. If it was not
-given to her, she would go from one to another, holding out her hand
-and begging for a drink. If she failed to secure it, she watched her
-opportunity, and while the guest was not looking would stealthily reach
-up, take his glass off the table, drink the contents, and return the
-glass to its place. She would do this with each one in turn until she
-had taken the last glass; but if a glass was given to her at the same
-time that the others were served, she was content with it and made no
-attempt to steal that of another. In this act she evinced a skill and
-caution worthy of a confirmed thief; she would secrete herself under
-the table or behind a chair and watch her chance. She made no attempt
-to steal the glass while it was being watched, but the instant she
-discovered that she was not observed, or thought she was not, the theft
-was committed.
-
-Her master frequently gave her a glass and a bottle of beer so that she
-might help herself. She could pour the beer with dexterity. She often
-spilt a portion of it and sometimes filled the glass to overflowing,
-but she always set the bottle right end up, lifted the glass with both
-hands, drained it, and refilled it as long as there was any in the
-bottle. She could also drink from the bottle and would resort to this
-method if no glass were given her. She knew an empty bottle from one
-that contained beer. I may remark here that I have known at least five
-or six chimpanzees that were fond of beer, and whenever they could get
-it would drink until they were drunk. I have never seen one, that I am
-aware of, that would drink spirits.
-
-This ape was very much attached to her master, would follow him and cry
-after him like a child. She was affectionate to him; but she had been
-so much annoyed by strangers that her temper was spoiled, and she was
-irritable.
-
-Arriving on the south side of Lake Izanga, I found a young chimpanzee
-at the house of a white trader. It was tied to a post in the yard,
-where it was annoyed by the natives who came to the place to trade. On
-approaching it for the first time, I spoke to it in its own language,
-using the word for food. It recognized the sound at once and responded
-to it. As I came nearer, it advanced as far towards me as the string
-with which it was tied would allow. Standing erect and holding out its
-hands, it repeated the sound two or three times. I gave it some dried
-fish. This it ate with relish, and we at once became friends. Its
-master permitted me to release it on the condition that I should not
-allow it to escape. I untied the cord and took the little captive in my
-arms. It put its arms around my neck as if I had been the only friend
-it had on earth. It clung to me and would not consent for me to leave
-it. I could but pity the poor, neglected creature. There it was, tied
-in the hot sun, hungry, lonely, and exposed to the tortures of every
-heartless native that chose to tease it. When it was not in my arms
-it followed me around and would not leave me for a moment. Its master
-cared but little for it and left it to the charge of his boy, who, like
-all other natives, had no thought or concern for the comfort of any
-creature but himself. I tried to purchase it, but the price was too
-much, and after two days our friendship was broken forever. But I was
-glad to learn soon after this that another of the traders had secretly
-released it and let it escape into the forest. The man who did this
-told me that he did it as an act of mercy. I often recall this little
-prisoner to mind, and always feel a sense of gladness at knowing that
-he was set at liberty by a humane friend. Whatever may have been his
-fate in the forest, it could have been no worse than to be confined,
-starved, and tormented, as he was while in captivity.
-
-Another small specimen which I saw at Gaboon was not of much interest
-except from one fact, and that was it was broken out with an
-eruptive disease prevalent among the natives. This disease is called
-_craw-craw_, or _kra-kra_. It is said to originate from the water,
-either by external or internal use of that fluid. This animal was
-infected in the same way and on the same parts of the body as men are
-affected by the same disease, and is another instance of apes being
-subject to the same maladies as those of man. The specimen itself also
-exemplified the difference in intellect among these animals, for this
-one had in its face a look of mental weakness, and every act confirmed
-the fact. It was silent, inactive, and obtuse.
-
-During my residence in the cage I saw fewer chimpanzees than gorillas;
-but from those I did see it was an easy matter to determine that they
-are much less shy and timid than the gorillas.
-
-On one occasion I heard a chimpanzee in the bush not far away from the
-cage. I called him with the usual sound. He answered, but did not come
-to the cage. It is probable that he could see it and was afraid of it.
-I tried to induce Moses to call him, and he did once utter the sound;
-but he appeared to regret having made the attempt. I called again and
-the stranger answered, and from the manner in which Moses behaved it
-was evident that the call had been understood. Moses would not attempt
-the call again, but clung to my neck with his face buried under my
-chin. It was probably jealousy that caused him to refuse, because he
-did not want the other to share my attentions. I gave the food sound,
-but I could not induce the visitor to come nearer. I failed to get a
-view of him so as to tell how large he was, but from his voice I judged
-that he must have been about full-grown. Whether he was quite alone or
-not I was not able to tell; but only the one voice could be heard.
-
-Another time while I was sitting quite alone, a young chimpanzee,
-perhaps five or six years old, appeared at the edge of a small opening
-of the bush. He plucked a bud or leaf from a small plant. He raised it
-to his nose and smelt it. He picked three or four buds of different
-kinds, one or two of which he put in his mouth. He turned aside the
-dead leaves that were lying on the ground, as if he expected to
-find something under them. I spoke to him, using the call sound; he
-instantly turned his eyes towards me, but made no reply. I uttered
-the food sound, and he replied but did not move. He betrayed no sign
-of fear and but little of surprise. He surveyed the cage and myself.
-I repeated the sound two or three times. He refused to approach any
-nearer. He turned his head from side to side for a moment, as if in
-doubt which way to go; then he turned aside and disappeared in the
-bush. He did not run or start away as if in great fear, but by the
-sound of the shaking bushes it could be told that he increased his
-speed after he had once disappeared from view.
-
-One day I had been for a stroll with Moses and the boy. As we returned
-to the cage we saw a chimpanzee about half grown; he was crossing a
-rugged little path about thirty yards away from us. He paused for a
-moment to look at us, and we stopped. I tried to induce Moses to call
-out to him, but he declined to do so. As the stranger turned aside I
-called to him myself, but he neither stopped nor answered. This one
-appeared to be quite brown, but the boy assured me the hair was jet
-black, and that the light skin gave the appearance of brown color. To
-satisfy myself, I had Moses placed in the same attitude and position,
-and, looking at him from the same distance, I became convinced that the
-boy was right.
-
-One morning, having started with Moses for a walk, we had gone only
-some forty yards away from the cage when he made a sound of warning. I
-instantly looked up and saw a large chimpanzee standing in the bush not
-more than twenty yards away. I paused to observe him. He stood for a
-moment, looking straight at us. I spoke to him, but he made no reply;
-he moved off in a line almost parallel to the little path we were in,
-and I returned towards the cage. He did not come any nearer to us,
-but kept his course almost parallel with ours. From time to time he
-turned his head to look, but gave no sign of attack. I called to him
-several times, but he made no answer. When I had reached a place in
-front of the cage I called again, and after the lapse of a few seconds
-he stopped. By this time he was concealed from view. He halted only
-for a moment, changed his course, and resumed his journey. This was
-the largest chimpanzee I saw in the forest. Once, while sitting in the
-cage, I heard the sound of something making its way through the bush
-not more than twenty yards away; presently a chimpanzee came into
-view. As it crossed the path near by, I called three or four times, but
-it neither stopped nor answered. As well as I could tell, it appeared
-to be a female and quite grown.
-
-I may take occasion to remark that, while the chimpanzee is mostly
-found in large family groups,--as I have reason to believe, from native
-accounts of them and from what has been told me by white men,--I have
-never been able to see a family of them together. Each of these that I
-have mentioned, so far as I could tell, was quite alone. Whether or not
-the others were scattered through the forest in like manner, hunting
-for food, and all came together after this, I cannot say.
-
-Another thing worthy of mention is the fact that both these apes, the
-chimpanzee and the gorilla, live in the same forest, and twice on the
-same day I have seen both kinds. This is contrary to the common idea
-that they do not inhabit the same jungle. It appears that where there
-is a great number of the one kind there are but a few of the other.
-The natives say that in combat between the chimpanzee and the gorilla
-the former is always victor, and on this account the gorilla fears the
-chimpanzee. I believe this to be true, because the chimpanzee, although
-not so strong as the gorilla, is more active and more intelligent.
-
-The chimpanzee will not approach or attack man if he can avoid him, but
-he does not shrink from him as the gorilla does. One instance that will
-illustrate this phase of his character I shall relate. On one occasion
-recently, while I was on the coast, a native boy started across a small
-plain near the trading station. With him was a dog that belonged to
-the white trader of the place. The dog was in advance of the boy, and
-as the latter emerged from a small clump of the bush he heard the dog
-bark in a playful manner, and discovered him not more than thirty yards
-away, prancing, jumping, and barking in a jolly way with a chimpanzee
-which appeared to be five or six years old. The ape was standing in the
-path along which the boy was proceeding. He was slapping at the dog
-with his hands and did not seem to relish the sport; yet he was not
-resenting it in anger. The dog thought the ape was playing with him,
-and he was taking the whole thing in fun. The boy looked at them for a
-few moments and retreated. As soon as he disappeared the dog desisted
-and followed him to the house. The boy was afraid of the ape and made
-no attempt to capture him. The ape was taken by surprise by the dog and
-the boy, and thus had no time to escape. He did not strike to harm the
-dog, but only to ward him off. The dog made no attempt to bite the ape,
-but would jump up against him and knock him out of balance, and this
-annoyed him. The ape didn’t seem to understand just what the dog meant.
-
-I shall not describe those apes that have been kept in captivity and
-are well known; but I will mention some of them. The largest specimen
-of the chimpanzee that I have ever seen was Chico, who belonged to Mr.
-James A. Bailey of New York. He was as large perhaps as these apes ever
-become, although he was less than ten years old when he died.
-
-Perhaps the most valuable specimen for scientific use that has ever
-been in captivity is Johanna, who belongs to the same gentleman. The
-history that is given of her, however, is hardly to be taken in full
-faith. Her age cannot be determined with certainty, but it is said that
-she is about thirteen years old. I have reason to doubt that, although
-I cannot positively deny it. Whatever may be her exact age, it is
-certain that she has now reached a complete adult state. She has grown
-to be quite as large as Chico was at the time of his death. She is not
-of amiable temper, but is much less vicious than he was. She has some
-of the marks of a kulu-kamba.
-
-In order to justify my doubts upon the subject of Johanna’s age, I may
-state that Chico was hardly ten years of age when he died, but he had
-reached the adult period; and as males of any genus of the primates do
-not reach that state sooner than the females, it is not probable, since
-he was mature at ten, that she was not so until twelve. In the next
-place, her captors claim to have seen her within a few hours after her
-birth, and state that they watched her and her mother from time to time
-until she was one year old. Then they killed the mother and captured
-the babe. The claim is absurd. These apes are nomadic in habit and are
-rarely ever seen twice in the same place. They claim that she was born
-on January 19, but, from what I know of these apes, I conclude that
-is not their season of bearing. I doubt if any of them _were_ ever
-born during that month. Again, it is claimed that she was captured by
-Portuguese explorers in the Congo, but the Portuguese do not possess
-along that river any territory in which these apes are ever found. They
-claim the territory around Kabinda, which would indicate that she came
-from the Loango valley instead of the Congo; but the cupidity of the
-average Portuguese would never allow anything to go at liberty for a
-year if it could be sold before that time.
-
-Johanna is accredited with a great deal of intelligence, but I do not
-regard her as being above the average of her race. Since the death
-of her companion, Chico, she has received the sole attention of her
-keeper, and since that time has been taught a few things which are
-neither marvelous nor difficult. In point of intellect she cannot be
-regarded as an extraordinary specimen of her tribe. I do not mean to
-detract from her reputation, but I have failed to discover in her any
-high order of mental qualities.
-
-The reason why Johanna may be regarded as the most valuable specimen
-for study is the fact that she is the only female of her race that has
-ever, in captivity, reached the state of puberty. She has done so,
-and this fact enables us to determine certain things which have never
-heretofore been known. This affords the zoologists an opportunity for
-the study of her sexual developments which may not again present itself
-in many years to come. From this important point of view she presents
-the student with many new problems in that branch of science. I have
-elsewhere stated my opinion that the female chimpanzee reaches the
-age of puberty at seven to nine years, and I have many reasons which
-I will not here recount that cause me to adhere to that belief. But
-the uncertainty of the age of this ape does not destroy her value as a
-subject of scientific study.
-
-The most sagacious specimen of the race that I have been brought in
-contact with is Consul II, who is now an inmate of the Bellevue Garden
-in Manchester, England. He has not been educated to perform mere tricks
-to gratify the visitor, in the way that animals are usually trained,
-but most of the feats that he performs are prompted by his own desire
-and for his own pleasure. There is a vast difference in the motives
-that prompt animals in the execution of these feats. I have elsewhere
-mentioned the fact that animals that are caused to act from fear do so
-mechanically, and the acts are not a true index to their intellect.
-While Consul and a few other apes that I have seen do many things by
-imitation, they do not do them by coercion. They seem to understand the
-purpose and foresee the result, and these impel them to act.
-
-Some of the feats performed by this ape I have never seen attempted by
-any other. One accomplishment is the riding of a tricycle. He knows the
-machine by the name of “bike,” although it is not really a bicycle. He
-can adjust it and mount it with the skill of an acrobat. The ease and
-grace with which he rides are sufficient to provoke the envy of any
-boy in England. He propels it with great skill and steers it with the
-accuracy of an expert. He guides it around angles and obstacles with
-absolute precision. He is allowed to go at liberty a great deal of his
-time; and this is the proper way to treat these apes in captivity. He
-rides the wheel for his own diversion. He does not do it to gratify
-strangers or to “show off.”
-
-[Illustration: CONSUL II RIDING A TRICYCLE (From a Photograph.)]
-
-Another accomplishment which Consul has is that of smoking a pipe,
-a cigar, or a cigarette. This may not be commended from a moral
-standpoint, but it appears to afford him quite as much pleasure as it
-does the average boy when he first acquires the habit. He has also
-formed the habit of spitting as he smokes,--but he has the good manners
-not to spit on the floor. When Consul has his pipe lighted he usually
-sits on the floor to enjoy a smoke, and he spreads down before him a
-sheet of paper to spit on. When he has finished smoking he rolls up
-the paper and throws it into some corner, out of the way. When playing
-about the grounds he often finds a cigar stub. He knows what it is,
-picks it up, puts it into his mouth, and at once goes to his keeper for
-a light. He will not attempt to light his pipe or cigar, because he is
-afraid of burning his fingers; but he will light a match and hand it to
-his keeper to hold while lighting the pipe. He sometimes takes a piece
-of paper, lights it in the fire, and hands it to some one else to light
-his pipe for him. He is afraid of the fire and will not hold the paper
-while it is burning. If any one hesitates to take it, he throws it at
-him and then gets out of the way. He is not fond of cigarettes, because
-he gets the tobacco in his mouth, and he does not like the taste of it.
-
-When Consul is furnished with a piece of chalk he begins to draw some
-huge figure on the wall or the floor. He never attempts to make a small
-design with chalk, but if given a pencil and paper, he executes some
-peculiar figure of smaller design. Those made with the chalk or the
-pencil are usually round or oval in shape, but if given a pen and ink,
-he at once begins to make a series of small figures containing many
-acute angles. Whether these results are from design or accident I
-cannot say, but he appears to have a well-defined idea as to the use of
-the instrument. Whether he can distinguish between writing and drawing
-I am unable to say.
-
-The only abstract thing that his keeper has tried to teach him is to
-select from the letters of the alphabet. He has learned to distinguish
-the first three. These are made upon the faces of cubical blocks of
-wood; each block contains one letter on each of its faces. He selects
-with very few mistakes the letter asked for, and errors appear to
-result from indifference rather than from ignorance.
-
-Consul is very fond of play, and he makes friends with some strangers
-on sight, but to others he takes an aversion without any apparent
-cause; and, while he is not disposed to be vicious when not annoyed, he
-resents with anger the approaches of certain persons. He is the only
-ape I have seen that can use a knife and fork with very much skill;
-but he cuts up his food with almost as much ease as a boy of the same
-age would do, and he uses his fork in eating. He has been taught to do
-this, until he rarely uses his fingers in the act. He is fond of coffee
-and beer, but does not care for spirits.
-
-There is nothing that so much delights Consul as to get into the large
-cage of monkeys and baboons kept in the garden. Most of them are afraid
-of him. But one large Guinea baboon is not so, and on every occasion he
-shows his dislike for the ape. The latter takes many chances in teasing
-him, but always manages to evade his attack. He displays much skill and
-a great degree of caution in playing these pranks upon the baboon when
-at close range. Upon the approach of the ape the other animals in the
-cage all seek some refuge, and he finds great diversion in stealing up
-to their place of concealment to frighten them. Consul is very strong
-and can lift objects of surprising weight. It is awkward for him to
-stand in an upright position, but he does so with more ease than any
-other chimpanzee that I have ever seen. If any one will take hold of
-his hand, he will stroll for a long time and without apparent fatigue.
-
-Owing to the sudden changes of temperature in that part of England
-where he is kept, he is provided with a coat and is often required to
-wear it when going out of doors. He does not like to be hampered with
-such a garment, and if for a moment he is not watched, he removes it
-and sometimes hides it to keep from wearing it. He is also provided
-with trousers; these he dislikes more if possible than his coat, but,
-above all other articles of wearing apparel, he dislikes shoes. His
-keeper often puts them on him, but whenever he gets out of sight he
-unties and removes them. He cannot tie the laces, but can untie them
-in an instant. He does not evince so much aversion to a hat or a cap
-and will sometimes put one on without being told; but he has a perfect
-mania for a silk hat and, if allowed to do so, he would demolish that
-of every stranger who comes to the garden. He has a decided vein of
-humor and a love of approbation. When he does anything that is funny
-or clever, he is perfectly aware of the fact; and when by any act he
-evokes a laugh from any one, he is happy and recognizes the approval by
-a broad chimpanzee grin.
-
-In the corner of the monkey house is a room set apart for the keeper,
-and in this room supplies of food for the inmates are kept. In a small
-cupboard in one corner is kept a supply of bananas and other fruits.
-Consul knows this and has tried many times to burglarize it. On one
-occasion he secured a large screw-driver and attempted to prise open
-the door. He found the resistance to be greatest at the place where the
-door locked, and at this point he forced the instrument in the crevice
-and broke off a piece of the wood, about an inch wide, from the edge
-of the door. At this juncture he was discovered and reproved for his
-conduct; but he never fails to stick his fingers in this crack and try
-to open the door. He has not been able to unlock it when the key is
-given him, although he knows the use of the key and has often tried it;
-but his keeper has never imparted the secret to him, and his method of
-using the key has been to prise with it or pull it, instead of turning
-it after putting it in the keyhole.
-
-The young keeper, Mr. Webb, deserves great credit for his untiring
-attention to this valuable young ape, and the results of his zeal are
-worthy of the recognition of every man who is interested in the study
-of animals.
-
-Another specimen that may be regarded as an intermediate type was
-recently kept in Bellevue Gardens at Manchester. He was playful and
-full of mischief. He had been taught to use a stick or broom in fight,
-and with such a weapon in his hand he would run all over the building,
-hunting some one to attack. He did not appear to be serious in his
-assault, but treated it as fun. It is a bad thing to teach to apes,
-because they grow pugnacious as they grow older, and all animals kept
-closely confined acquire a bad temper.
-
-[Illustration: MR. CROWLEY, LATE OF THE NEW YORK ZOÖLOGICAL GARDEN
-(Taken from Life.)]
-
-In an adjoining cage was kept a young orang, and the two ate at the
-same table. The chimpanzee appeared to entertain a species of contempt
-for the orang. The keeper had taught him to pass the bread to his
-neighbor, but he obeyed with such reluctance that his manner betrayed
-more disgust than kindness. A few small pieces of bread were placed on
-a tin plate, and the kulu was required to lift the plate in his hand
-and offer it to the orang before he himself was allowed to eat. He
-would lift the plate a few inches above the table and hold it before
-the orang’s face; when the latter had taken a piece of the bread, the
-chimpanzee withdrew the plate, held it for a moment, and dropped it.
-Meanwhile he kept his eyes fixed on the orang. The manner in which he
-dropped the plate looked as if he did so in contempt. When the meal was
-finished, the kulu would drink his milk from a cup, wipe his mouth with
-the serviette, and then get down from the table. The orang would slowly
-climb down and go back to his cage. We shall not describe the details
-of their home life, but they were two jolly young bachelors, one of
-which was as stupid as the other was bright.
-
-The specimens that were kept in the Gardens in New York were very
-fine. One of them was mentally equal to any other specimen hitherto
-in captivity. There were two kept in the Cincinnati Gardens which
-were also very fine. So far as I am aware, there have never been but
-nine of these apes brought to America; but six of these lived longer,
-and four of them grew to be larger, than any other specimens of this
-race have ever done in captivity. For some reason they never survive
-long in England or other parts of Europe. This is probably due to
-some condition of the atmosphere. It cannot be from a difference of
-treatment.
-
-I have seen a large number of chimpanzees; most of them were in
-captivity; yet I have seen enough of them in a wild state to gain some
-idea of their habits and manner. Those described will be sufficient to
-show the mental character of the genus.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX
-
-Other Kulu-Kambas--A Knotty Problem--Instinct or Reason--Various Types
-
-
-Whether the kulu-kamba is a distinct species of ape, or only a
-well-marked variety of the chimpanzee, he is by far the finest
-representative of his genus. Among those that I have seen are some very
-good specimens, and the clever things that I have witnessed in them are
-sufficient to stamp them as the highest type of all apes.
-
-On board a small river steamer that plies the Ogowé was a young female
-kulu that belonged to the captain. Her face was not by any means
-handsome, and her complexion was darker than that of any other kulu
-I have ever seen. It was almost a coffee color. There were two or
-three spots yet darker in shade, but not well defined in outline. The
-dark spots looked as if they had been artificially put on the face.
-The color was not solid, but looked as if dry burnt umber had been
-rubbed or sprinkled over a surface of lighter brown. Although she was
-young (perhaps not more than two years old), her face looked almost
-like that of a woman of forty. Her short, flat nose, big, flexible
-lips, protruding jaws, and prominent arches over the eyes, with a low,
-receding forehead, conspired to make her look like a certain type of
-human being one frequently sees. This gave her what is known as a
-dish-face, or concave profile.
-
-She had a habit of compressing her nose by contracting the muscles of
-the face, curling her lips as if in scorn and at the same time glancing
-at those around her as if to express the most profound contempt.
-Whatever may have been the sentiment in her mind, her face was a
-picture of disdain, and the circumstances under which she made use of
-these grimaces certainly pointed to the fact that she felt just as
-she looked. At other times her visage would be covered with a perfect
-smile. It was something more than a grin, and the fact that it was
-used only at a time when she was pleased or diverted showed that the
-emotion which gave rise to it was perfectly in keeping with the face
-itself. In repose her face was neither pretty nor ugly. It did not
-strongly depict a high mental status, nor yet portray the instincts of
-a brute; but her countenance was a safe index to her mind. This is true
-of the chimpanzee more, perhaps, than of any other ape. The gorilla
-doubtless feels the sense of pleasure, but his face does not yield
-to the emotion, while the opposite passions are expressed with great
-intensity, and with the common chimpanzee it is the same way, but not
-to the same extent.
-
-The kulu in question was more a coquette than a shrew. She plainly
-showed that she was fond of flattery; not perhaps in the same sense
-that a human being is, but she was certainly conscious of approbation
-and fond of applause. When she accomplished anything difficult, she
-seemed aware of it; and when she succeeded in doing a thing which she
-ought not to do, she never failed to express herself in the manner
-described above. She always appeared to be perfectly conscious of being
-observed by others, but she was defiant and composed. There is nothing
-known in the catalogue of mischief that she was not ready to tackle at
-any moment and take her chances on the result. From the stokehole to
-the funnel, from the jack-staff to the rudder, she explored that boat.
-To keep her out of mischief, she was tied on the saloon deck with a
-long line; but no one aboard the vessel was able to tie a knot in the
-line which she could not untie with dexterity and ease. Her master, who
-was a sailor and an expert in the art of tying knots, exhausted his
-efforts in trying to make one that would defy her skill.
-
-On one occasion I was aboard the little steamer when the culprit was
-brought up from the main deck, where she had been in some mischief, and
-was tied to one of the rails along the side of the boat. The question
-of tying her was discussed, and at length a new plan was devised. In
-the act of untying a knot she always began with the part of the knot
-that was nearest to her. It was now agreed to tie the line around one
-of the rails on the side of the deck, about halfway between the two
-stanchions that supported it, then to carry the loose ends of the line
-to the stanchion, and make them fast in the angle of the stanchion
-and the rail. As soon as she was left alone she began to examine the
-knots. She made no attempt at first to untie them, but she felt them,
-as if to see how firmly they were made. She then climbed upon the iron
-rail around which the middle of the line was tied and slackened the
-knot. She pulled first at one strand and then at the other; but one
-end was tied to the stanchion and the other to her neck, and she could
-find no loose end to draw through. First one way and then the other
-she drew this noose. She saw that in some way it was connected with
-the stanchion. She drew the noose along the rail until it was near the
-post; she climbed down upon the deck, then around the post and back
-again; she climbed up over the rails and down on the outside, and again
-carefully examined the knot; she climbed back, then through between the
-rails and back, then under the rails and back, but she could find no
-way to get this first knot out of the line. For a moment she sat down
-on the deck and viewed the situation with evident concern. She slowly
-rose to her feet and again examined the knot; she moved the noose back
-to its place in the middle of the rail, climbed up by it, and again
-drew it out as far as the strands would allow. Again she closed it;
-she took one strand in her hand and traced it from the loop to the
-stanchion; then she took the other end in the same manner and traced it
-from the loop to her neck. She looked at the loop and then slowly drew
-it out as far as it would come. She sat for a while holding it in one
-hand, and with the other moved each strand of the knot. She was in a
-deep study and did not even deign a glance at those who were watching
-her. At length she took the loop in both hands, deliberately put it
-over her head and crawled through it. The line thus released dropped
-to the deck; she quickly descended, took hold of it near her neck, and
-found that it was untied; she gathered it up as she advanced towards
-the other end that was tied to the post, and at once began to loosen
-the knots about it. In a minute more the last knot was released. She
-then gathered the whole line into a bundle, looked at those around her
-with that look of contempt which we have described, and departed at
-once in search of other mischief. Her air of triumph and content was
-enough to convince any one of her opinion of what she had done.
-
-If this feat was the result of instinct, the lexicons must give another
-definition for that word. There were six white men who witnessed the
-act, and the verdict of all of them was that she had solved a problem
-which few children of her own age could have done. Every movement
-was controlled by reason. The tracing out of cause and effect was
-too evident for any one to doubt. Almost any animal can be taught to
-perform certain feats, but that does not show innate capacity. The
-only true measure of the faculty of reason is to reduce the actor to
-his own resources and see how he will handle himself under some new
-condition; otherwise the act will be, at least in part, mechanical or
-imitative. In all my efforts to study the mental caliber of animals I
-have confined them strictly to their own judgment, and left them to
-work out the problem alone. By this means only can we estimate to what
-extent they apply the faculty of reason. No one doubts that all animals
-have minds which are receptive in some degree. But it has often been
-said that they are devoid of reason and controlled alone by some vague
-attribute called instinct. Such is not the case. It is the same faculty
-of the mind that men employ to solve the problems that arise in every
-sphere of life, the one which sages and philosophers have used in every
-phase of science, differing only in degree.
-
-This kulu-kamba knew the use of a corkscrew. This knowledge she had
-acquired from seeing it applied by men. While she could not use it
-herself with success, she often tried, and she never applied it to
-a wrong purpose. She would take the deck broom and scrub the deck,
-unless there were water on it; in that event she always left the job.
-She did not seem to know the purpose of sweeping the deck, and never
-swept the dirt before the broom. The action was doubtless imitative.
-She only grasped the idea that a broom was used to scrub the deck, but
-she failed to observe the effect produced. However, it cannot be said
-with certainty to what extent she was aware of the effect, but it is
-inferred from the fact that she did not try to remove the dirt. She
-knew what coal was intended for, and she often climbed into the bunker
-and threw it down by the furnace door. The furnace door and steam gauge
-were two things that escaped her busy fingers. I do not know how she
-learned the danger of them, but she never touched them. She had to be
-watched to keep her from seizing the machinery. For this she seemed to
-have a strong desire, but did not know the danger she might incur.
-
-I was aboard a ship when a trader brought off from the beach a young
-kulu to be sent to England. The little captive sat upright on the deck
-and seemed aware that he was being sent away. At any rate, his face
-wore a look of deep concern, as if he had no friend to whom he could
-appeal. On approaching him I spoke to him, using his own word for food.
-He looked up and promptly answered it. He looked as if in doubt as to
-whether I was a big ape or something else. I repeated the sound, and
-he repeated the answer and came towards me. As he approached me I again
-gave the sound. He came up and sat by my feet for a moment, looking
-into my face. I uttered the sound again, when he took hold of my leg
-and began to climb up as if it had been a tree. He climbed up to my
-neck and began to play with my lips, nose, and ears. We at once became
-friends, and I tried to buy him; but the price asked was more than I
-desired to pay. I regretted to part with him, but he was taken back to
-the beach, and I never saw him again.
-
-On another occasion one was brought aboard, and after speaking to him
-I gave him an orange; he began to eat it and at the same time caught
-hold of the leg of my trousers as if he did not wish me to leave him. I
-petted and caressed him for a moment and turned away, but he held on to
-me. He waddled about over the deck, holding on to my clothes, and would
-not release me. He was afraid of his master and the native boy who had
-him in charge. He was a timid creature, but was quite intelligent, and
-I felt sorry for him because he seemed to realize his situation.
-
-On the same voyage I saw one in the hands of a German trader. It was a
-young male, about one year old. He promptly answered the food sound.
-Then I called him to come to me; but this sound he neither answered nor
-complied with. He looked at me as if to ask where I had learned his
-language. I repeated the sound several times, but elicited no answer.
-I have elsewhere called attention to the fact that these apes do not
-answer the call when they can see the one who makes it, and they do
-not always comply with it. In this respect they behave very much like
-young children, and it may be remarked that one difficulty in all apes
-is to secure fixed attention. This is exactly the same with young
-children. Even when they clearly understand, sometimes they betray no
-sign of having heard. At other times they show that they both hear and
-understand, but do not comply.
-
-Another specimen that was brought aboard a ship when I was present
-was a young male, something less than two years old. He was sullen
-and morose. He did not resent my approaches, but he did not encourage
-them. I first spoke to him with the food sound, but he gave no heed.
-I retired a little distance from him and called him, but he paid no
-attention. I then used the sound of warning; he raised his head and
-looked in the direction from which the sound came. I repeated it, and
-he looked at me for a moment and turned his head away. I repeated it
-again. He looked at me, then looked around as if to see what it meant,
-and again resumed his attitude of repose.
-
-On my last voyage to the coast I saw a very good specimen in the Congo.
-It was a female, a little more than two years old. She was also of a
-dark complexion, but quite intelligent. She had been captured north of
-there, and within the limits elsewhere described. At the time I saw her
-she was ill and under treatment; but her master, the British consul,
-told me that when she was well she was bright and sociable. I made no
-attempt to talk with her, except some time after having left her I gave
-the call sound. She answered by looking around the corner of the house.
-I do not know whether she would have come or not, as she was tied and
-could not have come had she desired to do so.
-
-I have seen a few specimens of this ape, and most of them appear to
-be of a somewhat higher order than the ordinary chimpanzee; but there
-is among them a wide range of intelligence. It would be a risk to say
-whether the lowest specimen of kulu is higher or lower than the highest
-specimen of the common chimpanzee, but taken as a whole they are much
-superior. I shall not describe the specimens which have been known in
-captivity, since most of them have been amply described by others.
-
-If proper conditions were afforded to keep a pair of kulus in training
-for some years, it is difficult to say what they might not be taught.
-They are not only apt in learning what they are taught, but they are
-well disposed and can apply their accomplishment to some useful end.
-We cannot say to what extent they may be able to apply what they learn
-from man, because the necessity of using such knowledge is removed by
-the attention given to them.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX
-
-The Gorilla--His Habitat--Skeleton--Skull--Color--Structural
-Peculiarities
-
-
-In the order of nature the gorilla occupies the second place below man.
-His habitat is the lowlands of tropical West Africa, and it is confined
-to very narrow limits. The vague lines which bound his realm cannot be
-defined with absolute precision, but those generally given in books
-that treat of him are not correct. If he ever occupied any part of the
-coast north of the equator, he has long since become extinct in that
-part; but there is nothing to show that he ever did exist there. So
-far as I have been able to trace the lines that define the extent of
-his native haunts, they appear to confine him to the low delta country
-lying between the equator and the Loango valley along the coast, and
-reaching eastward to the interior--an average distance of less than
-one hundred miles. The eastern boundary is very irregular. The extreme
-limit on the north side is about the Gaboon River, eastward to the
-foothills of the Crystal Mountains; thence southward to the Ogowé River
-to the vicinity of the mouth of the Nguni; thence up that river twenty
-or thirty miles; thence by a zigzag line along the western base of the
-dividing lands between the Congo basin and the Atlantic watershed, to
-the head-waters of the Chi Loango River, and with that valley to the
-coast. Beyond these lines I have found no reliable trace of him, and
-along this boundary only now and then is he found, except along the
-coast.
-
-I have seen two adult skulls and two infant skulls of the gorilla
-that were brought by Mr. Wm. S. Cherry from the Kisanga valley, which
-lies on the north side of the middle Congo, into which the Kisanga
-River flows. The skulls are the only evidence I have found of this ape
-existing so far eastward; but they were said to have come from that
-part of the valley lying directly under the equator. Mr. Cherry himself
-did not collect them. He secured them from natives, and he does not
-claim to have seen any of those apes alive.
-
-There appear to be three centers of gorilla population. The first is in
-the basin of Izanga Lake; the second is on the south side of the basin
-of Lake Nkami; and the third is in the basin of the lake east of Sette
-Kama and west of the Nkami River. The gorilla is rarely, if ever, found
-in high or hilly districts. He appears to be restricted to the hummock
-lands, which are elevated only a few feet above tide-level. This is
-all the more singular from the fact that the ape appears to have a
-morbid dislike for water, and it is doubtful whether or not he can
-swim. It is true that he has one peculiar characteristic that belongs
-to aquatic animals. He has a kind of web between the digits; but its
-purpose cannot be to aid in swimming. I have been told that the gorilla
-can swim, and the statement may be true; but I have never observed
-anything in his habits to confirm this, and I have noted many facts
-that controvert it.
-
-I know of no valid reason why he should be confined to the limits
-mentioned, unless it be on account of climatic conditions which are
-peculiar to this district. South of it the climate along the coast is
-much cooler. The country east of it is hilly and comparatively barren.
-North of the equator is a land of almost perpetual rain. Within this
-district dry and rainy seasons are more equally divided and more
-uniform in temperature.
-
-The gorilla appears to be an indigenous product which does not bear
-transplanting. He thrives only in a low, hot, and humid region,
-infested by malaria, miasma, and fevers. It is doubtful if he can long
-survive in a pure atmosphere. The only specimen that I have ever heard
-of north of the equator was one on the south side of the Komo River,
-which is the north branch of the Gaboon. The point at which I heard of
-his being was within a few miles of the equator. I also heard of five
-having been seen a few miles southwest from Njole, which is located on
-the equator on the north bank of the Ogowé, a little way east of the
-Nguni. They were said to be the first and only ones ever seen in that
-region within the memory of man. As to their being found between Gaboon
-and Cameroon, I find no trace along the coast of one ever having been
-seen in that part.
-
-Certain writers have mentioned the fact that, in 1851 and 1852,
-gorillas came in great numbers from the interior to the coast. The
-fact is that then the gorilla was practically unknown to science. He
-had been reported by Ford, Savage, and others, but prior to that time
-there are no data to show whether or not they were more numerous
-in the years mentioned. There had never been a specimen brought to
-civilization. It was about that time that Dr. Ford sent a skeleton
-to America, and one had been previously sent to England. Some years
-earlier Dr. Savage had announced the existence of such a creature and
-had sent sketches of a skull, but it was more than ten years after the
-period in question that Paul du Chaillu brought out the first skins of
-gorillas and gave detailed accounts of their character, habits, and
-geographical distribution. From these facts it is not rash to conclude
-that the migrations of 1851 and 1852 are mere matters of fancy.
-
-Gorillas are found in the Ogowé delta, about one degree south latitude;
-but not one has ever been known to come from the Crystal Mountains. At
-the time above mentioned neither traders nor missionaries had ascended
-the Gaboon River above Parrot Island (which is less than twenty miles
-from the mouth), except to make a flying trip by canoe. Nothing was
-known of those parts except what was learned from the natives, and that
-was very little. During my first voyage I went up the river as far as
-Nenge Nenge, about seventy-five miles from the coast. At that place I
-spent two days with a white trader, who had been stationed there for a
-year. I was assured by him that there were no gorillas in that section.
-The natives report that they have been found in the lowlands south
-of there, in the direction of the Ogowé basin; but their reports are
-conflicting, and none of them, so far as I could learn, claims that
-they are found north of there, nor in the mountains eastward. I admit
-that they may have been found in, and may yet inhabit, the strip of
-land between the Gaboon and the Ogowé; but I repeat that there is no
-tangible proof that they were ever found north of the Gaboon. With due
-respect to Sir Richard Owen and other writers who have never been in
-that country, I insist that they are mistaken. It is true that one of
-the tribes living north of the Gaboon has a name for this animal; but
-it does not follow that the ape lives in that country. The Orungu tribe
-has a name for lion, but there is not such a beast within two hundred
-miles of their country. Not one of that tribe ever saw a lion.
-
-A number of specimens of gorillas have been secured at Gaboon, but
-they have been brought there from far away. It is the chief town of
-the colony, and there are more white men there than elsewhere to buy
-them. It is not possible for a stranger to ascertain what part of the
-country a specimen is brought from. The native hunter will not tell the
-truth, lest some one else should find the game and thus deprive him of
-its capture and sale. I saw a specimen at Cameroon, and was told it had
-been captured in that valley, fifty miles from the coast; but I hunted
-up its history and found with absolute certainty that it was captured
-near Mayumba, two hundred miles south of Gaboon.
-
-Even with the greatest care in hunting up the history of a specimen,
-one may fail, and often does fail, in tracing it to its true source;
-but every one, so far, that I have followed up has been brought from
-somewhere within the limits I have laid down. Contrary to the statement
-of some authorities that these apes “have never been seen on the coast
-since 1852,” I assert that by far the greatest number of them are found
-near the coast. I do not mean to say that they sit on the sand along
-the beach, or bathe in the surf, but they live in the jungle of the low
-coast belt. Along the lower Congo the gorilla is known only by name,
-and scores of the natives do not know even that. The nearest point to
-that river that I have been able to locate the gorilla as a native is
-in the territory about sixty or seventy miles northwest of Stanley Pool.
-
-I am much indebted to the late Carl Steckelman, who was an old resident
-of the coast, a good explorer, a careful observer, and an extensive
-traveler. He was drowned at Mayumba in my presence in October, 1895.
-I knew him well and secured from him much information concerning the
-gorilla. On a map he traced out for me what he believed to be the south
-and southeast limits of the gorilla’s habitat. Not thirty minutes
-before the accident in which he lost his life I had closed arrangements
-with him to make an expedition from Mayumba to the Congo, near Stanley
-Pool, by one route and return by another, but his death prevented the
-fulfillment of this plan.
-
-Dr. Wilson, who was the first missionary at Gaboon, located there in
-1842. About six years after that time he wrote a lexicon of the native
-language. In this the name of the gorilla does not appear at all. If
-the ape had been so very common, it is not probable that his name would
-have been omitted from this lexicon. Eight years later Dr. Walker, in
-a revision of the book, gave the definition, “a monkey larger than a
-man.” But he had never seen a specimen of the ape, except the skulls
-and a skeleton which had been brought from other parts. It is true
-that at Gaboon Dr. Savage first learned about the gorilla and there
-secured a skull. From this he made drawings, on which account his name
-was attached to that of the animal in natural history. It was still a
-few years later that Dr. Ford sent the first skeleton to America, and
-Captain Harris sent the first to England. The former skeleton is in the
-Museum of Zoölogy at Philadelphia. Both of these specimens may have
-come from any place a hundred miles away from Gaboon.
-
-It is possible that at this early date the gorilla may have occupied
-the peninsula south of the Gaboon River in greater numbers than he
-has since done, because up to that time there had been no demand for
-specimens. If this was true at that time, it is not so now; and if
-he is not extinct in that part, he is so rare as to make it doubtful
-whether or not he is found there at all as a native. In four journeys
-along the Ogowé River and the lakes of that valley I made careful
-inquiries at many of the towns, and the natives always assured me
-that the gorillas lived on the south side of that river. I spent five
-days at the village of Moiro, which is located on the north side of
-the river and about fifty miles from the coast. There I was told by
-the native woodsmen that no gorillas lived on the north side of the
-river, but that there were plenty of them along the lakes south of the
-river. They said that in the forest back of their town were plenty of
-chimpanzees, and that they were sometimes mistaken for gorillas, but
-there were absolutely none of the latter in that part.
-
-In view of these and countless other facts I deem it safe to say
-that few or no gorillas can be found at any point north of the Ogowé
-River; and I doubt if the specimen heard of on the Komo was a genuine
-gorilla. The natives sometimes claim to have something of the kind
-for sale, in order to get a bonus from some trader, when in truth they
-may not have anything of the kind. The only point north of the Ogowé
-at which I have had any reason to believe a gorilla was ever found
-was in the neighborhood of a small lake called Inenga. This lake is
-nearly due west from the mouth of the Nguni River and something more
-than a hundred miles from the coast. Certain reports along that part
-appeared to have a flavor of truth; but there was no evidence except
-the statement of the natives.
-
-In the lake region south of the river they are fairly abundant as far
-south as the head-waters of the Rembo, Nkami, and through the low
-country of the Esyira tribe; but they are very rare in the remote
-forests and unknown in the highlands and plains of that country. South
-of the Chi Loango they are quite unknown, and south of the Congo they
-are never heard of.
-
-There are no possible means of estimating their number; but they are
-not so numerous as has been supposed, and from the reckless slaughter
-carried on by the natives in order to secure specimens for white men,
-they may ultimately become extinct. Up to this time their ferocity
-alone has saved them from such a fate. But the use of improved arms
-will soon overcome that barrier.
-
-The skeleton of the gorilla is so nearly the same as that of
-the chimpanzee--which has elsewhere been compared to the human
-skeleton--that we shall not review the comparison at length; but we
-must note one marked feature in the external form of the skull, which
-differs alike from other apes and from man.
-
-The skull of the young gorilla is much like that of the chimpanzee and
-remains so until it approaches the adult state. At this period the
-ridge above the eyes becomes more prominent, and at the same time a
-sharp, bony ridge begins to develop along the temples and continues
-around the back of the head on that part of the skull called the
-occiput. At this point it is intersected by another ridge at right
-angles to it. This is called the sagittal ridge. It runs along the top
-of the head towards the face; but on the forehead it flattens nearly to
-the level of the skull and divides into two very low ridges, which turn
-off to a point above the eyes and merge into that ridge. These form a
-continuous part of the skull and are not joined to it by sutures. The
-mesial crest in a very old specimen rises to the height of nearly two
-inches above the surface of the skull, and imparts to it a fierce and
-savage aspect; but in the living animal the crests are not seen, as the
-depressions between them are filled with large muscles, which make the
-head look very much larger than it otherwise would. These crests affect
-only the exterior of the skull and do not appear to alter the form or
-size of the brain cavity, which is slightly larger in proportion than
-that of the chimpanzee. These crests are peculiar to the male gorilla.
-The female skull shows no trace of them.
-
-There is at least one case in which the male gorilla has failed to
-develop this crest. In the series of skulls found in the cuts given
-herewith, No. 6 is that of an adult male gorilla. I know it to be such,
-for I dissected the animal and prepared the skeleton for preservation.
-He was killed in the basin of Lake Ferran Vaz, not more than three or
-four hours’ walk from my cage, and his body was at once brought to me.
-A good idea of his size can be obtained by reference to another cut
-given herewith. This cut is copied from a photograph taken by me. It
-shows some natives in the act of skinning the gorilla.
-
-[Illustration: SKULLS OF GORILLAS--FRONT VIEW (From a Photograph in
-Buffalo Museum.)]
-
-[Illustration: SKULLS OF GORILLAS--PROFILE VIEW (From a Photograph in
-Buffalo Museum.)]
-
-In this picture the gorilla is sitting flat on the sand; his body is
-limp and is somewhat shorter than it was in life. Yet it can be seen
-that the top of his head is higher than the hip of the man who is
-holding him. In the foreground, on the left of the gorilla, sits the
-man who killed him. He is sitting on a log and is thereby a little more
-elevated than the gorilla. It did not occur to me to place them side
-by side in order to make a comparison. As he sits, the body and head
-of this gorilla measure nearly four feet from the base of the spinal
-column to the top of the head. I had no means of weighing him, but made
-an estimate by lifting him. I estimate that he weighed at least two
-hundred and forty pounds. He was not an old specimen, but comparing the
-skull with No. 7, in which the crests are well developed, it is found
-to be larger, and other things point to the conclusion that he was
-older than No. 7.
-
-I am aware that one specimen does not of itself establish anything, but
-in this case it shows that the male gorilla does not always develop
-the crest. The head of this specimen was surmounted by the red crown
-which I have elsewhere described. No. 1, which is the skull of my pet,
-Othello, had the same mark. He was captured near the place where No. 6
-was killed.
-
-No. 2 is the skull of a female nearly four years old. She had the same
-mark. She was also captured in the same basin, but on the opposite
-side of the lake. The facial bones of No. 6 show that he had received a
-severe blow early in life; but the fragments had knit together, and the
-effect could not be seen in the face of the ape while alive.
-
-No. 8 is the skull of a large male from Lake Izanga, which is on the
-south side of the Ogowé River, more than a hundred miles from the
-coast. This is one of the three centers of population mentioned. I do
-not know the history of this specimen. It was presented to me by Mr.
-James Deemin, an English trader, with whom I traveled many days on the
-Ogowé River, and who extended to me many courtesies.
-
-No. 5 is the skull of an adult female. By comparing it in profile with
-No. 6, it will be seen that they resemble each other closely, except
-that the muzzle of the latter projects a little more, and the curvature
-of the skull across the top is less; but the transverse distance is a
-little greater. Nos. 2, 3, 4, and 5 are females; the others are males.
-
-[Illustration: NATIVES SKINNING A GORILLA (From a Photograph.)]
-
-While this series is not complete in either sex, it is an excellent one
-for comparative study. I do not know whether or not the heads of those
-with the crests were the same color as No. 6, but the _ntyii_, which
-I have mentioned as possibly a new specimen of the gorilla, does not
-have this crown of red. His ears are also said to be larger than those
-of the gorilla, but smaller than the chimpanzee’s. He is reputed to
-grow to a larger size than either of them. The skin of the gorilla is a
-dull black or mummy color over the body; but over the face it is a jet
-black, quite smooth and soft. It looks almost like velvet.
-
-One fact peculiar to this ape is that the palms of both the hands
-and the feet are perfectly black. In other animals these are usually
-lighter in color than the exposed parts. In most other apes, monkeys,
-baboons, and lemurs, as in all races of men, the palms are lighter
-than the backs of the hands and feet. The thumb of the gorilla is more
-perfect than that of the chimpanzee, yet it is smaller in proportion to
-the hand than in man. The hand is very large, but has more the shape of
-the hand of a woman than that of a man. The fingers taper in a graceful
-manner, but by reason of the web alluded to they appear much shorter
-than they really are. It is not really a web in the true sense, but the
-integument between the fingers is extended down almost to the second
-joint. The forward edge of this is concave when the fingers are spread.
-When the fingers are brought together the skin on the knuckles becomes
-wrinkled, and the web almost disappears. This is more readily noticed
-in the living animal than in the dead. The texture of the skin in the
-palms is coarsely granulated, and the palmar lines are indistinct. The
-great toe sets at an angle from the side of the foot, thus resembling
-a thumb. It has more prehension than the corresponding member of the
-hand. The foot is less flexible than the hand, but it has greater
-strength and prehension.
-
-At this point I wish to draw attention to one important fact. The
-tendons of the foot, which open and close the digits, are imbedded in
-the palm in a deep layer of coarse, gristly matter, which forms a pad,
-as it were, under the soles of the foot and prevents it from bending.
-Therefore it is not possible for a gorilla to sleep on a perch. In
-this respect he resembles man more than the chimpanzee does, but it
-is quite certain that neither of them has the true arboreal habit.
-The gorilla is an expert climber, but he cannot sleep in a tree. In
-the hand the tendons which close the fingers are the same length as
-the line of the bones, and this permits him to open the fingers to a
-straight line, which the chimpanzee cannot do.
-
-One other important point I desire to mention. The muscles in the leg
-of the gorilla will not permit the animal to stand or walk erect. The
-large muscle at the back of the leg is shorter than the line of the
-bones of the leg above and below the knee. When this muscle is brought
-to a tension, those bones form an angle of from 130° to 160°, or
-thereabouts. So long as the sum of two sides of a triangle is greater
-than the other side, a gorilla can never bring his leg into a straight
-line. In the infant state, while the muscles are elastic and the bones
-less rigid, the leg can be forced nearly straight. The habit of hanging
-by the arms and walking with them in a straight line develops the
-corresponding muscle in those members so that the bones can be brought
-in line and the limbs straightened.
-
-The gorilla can stand upon his feet alone and walk a few steps in that
-position; but his motion is very awkward; his knees turn outward,
-forming an angle of 40° or 50° on either side of the mesial plane. He
-never attempts to walk in this position except at perfect leisure, and
-then he holds on to something with his hands.
-
-[Illustration: YOUNG GORILLA WALKING (From a Drawing.)]
-
-The leg of the gorilla from the knee to the ankle is almost the same
-in size. In the human leg there is what is called the “calf” of the
-leg, but in the apes this is very small. However, there is a tendency
-in the ape to develop that feature. In the human species the calf of
-the leg appears to belong to the higher types of men. As we descend
-from the highest races of mankind this characteristic decreases, and
-it almost disappears in the lowest savage. The pygmies and the bushmen
-have smaller calves than any other men. It is not to be inferred from
-this that apes would ever have this feature developed in them by their
-elevation to a higher plane. So long as they remain apes they will
-retain this characteristic, which is one of the distinctive features
-of their apehood. One thing which makes the calf appear smaller in
-the gorilla is the large size of the muscles about the ankle and the
-flexibility of that joint. Also the fact that the joint of the knee is
-larger in proportion to the leg makes it appear smaller than it really
-is. The corresponding parts of the arm are more like those of the human
-body.
-
-In a sitting posture the gorilla rests his body upon the ischial bones
-and sits with his legs extended or crossed. The chimpanzee usually
-squats, resting the ischial bones upon his heels. He sometimes sits,
-but more frequently he squats. When in either of these attitudes both
-kinds usually fold their arms across their breasts.
-
-The hair of the gorilla is irregular in growth. It is more dense than
-that of the chimpanzee, but less uniform in size and distribution.
-On the breast it is very sparse, while on the back it is dense and
-interspersed with long, coarse hairs. The hair on the arms is long and
-coarse. The ground color is black, but the extreme end of the hair
-is tipped with pale white. This is so even in early youth. With age
-the white encroaches, until in extreme age the animal becomes quite
-gray. The top of the head is covered with a growth of short hair. In
-certain specimens this crest is of a dark tan color. It looks almost
-like a wig. This mark seems to be peculiar to certain localities. It is
-uniform among those captured in the Ferran Vaz basin.
-
-A white trader living on Ferran Vaz Lake claims to have seen a gorilla
-which was perfectly white. It was said to have been seen on a plain
-near the lake in company with three or four others. It was thought to
-be an albino. In my opinion it was only a very aged specimen turned
-gray. A few of them have been secured that were almost white. It is
-not, however, such a shade of white as would be found in an animal
-whose normal color is white. I cannot vouch for the color of this ape
-seen on the plain, but there must have been something peculiar in it to
-attract attention among the natives. They regarded it as something very
-extraordinary.
-
-So far, only one species of this ape is known to science; but there
-are certain reasons to believe that two species exist. In the forest
-regions of Esyira the natives described to me another kind of ape,
-which they averred was a half-brother to the gorilla. They know the
-gorilla by the native name _njina_, and the other type by the name
-_ntyii_. They do not confuse this with the native name _ntyigo_,
-which is the name of the chimpanzee. Neither is it a local name for
-the _kulu-kamba_. All of those apes are known to the natives. They
-described in detail, and quite correctly, the three known kinds of ape.
-In addition they gave me a minute account of the appearance and habits
-of a fourth kind, which I believe to be another species of the gorilla.
-They claim that he is more intelligent and human-like than any one of
-the others. They say that his superior wisdom makes him more alert and,
-therefore, more difficult to find. He is said always to live in parts
-of the forest more remote from human habitation. On my next voyage I
-mean to hunt for this new species.
-
-The dental formula of the gorilla is the same as that of man; but the
-teeth are larger and stronger, and the canine teeth are developed into
-tusks. One thing to be remarked is the great variety of malformations
-in the teeth of this animal. It is a rare thing to find among them a
-perfect set of teeth, except in infancy. The cause of this deficiency
-appears to be violence.
-
-The eyes of the gorilla are large, dark, and expressive, but there
-is no trace of white in them. That part of the eye which is white in
-man is a dark coffee-brown in the gorilla. It becomes lighter as it
-approaches the base of the optic nerve. The taxidermist or the artist
-who often furnishes him with a white spot in the corner of his eye does
-violence to the subject. Those who pose him with his mouth opened like
-a fly-trap, and his arms raised like a lancer, ought to be banished
-from good society. It is true that such things lend an aspect of
-ferocity to the creature, but they are caricatures of the thing they
-mean to portray.
-
-The ears of the gorilla are very small and lie close to the sides of
-the head. The model of them is much like the human ear. The lower lip
-is massive, and the animal frequently relaxes it, so that a small red
-line is visible between the lips. The usual height of the adult male
-gorilla, if standing quite erect, is about five feet ten inches. The
-tallest specimen that has ever been taken is a trifle more than six
-feet two inches.
-
-I shall not pursue the comparison into minute details, but shall leave
-that to the specialist, in whose hands it will be treated with more
-skill and greater scope. As my especial line of research has been
-in the study of the speech and the habits of these animals, I shall
-confine myself to that. But the general comparison made is necessary to
-a better understanding of these subjects.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI
-
-Habits of the Gorilla--Social Traits--Government--Justice--Mode of
-Attack--Screaming and Beating--Food
-
-
-Studying the habits of the gorilla in a wild state is attended with
-much difficulty, but the results obtained during my sojourn of nearly
-four months among them in the forest are an ample reward for the
-efforts made. In captivity the habits of animals are made to conform
-in a measure to their surroundings, and since those are different from
-their natural environment, many of their habits differ in a like degree
-from the normal. Some are foregone, others modified, and new ones are
-acquired. Therefore, it is difficult to know exactly what the animal
-was in a state of nature.
-
-In the social life of the gorilla there are certain things in which he
-differs from the chimpanzee, but there are others in which they closely
-resemble each other. From the native accounts of the modes of life
-of these two apes there would appear to be a much greater difference
-than a systematic study of them reveals. The native version of things
-frequently has a germ of truth which may serve as a clue to the facts
-in the case; and while we cannot safely rely upon all the details of
-the tales they relate, we forgive their mendacity and make use of the
-suggestions they furnish.
-
-The gorilla is polygamous in habit, and he has an incipient idea of
-government. Within certain limits he has a faint perception of order
-and justice, if not of right and wrong. I do not mean to ascribe to him
-the highest attributes of man or to exalt him above the plane to which
-his faculties justly assign him; but there are reasons to justify the
-belief that he occupies a higher social and mental sphere than other
-animals, except the chimpanzee.
-
-In the beginning of his career of independent life the young gorilla
-selects a wife with whom thereafter he appears to sustain the conjugal
-relation, and he maintains a certain degree of marital fidelity. From
-time to time he adopts a new wife, but does not discard the old one. In
-this manner he gathers around him a numerous family, consisting of his
-wives and children. Each mother nurses and cares for her own young, but
-all of them grow up together as the children of one family. The mother
-sometimes corrects and sometimes chastises her young. This presupposes
-some idea of propriety.
-
-The father exercises the function of patriarch in the sense of a
-ruler, and the natives call him _ikomba njina_, which means “gorilla
-chief.” This term is derived from the third person singular of the verb
-_kamba_, “to speak”--_i kamba_, “he speaks.” Hence “spokesman,” or one
-that speaks for others. To him all the others show a certain amount of
-deference. Whether this is due to fear or respect is not certain; but
-here is at least the first principle of dignity.
-
-The gorilla family of one adult male and a number of females and
-their young practically constitutes within itself a nation. There do
-not appear to be any social relations between different families,
-but within the same household there is apparent harmony. The gorilla
-is nomadic and rarely ever spends two nights in the same place. Each
-family roams about from place to place in the bush in search of food,
-and wherever they may be when night comes on, there they select a place
-to sleep.
-
-The largest family of gorillas that I ever heard of was estimated to
-contain twenty members. The usual number is rarely ever more than ten
-or twelve. The chimpanzees appear to go in somewhat larger groups than
-these. Sometimes in a single group of chimpanzees as many as three,
-or even four, adult males have been seen. When the young gorilla
-approaches the adult state he leaves the family group, finds himself
-a mate, and sets out in the world for himself. I observe that, as a
-rule, when one gorilla is seen alone in the forest it is usually a
-young male about reaching the state of manhood. It is probable that
-he has then set out for himself, and that he is in search of a wife.
-When two only are seen together they usually prove to be a young male
-and a young female. It sometimes occurs that three adults are seen
-with two or three children. In large families are seen young ones of
-different ages, from one year old to five or six years old. The older
-children are always fewer in number than the younger ones. I have once
-seen a large female quite alone except for her babe. Whether she lived
-alone or was only temporarily absent from her family I had no means of
-ascertaining.
-
-The gorilla chief does not provide food for his family. On the
-contrary, it is said that they provide for him. I have been informed,
-on two occasions and from different sources, that the gorilla chief
-has been seen sitting quietly eating under the shade of a tree while
-the others collected and brought to him his food. I have never myself
-witnessed such a scene, but it seems probable that the same story
-coming from two sources has some foundation of fact.
-
-In the matter of government the gorilla appears to be somewhat more
-advanced than most animals. The chief leads the others on the march
-and selects their feeding grounds and their places to sleep. He breaks
-camp, and the others all obey him in these respects. Other gregarious
-animals do the same, but, in addition to these things, the gorillas
-from time to time hold a rude form of court, or council, in the jungle.
-It is said that the king presides on these occasions; that he sits
-alone in the center, while the others stand or sit in a semicircle
-about him and talk in an excited manner. Sometimes all of them are
-talking at once. Many of the natives claim to have witnessed these
-proceedings; but what they mean or allude to no native undertakes
-to say, except that there appears to be something of the nature of
-a quarrel. To what extent the chief gorilla exercises the judicial
-function is a matter of doubt, but there appears to be some real ground
-for the story.
-
-As to the succession of the kingship there is no authoritative
-information as yet to be had; but from the meager data upon this point
-the belief is that on the death of the _ikomba_ if there be an adult
-male he assumes the royal prerogative; otherwise the family disbands
-and eventually becomes absorbed by or attached to other families.
-Whether this new leader is elected in the manner in which other animals
-appoint a leader, or assumes it by reason of his age, cannot now be
-stated. There is no doubt that in many instances families remain intact
-for a long time after the death of their _ikomba_.
-
-It has been stated by many writers that the gorilla builds a rude hut
-for himself and family. I have found no evidence that such is the fact.
-The natives declare that he does this, and some white men affirm the
-same. During my travels through the country of the gorilla I offered
-frequent and liberal rewards to any native who would show me a specimen
-of this simian architecture; but I was never able to find a trace of
-one made or occupied by any ape. Sometimes they take shelter from
-the tornadoes, but it is usually under some fallen tree or a cluster
-of broad leaves. There is absolutely nothing to indicate that they
-rearrange any part of tree or leaves. So far as I could find, there is
-absolutely no proof that any gorilla ever put two sticks together with
-the idea of building a shelter. As to his throwing sticks or stones at
-an enemy, there is nothing to verify it, but much to controvert it. It
-is a mere freak of fancy.
-
-The current opinion that a gorilla will attack a man without being
-provoked to it is another popular error. He is shy and timid. He
-shrinks alike from man and from other large animals. When he is in a
-rage he is both fierce and powerful; but his ferocity and strength are
-rated above their value. In combat no doubt he is a stubborn foe, but
-no one I have ever met has seen him thus engaged. His mode of attack,
-as described by certain travelers, is a mere theory. It is said that
-in this act he walks erect, furiously beats upon his breast, roars,
-and yells. In this manner he first terrorizes and then seizes his
-adversary, tears open his breast and drinks the blood. I have never
-seen a large gorilla in the act of assault.
-
-During my stay in the jungle I had a young gorilla in captivity. I made
-use of him in studying the habits of his race. I kept him tied with a
-long line which allowed him room to play or climb about in the bushes,
-and at the same time prevented him from escaping into the forest, as he
-always tried to do the instant he was released. I frequently released
-him for the purpose of watching his mode of attack when recaptured.
-While being pursued he rarely looked back, but when overtaken he
-invariably assailed his captor. This gave me an opportunity of seeing
-his method of attack. In this he displayed both skill and judgment. As
-my native boy approached him he calmly turned one side to the foe and,
-without facing the boy, rolled his eyes in such a manner as to see him
-and at the same time conceal his own purpose. When the boy came within
-reach, the gorilla grasped him by thrusting the arm to one side and
-obliquely backwards. When he had seized his adversary by the leg, he
-instantly swung the other arm around with a long sweep, so as to strike
-the boy a hard blow. Then he used his teeth. He seemed to depend more
-upon the blow than upon the grasp, but the latter served to hold the
-object of attack within reach. In every case he kept one arm and one
-leg in reserve until he had seized his adversary.
-
-It is true that these attacks were made upon an enemy in pursuit, but
-his mode of doing this appeared to be natural to him. He struck a
-severe blow and showed no sign of tearing or scratching his opponent.
-In these attacks he made no sound. I do not say that other gorillas
-never scream or tear their victims, but I take it that the habits of
-the young are much, if not quite, the same as those of their elders;
-and from a study of this specimen I am forced to modify many opinions
-imbibed from reading or from pictures and museum specimens which I
-have seen. Many of them represent the gorilla in absurd and sometimes
-impossible attitudes. They certainly do not represent him as I have
-seen him in his native wilds. I had a young female gorilla as a subject
-for study for a short time. Her mode of attack was about the same as
-that just described, but she was too large to risk very far in such
-experiments.
-
-When the chimpanzee attacks,--so far as I have seen among my own
-specimens,--he approaches his enemy and strikes with both hands, one
-slightly in advance of the other. After striking a few blows he grasps
-his opponent and uses his teeth. Then, shoving him away, he again uses
-the hands. Usually, on beginning the attack, he accompanies the assault
-with a loud, piercing scream. Neither he nor the gorilla closes the
-hand to strike or uses any weapon except the hands and the teeth.
-
-I have read and heard descriptions of the sounds made by gorillas, but
-nothing ever conveyed to my mind an adequate idea of their real nature
-until I heard them myself within about a hundred feet of my cage in
-the dead of night. By some it has been called roaring, and by others
-howling; but it is neither a roar nor a howl. They utter a peculiar
-combination of sounds, beginning in a low, smooth tone, which rapidly
-increases in pitch and frequency, until it becomes a terrific scream.
-The first sound of the series and each alternate sound are made by
-expiration; the intermediate ones appear to be by inspiration. How this
-is accomplished it is difficult to say. The sound as a whole resembles
-the braying of an ass, except that the notes are shorter, the climax is
-higher, and the sound is louder. A gorilla does not yell in this manner
-every night, but when he does so it is usually between two and five
-o’clock in the morning. I have never heard the sound during the day nor
-in the early part of the night. When screaming he repeats the series
-from ten to twenty times, at intervals of one or two minutes apart. I
-know of nothing in the way of vocal sounds that can inspire such terror
-as the voice of the gorilla. It can be heard over a distance of three
-or four miles. I can assign no definite meaning to it unless it is
-intended to alarm some intruder.
-
-One morning, between three and four o’clock, I heard two of them
-screaming at the same time. I do not mean at the same instant, but at
-intervals during the same period of time. One of them was within about
-a third of a mile of me, and the other in another direction, perhaps
-a mile away. The points we respectively occupied formed a scalene
-triangle. The sounds made by the two apes did not appear to have any
-reference to each other. Sometimes they would alternate, and at other
-times they would interrupt each other. They were both made by giants of
-their kind, and every leaf in the forest vibrated with the sound. This
-was during the latter part of May. They scream in this way from time to
-time throughout the year, but it is most frequent and violent during
-February and March.
-
-This wild screaming is sometimes accompanied by a peculiar beating
-sound. It has been vaguely and variously described by travelers, and
-currently believed to be made by the animal beating with his hands upon
-his breast; but that is not the fact. The sound cannot be made by that
-means. The quality of the sound shows that such cannot be the means
-employed. I have several times heard this beating and have paid marked
-attention to its character. At a great distance it would be difficult
-to determine its exact quality.
-
-On one occasion, while passing the night in a native town, I was
-aroused from sleep by a gorilla screaming and beating within a few
-hundred yards of the village. I drew on my boots, took my rifle, and
-cautiously crossed the open ground between the village and the forest.
-This brought me within about two hundred yards of the animal. The moon
-was faintly shining, but I could not see the beast, and I had no desire
-to approach nearer at such a time. I distinctly heard every stroke. I
-believe the sound was made by beating upon a log or piece of dead wood.
-He was beating with both hands. The alternating strokes were made with
-great rapidity. The order of the strokes was not unlike that produced
-by the natives in beating their drums, except that in this instance
-each hand made the same number of strokes, and the strokes were in a
-constant series, rising and falling from very soft to very loud, and
-_vice versa_. A number of these runs followed one another during the
-time the voice continued. Between the first and second strokes the
-interval was slightly longer than that between the second and third,
-and so on through the scale. As the beating increased in loudness the
-interval shortened in an inverse degree, while in descending the scale
-the intervals lengthened as the beating softened, and the author of the
-sound was conscious of the fact.
-
-I could trace no relation in time or harmony between the sound of the
-voice and the beating, except that they began at the same time and
-ended at the same time. The same series of vocal sounds was repeated
-each time, beginning on the low note and ending in each case with the
-note of the highest pitch, while the rise and fall of the series of
-the beaten sounds were not measured by the duration of the voice. The
-series each time began with a soft note, but ended at any part of the
-scale at which it happened to be at the time the voice ceased. The
-coinciding notes were not the same in every case.
-
-No doubt the gorilla sometimes beats upon his breast. He has been seen
-to do this in captivity, but the sounds described above were not so
-made. Since the gorilla makes these sounds only at night, it is not
-probable that any man ever saw him in the act. It does not require
-a delicate sense of hearing to distinguish a sound made by beating
-the breast from that made by beating on dead wood or other similar
-substance.
-
-I have attributed the above sound to the gorilla, because I have been
-assured by many white men and scores of natives that it was made by
-him; but since my return from Africa I have had time to consider and
-digest certain facts tabulated on my first voyage, and, as a result of
-these reflections, I doubt whether this sound is made by the gorilla.
-There are reasons to believe that it is made by the chimpanzee.
-
-I observed that my own chimpanzees made a sound exactly the same as
-that I heard in the forest, except that it was less in volume. This was
-due to the age of the apes that made it. I could induce them at any
-time to make the sound, and frequently did so in order to study it.
-After my arrival in New York I found that Chico--the big chimpanzee
-belonging to Mr. Bailey--frequently made the same sound. This he
-always did at night. The cry was said to be so loud and piercing
-that it fairly shook the stately walls of Madison Square Garden.
-From reading the description given by the late Professor Romanes of
-the sound made by “Sally” in the London Gardens, it appears that she
-made the same sound. It is well known to the natives that chimpanzees
-beat on some sonorous body, which the natives call a drum. In 1890 I
-called attention to the beating practiced by the two chimpanzees in
-the Cincinnati Gardens. They frequently indulged in beating with their
-knuckles upon the floor of their cage. This was done chiefly by the
-male. The late E. J. Glave described to me the same thing as being done
-by the chimpanzees in the middle Congo basin.
-
-It is not probable that two animals of different genera utter the
-same exact sound, and this is more especially true of a sound that is
-complex or prolonged. Neither is it likely that the two would have a
-common habit, such as beating on any sonorous body. Since it is certain
-that one of these apes does make the sound described, it is more
-than probable that the other does not. The same logic applies to the
-beating. Many things that are known to the chimpanzee are taken for
-granted in the gorilla; but it is erroneous to suppose that in such
-habits as these they would be identical. In view of the facts I am
-inclined to believe the sounds described are made by the chimpanzee and
-not by the gorilla.
-
-There is another case in which the gorilla is wrongly portrayed. The
-female gorilla is represented as carrying her young clinging to her
-waist. I have seen the mother in the forest, with her young mounted
-upon her back, its arms around her neck, and its feet hooked in her
-armpits. I have never seen the male carry the young, but in a number
-of specimens of advanced age I have seen and called attention to the
-mark upon the back and sides which indicates that he does this. It is
-in the same place that the young one rests upon the back of the mother.
-In form it is like an inverted Y, with the base resting on the neck and
-the prongs reaching under the arms. This mark is not one of nature. It
-is the imprint of something carried there. In some specimens the hair
-is worn off until the skin is almost bare. The prongs are more worn
-than the stem of the figure. This is due to the fact that the abrasion
-is greater upon those parts than elsewhere. I do not assert that such
-is the cause, but I do assert that such is the fact.
-
-The gorilla is averse to human society. In captivity he is morose and
-sullen. He frets and pines for his liberty. His face appears to be
-incapable of expressing anything resembling a smile, but when in repose
-it is not repugnant. In anger his visage depicts the savage instincts
-of his nature. He does not seem to bear captivity well, even when not
-removed from his native climate. The longest any one of them has ever
-been known to live in captivity was about three and a half years. The
-one shown in the accompanying cut belonged to a trader by the name of
-Jones. The name of the gorilla was Sally, and I have called her Sally
-Jones. She lived with her master three years and a half and died of
-grief at his absence.
-
-[Illustration: SALLY JONES (YOUNG GORILLA) CAUGHT NAPPING (From a
-Photograph.)]
-
-The gorilla which lived with me for a time in the forest was a sober,
-solemn, stoical creature, and nothing could arouse in him a spirit of
-mirth. The only pastime he cared to indulge in was turning somersaults.
-Almost every day, at intervals of an hour or so, he would stand up for
-a moment, then put his head upon the ground, turn over, rise to his
-feet again, and look at me as if expecting my applause. His actions in
-this feat were very much like those of a boy. He frequently repeated
-this act a dozen times or more, but never smiled or evinced any sign of
-pleasure. He was selfish, cruel, vindictive, and retiring.
-
-One peculiar habit of the gorilla, both wild and in captivity, is that
-of relaxing the lower lip when in repose. It is not done when the
-creature is in a sullen mood, but frequently, when perplexed or in a
-deep study, this occurs. Another habit is that of protruding the end
-of the tongue between the lips, until it is about even with the outer
-edge of them. The end of the tongue is somewhat more blunted than that
-of the human. This habit is so frequent with the young gorilla that it
-would appear to have some meaning; but I cannot suggest what it is.
-
-In sleeping, the habit of the gorilla is to lie upon the back or side,
-with one or both arms placed under the head as a pillow. He cannot
-sleep on a perch,--as we have already noted,--but lies upon the ground
-at night. I had pointed out to me the place at the base of a large tree
-where a school of them had slept the night before. One imprint was
-quite distinct. The stories told about the king gorilla, or _ikomba_,
-placing his family in a tree while he sits on watch at the base is
-another case of supposition.
-
-The food of the gorilla is not confined to plants and fruits. He is
-fond of meat and eats it either raw or cooked. He secures a supply of
-this kind of food by catching small rodents of various kinds, lizards,
-toads, etc. It is also well known that he robs the nests of birds,
-taking the eggs or the young. A native once pointed out to me the
-quills and bones of a porcupine which had been left by a gorilla who
-had eaten the carcass. It is not at all rare for them to do this. The
-fruits and plants upon which they chiefly live are acidulous in taste,
-and some of them are bitter. They often eat the fruit of the plantain,
-but they prefer the stalk of that plant; this they twist or break open
-and eat the succulent heart. They do the same with the batuna, which
-grows all through the forest. The fruit of this plant is a red pod
-filled with seeds imbedded in a soft pulp. It is slightly acid and
-astringent. The wild mangrove, which forms a staple article of food
-for the chimpanzee, is rarely if ever eaten by the gorilla. I once
-saw a gorilla try to seize a dog, but whether or not it was for the
-purpose of eating the flesh I cannot say. One, however, did catch and
-devour a small dog on board the steamer Nubia, while on a voyage home
-from Africa. Both animals belonged to Captain Button, and from him I
-learned of the incident. Gorillas have no fixed hours for eating, but
-they usually eat in the early morning or the late afternoon. In a few
-instances I have seen them refuse meat. They are perhaps less devoted
-to eating flesh than the chimpanzee is.
-
-In the act of drinking, the gorilla takes a cup, places the rim in his
-mouth, and drinks in the same manner as a human being does. He does
-this without being taught, while the chimpanzee prefers to put both
-lips in the vessel. I have never known a gorilla that would drink beer,
-spirits, coffee, or soup. Their drink is limited to milk or water. The
-chimpanzee drinks beer and various other things.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXII
-
- Othello and Other Gorillas--Othello and Moses--Gorilla
- Visitors--Gorilla Mother and Child--Scarcity of Gorillas--Unauthentic
- Tales
-
-
-While I was living in my cage in the jungle I secured the young gorilla
-to whom I gave the name Othello. He was about six months old, strong,
-hardy, and robust. I found him to be a fine subject for study and made
-the best use of him for that purpose. I have elsewhere described his
-character, but his illness and death are matters of interest.
-
-At noon on the day of his decease he appeared to be quite well and in
-fine humor. He was turning somersaults and playing like a child with
-a native boy. He evinced much interest in his play, and his actions
-indicated that it gave him pleasure; but his face never once betrayed
-the fact. It was amusing to see him with the actions of a romping child
-and the face of a cynic.
-
-He was supplied with plenty of his favorite food, had a good appetite,
-and ate with a relish. Just after noon I sent the boy on an errand.
-Near the middle of the afternoon I observed that Othello was ill. He
-declined to eat or drink and lay on his back on the ground, with his
-arms under his head as a pillow. I tried to induce him to walk with
-me, to play, or to sit up, but he refused. By four o’clock he was
-very ill. He rolled from side to side and groaned in evident pain. He
-kept one hand upon his stomach, where the pain appeared to be located.
-He displayed all the symptoms of gastric poisoning, and I have reason
-to believe now that the boy had given him poison. I should regret to
-foster this suspicion against an innocent person, but it is based upon
-certain facts that I have learned since that time.
-
-While I sat in my cage watching Othello, who lay on the ground a short
-distance away, I discovered a native approaching him from the jungle.
-The man had an uplifted spear in his hand, as if in the act of hurling
-it at something. He had not seen me, but it did not for a moment occur
-to me that he had designs upon my pet. I spoke to him in the native
-language, whereupon he explained that he had seen the young gorilla and
-suspected that there was an old one close at hand, and being in fear of
-an attack, he was prepared. He said he was not afraid of a little one,
-but desired to capture him. I informed him that the gorilla was ill. He
-made an examination and assured me that Othello would die.
-
-The man departed, and Othello continued to grow worse. His sighing and
-groaning were really touching. I gave him an emetic, which produced
-good results. I also used some vaporoles to resuscitate him, but my
-skill was not sufficient to meet the demands of his case. His conduct
-was so like that of a human being that it deeply impressed me, and
-being alone with him in the silence of the dreary forest at the time of
-his death, the scene had a touch of sadness that impressed me with a
-deeper sense of its reality. Moses watched the dying ape as if he knew
-what death meant. He showed no signs of regret, but his manner was such
-as to suggest that he knew it was a trying hour.
-
-Othello died just before sunset, but for a long time prior to this he
-was unconscious. The only movements made by him were spasmodic actions
-caused by pain. The fixed and vacant stare of his eyes in his last
-hour was so like that of man in the hour of dissolution that no one
-could look upon the scene and fail to realize the solemn fact that this
-was death. The next day I dissected him and prepared the skin and the
-skeleton to bring home with me. They are now, with those of Moses and
-others, in the Museum of the University of Toronto.
-
-When I first secured this ape and brought him to my house in the bush,
-he was placed on the ground a few feet from my cage. Near him were laid
-some bananas and sugarcane belonging to Moses, who had not yet seen the
-stranger. The gorilla was in a box with one side open, so that he could
-easily be seen. My purpose was to see how each would act on discovering
-the other. When Moses observed the food he proceeded to help himself.
-On seeing the gorilla he paused a moment and gave me an alarm. He was
-not himself deterred from taking a banana. He seized one and retreated.
-While he was eating the banana, I took the gorilla from the cage and
-set him on the ground by it. I petted him and gave him some food. Moses
-looked on but did not interfere.
-
-When I returned to my cage Moses proceeded to investigate the new ape.
-He approached slowly and cautiously within about three feet of it. He
-walked around the gorilla a couple of times, keeping his face towards
-it, and gradually getting a little nearer. At length he came up within
-a few inches of one side of the gorilla and stopped. He stood almost
-on tiptoe, with only the ends of his fingers touching the ground. The
-gorilla continued to eat his food without so much as giving Moses a
-look. Moses placed his mouth near the ear of the gorilla and gave
-one terrific yell. The gorilla did not flinch or even turn his eyes.
-Moses stood for a moment looking as if in surprise that he had made
-no impression. After this time he made some friendly overtures to the
-gorilla, but the latter did not entertain them with favor, beyond
-maintaining terms of peace. They never quarreled, but Othello always
-treated Moses as an inferior. I do not know if he entertained a real
-feeling of contempt, but his manner was haughty and condescending.
-
-There were but few articles of food that he and Moses liked in common,
-and, therefore, they had no occasion to quarrel; but they never played
-together or cultivated any friendly terms, as the chimpanzees did among
-themselves. This may have been due to the fact that the gorilla was
-so exclusive in his demeanor towards the chimpanzee as to forbid all
-attempts of the latter to become intimate. The chimpanzee by nature is
-more sociable and is fond of human society. He imitates the actions
-of man in many things and quickly adapts himself to new conditions,
-while the gorilla is selfish and retiring. He can seldom be reconciled
-to human society. He does not imitate man nor readily yield to the
-influence of civilization.
-
-One special trait of the gorilla which I wish to emphasize is that
-he is one of the most taciturn of all the family. This fact does not
-confirm my theory as to their faculty of speech; but it is a fact, so
-far as I observed, although the natives say that he is as loquacious
-as the chimpanzee. Among the specimens that I have studied, both wild
-and in captivity, I have never heard but four sounds that differed from
-each other, and of these only two could properly be defined as speech.
-I do not include the screaming sound described in another chapter. I
-have not been able, so far, to translate the sounds that I have heard,
-and they cannot be spelled with our letters.
-
-There is one sound which Othello often used. It was not a speech
-sound, but a kind of whine, always coupled with a deep sigh. When left
-alone for a time he became oppressed with solitude. At such times he
-often heaved a deep sigh and uttered this strange sound. The tone and
-manner strongly appealed to the feelings of others, and while he did
-not appear to address it to any one or have any design in making it,
-it always touched a sympathetic chord, and I was sometimes tempted to
-release him. Another sound which was not within the pale of speech was
-a kind of grumbling sound. This frequently occurred when he was eating.
-It was not exactly a growl, but a kind of complaint. Twice I heard
-this same sound made by wild ones in the forest near my cage. The only
-thing that I can compare it to is the habit that cats have of growling
-while eating. It appears to be done only when something is near. It is
-possibly intended to deter others from trying to take the food.
-
-During my life in the cage I saw twenty-two gorillas; but I shall
-describe only a few of them, as their actions in most instances were
-similar. The first one that I had the pleasure of seeing in the jungle
-came within a few yards of the cage before it was yet in order to
-receive. He was exactly half grown. He must have been attracted by the
-noise made in putting the cage together. He advanced with caution,
-and when I discovered him he was peering through the bushes, as if to
-ascertain the cause of the sounds. When he saw me, he tarried only a
-few seconds and hurried off into the jungle. I did not disturb or shoot
-at him, because I desired him to return.
-
-On the third day after I went to live in the cage a family of ten
-gorillas was seen to cross an open space along the back of a batch of
-plantains near one of the villages. A small native boy was within about
-twenty yards of them when they crossed the path in front of him. A few
-minutes later I was notified of their vicinity. I took my rifle and
-followed them into the jungle until I lost the trail. A few hours after
-this they were again seen by some natives not far away from my cage,
-but they did not come near enough to be seen or heard. The next day a
-family came within some thirty yards of the cage. The bush was so dense
-that I could not see them, but I could distinguish four or five voices.
-They seemed to be engaged in a broil of some kind. I suppose it was the
-family that had been seen the day before. The second night after that I
-heard the screams of one in the forest some distance from me, but I do
-not know whether it was the king of this family or another.
-
-One day as I sat alone a young gorilla, perhaps five years old, came
-within six or seven yards of the cage and took a peep. I do not know
-whether or not he was aware of its being there until he was so near. He
-stood for a time, almost erect, with one hand holding on to a bough.
-His lower lip was relaxed, showing the red line mentioned elsewhere,
-and the end of his tongue could be seen between his parted lips. He did
-not evince either fear or anger, but rather appeared to be amazed. I
-heard him creeping through the bush a few seconds before I saw him. As
-a rule, they move so stealthily as not to be heard. I know of no other
-animal of equal size that makes so little noise in going through the
-forest. During the short time he stood gazing at me I sat still as a
-statue, and I think he was in doubt as to whether or not I was alive.
-He did not run away, but after a brief pause turned off at an angle and
-quietly departed. He lost no time, but made no great haste. The only
-sound he made was a low grunt, and this he did not repeat.
-
-At another time I heard two making a noise among the plantains near me.
-I could obtain only a glimpse of them, but as well as I could see they
-were of good size, being almost grown. They were making a low sound
-from time to time, something such as I have described; but I could
-not see them well enough to frame any opinion as to what it meant.
-They were certainly not quarreling, and I was not sure that they were
-eating. I afterwards went and looked to see if I could find where they
-had broken any of the stalks. Their trail was visible through the grass
-and weeds, but I could find no broken stalk. They were moving at a
-very leisurely gait and must have been within hearing distance some ten
-or twelve minutes. They were quite alike in color and appeared to be so
-in size, although the adult male attains a much greater size than the
-female.
-
-On one occasion I was standing outside of the cage some twenty yards
-away, and Moses was sitting on a dead log near by. I turned to him
-and was in the act of sitting down by him when he gave alarm. This he
-did in an undertone, apparently to avoid attracting the attention of
-the thing against which the warning was intended. I looked around,
-and discovered a gorilla standing not twenty yards away. He had just
-discovered us. He gazed for a moment and started on, moving obliquely
-towards the cage. I turned to retreat. At this instant Moses gave one
-of his piercing screams, which frightened the gorilla and he fled. He
-changed his course almost at right angles. He was going at a good rate
-before Moses screamed, but he at once increased his pace.
-
-One day I heard three sounds which a native boy assured me were made
-by gorillas; they were in different directions from the cage. It was
-not a scream nor a howl, but somewhat resembled the human voice calling
-out with a sound like “he-oo!” These sounds were repeated at intervals,
-but did not appear to be in the relation of call and answer; and the
-animals making them did not approach each other while calling. The
-sounds were the same except in volume. One of them appeared to be
-made by an animal much larger than the animals that had made the two
-other sounds. I should state that this sound rarely occurred within my
-hearing during my stay in that part, and with one exception I never
-heard a gorilla make any loud sound during the day.
-
-Another interesting specimen came prowling through the jungle as if he
-had lost his way. He found a small opening, or tunnel, which I had cut
-through the foliage in order to get a better view. Turning into that,
-he came a few steps towards the cage before he discovered it. Suddenly
-he stopped and squatted on the ground. He did not sit flat down. For
-a few seconds he was motionless. So was I. He slowly raised one arm
-till his hand was above his head, in which position he sat for a few
-moments. Then he moved his hand quickly forward, as if to motion at me.
-He did not drop his hand to the ground, but held it for a short time
-at an angle from his face. Then he slowly let it down till it reached
-the ground. During this time he kept his eyes fixed on me. At length
-he raised the other arm and seized hold of a strong bush, by which he
-slowly drew himself to a half-standing position. Thus he stood for a
-few seconds, with one hand resting on the ground. Suddenly he turned
-to one side, parted the bushes, and disappeared. He uttered no sound
-whatever. Another came within about thirty yards of my retreat. When he
-discovered me he stopped and stared in a perplexed manner. He turned
-away to retreat, but, after going a few feet, turned round and sat
-down on the ground. He remained in that attitude for more than half a
-minute; then he rose and retired in the direction from which he had
-come.
-
-The finest specimen of which I ever had a view, and at the same time
-the best subject for study, was a large female that came within a
-trifle more than three yards of me. A dog that belonged to one of the
-native villages had become attached to me and had found its way through
-the bush to my cage. He frequently came to visit me, and I was always
-glad to welcome him. One afternoon about three o’clock he came, and I
-let him into the cage for a while, to pass the usual greetings. I had a
-bone which I had saved from my last meal, and I threw this out to him
-in the bush a few feet away from the cage. He seized the bone and began
-to gnaw it where it lay. His body was in the opening of a rough path
-cut through the jungle near the cage, but his head was concealed under
-a clump of leaves. All at once I caught a glimpse of some moving object
-at the edge of the path on the opposite side of the cage. It was a huge
-female gorilla carrying a young one on her back.
-
-When I first saw her she was not more than fifty feet away. She was
-creeping along the edge of the bushes and watching the dog. He was busy
-with the bone. Her tread was so stealthy that I could not hear the
-rustling of a leaf. She advanced a few feet, crouched under the edge
-of the bushes, and cautiously peeped at the dog. Again she advanced
-a little way, halted, crouched, and peeped. It was evident that her
-purpose was to attack the dog. Her approach was so wary as to leave
-no doubt of her dexterity in attacking a foe. Every movement was the
-embodiment of stealth. Her face wore a look of anxiety with a touch of
-ferocity. Her movements were quick but accurate, and her advance was
-not delayed by any indecision. The dog had not discovered her approach.
-The smell of the bone and the noise he was making with it prevented
-him from either smelling or hearing her. I could not warn him without
-alarming her. If he could have seen her before she made the attack,
-I should have left him to take his chances by flight or by battle. I
-should have been glad of an opportunity to witness such a combat and to
-study the actions of the belligerents, but I could not consent to see a
-friendly dog taken at such disadvantage. She was now rapidly covering
-the distance between them, and the dog had not yet discovered her.
-
-[Illustration: GORILLA MOTHER WITH YOUNG]
-
-When she reached a point within about ten feet of him I determined to
-break the silence. I cocked my rifle. The click of the trigger caught
-her attention. I think this was the first that she was aware of my
-presence. She instantly stopped, turned her face and body towards the
-cage, and sat down on the ground in front of it. She gave me such a
-look that I almost felt ashamed for having interfered. She sat for
-more than a minute staring at me as if she had been transfixed. There
-was no trace of anger or fear, but the look of surprise was on every
-feature. I could see her eyes move from my head to my feet. She scanned
-me as closely as if her purpose had been to purchase me. At length she
-glanced at the dog who was still gnawing the bone, then turned her head
-uneasily, as if to search for some way of escape. She then rose and
-retraced her steps with moderate haste. She did not run, although she
-lost no time. From time to time she glanced back to see that she was
-not pursued. She uttered no sound of any kind.
-
-From the time this ape came in view until she departed was about
-four minutes, and during that time I was afforded an opportunity
-of studying her in a way that no one else has ever been able to do.
-I watched every movement of her body, face, and eyes. Being in the
-cage, I sat with perfect composure and studied her without the fear
-of attack. With due respect for the temerity of men, I do not believe
-that any sane man could calmly sit and watch one of these huge beasts
-approach so near him without feeling a tremor of fear, unless he were
-protected as I was. Any man would either shoot or retreat, and he could
-not possibly study the subject with equanimity.
-
-The temptation to shoot her was almost too great to resist, and the
-desire to capture her babe made it all the more so. But I refrained
-from firing my gun anywhere within a radius of half a mile or so of my
-cage, and the natives had agreed to the same thing. My purpose in doing
-so was to avoid frightening the apes away from the locality. I had been
-told by the native hunters that if I wounded one of the apes the others
-would leave the vicinity and perhaps not return for weeks. It is said
-that if you kill one the others do not notice it so much as if you
-merely wounded it. Although they seem to be conscious of the fact of
-the killing, and for the time depart, they will return within a short
-time.
-
-I could have shot this one with perfect ease and safety. As she
-approached, her head and breast were towards me; just before she
-discovered me her left side was in plain view, and when she sat down
-her breast was perfectly exposed. I could have shot her in the heart,
-the breast, or the head. Her baby hung upon her back, with its arms
-embracing her neck and its feet caught under her arms. The cunning
-little imp saw me long before the mother did, but it gave her no
-warning of danger. It lay with its cheek resting on the back of her
-head. Its black face looked as smooth and soft as velvet. Its big,
-brown eyes were looking straight at me, but it betrayed no sign of fear
-or even of concern. It really had a pleased expression and wore the
-nearest approach to a smile I have ever seen on the face of a gorilla.
-I believe that this is their method of carrying the young and have
-elsewhere assigned other reasons for this belief. In this case it is
-not a matter of belief, but one of knowledge, and everything that I
-have observed conspires to show that this is not an exception to the
-rule.
-
-During my sojourn of nearly four months in the jungle, where, it was
-said, a greater number of gorillas could be found than in any other
-place in the basin of that lake, I saw a total of only twenty-two. I
-saw one other at a time while I was hunting in the forest. I caught
-only a glimpse of him, and should not even have done that had not the
-native guide discovered and pointed him out to me. I believe that no
-other white man has ever seen an equal number of these animals in a
-wild state, and it is certain that no other has ever seen them under
-such favorable conditions for study. I have compared notes with many
-white men along that part of the coast, but I have never found any
-reliable man who claims to have seen an equal number. All of them admit
-that my cage is the best possible means of seeing the apes. I know men
-who have lived in that part for years and who frequently hunt in the
-forest for days at a time, but never yet have seen a live gorilla. I
-met one man on my last voyage who has lived on the edge of the gorilla
-country forty-nine years, making frequent journeys through the bush
-and along the water-courses in the interest of trade. This man told me
-himself that in all that time he had never seen a wild gorilla.
-
-I would cite Mr. James A. Deemin as an expert woodsman and a cool,
-daring hunter. I have enjoyed several hunts with him. He had traveled,
-traded, and hunted through the gorilla country for more than thirteen
-years. He told me that with two exceptions he had never seen a wild
-gorilla. The first he ever saw was a young one, and he once saw a
-school of them at a distance. On this latter occasion he was in a canoe
-and under the cover of the bushes along the side of a river. Unobserved
-he came near them.
-
-Another man, whose name I am at liberty to mention, is Mr. J. H. Drake
-of Liverpool. By those who know him Mr. Drake has never been suspected
-of lacking courage in the hunt or of being given to romance. Yet in
-many years on the coast he saw but one school of these apes, and that
-was the same one that Mr. Deemin saw when the two men were traveling
-together. Others could be cited who testify that it is a rare thing for
-the most expert woodsman ever to see one of these creatures, and many
-of the stories told by the casual traveler cannot be received at par.
-I do not mean to impeach the veracity of others, but the temptation to
-romance is too great for some people to resist. While we cannot prove
-the negative by direct evidence, we must be permitted to doubt whether
-or not these apes are so frequently met in the jungle as they are
-alleged to be. I will give some reasons for being a sceptic on this
-subject.
-
-Almost every yarn told by the novice is about the same in substance,
-and much the same in detail, as those related by others. It seems that
-most of them meet the same old gorilla, still beating his breast and
-screaming just as he did forty years ago. The number of gun-barrels
-that he is accused of having chewed up would make an arsenal sufficient
-to arm the volunteers. What becomes of all those that are attacked by
-this fierce monarch of the jungle? Not one of them ever gets killed,
-and not one of them ever kills the gorilla. Does he merely do this as
-a bluff and then recede from the attack? Or does he follow it up and
-seize his victim, tear him open, and drink his blood, as he is supposed
-to do? How does the victim escape? What becomes of the assailant? Who
-lives to tell the tale?
-
-The gorilla has good ears, good eyes, and is a skillful bushman. One
-man walking through the jungle will make more noise than half a dozen
-gorillas make. The gorilla almost always sees and hears a man before
-he is seen or heard by him. He is shy and will not attack a man unless
-wounded or provoked to it. He is always on the alert for danger and
-rarely comes into the open parts of the bush except for food. He can
-conceal himself with more ease than a man can and has every advantage
-in making his escape. I do not believe that he will ever approach a man
-if he can evade him, but I quite believe that he will make a strong
-defense if surprised or attacked. I do not believe it possible for any
-one to see a great number of gorillas in any length of time unless he
-goes to some one place and remains there, as I have done. Even then
-he must sometimes wait for days without a trace of one. Silence and
-patience alone will enable him to see them. When the gorilla sees a
-man, he retires as soon as he discovers the nature of the thing before
-him. He does not always flee in haste, as some other animals do, but is
-more deliberate and cool about it. He will retreat in good order and
-always starts in time, if possible, to escape without being observed. I
-trust that I may be pardoned for not being able to believe that every
-stranger who visits that country is attacked by a gorilla.
-
-Many people labor under the popular delusion that they have seen a
-gorilla with some itinerant menagerie, and it may be cruel of me to
-undeceive them. Up to this time there has been but one gorilla landed
-alive in America. This one arrived in Boston in the autumn of 1897.
-It was a mere baby and lived only five days. It was exhibited to the
-public during only a part of two days. The many alleged gorillas
-offered by mendacious showmen are vile fakes, and the exhibitors should
-be dealt with as impostors.
-
-I regret that I have been compelled to deny much that has been said,
-but I make no apology for having done so. In this work I have sought to
-place these apes before the reader as I have seen them in their native
-forests. I have not clothed them in fine raiment or invested them with
-glamour. But I trust that this contribution may be found worthy of the
-approval of all men who love nature and respect fidelity.
-
-I have the vanity to believe that the methods of study which I have
-employed will be made the means of farther research by more able
-students than the writer. In addition to those apes that I have seen in
-a wild state, I have seen about ten in captivity. Two of those were my
-own. They were good subjects for study, and I made the best use of them
-during the time I had them.
-
-While in the jungle I accomplished one thing, in which I feel a just
-sense of pride, and that was making a gorilla take a portrait of
-himself. This will interest the amateur in the art of snapshots, and I
-shall relate it.
-
-I selected a place in the forest where I found some tracks of the
-animal along the edge of a dense thicket of batuna. Under cover of the
-foliage I set up two pairs of stakes which were crossed at the tops,
-and to them was lashed a short pole forming something like a sawbuck.
-To this was fastened the camera, to which had been attached a trigger
-made of bamboo splits. One end of a string was fastened to the trigger,
-and the other end carried under a yoke to a distance of eight feet
-from the lens. At this point were attached a fresh plantain stalk
-and a nice bunch of the red fruit of the batuna. Upon this point the
-camera was focused, the trigger was set, and it was left to await the
-gorilla. That afternoon I returned to find that something had taken the
-bait, broken the string, sprung the trigger, and snapped the camera.
-I developed the plate, but could find no image of anything except the
-leaves in front of it. I repeated the experiment, with similar results,
-but could not understand how anything could steal the bait and yet not
-be shown in the picture. The third time I did this I was gratified to
-find the image of a gorilla, and also to discover the cause why the
-other experiments had not succeeded.
-
-The deep shadows of the forest make it difficult to take a photograph
-without giving it a time exposure, and when the sun is under a cloud or
-on the wrong side of an object success is quite impossible. The leaves
-which were shown in the first two plates were only those which were
-most exposed to the light, and all the lower part of the picture was
-without detail. In the third trial it could be seen that the sun was
-shining at the instant of exposure. A part of the body of the gorilla
-was in the light, but most of it was in the shadow of the leaves above
-it. The left side of the head and face was quite distinct, so likewise
-were the left shoulder and arm. The hand and the bait could not have
-been distinguished except by their context. The right side of the head,
-the arm, and most of the body were lost in the view. The picture showed
-that the gorilla had taken the bait with his left hand, and that he was
-in a crouching posture at the moment.
-
-While the photograph was very poor as a work of art, it was full of
-interest as an experiment. Although it did not result in getting a good
-picture, I did not regard the effort as a failure. It shows at least
-that such a thing is possible, and by careful efforts, often repeated,
-it could be made a means of obtaining some novel pictures. A little
-ingenuity would widen the scope of this device and make it possible to
-photograph birds, elephants, and everything else in the forest. When I
-return to that place on a like journey I shall carry the scheme into
-better effect.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIII
-
-Other Apes--The Apes in History--Habitat--The Orangs--The Gibbon
-
-
-In the various records that constitute the history of these apes are
-found many novel and incoherent tales, but most of them appear to
-rest upon some basis of truth. In order to arrive at a more definite
-knowledge concerning them, we may review the data at our command.
-
-In the annals of the world, the first record that alludes to these
-manlike apes is that of Hanno, who made a voyage from Carthage to the
-west coast of Africa, nearly five hundred years before the Christian
-era. He described an ape which was found in the locality about Sierra
-Leone. It is singular that the description which he gave of those apes
-should coincide so fully with the apes known at the present day; but it
-is quite certain that the apes of which he gave an account were neither
-gorillas nor chimpanzees. There is nothing to show that either of these
-apes ever occupied that part of the world, or that any similar type has
-done so.
-
-The ape described by Hanno was certainly not an anthropoid, but a large
-dog-faced monkey or baboon, technically called _cynocephalus_. These
-animals are found all along the north coast of the Gulf of Guinea,
-but there is no trustworthy evidence of any true ape living north of
-Cameroon valley. The river that waters it empties into the sea about
-four degrees north of the equator. Here begins the first trace of the
-chimpanzee. As we pass along the windward coast, casual reports are
-current to the effect that gorillas and chimpanzees occupy the interior
-north of there; but when these reports are sifted down to solid facts,
-it turns out to be a big baboon or a monkey upon which the story rests.
-Its likeness to man, as described by Hanno, was doubtless the work of
-fancy, and the name _troglodytes_ which he gave to it shows that he
-knew but little of its habits, or cared but little for the exactness of
-his statements.
-
-The account given by Henry Battel, in 1590, contains a thread of truth
-woven into a web of fantasy. He must have heard the stories he relates,
-or seen some specimens along the coast north of the Congo. There are
-certain facts which point to this conclusion. The name _pongo_ which
-he gave to one of them belongs to the Fiote tongue, which is spoken
-by the native tribes around Loango. Those people use the name, and it
-is commonly understood to be synonymous with the name _njina_, used
-by the tribes north of there. It is always applied to the gorilla. To
-me, however, it appears to coincide with the name _ntyii_, as used by
-the Esyira people for another ape, which is described in the chapter
-devoted to gorillas. It was from Loango that Dr. Falkenstein, in 1876,
-secured an ape under that name. It is singular that Baron Wurmb, in
-1780, makes use of the name _pongo_ for an orang. I have not been able
-to learn where he acquired this name, but it appears to be a native
-Fiote name for more than four hundred years, and the history of their
-language is fairly well known.
-
-The name _enjocko_, given by Battel to another ape, is beyond a doubt
-a corruption of the native name _ntyigo_ (_ntcheego_), and this name
-belongs north of the Congo from Mayumba to Gaboon. He may have inferred
-that these apes occupied Angola, but there is not a vestige of proof
-that any ape exists in that part of Africa. Even the native tribes
-of that part have no indigenous name for either of these apes. Other
-parts of his account are erroneous, and while he may have believed
-that these apes “go in bodies to kill many natives that travel in
-the wood,” and the natives may have told him such a thing, the apes
-do not practice such a habit. With all their sagacity, they have no
-idea of unity of action. If a band of them were attacked, they would
-no doubt act together in defense, but it is not to be believed that
-they ever preconcert any plan of attack. Neither do these apes ever
-assault an elephant. He is the one animal they hold in mortal dread. I
-have incidentally mentioned elsewhere the conduct of my two _kulus_ on
-board the ship when they saw a young elephant. Chico, the big ape that
-has also been mentioned, was often vicious and stubborn. Whenever he
-refused to obey his keeper or became violent, an elephant was brought
-in sight of his cage. On seeing it he became as meek as a lamb and
-showed every sign of the most intense fear. Mr. Bailey himself told me
-of the dread both of his apes had of an elephant. Battel was also wrong
-in the mode he described of the mother carrying her young, and that of
-the apes in using sticks and clubs.
-
-The ape known as _Mafuka_, which was exhibited in Dresden in 1875,
-was also brought from the Loango coast, and it is possible that this
-is the ape to which the native name _pongo_ really belonged. This
-specimen in many respects conforms to the description of the _ntyii_
-given, but the idea suggested by certain writers that _Mafuka_ was a
-cross between the gorilla and the chimpanzee is not, to my mind, a
-tenable supposition. It would be difficult to believe that two apes of
-different species in a wild state would cross, but to believe that two
-that belonged to different genera would do so is yet more illogical.
-I may state, however, that some of the Esyira people advance such a
-theory concerning the _ntyii_, but the belief is not general, and those
-best skilled in woodcraft regard them as distinct species.
-
-To quote, in “pidjin” English, the exact version of their relationship,
-as it was given to me by my interpreter while in that country, may
-be of interest to the reader. I may remark, by way of explaining the
-nature of the “pidjin” English, that it is a literal translation of the
-native mode of thought into English words. The statement was:--
-
-“_Ntyii_ ’e one; _njina_ ’e one; all two ’e one, one. _Ntyii_ ’e one
-mudder; _njina_ ’e one mudder; all two ’e one, one. _Ntyii_ ’e one
-fader; _njina_ ’e one fader. All two ’e one.” By which the native means
-to say that the _ntyii_ has one mother, and the _njina_ has one mother,
-so that the two have two mothers, but both have one father, therefore
-they are half-brothers.
-
-The other version given in denial of this statement is as follows:--
-
-“_Ntyii_ ’e one mudder; _njina_, ’e one mudder. ’E one, one. _Ntyii_
-’e one fader; _njina_ ’e one fader. ’E one, one. All two ’e one, one.
-_Ntyii_ ’e one mudder; _njina_ ’e one mudder. All two ’e one, one. ’E
-brudder. _Ntyii_ ’im fader; _njina_ ’im ’e brudder. All two ’e one,
-one.” The translation is that the _ntyii_ has a mother, and the _njina_
-has a mother, which are not the same, but are sisters. The _ntyii_ has
-a father, and the _njina_ has a father, which are not the same, but are
-brothers; and therefore the two apes are only cousins, which in the
-native esteem is a remote degree of kinship.
-
-The ape described by Lopez certainly belonged to the territory north of
-the Congo, which coast he explored, and gave his name to a cape about
-forty miles south of the equator. It still bears the name Cape Lopez.
-However, it is probable that at that time most of the low country now
-occupied by these apes was covered with water; that the lakes of that
-region were then all embraced in one great estuary, reaching from
-Ferran Vaz to Nazavine Bay, and extending eastward to the foothills
-below Lamberene. There is abundant evidence to show that such a state
-has once existed there, but it is not probable that these apes have
-ever changed their latitude.
-
-The name _soko_ appears to be a local name for the ordinary type of
-chimpanzee found throughout the whole range of their domain, and known
-in other parts by other names. In Malimbu the name _kulu_ appears to
-apply to the same species, while in the southwestern part of their
-habitat that name, coupled with the verb _kamba_, is confined strictly
-to the other type. Along the northern borders of the district to
-which that species belongs, but where he is very seldom found and
-little known to the natives, he is called by the Nkami tribe _kanga
-ntyigo_, to distinguish him from the common variety, to which the
-latter name only is applied.
-
-[Illustration: PLAIN AND EDGE OF FOREST IN THE COUNTRY OF THE APES]
-
-The etymology of the name _kanga_ as applied to this ape is rather
-obscure. In common use it is a verb, with the normal meaning “to parch”
-or “fry,” and hence the secondary meaning “to prepare.” Since this
-ape is said to be of a higher order of the race, the term is used to
-signify that he is “better prepared” than the other; that is to say, he
-is prepared to think and talk in a better manner. But another history
-of this word appears to be more probable. The ape to which the name
-is applied lives between the Nkami country and the Congo. The name is
-possibly a perversion of _kongo_ and implies the kind of _ntyigo_ that
-lives towards the great river of that name. The etymology of African
-names is always difficult because there is no record of them; but many
-of them can be traced out with great precision, and some of them are
-unique.
-
-The name _M’Bouve_, as given by Du Chaillu, I have not been able to
-identify. In one part of the country I was told that the word meant
-the “chief” or head of a family. In another part it was said to mean
-something like an advocate or champion, and was applied to only one
-ape in a family group. The Rev. A. C. Goode, a missionary who recently
-died near Batanga, was stationed for twelve years at Gaboon. During
-that time he traveled all through the Ogowé and Gaboon valleys. He was
-familiar with the languages of that part, and he explained the word in
-about the same way.
-
-Whatever may be said concerning the veracity of Paul du Chaillu, there
-is one thing that must be said to his credit. He gave to the world more
-knowledge of these apes than all other men had ever done before; and
-while he may have given a touch of color to many incidents, and related
-some native yarns, he told a vast amount of valuable truth; and I can
-forgive him for whatever he may have misstated, except one thing; that
-is, the starting of that story about gorillas chewing up gun-barrels.
-It has been a staple yarn, in stock ever since, and the instant you ask
-a native any question about the habits of the gorilla he begins with a
-stereotype edition of that improbable story.
-
-In view of the fact that I have made careful and methodic efforts to
-determine the exact boundary of the habitat and the real habits of
-these two apes, I feel at liberty to speak with an air of authority.
-I have acquired my knowledge on the subject by going to their own
-country and living in their own jungle, and I have thus obtained their
-secrets from first-hand. With due respect to those who write books and
-speak freely upon subjects of which they know but little, I beg leave
-to suggest that if the authors had gone into the jungle and lived
-among those animals, instead of consulting others who know less than
-themselves about the subject, many of them would have written in a very
-different strain. I do not mean this as a rebuke to any one, but seeing
-the same old stories repeated year after year, and knowing that there
-is no truth in them, I feel it incumbent as a duty to challenge them.
-
-I believe that in the future it will be shown that there are two types
-of gorilla as distinct from each other as the two chimpanzees are. This
-second variety of gorilla will be found between the third and fifth
-parallels south and east of the delta district, but west of the Congo.
-I believe it was represented in the ape _Mafuka_.
-
-My researches among the apes have been confined chiefly to the
-two kinds heretofore described, but I have seen and studied in a
-superficial way the orang and the gibbon. I am not prepared as yet to
-discuss the habits of those two apes, but, as they form a part of the
-group of anthropoids, we cannot dismiss them without honorable mention.
-
-The orang-outang, as he is commonly called, is known to zoölogy by the
-first of these terms alone. He is a native of Borneo and Sumatra, and
-opinions differ as to whether there are two species or only one.
-
-The general plan of the skeleton of the orang is very much the same as
-that of the other apes. The chief points of difference are that it has
-one bone more in the wrist and one joint less in the spinal column than
-is found in man. He has thirteen pairs of ribs, which appear to be more
-constant in their number than in man. His arms are longer, and his legs
-shorter, in proportion to his body than the other two apes. The type of
-the skull is peculiar and combines to a certain extent more human-like
-form in one part with a more beast-like form in another. The usual
-height of an adult male is about fifty-one inches.
-
-I have never had an opportunity of studying this ape in a wild state
-and have had access to only a few of them in captivity. All of these
-were young, and most of them were inferior specimens. He is the most
-stupid and obtuse of the four great apes. Except for his skeleton
-alone, he would be assigned a place below the gibbon, for in point
-of speech and mental caliber he is far inferior. Perhaps the best
-authorities upon the habits of this ape in a wild state are Messrs. W.
-T. Hornaday and Alfred R. Wallace.
-
-[Illustration: Young Orangs (From a Photograph.)]
-
-The smallest and last in order of the anthropoid apes is the gibbon.
-He is much smaller in size, greater in variety, and more active than
-any other of the group. His habitat is in the southeast of Asia; its
-outline is vaguely defined, but it includes the Malay Peninsula and
-many of the contiguous islands east and south of it.
-
-In model and texture the skeleton of the gibbon is the most delicate
-and graceful of all the apes, and in this respect is superior to that
-of man. He is the only one of the four apes that can walk in an erect
-position. In doing this the gibbon is awkward and often uses his arms
-to balance himself. Sometimes he touches his hands to the ground. At
-other times he raises them above his head or extends them on either
-side. The length of them is such that he can touch the fingers to the
-ground while the body is nearly or quite erect. In the spinal column
-he has two, and sometimes three, sections more than man. His digits
-are very much longer, but his legs are nearly the same length, in
-proportion to his body, as those of man. He has fourteen pairs of ribs.
-
-The gibbon is the most active and probably the most intelligent of all
-apes. He is more arboreal in habit than any other. Many stories are
-told of his agility in climbing, and leaping from limb to limb. One
-authentic report credits one of these apes with leaping a distance of
-forty-two feet, from the limb of one tree to that of another. Perhaps
-a better term is to call it swinging, rather than leaping, as these
-flights are performed chiefly by the arms. Another account is that a
-gibbon swinging by one hand propelled himself a horizontal distance of
-eighteen feet through the air, seized a bird in flight, and alighted
-safely upon another limb, with his prey in hand.
-
-There are several known species of this ape. The largest of these is
-about three feet high; but the usual height is not more than thirty
-inches. The voice of one species is remarkable for its strength, scope,
-and quality, being in these regards superior to that of all other
-apes. Most of the members of this genus are endowed with better vocal
-qualities than other animals.
-
-This ends the list of the manlike apes. Next in order after them come
-the monkeys, then the baboons, and, last, the lemurs.
-
-The descent, as we have elsewhere observed, from the highest ape to the
-lowest monkey presents one unbroken scale of imbricating planes. We
-have seen in what degree man is related to the higher apes. From thence
-we may discern in what degree his physical nature is the same as that
-of all the order to which he belongs. No matter in what respect man may
-differ in his mental and moral nature, his likeness to them should at
-least restrain his pride, evoke his sympathy, and cause him to share
-the bounty of his benevolence. Let him realize in full extent that he
-is one in nature with the rest of animate creatures, and they will
-receive the benign influence of his dignity without impairing it, while
-he will elevate himself by having given it.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIV
-
-The Treatment of Apes in
-Captivity--Temperature--Building--Food--Occupation
-
-
-In conclusion I deem it in order to offer a few remarks with regard to
-the causes of death among these apes, and to say something regarding
-the treatment of animals in captivity. We know so little and assume so
-much concerning them that we often violate the very laws which we are
-trying to enforce.
-
-We have already noticed the fact that the gorilla is confined by
-nature to a low, humid region, reeking with miasma and the effluvia of
-decaying vegetation. The atmosphere in which he thrives is one in which
-human life can hardly exist. We know in part why man cannot live in
-such an atmosphere and under such conditions, but we cannot say with
-certainty why the ape does do so. It would seem that the very element
-that is fatal to man gives strength and vitality to the gorilla. We
-know that all forms of animal life are not affected in the same way by
-the same causes; and while it may be said in round numbers that what is
-good for man is good for apes, that is not a fact.
-
-The human race is the most widely distributed of any genus of mammals,
-and, as a race, it can undergo greater extremes of change in climate,
-food, or condition than any other kind of animal. Man’s migratory
-habits, both inherent and acquired, have fitted him for a life of
-vicissitudes, and such a life inures him, as an individual, to all
-extremes. On the other hand, the gorilla, as a genus, is confined to a
-small habitat, which is uniform in climate, products, and topography.
-Having been so restricted to these conditions he is unfitted for any
-radical change, and when such is forced upon him the result must always
-be to his injury.
-
-In certain parts of the American tropics there is found a rich gray
-moss growing in great profusion in these localities and on certain
-kinds of trees. It is not confined to any special level, but thrives
-best on low elevations. Under favorable conditions it grows at
-altitudes far above the surrounding swamps. Its character and quantity,
-however, are measured by the altitude at which it grows. It is an
-aërial plant, and it may be detached from the boughs of one tree and
-transplanted upon those of another. It may be taken with safety to a
-great distance, so long as an atmosphere is supplied to it that is
-suited to its nature, but when removed from its normal conditions and
-placed in a purer air it begins to languish and soon dies. If returned
-in time, however, to its former place or one of like character, it will
-revive and continue to grow.
-
-What element this plant extracts from the impure air is unknown. It
-cannot be carbonic acid gas, which is the chief food of plants, nor can
-it be any form of nitrogen. It is well known that the plant cannot long
-survive in a pure atmosphere. Whatever the ingredient extracted may
-be, it is certain that it is one that is deadly to human life and one
-that other plants refuse. Moisture and heat alone will not account for
-it. We have another striking instance in the eucalyptus, which lives
-upon the poison of the air around it. There are many other such cases
-in vegetable life; and while the animal is a higher organism than the
-plant, there are certain laws of life that obtain in both kingdoms and
-involve the same principles.
-
-Between the case of the gorilla and that of the plant there is some
-analogy. It may not be the same element that sustains them both, but it
-is possible that the very microbes which germinate disease and prove
-fatal to man sustain the life of the ape in the prime of health. The
-poison which destroys life in man preserves it in the ape.
-
-The chimpanzee is distributed over a much greater range than the
-gorilla and is capable of undergoing a much greater degree of change
-in food and temperature. The history of these apes in captivity shows
-that in that state the chimpanzee lives much the longer and requires
-much less care. From my own observation I assert that all these apes
-can undergo a greater range of temperature than of humidity. The latter
-appears to be one of the essential things to the life of a gorilla.
-One fatal mistake made in treating him is furnishing him with a dry,
-warm atmosphere and depriving him of the poison contained in the
-malarious air in which he naturally spends his life. Both of these apes
-need humidity. In a dry air the chimpanzee will live longer than the
-gorilla, but neither of them can long survive it; and it would appear
-that a salt atmosphere is best for the gorilla.
-
-I believe that one of these apes could be kept in good condition for
-any length of time if he were supplied with a normal humidity in an
-atmosphere laden with miasma and allowed to vary in its temperature. A
-constant degree of heat is not good for any animal. There is no place
-in all the earth where nature sustains a uniform degree of heat. We
-need not go to either extreme, but a change is requisite to bring into
-play all the organs of the body.
-
-The treatment which I would recommend for the care of apes is to build
-them a house entirely apart from that of other animals. It should be
-eighteen or twenty feet wide by thirty-five or forty feet long, and at
-least fifteen feet high. It should have no floor except earth, and that
-should be of sandy loam or vegetable earth. In one end of this building
-there should be a pool of water twelve or fifteen feet in diameter;
-and, imbedded in mold under the water, there should be a steam coil
-to regulate the temperature as may be desired. In this pool should be
-grown a dense crop of water plants such as are found in the marshes of
-the country in which the gorilla lives. This pool should not be cleaned
-out nor the water changed; but the plants should be allowed to grow and
-decay in a natural way. Neither the pool nor the house should be kept
-at a uniform heat, but the temperature should be allowed to vary from
-60° to 90°.
-
-In addition to the things above mentioned, the place should be provided
-with the means of giving it a spray of tepid water, which should be
-turned on once or twice a day and allowed to continue for at least
-an hour at a time. The water for this purpose should be taken from
-the pool, but should never be warmer than the usual temperature of
-tropical rain. The animal should not be required to take a bath in this
-way, but should be left to his own choice about it.
-
-The house should contain a thin partition that could be removed at
-will, and the end of the building farthest from the pool should be
-occupied by a strong tree, either dead or alive, to afford the inmates
-proper exercise. The south side of the house should be of glass, and
-at least half of the top should be of the same. These parts should
-be provided with heavy canvas curtains, to be drawn over them so as
-to adjust or regulate the sunlight. In the summer time the building
-should be kept quite open, so as to admit the air and the rain. The
-rule that strangers or visitors should not annoy or tease them should
-be enforced without respect to person, time, or rank. No visitor should
-be allowed on any terms to give them any kind of food. The reasons for
-these precautions are obvious to any one familiar with the keeping of
-animals; but in the case of the gorilla their observance cannot be
-waived with impunity.
-
-The ape does not need to be pampered. On the contrary, he should be
-permitted to rough it. Half of the gorillas that have ever been in
-captivity have died from overnursing. By nature they are strong and
-robust if the proper conditions exist; but when these are changed they
-become frail and tender creatures. They should not be restricted to
-a vegetable diet nor limited to a few articles of food, but should
-be allowed to select such things as they prefer to eat. I have grave
-doubts as to the wisdom of limiting the quantity. One mistake is
-often committed in the treatment of animals, and that is to continue
-the same diet at all times and to limit that to one or two items. It
-may be observed that the higher the form of organism the more diverse
-the taste becomes. Very hardy animals or those of low forms may be
-restricted to one kind of staple food. The higher form demands a change.
-
-One thing above all others that I would inhibit is the use of straw
-of any kind in the cage, for beds or for any other purpose. If it
-be desired to furnish them with such a comfort, nothing should ever
-be used but dead leaves, if they can be supplied. In their absence
-a canvas mattress or wire matting should be used. There are certain
-kinds of dust given off by the dry straw of all cereal plants. This is
-deleterious to the health of man, but vastly more so to these apes.
-It is taken into the lungs and through them acts upon other parts of
-the body by suppressing the circulation and respiration. No matter
-how clean the straw may be, the effect will be the same in the end.
-Hay is less harmful than straw, but even the use of hay should not be
-permitted.
-
-Another thing which is necessary is to entertain or amuse the apes in
-some way, otherwise they become despondent and gloomy. It is believed
-by those who are familiar with these creatures that loneliness or
-solitude is a fruitful cause of death. This is especially true of the
-gorilla.
-
-Another important fact, little known, is that tobacco smoke is usually
-fatal to a gorilla. Every native hunter that I met in Africa testifies
-that this simple thing will kill any gorilla in the forest if he is
-subjected to the fumes for a sufficient time. I have reason to believe
-that this is true. It may not invariably prove fatal, but it will be
-so in many instances. The chimpanzee is not so much affected by it,
-although he dislikes it. The gorilla detests it and shows at all times
-his strong aversion to it. I have no doubt that this is one of the
-reasons why these apes die on board the ships by which they are brought
-from Africa.
-
-Both of these apes are possessed, in a degree, of savage and resentful
-instincts; but these are much stronger in the gorilla than in the
-chimpanzee. The gorilla, therefore, requires firm and consistent
-treatment. This can be used without severity or cruelty, but the
-intellect of the gorilla must not be underrated. He studies with a keen
-perception the motives and intentions of man, and is seldom mistaken
-in his interpretation of them. He often manifests a violent dislike
-for certain persons, and when this is discovered to be the case, the
-object of his dislike should not be permitted in his presence, for the
-result is to enrage the ape and excite his nervous nature. When he
-becomes sullen or obstinate, he should not be coaxed or indulged, nor
-yet used with harshness. He should either be left alone for a time or
-be diverted by a change of treatment.
-
-
-
-
-INDEX
-
-
- “Aaron”
- his intelligent expression, 144, 146, 147
- his capture, 145
- on the journey, 147, 148
- his tricks, 148
- ” one aversion, 148, 149
- ” sympathy for Moses, 149-152
- realization of death, 151, 152
- loses his mate, 170
- his illness and death, 172-174
-
- “Aaron” with “Elisheba”
- acts as a protector, 156
- his reliance on human aid, 157, 158-159
- driving the cow, 158, 159
- we start for Liverpool, 159
- the bogie on the steamer, 159
- solicitude of the apes, 159-160
- their ingenuity, 161
- the ape in the mirror, 161-162
- Aaron’s jealousy, 162-165
- the rivals, 163-165
- arrival at Liverpool, 167, 168
- Elisheba’s illness, 168
- Aaron again becomes nurse, 170
-
- Abstract ideas in simians, Lack of, 20, 36
-
- Affection in animals not mere instinct, 58-59, 173
-
- Age of maturity in apes, 98, 191, 192
-
- Amusement (of captives)
- captives should have, 55-56, 283
- means of, 20-21, 33, 35, 54-56
-
- _Angola_, 268
-
- Anthropoid or manlike apes (see also _Chimpanzee_, _Gorilla_,
- _Gibbon_, _Orang_, and references under _Chimpanzee captives_)
- the group, 3
- superior intelligence, 35, 60
-
- Apes (see also _Simians_ and references under _Anthropoid apes_)
- resemblance to man, 2
- described, 3, 92-98, 223 ff.
- anthropoid or manlike group, 3
- skeleton a duplicate of man’s, 4, 7
- superior intelligence of anthropoid, 35, 60
- travelers’ stories untrue, 71-72, 235-236, 266 ff.
- do not act in concert, 268
-
- Approval, Apes’ love of, 197, 203
-
- Arboreal habit, The, 96-97, 224-225, 245
-
-
- Baboon, The, 3, 14, 15, 196-197, 224, 266, 277
- relative plane, 3, 277
-
- Bailey, Mr. James A., New York City
- his valuable apes, 190-191
- corroborative testimony, 268
-
- “Banquo,” 28-29
-
- Battel, Henry (1590), 267, 268
-
- _Batuna_ (plant), 77, 245
-
- Bellevue Gardens, Manchester, England (see also _Consul II_)
- Consul II, 193
- a pugnacious ape, 198-200
- chimpanzee and orang, 200
-
- Borneo, 274
-
- Buffalo (N. Y.) Museum, Specimens in, 104
-
-
- Cage in the jungle, The
- idea first conceived, 60
- exceptional opportunities it afforded, 60, 71, 260
- its construction, 62-64
- its furniture, 64-66
- date of occupancy, 71
- length of occupancy, 71
- my chimpanzee companion, 71
- (see also _Moses_)
- the native boy, 71, 120, 121, 125, 148-149
- program for the day, 73 ff.
- my menu, 73, 77, 79, 84
- wild visitors, 75 ff., 186-190, 252-260
- the tornado, 79 ff.
-
- _Cameroon_ (valley), 85, 213, 215, 267
-
- Capuchin monkey, The (see also under _Monkey_), 18-19, 28, 29, 38, 39,
- 42, 52
-
- Care of simian captives
- amusement of, 20-21, 33, 35, 54-56, 283
- their short lives, 146, 200, 201
- effects of confinement, 231
- cannot live in pure air, 280, 281
- condition compared to a certain
- tropical moss, 279-280
- humidity essential, 280-282
- diet, 282-283
- dust of straw injurious, 283
- tobacco fatal to the gorilla, 283-284
-
- Catarrhini, 3
-
- “Caucasian of monkeys, The,” 35
-
- Cebus monkey, The (see also under _Monkey_)
- brown species, 17, 24, 42
- experiments with, 17, 18
- superior intelligence, 35
- white-faced species, 42
-
- _Charla_ (lake), 25
-
- Charleston, S. C., Experiments at, 24 ff.
-
- Cherry, Mr. William S., African traveler, 212
-
- Chicago Gardens, Experiments at, 17, 29
-
- “Chico”
- his unusual size, 190
- ” scream, 241
- ” fear of an elephant, 268
-
- _Chi Loango_ (river), 211, 218
-
- Chimpanzee, The (see also _Kulu-kamba_, _Ntyigo_, and references
- under _Chimpanzee captives_)
- order of intelligence, 4, 60, 85, 99, 105-106
- perception of number, 34
- resemblance to man (see also _Skeleton_), 60-62, 92
- in native haunts, 70, 71, 186-190
- habitat, 85-87, 280
- derivation and meaning of name, 86
- two species, 86 ff.
- described in detail, 92-98, 188
- position in sleep, 96
- longevity, 98
- age of maturity, 98, 191, 192
- breeding season, 98-99
- social traits and government, 99-105
- reasoning power and mental status, 105, 116, 206
- does not bear captivity well, 146
- pulmonary trouble common, 146
- maladies resemble man’s, 186
- seen from the cage, 186-190
- climate of America favorable, 200-201
- mode of attack, 237
- scream and beating sound, 240-242
- disposition, 250, 284
-
- Chimpanzees, Speech of
- extent of vocabulary, 108, 115, 136
- number of words interpreted, 108, 115
- pitch of voice, 108, 109, 111, 112, 116
- vocal organs, 108-110
- phonetic symbols invented by author, 109-113
- method of producing sounds, 110-111
- character and meaning of sounds, 112-115, 123, 125, 130, 135-137
- quality of voice, 113
- use of gestures, 114-115
- possibility of development, 139
- resemblance to human speech, 116
- constant meanings of sounds, 136, 137
-
- Chimpanzee captives, Some (see _Aaron_; _Elisheba_; _Sailor’s pet_;
- _Village pet_; _Gaboon, captives at_; _Izanga_; _Chico_; _Johanna_;
- _Consul II_; _Clever kulu_; _Five young kulus_; _Sally_)
-
- Cincinnati Zoölogical Garden, Experiments at, 14, 28, 200, 241
-
- Classification of simians, 2-4
-
- Clever kulu, A
- her color, 202
- facial expression, 203, 206
- love of approval, 203, 204
- always in mischief, 204
- unties complicated knots, 204-206
- evidence of reasoning power, 206
-
- Color, Simians’ perception of, 30-32, 35, 36, 139
-
- Concrete ideas, Simians can express only, 36
-
- _Congo_ (river), 66, 85, 191, 209, 211, 212, 216, 218, 241, 267, 268,
- 270, 272
-
- Constant meanings of sounds in simian speech, 15, 18, 23, 135-137
-
- “Consul II”
- his remarkable sagacity, 193
- rides a “bike,” 193
- smokes a pipe, 193-195
- draws with chalk or pencil, 195, 196
- distinguishes three letters, 196
- love of teasing, 196-197
- aversion to being clothed, 197
- loves approval, 197
- attempts at burglary, 198
- his keeper’s zeal, 198
-
- Cranio-facial angles
- of man, 8
- ” apes, 9
- ” monkeys, 9
- ” reptiles, 10
-
- Cross, Dr., Liverpool, England
- guardian of Aaron and Elisheba, 168, 172
-
- Cruelty
- unnecessary in hunting, 146
- inherent in natives, 157, 184-185
-
- Crystal Mountains, 211, 214
-
- Cynocephalus, 266
-
-
- “Darwin”
- learns Puck’s sound for “food,” 43
-
- Deaf-mutes, Method of teaching applied to simian speech, 110
-
- Death, Apes’ realization of, 151, 152, 170, 259
-
- Deemin, Mr. James, English trader, 223, 261
-
- Descriptions of simians
- of monkeys, 3, 224
- ” chimpanzee, 92-98, 224
- ” gorilla, 223 ff.
-
- Development of “calf” a means of comparison, 227
-
- Dexterity and ingenuity
- of apes, 122, 126, 129, 130, 132, 161, 184, 193-198, 204-206
- of monkeys, 56-57
-
- Dialects (see _types_ under _Monkeys, Speech of_)
-
- Dimension, Simians’ perception of, 30, 36
-
- “Dodo”
- Nemo’s apologetic speech, 47
- her appeal to her keeper, 48-50
-
- Drake, Mr. J. H., African traveler, 261
-
- Drum, The (see _Kanjo_)
-
- Du Chaillu, Paul, African traveler, 214, 272, 273
-
-
- Early reports of apes (see _Ford_, _Savage_, _Wilson_, _Walker_,
- _Hanno_, _Battel_, _Du Chaillu_)
-
- “Elisheba” (see also _Aaron with Elisheba_)
- where captured, 154
- her shrewish temper, 154-156
- her selfishness and perversity, 155-156
- her champion and slave, 156, 162-165
- a suitor rebuffed, 163-165
- submissive only from policy, 166
- her illness and death, 168-171
-
- Eloquence of monkeys’ speech, 22, 47-50
-
- Emotions, Simians display human
- sympathy, 149-152, 170-171
- aversion, 26, 148-149
- sorrow, 50, 152, 170
- jealousy, 46, 125, 162-165, 186
- contempt, 203, 206, 250
- affection, 58-59, 134-135, 173, 174
-
- _Enjocko_, 268
-
- Enumeration (see _Number, Perception of_)
-
- _Esyira_ (tribe and country), 140, 144, 145, 218, 228, 267, 269
-
- Ethics, Monkeys’ code of, 30
-
- Etymology of native names, 232, 272
-
- Evolution, 36
-
- Expression (see also _Facial expression_)
- defined, 13
- speech a means of, 13
- animals’ limit of, 13, 23
-
-
- Facial expression of simians, 1, 16, 46, 47, 126, 146-147, 150, 162,
- 170, 182, 197, 202-204, 206, 207, 229
-
- Falkenstein, Dr., 267
-
- Ferocity of apes exaggerated, 229, 235-236
-
- _Ferran Vaz_ (lake), 66, 144, 149, 219, 228, 270
-
- _Fiote_ (tribe and language), 86, 267
-
- Five young kulus, 207-210
-
- Food
- of chimpanzee, 106-107, 128-129, 132
- of gorilla, 245-246
-
- Ford, Dr., African traveler, 214, 217
-
- Form, Simians’ perception of, 30, 139, 196
-
- Fort Gorilla, 71
-
-
- _Gaboon_ (town and river), 66, 153, 155, 182, 211, 214-217, 268, 272
-
- Gaboon, Some captives at, 182 ff.
- their table manners, 182-184
- their love of beer, 183-184
- their dexterity, 184
- maladies resemble man’s, 186
-
- Gibbon, The
- order of intelligence, 4
- arboreal habit, 96, 276
- size and activity, 275-276
- skeleton, 276
- can stand erect, 276
- wonderful leaping power, 276
- several known species, 277
- vocal qualities, 277
-
- Glave, E. J., African traveler, 241
-
- Goode, Rev. A. C., late missionary at Batanga, 272
-
- Gorilla, The
- order of intelligence, 4, 211, 232
- resemblance to man, 60
- in native haunts, 70, 71
- seen from the cage, 71, 77-78, 186, 252-260
- his scream and beating sound, 84, 109, 237-242
- arboreal habit, 96-97, 224-225, 245
- nomadic, 97, 233
- habitat, 211 ff., 273, 278-279
- early reports of (see references under _Early reports_)
- skeleton, 218-223
- described in detail, 223 ff.
- cannot walk erect, 225
- the “calf” as means of comparison, 227
- species, 228, 274
- compared with other apes and with man, 228-231
- social traits and government, 231 ff.
- derivation of name, 232
- in council, 234
- ferocity exaggerated, 235-236, 262, 273
- mode of attack, 236-237
- sounds wrongly attributed to, 109, 240-242
- method of carrying young, 242, 259
- disposition, 242, 250-251, 284
- food, 245-246, 282-283
- stealthiness, 253, 262
- calling sound, 254
- difficult to find, 260-263
- only one ever brought to America, 263
- a wild gorilla takes his own photograph, 264-265
- care in captivity, 278 ff.
-
- Great forest, The, 68
-
- Guinea, Gulf of, 85, 266
-
-
- Habitat
- of gorilla, 211 ff., 273, 278-279
- of chimpanzee, 85-87, 280
- of orang, 274
- of gibbon, 276
-
- Handmann, Mr. Otto, German consul at Gaboon, 182
-
- Hanno, 500 B.C., earliest mention of the ape, 266-267
-
- Harris, Captain, African traveler, 217
-
- Harvard Medical School Collection, 6
-
- Hornaday, W. T., authority on orang, 275
-
- Human faculties, embryo of all, exists in simians, 37
-
-
- _Ikomba njina_, 232, 234, 235
-
- _Inenga_ (lake), 218
-
- Ingenuity of simians (see _Dexterity_)
-
- _Izanga_ (lake), 184, 212, 223
- an unhappy captive at, 184-185
- an act of mercy, 185
-
-
- “Jack,” 25
-
- “Jennie,” 27
-
- “Johanna”
- her value for scientific use, 190, 192
- probable age, 191
- size, 191
- intellectual plane, 192
-
- “Jokes” 24 ff.
- his fright, 24
- the reconciliation, 26
-
- Journeys in the jungle
- to the chimpanzee country, 66
- a five days’ journey on foot, 148
- to the coast, 153
-
- Jungle, the African
- described, 66-70, 153
- daily life in, 73 ff.
- the quiet hour, 77
- a tornado, 79 ff.
-
-
- _Kabinda_ (town), 191
-
- _Kanga ntyigo_
- etymology of the name, 272
-
- _Kanjo_, The, 102-104
- the drum, 104, 241
-
- Keller, Helen
- with Nellie, 52-53
-
- _Kisanga_ (valley and river), 212
-
- _Komo_ (river, also name of gunboat), 153, 213, 217
-
- _Kongo_, 272
-
- _Kulu-kamba_ (see also under _Chimpanzee_, and references under
- _Chimpanzee captives_)
- its habitat, 87
- described and compared with _ntyigo_, 87-91
- Moses’ successor, 144
- highest type of all apes, 202, 210
- name applied to different types, 270
-
-
- _Lamberene_ (town), 270
-
- Lemur, 2, 224
- relative plane, 2, 277
-
- _Loango_ (valley), 192, 211, 267, 269
-
- Longevity of chimpanzee, 98
-
- Lopez, African explorer, 270
-
- Lopez, Cape, 153, 270
-
-
- _Mafuka_, 269, 274
-
- Maladies of simians
- pulmonary trouble common, 146
- resemble man’s, 186
-
- Malay Peninsula, 276
-
- Mandrill, The, 14
-
- _Mayumba_ (town), 215, 216, 268
-
- _M’Bouve_, 272
-
- “McGinty”
- his jealousy, 45, 46
-
- Meanings of certain sounds in simian speech (see also under _Monkeys,
- Speech of_, and _Chimpanzees, Speech of_)
- sound meaning “food,” 19, 28, 29, 43, 112-113
- sound meaning “drink,” 19, 28, 29
- sound meaning “warning,” 14, 20, 27, 113
- sound meaning “alarm,” 24, 27, 113
- sound meaning “friendship,” 113
- sound meaning “good,” 160, 181
- calling sound, 112-113, 136
-
- Mental power and status of simians (see also under _Ape_,
- _Chimpanzee_, _Monkey_, _Gorilla_, “_Aaron_,” “_Moses_,” etc.)
- compared to man, 105
- compared to the dog, 116
-
- Menu, My daily, 73, 77, 79, 84
-
- Mesial crest (see _Gorilla, Skeleton of_)
-
- “Mickie”
- the boss of the school, 45-46
- his tricks, 46
-
- Middle forest, The, 68
-
- Mirror, Experiments with, 40-41, 161-162
-
- Mode of attack
- of chimpanzee, 237
- of gorilla, 236-237
-
- _Moiro_, 217
-
- Monkey, The (see also _Simians_)
- human appearance, 1
- relative plane, 2, 277
- relationship to man, 2, 277
- all simians not monkeys, 2-3
- described, 3, 224
- old world and new world, 3
- cranio-facial angles, 9
- Cebus species (see _Cebus_)
- Capuchin species (see _Capuchin_)
- perception of sound, color, form, dimension, quality, number, music,
- etc., 30-37
- code of ethics, 30
- Rhesus species (see _Rhesus_)
- difference in traits and tastes, 35
- express emotion, 50
- affection not mere instinct, 58-59
-
- Monkeys, Laughter of, 38, 54-55
-
- Monkeys, Speech of
- study of, 14 ff.
- poor success of first efforts, 15
- sound meaning “alarm” or “warning,” 14, 20, 24, 27
- phonograph first used, 16-18
- sounds have constant meanings, 15, 18, 23
- number of sounds interpreted, 18
- sounds described, 19-20
- speech monophrastic and monophonetic, 19, 44
- pitch of voice, 20, 28, 50
- resemblance to human speech, 20, 22-23
- each species has its own speech, 23, 44
- sign of surrender, 25 ff.
- sound meaning “food,” 19, 28, 29
- sound meaning “drink,” 19, 28, 29
- musical quality of voices, 19, 25, 45, 47, 50, 53, 57
- eloquence, 22, 47-50
- types of speech and inflections, 23, 42, 60
-
- “Moses”
- my sole companion in the cage, 71
- his breakfast, 73
- his amusements, 73, 120, 122-124
- his siesta, 77, 124
- position in sleep, 96
- learns a word of human speech, 115-116, 137-138
- his capture, 117-118
- his moral training, 118, 120-121, 130-132
- his tricks, 120-121, 123-124, 131
- dexterity and ingenuity, 122, 126, 129-130, 132-133
- reading the newspaper, 123
- his jealousy and temper, 125, 186
- our walks in the jungle, 125
- understood rights of possession, 125, 128
- preferences in food, 128, 129, 132
- meaning of sounds, 123, 125, 135-137
- his quick vision, 125
- a severe lesson, 131-132
- reasoning power, 133
- his devotion, 134-135
- perception of form, color, music, etc., 139
- he signs a legal document, 139-140
- last illness, 140-142, 149-151
- his chimpanzee nurse, 149-152
- his death, 142, 151, 152
- his claims to fame, 143
-
- _Mpongwe_, 86
-
- Music, Simians’ perception of, 35-36
-
-
- Native explanation of relationships, 269-270
-
- Native reports unreliable, 215, 231
-
- _Nazavine_ (bay), 270
-
- “Nellie”
- her love of companionship, 20, 22
- warns me of danger, 21 ff.
- her perception of sound, 22
- with Helen Keller, 52-53
- her ingenuity, 56-57
-
- “Nemo”
- his diplomacy, 47
- his abject apology, 47-48
-
- _Nenge Nenge_ (town), 214
-
- New world monkeys, 3
- their superior intelligence, 35
-
- New York Zoölogical Gardens, Experiments at, 45-51
-
- _Nguni_ (river), 154, 211, 213, 218
-
- “Nigger,” 45, 51
-
- _Njina_, 228, 267, 269, 270
-
- _Njole_ (town), 213
-
- _Nkami_ (tribe, lake, and river), 66, 144, 212, 218, 272
-
- _Noogo_ (river), 144
-
- Nose a distinguishing feature, The, 3
-
- _Ntcheego_, 268
-
- _Ntyigo_ (see also under _Chimpanzee_)
- its habitat, 87
- described, 87-90
- compared with _kulu-kamba_, 90-91
- distinguished from _ntyii_, 228
-
- _Ntyii_, 223, 228, 267, 269-270
-
- _Ntyi-ne-nye-ni_ (village), 144
-
- Number, Perception of
- by simians, 32-34, 36
- by birds, 34
-
-
- _Ogowé_ (river, delta, and basin), 66, 117, 202, 211, 213, 214, 215,
- 217, 218, 223, 272
-
- Old world monkeys, 3
-
- Orang, The
- order of intelligence, 4
- arboreal habit, 97
- a captive at Bellevue, 200
- compared, 274, 275
-
- _Orungu_ (tribe), 215
-
- “Othello”
- place of capture, 221
- absence of humor, 244
- illness and death, 247-249
- with Moses, 249, 250
- his speech sounds, 251
-
- Owen, Sir Richard, writer on Africa, 215
-
-
- Parrot Island, 214
-
- Paternal instinct in animals, 100
-
- “Pedro”
- his troubles, 38
- appreciation of kindness, 38
- recording his sounds, 38, 39
- his tale of woe, 39, 41
- speech repeated to Puck, 39-41
-
- Philadelphia Museum of Zoölogy, Specimens at, 217
-
- Phonograph as a means of recording speech of monkeys, 15 ff.
- first experiments, 16 ff.
- behavior of monkeys on hearing, 16-18
- speech and reply recorded, 18
- Pedro’s speech recorded, 38
- experiment with Puck, 39-41
-
- Pitch of voice
- in monkeys, 20, 28
- in apes, 108, 109, 111-112
-
- Platarrhini, 3
-
- _Pongo_, 267, 269
-
- Program, A day’s, 73 ff.
-
- “Puck,” his perplexity on hearing phonograph, 39-41
-
-
- Quality, Simians’ perception of, 30
-
- Quantity, Simians’ perception of, 32
-
-
- Reasoning power in simians, Evidences of, 16-18, 33-34, 36, 37, 105,
- 133, 161, 206
-
- Records of speech sounds (see _Phonograph_)
-
- _Rembo_ (river), 144, 218
-
- Resemblances between simians and man
- in body, 1, 2, 4-8, 60, 92, 186, 277
- in speech, 20, 22-23, 116
- in affections, 58-59, 173, 174
-
- Rhesus monkey, 32
-
- Romanes, Professor
- experiments with chimpanzee, 34
- experiments with “Sally,” 241
-
- Sacrum (see _Skeleton_)
-
- Sagittal ridge (see _Gorilla, Skeleton of_)
-
- Sailor’s pet, A
- his suit rejected, 163-165
-
- “Sally,” 241
-
- “Sally Jones,” 244
-
- Savage, Dr., African traveler, 213, 214, 216
-
- Scream of gorilla and chimpanzee, 84, 109, 237-242
-
- _Sette Kama_ (town), 144, 212
-
- Sheldon, Mrs. M. French, African traveler, 25
-
- Sierra Leone, 266
-
- Simians (see _Apes_, _Monkeys_, etc.)
- wide range of types, 2
- different forms described, 3
- two grand divisions, how distinguished, 3
-
- Simian speech (see _Monkeys, Speech of_, and _Chimpanzees, Speech of_)
-
- Size of apes, 96, 190, 191, 221, 230
-
- Skeleton, The
- as basis of comparison, 4
- chief point of difference, 4
- sacrum, peculiarities of, 4-6, 8
- vertebræ, number of, 5-6
- causes of difference in sacrum and vertebræ, 6
- sternum, differences in, 6, 7
- skull, differences in, 8
- general comparison, 7-8
- of gorilla, 218-223
- of gibbon, 276
-
- Smithsonian Institution, Experiments at, 15 ff., 38
-
- Snapshot, A unique, 264-265
-
- Social traits and government
- of chimpanzee, 99-105
- of gorilla, 231 ff.
-
- _Soko_, 270
-
- Speech defined, 12
-
- Speech of animals (see also _Monkeys, Speech of_, and _Chimpanzees,
- Speech of_)
- author’s interest in, 12
- grounds of belief in, 12, 13
- vocabularies limited, 13
- can express what they conceive, 13, 23
- development of interest, 14
-
- Spider-monkey, 38
-
- Stanley Pool, 216
-
- Steckelman, Carl, African explorer, 216
-
- Sternum (see _Skeleton_)
-
- Stories of travelers and writers often untrue, 71-72, 235-236,
- 261-263, 267, 268, 273
-
- Strohm, Mr. Adolph, trader at Gaboon, 154, 158
-
- Sumatra, 274
-
-
- Threadbare story, A, 262, 273
-
- Tornado in the jungle, 79 ff.
-
- Translations of native reports, Literal, 269, 270
-
- Troglodytes, 267
-
- _Tyimba_ (village), 144
-
-
- Under forest, The, 68
-
- University of Toronto Collection, 249
-
-
- Village pet, A
- the children’s playmate, 175-178
- understood names and commands, 179
- brought water and wood, 179-180
- brought persons named, 180-181
- price double that of a slave, 182
-
- Vocabularies of animals (see _Speech of Animals_; _Monkeys, Speech
- of_, and _Chimpanzees, Speech of_)
-
-
- Walker, Dr., revises Wilson’s lexicon of native language, 216
-
- Wallace, Mr. Alfred R., authority on orang, 275
-
- Webber, Mr., keeper of ape at Bellevue
- his success in training, 198
-
- Wild visitors to the cage, 75 ff., 81-82, 186-190, 252-260
- did not usually evince fear, 253
- retreated in good order, 253, 255, 258
- Moses frightens one away, 254
- a gorilla beckons, 255
- a narrow escape, 256-258
- an exceptional opportunity, 258-259
- a brave baby, 260
- a gorilla takes his own photograph, 264-265
-
- Wilson, Dr., first missionary at Gaboon
- wrote lexicon of native language, 216
-
- Wurmb, Baron, 267
-
-
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-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Apes and Monkeys: Their Life and Language, by Richard Lynch Garner</p>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
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-at <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
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-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: Apes and Monkeys: Their Life and Language</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Richard Lynch Garner</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: February 27, 2022 [eBook #67517]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: Tim Lindell and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK APES AND MONKEYS: THEIR LIFE AND LANGUAGE ***</div>
-
-<p class="center p0 p2"><span class="figcenter" id="img001">
- <img src="images/001.jpg" class="w50" alt="R. L. Garner." />
-</span></p>
-<p class="center p0 caption">R. L. Garner.<br /></p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h1>APES AND MONKEYS<br /><br />
-<em><small>THEIR LIFE AND LANGUAGE</small></em></h1>
-
-<p class="center p2 p0"><small>BY</small></p>
-<p class="center p1 p0">
-<big>R. L. GARNER</big></p>
-
-<p class="center p2 p0"> <span class="smcap">With an Introduction by</span></p>
-<p class="center p1 p0">
-<big>EDWARD EVERETT HALE</big></p>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p class="center p2 p0"> <span class="smcap">Boston, U.S.A., and London</span><br />
-<big>GINN &amp; COMPANY, PUBLISHERS</big><br />
- The Athenæum Press
-</p>
-
-</div>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-
-<p class="center p0"> <span class="smcap">Entered at Stationers’ Hall</span></p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p class="center p0"><small><span class="smcap">Copyright, 1900</span></small><br />
-<span class="smcap">By</span> GINN &amp; COMPANY</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p class="center p0"><small>ALL RIGHTS RESERVED</small></p>
-
-<p class="center p0">24.12
-</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_iii">[Pg iii]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="PREFACE">PREFACE</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>This volume is the natural product of many years devoted by the author
-to studying the speech and habits of monkeys. That naturally led him
-up to the study of the great apes. The matter contained in this work
-is chiefly a record of the tabulated facts gleaned from his special
-field of research. The aim in view is to convey to the casual reader a
-more correct idea than now prevails concerning the physical, mental,
-and social habits of apes and monkeys and to prepare him for a wider
-appreciation of animals in general.</p>
-
-<p>The favorable conditions under which the writer has been placed, in the
-study of these animals in the freedom of their native jungle, have not
-hitherto been enjoyed by any other student of nature.</p>
-
-<p>A careful aim to avoid all technical terms and scientific phraseology
-has been studiously adhered to, and the subject is treated in the
-simplest style consistent with its dignity. Tedious details are
-relieved by an ample supply of anecdotes taken from the writer’s own
-observations. Most of the acts related are those of his own pets. A
-few of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_iv">[Pg iv]</span> them are of apes in a wild state. The author has carefully
-refrained from abstruse theories or rash deductions, but has sought
-to place the animals here treated of in the light to which their own
-conduct entitles them, allowing the reader to draw his own conclusions.</p>
-
-<p>The author frankly confesses to his own belief in the psychic unity of
-all animate nature. Believing in a common source of life, a common law
-of living, and a common destiny for all creatures, he feels that to
-dignify the apes is not to degrade man but rather to exalt him.</p>
-
-<p>Believing that a more perfect knowledge of these animals will bring
-man into closer fellowship and deeper sympathy with nature, and with
-an abiding trust that it will widen the bounds of humanity and cause
-man to realize that he and they are but common links in the one great
-chain of life, the author gives this work to the world. When once man
-is impressed with the consciousness that in some degree, however small,
-all creatures think and feel, it will lessen his vanity and ennoble his
-heart.</p>
-
-<p class="p0 right">
-THE AUTHOR<br />
-</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_v">[Pg v]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CONTENTS">CONTENTS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table class="autotable">
-<tr>
-<th>
-</th>
-<th class="tdr">
-PAGE
-</th>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>
-<a href="#INTRODUCTION"><span class="smcap">Introduction</span></a>
-</td>
-<td class="tdr">
-<a href="#Page_xi">xi</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="2">
-<a href="#CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>
-Monkeys, Apes, and Men&mdash;Comparative Anatomy&mdash;Skulls&mdash;The Law of Cranial Projection
-</td>
-<td class="tdr">
-<a href="#Page_1">1</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="2">
-<a href="#CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>
-Early Impression&mdash;What is Speech?&mdash;First Efforts&mdash;The Phonograph&mdash;The
- First Record of Monkey Speech&mdash;Monkey Words&mdash;Phonetics&mdash;Human
- Speech and Monkey Speech
-</td>
-<td class="tdr">
-<a href="#Page_12">12</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="2">
-<a href="#CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>
-Monkey Friends&mdash;Jokes&mdash;The Sound of Alarm&mdash;Jennie
-</td>
-<td class="tdr">
-<a href="#Page_24">24</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="2">
-<a href="#CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>
- Monkey Ethics&mdash;Sense of Color&mdash;Monkeys Enumerate&mdash;First
- Principles of Art
-</td>
-<td class="tdr">
-<a href="#Page_30">30</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="2">
-<a href="#CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>
-Pedro’s Speech Recorded&mdash;Delivered to Puck through the Phonograph&mdash;Little
- Darwin Learns a New Word
-</td>
-<td class="tdr">
-<a href="#Page_38">38</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="2">
-<a href="#CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>
-Five Little Brown Cousins: Mickie, McGinty, Nemo, Dodo, and
- Nigger&mdash;Nemo Apologizes to Dodo <span class="pagenum" id="Page_vi">[Pg vi]</span>
-</td>
-<td class="tdr">
-<a href="#Page_45">45</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="2">
-<a href="#CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>
-Meeting with Nellie&mdash;Nellie was my Guest&mdash;Her Speech and Manners&mdash;Helen
- Keller and Nellie&mdash;One of Nellie’s Friends&mdash;Her
- Sight and Hearing&mdash;Her Toys and how She Played with
- Them
-</td>
-<td class="tdr">
-<a href="#Page_52">52</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="2">
-<a href="#CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>
-Caged in an African Jungle&mdash;The Cage and its Contents&mdash;Its
- Location&mdash;Its Purpose&mdash;The Jungle&mdash;The Great Forest&mdash;Its
- Grandeur&mdash;Its Silence
-</td>
-<td class="tdr">
-<a href="#Page_60">60</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="2">
-<a href="#CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>
-Daily Life and Scenes in the Jungle&mdash;How I Passed the Time&mdash;What
- I Had to Eat&mdash;How it was Prepared&mdash;How I Slept&mdash;My
- Chimpanzee Companion
-</td>
-<td class="tdr">
-<a href="#Page_73">73</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="2">
-<a href="#CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>
-The Chimpanzee&mdash;The Name&mdash;Two Species&mdash;The Kulu-Kamba&mdash;Distribution&mdash;Color
- and Complexion
-</td>
-<td class="tdr">
-<a href="#Page_85">85</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="2">
-<a href="#CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>
-Physical Qualities of the Chimpanzee&mdash;His Social Habits&mdash;Mental
- Characteristics
-</td>
-<td class="tdr">
-<a href="#Page_92">92</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="2">
-<a href="#CHAPTER_XII">CHAPTER XII</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>
-The Speech of Chimpanzees&mdash;A New System of Phonetic Symbols&mdash;Some
- Common Words&mdash;Gestures
-</td>
-<td class="tdr">
-<a href="#Page_108">108</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="2">
-<a href="#CHAPTER_XIII">CHAPTER XIII</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>
-Moses&mdash;His Capture&mdash;His Character&mdash;His Affections&mdash;His Food&mdash;His
- Daily Life&mdash;Anecdotes of Him
-</td>
-<td class="tdr">
-<a href="#Page_117">117</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="2">
-<a href="#CHAPTER_XIV">CHAPTER XIV</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>
-The Character of Moses&mdash;He Learns a Human Word&mdash;He Signs
- His Name to a Document&mdash;His Illness&mdash;Death<span class="pagenum" id="Page_vii">[Pg vii]</span>
-</td>
-<td class="tdr">
-<a href="#Page_134">134</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="2">
-<a href="#CHAPTER_XV">CHAPTER XV</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>
-Aaron&mdash;His Capture&mdash;Mental Powers&mdash;Acquaintance with Moses&mdash;His
- Conduct during Moses’ Illness
-</td>
-<td class="tdr">
-<a href="#Page_144">144</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="2">
-<a href="#CHAPTER_XVI">CHAPTER XVI</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>
-Aaron and Elisheba&mdash;Their Characteristics&mdash;Anecdotes&mdash;Jealousy
- of Aaron
-</td>
-<td class="tdr">
-<a href="#Page_153">153</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="2">
-<a href="#CHAPTER_XVII">CHAPTER XVII</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>
-Illness of Elisheba&mdash;Aaron’s Care of Her&mdash;Her Death&mdash;Illness
- and Death of Aaron
-</td>
-<td class="tdr">
-<a href="#Page_167">167</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="2">
-<a href="#CHAPTER_XVIII">CHAPTER XVIII</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>
-Other Chimpanzees&mdash;The Village Pet&mdash;A Chimpanzee as Diner-Out&mdash;Notable
- Specimens in Captivity
-</td>
-<td class="tdr">
-<a href="#Page_175">175</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="2">
-<a href="#CHAPTER_XIX">CHAPTER XIX</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>
-Other Kulu-Kambas&mdash;A Knotty Problem&mdash;Instinct or Reason&mdash;Various
- Types
-</td>
-<td class="tdr">
-<a href="#Page_202">202</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="2">
-<a href="#CHAPTER_XX">CHAPTER XX</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>
-The Gorilla&mdash;His Habitat&mdash;Skeleton&mdash;Skull&mdash;Color&mdash;Structural
- Peculiarities
-</td>
-<td class="tdr">
-<a href="#Page_211">211</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="2">
-<a href="#CHAPTER_XXI">CHAPTER XXI</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>
-Habits of the Gorilla&mdash;Social Traits&mdash;Government&mdash;Justice&mdash;Mode
- of Attack&mdash;Screaming and Beating&mdash;Food
-</td>
-<td class="tdr">
-<a href="#Page_231">231</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="2">
-<a href="#CHAPTER_XXII">CHAPTER XXII</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>
-Othello and Other Gorillas&mdash;Othello and Moses&mdash;Gorilla Visitors&mdash;Gorilla
- Mother and Child&mdash;Scarcity of Gorillas&mdash;Unauthentic
- Tales <span class="pagenum" id="Page_viii">[Pg viii]</span>
-</td>
-<td class="tdr">
-<a href="#Page_247">247</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="2">
-<a href="#CHAPTER_XXIII">CHAPTER XXIII</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>
- Other Apes&mdash;The Apes in History&mdash;Habitat&mdash;The Orangs&mdash;The
- Gibbon
-</td>
-<td class="tdr">
-<a href="#Page_266">266</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="2">
-<a href="#CHAPTER_XXIV">CHAPTER XXIV</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>
-The Treatment of Apes in Captivity&mdash;Temperature&mdash;Building&mdash;Food&mdash;Occupation
-</td>
-<td class="tdr">
-<a href="#Page_278">278</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>
-<a href="#INDEX"><span class="smcap">Index</span></a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_ix">[Pg ix]</span>
-</td>
-<td class="tdr">
-<a href="#Page_287">287</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="LIST_OF_ILLUSTRATIONS">LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<table class="autotable">
-<tr>
-<th>
-</th>
-<th class="tdr">
-PAGE
-</th>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>
-<a href="#img001"><span class="smcap">Portrait of R. L. Garner</span></a>
-</td>
-<td class="tdr">
-<a href="#img001">Frontispiece</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>
-<a href="#img002"><span class="smcap">Pelvis of the Chimpanzee</span></a>
-</td>
-<td class="tdr">
-<a href="#img002">5</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>
-<a href="#img003"><span class="smcap">Diagram <abbr title="Number">No.</abbr> 1</span> (<span class="smcap">Cranio-facial Angles</span>)</a>
-</td>
-<td class="tdr">
-<a href="#img003">8</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>
-<a href="#img004"><span class="smcap">Diagram <abbr title="Number">No.</abbr> 2</span> (<span class="smcap">Cranio-facial Angles</span>)</a>
-</td>
-<td class="tdr">
-<a href="#img004">9</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>
-<a href="#img005"><span class="smcap">Diagram <abbr title="Number">No.</abbr> 3</span> (<span class="smcap">Cranio-facial Angles</span>)</a>
-</td>
-<td class="tdr">
-<a href="#img005">9</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>
-<a href="#img006"><span class="smcap">Diagram <abbr title="Number">No.</abbr> 4</span> (<span class="smcap">Cranio-facial Angles</span>)</a>
-</td>
-<td class="tdr">
-<a href="#img006">10</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>
-<a href="#img007"><span class="smcap">Monkey Learning to Count</span></a>
-</td>
-<td class="tdr">
-<a href="#img007">33</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>
-<a href="#img008"><span class="smcap">Native Village at Glass Gaboon</span></a>
-</td>
-<td class="tdr">
-<a href="#img008">61</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>
-<a href="#img009"><span class="smcap">A Native Canoe</span></a>
-</td>
-<td class="tdr">
-<a href="#img009">63</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>
-<a href="#img010"><span class="smcap">The Edge of the Jungle</span></a>
-</td>
-<td class="tdr">
-<a href="#img010">65</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>
-<a href="#img011"><span class="smcap">In the Jungle</span></a>
-</td>
-<td class="tdr">
-<a href="#img011">67</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>
-<a href="#img012"><span class="smcap">Waiting and Watching in the Cage</span></a>
-</td>
-<td class="tdr">
-<a href="#img012">69</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>
-<a href="#img013"><span class="smcap">Starting for a Stroll</span></a>
-</td>
-<td class="tdr">
-<a href="#img013">74</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>
-<a href="#img014"><span class="smcap">A Peep at My Cage</span></a>
-</td>
-<td class="tdr">
-<a href="#img014">75</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>
-<a href="#img015"><span class="smcap">Preparing for the Night</span></a>
-</td>
-<td class="tdr">
-<a href="#img015">83</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>
-<a href="#img016"><span class="smcap">Kanjo Ntyigo-Chimpanzee Dance</span></a>
-</td>
-<td class="tdr">
-<a href="#img016">103</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>
-<a href="#img017"><span class="smcap">Native Carrier Boy</span></a>
-</td>
-<td class="tdr">
-<a href="#img017">119</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>
-<a href="#img018"><span class="smcap">A Stroll in the Jungle&mdash;<abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Garner, Moses, and Native
- Boy</span></a>
-</td>
-<td class="tdr">
-<a href="#img018">127</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>
-<a href="#img019"><span class="smcap">Elisheba and Aaron</span></a>
-</td>
-<td class="tdr">
-<a href="#img019">169</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>
-<a href="#img020"><span class="smcap">Native Village, Interior of Nyanza</span></a>
-</td>
-<td class="tdr">
-<a href="#img020">176</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>
-<a href="#img021"><span class="smcap">Consul II Riding a Tricycle</span></a> <span class="pagenum" id="Page_x">[Pg x]</span>
-</td>
-<td class="tdr">
-<a href="#img021">194</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>
-<a href="#img022"><span class="smcap"><abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Crowley, Late of the New York Zoölogical Garden</span></a>
-</td>
-<td class="tdr">
-<a href="#img022">199</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>
-<a href="#img023"><span class="smcap">Skulls of Gorillas&mdash;Front View</span> </a>
-</td>
-<td class="tdr">
-<a href="#img023">220</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>
-<a href="#img024"><span class="smcap">Skulls of Gorillas&mdash;Profile View</span></a>
-</td>
-<td class="tdr">
-<a href="#img024">220</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>
-<a href="#img025"><span class="smcap">Natives Skinning a Gorilla</span></a>
-</td>
-<td class="tdr">
-<a href="#img025">222</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>
-<a href="#img026"><span class="smcap">Young Gorilla Walking</span></a>
-</td>
-<td class="tdr">
-<a href="#img026">226</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>
-<a href="#img027"><span class="smcap">Sally Jones (Young Gorilla) Caught Napping</span></a>
-</td>
-<td class="tdr">
-<a href="#img027">243</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>
-<a href="#img028"><span class="smcap">Gorilla Mother with Young</span></a>
-</td>
-<td class="tdr">
-<a href="#img028">257</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>
-<a href="#img029"><span class="smcap">Plain and Edge of Forest in the Country of the Apes</span></a>
-</td>
-<td class="tdr">
-<a href="#img029">271</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>
-<a href="#img030"><span class="smcap">Young Orangs</span></a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_xi">[Pg xi]</span>
-</td>
-<td class="tdr">
-<a href="#img030">275</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="INTRODUCTION">INTRODUCTION</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Garner’s book needs no introduction. By this I mean that I think
-that no intelligent person will open into it without wishing to read
-more and more. The book is its own introduction.</p>
-
-<p>I write these lines, not so much to explain what the book is as to
-introduce <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Garner himself to people who do not know him, that they
-may thank him for the step forward which he has made and is making.</p>
-
-<p>It is hardly half a century since one of the highest authorities in
-the Church of England told us that animals have no rights whatever,
-and that men should be kind to them simply for the reason that it was
-desirable that men should improve their own characters. If I tied a tin
-pail to a dog’s tail, I injured my character. If I patted the dog on
-the head, I improved my character. “See all things for my use,”&mdash;this
-was really the motto of a book of ethics somewhat famous in its day.</p>
-
-<p>Happily the world has lived beyond such a crusty selfishness as
-this,&mdash;happily, perhaps, not for mankind only. Happily for our thought
-of the universe in which we live, men have found out that they have
-duties towards animals as they have duties towards each other,&mdash;say
-that in a certain sense we are the gods of animals, to whom they<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xii">[Pg xii]</span> look
-up as we look up to our Father in heaven; let us, at least, treat them
-as we would be treated.</p>
-
-<p>How shall we do this? How shall we come at some understanding of their
-life, of their needs, of their hopes and fears? How can we be just to
-them?</p>
-
-<p><abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Garner has set to work in this business with systematic
-perseverance and a real comprehension of the position. Of all the
-inferior animals, these monkeys and apes, it seems, have more machinery
-for thought, if I may use so clumsy an expression, than have any
-others. The book will tell the reader why it is easier to come at some
-notion of the language of the Capuchin monkey than it is to apprehend
-the method by which the horse communicates with the horse, or the
-blackbird with the blackbird. With scientific precision, <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Garner has
-availed himself of this fact, is availing himself of it at the moment
-when I write. He has selected animals, which are certainly animals and
-not men. He has selected these as those where his study can be precise,
-and where it is most easy to arrive at correct conclusions; and it is
-not in the study merely of speech and of listening; it is study of
-what I may call the principles which underlie animal life, to which
-this explorer in a new field has devoted himself. The reader of this
-book will understand why it is that he gives up years of life to such
-society as that his dear little Moses gave him; why he plunges into</p>
-
-<p class="poetry p0">
-The multitudinous abyss<br />
-Where nature joys in secret bliss,<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="p0">that he may come at some of the secrets of those beings who are at home
-there.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_xiii">[Pg xiii]</span></p>
-
-<p><abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Garner does not ask himself, and I do not propose that the reader
-shall ask, what changes may ensue in the trade of the world from his
-discovery. He does not pretend that there will be more palm oil, or
-more Manila hemp, because we understand monkeys and apes and gorillas
-and orangs better than our fathers. But he believes, and those who
-have followed him with sympathy believe, that we shall know more of
-ourselves, that we shall know more of the universe in which we live,
-that we shall know more of God, the I Am, who is the life of this
-universe, than our fathers knew, if this brave explorer is able to
-carry on farther such investigations as this book describes.</p>
-
-<p>May his life be prolonged for such study; it has been long enough now
-for us to owe him a large debt of gratitude for the lifelong sacrifice
-and determination with which he has prosecuted these studies thus far.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-EDWARD E. HALE.<br />
-</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>October 26, 1900.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="APES_AND_MONKEYS">APES AND MONKEYS</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I
-</h2>
-</div>
-<p class="center heading p0">Monkeys, Apes, and Men&mdash;Comparative Anatomy&mdash;Skulls&mdash;The Law of Cranial
-Projection</p>
-
-
-<p>From time immemorial monkeys have been subjects of interest to the old
-and to the young. The wise and the simple are alike impressed with
-their human looks and manners. There are no other creatures that so
-charm and fascinate the beholder as do these little effigies of the
-human race. With equal delight, patriarchs and children watch their
-actions and compare them to those of human beings. Until recent years
-monkeys have served to amuse rather than to instruct the masses. But
-now that the search-light of science is being thrown into every nook
-and crevice of nature, human interest in them is greatly increased and
-the savants of all civilized lands are wrestling with the problem of
-their possible relationship to mankind. With the desire of learning
-as much as possible concerning their habits, faculties, and mental
-resources, they are being studied from every point of view, and each
-characteristic is seriously compared in detail to the corresponding one
-in man. Concurrent with this desire, we shall note the chief points of
-resemblance and of difference between them.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</span></p>
-
-<p>In order to appreciate more fully the value of the lessons to be drawn
-from the contents of this volume we must know the relative planes
-that men and monkeys occupy in the scale of nature. Within the limits
-of this work, however, we can only compare them in a general way.
-Since monkeys differ so widely among themselves, it is evident that
-all of them cannot in the same degree resemble man; and as the degree
-of interest in them is approximately measured by their likeness or
-unlikeness to man, it is apparent that all cannot be of equal interest
-as subjects of comparative study. But since each forms an integral part
-of one great scale, each one is equally important in tracing out the
-continuity of the order to which all belong.</p>
-
-<p>The vast family of simians has perhaps the widest range of types of
-any single family of animals. Beginning with the great apes, which
-in size, form, and structure so closely resemble man, we descend the
-scale until it ends in the lemurs, which are almost on the level of
-rodents. The descent is so gradual that it is difficult to draw a line
-of demarcation at any point between the two extremes. There is now,
-however, an effort being made to separate this family into smaller and
-more distinct groups; but the lines between them are not sharply drawn,
-and the literature of the past has a tendency to retard the effort. But
-we shall not here assume to discuss the problems with which zoölogy may
-in the future have to contend; we shall accept the current system of
-classification and proceed along that line.</p>
-
-<p>In the language of the masses all the varied types that belong to the
-simian family are known as <em>monkeys</em>. This<span class="pagenum" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</span> term is so broad in
-its application as to include many forms which are not to be considered
-in this work, and many of them should be known under other names. Some
-of these resemble man more than they resemble each other. By the word
-<em>monkey</em>, we mean to refer only to those of the simian tribe that
-have long tails and short faces, while the word <em>baboon</em> refers
-only to the dog-like forms having tails of medium length and long
-projecting faces. The term <em>ape</em> will be applied only to those
-having no tails at all. While all of these animals are called simians,
-they are not all monkeys.</p>
-
-<p>The simian family is divided into two great classes, known as <em>old
-world monkeys</em> and <em>new world monkeys</em>. The chief point of
-distinction is in the structure of the nose. All of the monkeys
-belonging to the old world stock have long, straight noses with
-vertical nostrils, separated by a narrow thin wall, or septum, and
-from this fact they are technically known as <em>catarrhini</em>. The
-new world stock have short, flat noses with oblique nostrils set wide
-apart, and on this account they are known as <em>platarrhini</em>. There
-are many other marks that distinguish genera and species, but these are
-the two grand divisions of the simian race. We shall not here attempt
-to classify the many genera and species of either of these divisions.
-But we shall point out some of the most salient anatomical features of
-men and apes, and then those of monkeys.</p>
-
-<p>Among the simians, erroneously called monkeys, are the four kinds
-that constitute the anthropoid, or manlike, group of apes. In certain
-respects they differ from each other as much as any one of them differs
-from man. The<span class="pagenum" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</span> four apes here alluded to and named in the order of
-their physical resemblance to man are: the gorilla, the chimpanzee,
-the orang, and the gibbon; but if placed in the order of their mental
-and social characteristics they stand as follows: the chimpanzee,
-which is next to man, the gorilla, the gibbon, and, last, the orang.
-It is possible, however, that it may yet be found that the gibbon is
-intellectually the highest of this group.</p>
-
-<p>As the skeleton is the framework of the physical structure, it will
-serve for the basis upon which to build up the comparisons; and as, on
-the whole, the chimpanzee is the nearest approach to man, we select and
-use him as the standard of comparison. The skeleton of the chimpanzee
-may be said to be an exact duplicate of that of man. The assertion,
-however, should be qualified by a few facts of minor importance; but
-since they are facts, they should not be ignored. The general plan,
-purpose, and structure of the skeletons of man and chimpanzee are the
-same. There is no part of the one which is not duplicated in the other,
-and there is no function discharged by any part of the one that is not
-discharged by a like part of the other. The chief point in which they
-differ is in the structure of one bone. To this we shall pay special
-attention.</p>
-
-<p>Near the base of the spinal column is a large compound bone, known as
-the <em>sacrum</em>. It is a constituent part of the column, but in its
-singular form and structure it differs slightly from the corresponding
-bone in man. The general outline of this bone has the form of an
-isosceles triangle. It fits in between the two large bones that spread
-out towards the hips and articulate with the thigh bones. In<span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</span> man,
-about halfway between the center and the edge along each side is a row
-of four nearly round holes. Across the surface of the bone is a dim,
-transverse line, or seam, between each pair of holes, from which it is
-seen that five smaller sections of the spinal column have anchylosed,
-or grown together, to form the sacrum. The holes coincide with the
-open spaces between the transverse processes, or lateral projections,
-of the other bones of the spinal column above this. In the chimpanzee
-this bone has the same general form as in man, except that instead of
-four holes in each row it has five. They are connected by transverse
-seams the same as in man, thus indicating that six of the vertebræ,
-instead of five, are united. In compensation for this, the ape has one
-vertebra less in the portion of the spinal column just above, which is
-called the lumbar. In man there are five free lumbar vertebræ and five
-united sections of the sacrum, while in the ape there are only four
-free lumbar vertebræ and six united sections forming the sacrum. But
-regarding each section of the sacrum as a separate bone and counting
-the whole number of vertebræ in the spinal column there are found to be
-exactly the same number in each.</p>
-
-<p class="center p0 p2"><span class="figcenter" id="img002">
- <img src="images/002.jpg" class="w75" alt="Pelvis of the Chimpanzee" />
-</span></p>
-<p class="center p0 caption">Pelvis of the Chimpanzee<br />
-<em>A, sacrum; B, fourth lumbar vertebra; C, coccyx; D, ilium or hip bone;
-E, femur or thigh bone.</em>
-</p>
-
-<p>Some writers have put great stress upon the difference<span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</span> in the
-structure of this bone, and have pointed out as impossible a common
-origin for man and ape; but one fact remains to be explained, and that
-is, that while these appear to be fixed and constant characteristics
-of man and ape there are many exceptions known in human anatomy. In
-the splendid collection of human spinal columns in the museum of the
-Harvard Medical School are no less than eighteen specimens of the human
-sacrum having six united segments; and I have found in the collections
-of various museums a total of more than thirty others. These facts show
-that this characteristic is not confined to the ape. It is true that
-in some of these abnormal specimens there remain five <em>lumbar</em>
-vertebræ. This seems to indicate that this portion of the spinal column
-is the most susceptible to variation. I have never seen an instance,
-however, of variation in the sacrum of the chimpanzee. In this respect
-he appears to be, in his structural type, more constant than man.</p>
-
-<p>One reason why this bone is so formed in the ape is this. At that point
-the greatest weight and strain are laid upon the spinal column, and
-the crouching habit of the animal has a tendency to depress the lowest
-lumbar vertebra between the points of the hip bones and thus arrest
-its lateral movement. Since the flexure of this part is lessened, the
-cartilage that lies between the two segments becomes rigid and then
-ossifies. The erect posture of man allows more play in the region of
-the loins, and hence this motion prevents the two bones from uniting.</p>
-
-<p>Another bone that may be said to vary somewhat is the sternum, or
-breastbone. It is the thin, soft bone to which<span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</span> the ribs are joined
-in the front of the body. In the young of both man and ape it is
-a mere cartilage. This slowly ossifies as the animal matures. The
-process appears to begin at five different segments, the first nucleus
-appearing near the top. This bone never becomes quite perfect either
-in man or ape. It always remains somewhat porous, and even in advanced
-age the outline of the lower portion is not defined by a smooth, sharp
-line, but is irregular in contour and merges into the cartilages that
-unite the ribs to it.</p>
-
-<p>In an adult human being this bone is usually found to be in two
-segments, while in the ape it varies. In some specimens it is the same
-as in man. In others it is sometimes found to be in three, four, or
-even five sections. But the sternum in each is regarded as one bone,
-and is developed from one continuous cartilage. The separate parts are
-not considered distinct bones. The reason, no doubt, that this bone
-remains in separate sections in the ape is due to the stooping habit
-of the animal, by which the part is constantly flexed and alternately
-straightened, and therefore discharges its function better than it
-otherwise could.</p>
-
-<p>With these trifling exceptions the skeletons of man and ape may be
-truly said to be exact counterparts of each other, having the same
-number of bones, of the same general model, arranged in the same order,
-articulated in the same manner, and performing the same functions.
-In other words, the corresponding bone in each is the same in design
-and purpose. The frame of the ape is, as a rule, more massive in its
-proportions than that of man; but<span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</span> while this is true of certain kinds
-of apes, the reverse is true of others.</p>
-
-<p>In man the sacrum is more curved in the plane of the hips than it is
-in the ape, while the bones of the digits in man are less curved. The
-arms of man are shorter than the legs, while in the ape the comparative
-length of these features is reversed. In the cranial types it is
-readily seen that the skull of man is more spherical and the face
-almost or quite vertical. The skull of the ape is elongated and the
-chin projects. Thus his face is at an angle from a vertical line. These
-facts deserve more notice than the mere mention.</p>
-
-<p class="center p0 p2"><span class="figcenter" id="img003">
- <img src="images/003.jpg" class="w75" alt="Diagram No. 1" />
-</span></p>
-<p class="center p0 caption">Diagram <abbr title="Number">No.</abbr> 1<br /></p>
-
-<p>In the scheme of nature there appears to be a fixed law of cranial
-projection. The cranio-facial angle in man, <span class="allsmcap">ABC</span> (as shown in
-diagram <abbr title="Number">No.</abbr> 1), is a right angle, and the gnathic angle <span class="allsmcap">ADE</span>
-is approximately the same. The line <span class="allsmcap">FG</span> represents the axis
-of the facial plane, and the line <span class="allsmcap">HI</span> is the cervical axis.
-Reckoned from the vertical line <span class="allsmcap">KL</span> it will be seen that the
-angles formed by the facial axis <span class="allsmcap">FG</span> and the cervical axis
-<span class="allsmcap">HI</span> are about the same on opposite sides of the vertical line
-<span class="allsmcap">KL</span>. It will be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</span> observed that these lines and angles are those
-of man whose posture is upright. In diagram <abbr title="Number">No.</abbr> 2 it will be seen that
-both the facial axis <span class="allsmcap">FG</span> and the cervical axis <span class="allsmcap">HI</span> form
-a greater angle from the vertical line than in man. It will also be
-seen that the cranio-facial angle <span class="allsmcap">ABC</span> is increased by about
-one-half of the angle of the facial axis <span class="allsmcap">GML</span>. The gnathic
-angle <span class="allsmcap">ADE</span> is increased in about the same degree. These are the
-lines and angles of the anthropoid apes.</p>
-
-<p class="center p0 p2"><span class="figcenter" id="img004">
- <img src="images/004.jpg" class="w75" alt="Diagram No. 2" />
-</span></p>
-<p class="center p0 caption">Diagram <abbr title="Number">No.</abbr> 2<br /></p>
-
-<p class="center p0 p2"><span class="figcenter" id="img005">
- <img src="images/005.jpg" class="w75" alt="Diagram No. 3" />
-</span></p>
-<p class="center p0 caption">Diagram <abbr title="Number">No.</abbr> 3<br /></p>
-
-<p>Diagram <abbr title="Number">No.</abbr> 3 represents the lines and angles of monkeys, in which the
-angles widened in a degree measured by the tendency of the animal to
-assume a horizontal posture.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</span></p>
-
-<p>In diagram <abbr title="Number">No.</abbr> 4 we have the lines and angles of reptiles. In these it
-will be seen that the facial axis <span class="allsmcap">FG</span> and the cervical axis
-<span class="allsmcap">HI</span> are almost horizontal. The cranio-facial and gnathic angles
-have been correspondingly widened.</p>
-
-<p class="center p0 p2"><span class="figcenter" id="img006">
- <img src="images/006.jpg" class="w75" alt="Diagram No. 4" />
-</span></p>
-<p class="center p0 caption">Diagram <abbr title="Number">No.</abbr> 4<br /></p>
-
-<p>Man standing erect has the greatest range of vocal powers of any
-animal. He also has the greatest control over them. In vocal range the
-apes come next in order. As we descend the scale from man through apes,
-monkeys, lemurs, and lemuroids, ultimately ending in the reptilian
-forms, we find the vocal powers restricted in scope and degraded in
-quality, until in the lowest reptiles they are lost in a mere hiss.</p>
-
-<p>Concurrent with the variations described, the longitudinal, vertical,
-and transverse axes of the brain also change their proportion in a like
-degree. The angles formed by the plane of the vocal cords with the axis
-of the larynx undergo a corresponding change. A just deduction from<span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</span>
-these facts is, that the gnathic index <span class="allsmcap">ADE</span> is a true vocal
-index.</p>
-
-<p>This rough outline of the law of cranial projection does not purport
-to be a full treatment of the many lines and angles correlated to the
-powers of speech, but the suggestions may lead the craniologist into
-new fields of thought.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="center heading p0">Early Impression&mdash;What is Speech&mdash;First Efforts&mdash;The Phonograph&mdash;The
-First Record of Monkey Speech&mdash;Monkey Words&mdash;Phonetics&mdash;Human Speech
-and Monkey Speech</p>
-
-
-<p>Among the blue hills and crystal waters of the Appalachian Mountains,
-remote from the artificialities of the great cities, the conditions of
-life under which I grew up were more primitive and less complex than
-they are in the busy centers of vast population. There nature was the
-earliest teacher of my childhood, and domestic animals were among my
-first companions. Among such environments my youth was passed, and
-among them I first conceived the idea that animals talk. As a child, I
-believed that all animals of the same kind could understand each other,
-and I recall many instances in which they really did so.</p>
-
-<p>My elders said that animals could communicate with each other, but
-denied that they could talk. As a boy, I could not forego the belief
-that the sounds they used were speech; and I still ask: In what respect
-are they not speech? This question leads us to ask another.</p>
-
-<p>What is speech? Any oral sound, voluntarily made, for the purpose of
-conveying a preconceived idea from the mind of the speaker to the
-mind of another, is speech. Any oral sound so made and so discharging
-this function<span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</span> in the animal economy is speech. It is true that the
-vocabularies of animals, when compared with those of man, are very
-limited; but the former are none the less real. The conception in the
-mind of an animal may not be so vivid as it is in the human mind, but
-the same conception is not always equally clear in two human minds. The
-fact of its being vague does not lessen its reality.</p>
-
-<p>Expression is the materialized form of thought, and speech is one mode
-of expression. Every animal is capable of expressing any thought that
-he is capable of conceiving, and such expression will be found to be
-as distinct as the thought which it expresses. It is inconsistent with
-every view of nature to suppose that any creature is endowed with the
-faculty of thought and forbidden the means of expressing it.</p>
-
-<p>It is true that there are some oral sounds which express emotion&mdash;such
-as pain or pleasure. These may not properly be called speech, although
-from them we may infer the state of mind attending them; but while they
-are not truly speech, they appear to be the cytula from which speech
-is developed. While emotions are not voluntary, they do not exist
-apart from mind. They are produced by external causes, and the line of
-demarcation which separates them from more definite forms of thought is
-a vague and wavering one. Thought may be involuntary, but expression
-arises from desire, and this is the sole motive of speech.</p>
-
-<p>It is not the purpose of this work to discuss the problems of
-psychology, except to state the grounds upon which we base the claim
-that animals possess the faculty<span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</span> of speech; but this is intended as a
-record of observed facts and from them the psychologist may make his
-own deductions.</p>
-
-<p>With the ever-present belief that animals could talk to each other, I
-observed from year to year certain things which tended to confirm it.
-About sixteen years ago an instance occurred which forever removed
-from my mind all doubt or wavering. Prior to that time I had observed
-that animals of the higher orders appeared to have the better types of
-speech and, concurrent with this belief, I tabulated many facts. In
-1884 I made a visit to the Cincinnati Zoölogical Garden, where I was
-deeply impressed with the conduct of a school of monkeys occupying a
-cage which also contained a large mandrill. This savage baboon was an
-evident source of terror to the smaller inmates of the cage. A brick
-wall separated the cage into two compartments. The one was intended
-for summer and the other for winter occupancy. Through this wall was
-a small doorway, large enough to admit the passage of the occupants.
-I observed that two or three of the monkeys kept continual watch over
-the conduct of the baboon and reported to the other monkeys every
-movement that he made. When he was lying still, the monkeys passed back
-and forth without fear, but the instant he rose to his feet or gave
-any sign of disquiet the fact was promptly reported by the monkeys
-on watch to those in the adjoining compartment, and they acted in
-accordance with the warning. I was not able to determine the exact
-thing they reported, but the nature of the report was evident, and I
-resolved to learn more fully its meaning.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</span> After spending some hours
-watching their conduct and listening to the sound which controlled it,
-I became convinced that what they said was sufficiently definite to
-guide the actions of those to whom it was addressed. In fact I should
-have been willing to intrust my own safety to those warnings. After a
-brief study of those sounds I was able to understand the attitude of
-the baboon towards his neighbors; and while the warning contained no
-elaborate detail that I could understand, the nature of his actions was
-made evident. I observed that a certain sound of warning caused them
-to act in a certain way, and a certain other sound caused them to act
-differently.</p>
-
-<p>From this start I determined to learn the speech of monkeys. I did not
-suspect that the task would be so great as it has proved to be. I did
-not foresee the difficulties that have since become apparent. Year
-by year, as new ideas came to me, new barriers arose and the horizon
-continually widened. Yet I was not discouraged at the poor success of
-my first efforts. From time to time I visited the various collections
-of monkeys in this country and even availed myself of those found with
-traveling shows, hand organs, and elsewhere.</p>
-
-<p>After some years of casual study it occurred to me that the phonograph
-would be a great aid in solving this problem. It would enable me to
-make more accurate comparisons of the sounds made by different monkeys;
-and after duly considering the matter I went to Washington and made my
-purpose known to <abbr title="doctor">Dr.</abbr> Baker, of the Smithsonian Institution. This at
-first evoked from him a smile, but after explaining the means by which
-it was hoped to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</span> accomplish the end he looked upon the novel feat as a
-new step in the science of speech.</p>
-
-<p>Having secured a phonograph, I repaired to the animal house then
-adjoining the Smithsonian Institution. At that time there were but two
-live monkeys there, and these were the nucleus around which has grown
-the present National Zoölogical Park at Washington. These two monkeys
-were of different species, but had for some time occupied the same
-cage. I had the female removed from the cage and carried into another
-room. Then the phonograph was placed near her cage, and by various
-means she was induced to utter a few sounds which were recorded upon
-the wax cylinder. The machine was then placed near the cage containing
-the male and the record repeated to him. His conduct plainly showed
-that he recognized the sound and understood the nature of it. He
-searched the horn from which the sounds proceeded and appeared to be
-perplexed at not finding the monkey that had made them. He traced the
-sound to its proper source, but, failing to find his mate, he thrust
-his arm into the horn and felt around the sides of it in the vain hope
-of finding her. The expression of his face was a study worthy of the
-best efforts of the physiognomist.</p>
-
-<p>Then a few sounds of his voice were recorded upon another cylinder and
-were delivered to the female, who showed signs of recognition; but as
-this record was very indistinct it did not evoke from her the interest
-which the other had evoked from him.</p>
-
-<p>This is doubtless the first instance in the history of speech that an
-attempt was ever made to reduce the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</span> speech of monkeys to record. While
-this first experiment was crude and the results were not conclusive, it
-pointed in the right direction and it inspired to further efforts to
-find the fountain head from which flows the great river of human speech.</p>
-
-<p>Some critic at that time declared that this experiment could be of no
-scientific value, because the monkey had been provoked to make the
-sounds recorded, and the sounds so evoked were only sounds of anger or
-profanity. It was not a matter of concern to me whether these words
-were moral or profane, so long as they were speech sounds of a monkey
-and were so recognized by other monkeys. If a monkey uses profanity, he
-doubtless has some other forms of speech.</p>
-
-<p>Shortly after this experiment I went to Chicago and made a record of
-a brown <em>Cebus</em> monkey. This record was of a sound most commonly
-used by that species. I had no exact idea as to its meaning, but its
-frequent use caused me to select it as one of their most important
-words. Having secured this, I returned to New York. There I selected
-a monkey of the same species and to him reproduced the record. He
-instantly gave signs of understanding it and replied to it. Again and
-again this sound was reproduced and he repeatedly answered it. He
-looked at the horn from which it came, then at the moving instrument,
-and drew back from them. But as the sound continued to proceed from
-the horn his interest seemed to awaken. He approached the horn and
-cautiously peeped into it. The sound was repeated. He thrust his arm
-into the horn and peeped around the outside to see if he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</span> had scared
-the monkey out. Failing to find him, he again retired from the horn,
-but responded to the sounds. He appeared to regard the thing with a
-kind of superstition. He seemed conscious of the fact that there should
-be a monkey there, but failing to find it he evinced suspicion. I do
-not know to what extent he regarded this as a spook, but he evidently
-realized that it was some unusual thing.</p>
-
-<p>In this experiment certain facts may be observed. The record delivered
-to him nothing but the cold, mechanical sound. The elements of gesture,
-etc., were entirely eliminated as factors in the problem, so that the
-monkey had nothing to interpret except the sound. This would indicate
-that the speech sound of a monkey as well as that of man carried
-with it a fixed and constant meaning. This conclusion has since been
-confirmed by ample and varied experiments with mechanical devices of
-many kinds.</p>
-
-<p>Among the defects observed in this experiment was the fact that I
-had not provided a means of recording the sound made in reply to the
-record. Subsequently I secured another instrument to do this. In
-this manner I obtained a reply, and thus I had the two cylinders for
-comparison. In like manner I repeated the experiment of delivering the
-record with one machine and recording the reply with another, until
-I had secured records of the speech sounds of nearly all the monkeys
-in captivity in this country. Taking these records at my leisure, I
-carefully compared and studied them, until I was able to interpret nine
-sounds of the speech of the Capuchin<span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</span> monkeys, and, incidentally, a few
-sounds of a great number of other species.</p>
-
-<p>It is quite impossible to represent the sounds of monkey speech by
-any literal formula, and it is difficult to translate them into their
-exact equivalent of human speech; but, in order to convey some idea
-of the nature and scope of that speech, I shall describe a word or
-two. In the tongue of the brown Capuchin monkey the most important
-word somewhat resembles the word “who,” uttered like “wh-oo-w.” The
-phonetic effect is rich and musical. The vowel element which dominates
-it is a pure vocal “u.” The radical meaning of this sound is food,
-which is the central thought of every monkey’s life. It does not only
-mean food in the concrete sense, referring to the thing to be eaten,
-but it sometimes refers to the act of eating, in which sense it has
-the character of a verb. At other times it refers to the desire to eat
-or to the sensation of hunger, in which instance it may be said to
-have the character of an adjective. But grammatical values depend upon
-structure, and since the speech of monkeys is <em>monophrastic</em> it
-cannot truly be said to have grammatical form. All the sounds of this
-species, so far as I have seen, are monosyllables; and most of them
-contain but one distinct phonetic. I have therefore described them as
-“monophonetic.” The word above described is sometimes used with the
-apparent purpose of expressing friendship, or something of that kind.</p>
-
-<p>Another word which refers to drink, or liquid, begins with a faint
-guttural “ch,” gliding through a sound resembling the French diphthong
-“eu,” and ending with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</span> a vanishing “y.” The sound is used with
-reference to drink in much the same way as the other sound is used with
-reference to food.</p>
-
-<p>So far I have not found any trace of the vowels “a,” “e,” “i,” or “o,”
-sounded long, but in one sound of alarm emitted under stress of great
-fear or in case of assault, the vowel element resembles short “i.” This
-sound is uttered in a pitch about two octaves above a human female
-voice.</p>
-
-<p>All of the sounds made by monkeys and, so far as I have observed, by
-other animals, refer to their natural physical wants. They are not
-capable of expressing intricate or abstract thoughts, for the animal
-himself has no such thoughts. Their simple modes of life do not require
-complex thoughts.</p>
-
-<p>A striking point of resemblance between human speech and that of the
-simian is found in a word that “Nellie” (one of my pets) used in
-warning me of the approach of danger. It is not that sound elsewhere
-described as the alarm sound used in case of imminent danger. This
-sound is used in case of remote danger or in announcing something
-unusual. As nearly as can be represented by letters it resembles
-“e-c-g-k.” With this word I have often been warned by these little
-friends. Nellie’s cage occupied a place near my desk. At night she
-would always stay awake as long as the light was kept burning. Having
-always kept late hours myself, I did not violate the rule of my life in
-order to give her a good night’s rest. About two o’clock one morning,
-when about to retire, I found Nellie wide awake. I drew a chair near
-her cage and sat watching her pranks. She tried to entertain me with
-bells<span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</span> and toys. Without letting her see it, I tied a long thread to a
-glove and placed it in the corner of the room at a distance of several
-feet away. Holding one end of the string, I drew the glove obliquely
-across the floor. When I first tightened the string, which was drawn
-across one knee and under the other, the glove slightly moved. This
-her quick eye caught at the first motion. Standing almost on tiptoe,
-her mouth half open, she cautiously peeped at the glove. Then in a
-low undertone, verging on a whisper, she uttered the sound “e-c-g-k!”
-Every second or so she repeated it, at the same time watching to see
-whether or not I was aware of the approach of this goblin. Her actions
-were very human-like. Her movements were as stealthy as those of a
-cat. As the glove came closer and closer she became more and more
-demonstrative. When at last she saw the monster climbing the leg of
-my trousers she uttered the sound in a loud voice and very rapidly.
-She tried to get to the object. She evidently thought it was a living
-thing. She detected the thread with which the glove was drawn across
-the floor, but she seemed in doubt as to what part it played in the
-matter. Her eyes several times followed the thread from my knee to the
-glove, but I do not think she discovered what caused the glove to move.
-Having repeated this a few times, with about the same result each time,
-I relieved her anxiety by allowing her to examine the glove. She did
-this with marked interest for a moment and then turned away. I tried
-the same thing again, but failed to elicit from her the slightest
-interest after she had once examined the glove.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</span></p>
-
-<p>When Nellie first discovered the glove moving on the floor, she
-attempted to call my attention in a low tone. As the object approached
-she became more earnest and uttered the sound somewhat more loudly.
-When she discovered the monster&mdash;as she regarded it&mdash;climbing up my
-leg, she uttered the warning in a voice sufficiently loud for the
-distance over which the warning was conveyed. These facts indicate that
-her perception of sound was well defined. Her purpose was to warn me of
-the approaching danger without alarming the object against which the
-warning was intended. As the danger increased, the warning became more
-urgent. When she saw the danger at hand, she no longer concealed or
-restrained her alarm.</p>
-
-<p>Nellie was an affectionate little creature. She hated to be left alone,
-even when supplied with toys and a super-abundance of food. When she
-saw me put on my overcoat or take my hat, she foresaw that she would
-be left alone. Then she began to plead and beg and chatter. I often
-watched her through a small hole in the door. When quite alone, in
-perfect silence she played with her toys. Sometimes for hours together
-she did not utter a word. She was not an exception to the rule that
-monkeys do not talk when alone.</p>
-
-<p>Although their speech is inferior to human speech, yet in it there is
-an eloquence that soothes and a meaning that appeals to the human heart.</p>
-
-<p>Briefly stated, the speech of monkeys and human speech resemble each
-other in all essential points. The speech sounds of monkeys are
-voluntary, deliberate, and articulate. They are addressed to others
-with the evident purpose<span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</span> of being understood. The speaker shows that
-he is conscious of the meaning which he desires to convey through the
-medium of speech. He awaits and expects a reply. If it is not given,
-the sound is repeated. The speaker usually looks at the one addressed.
-Monkeys do not habitually utter these sounds when alone. They
-understand the sounds made by others of their own kind. They understand
-the sounds when imitated by a human being, by a phonograph, or by other
-mechanical means. They understand the sounds without the aid of signs
-or gestures. They interpret the same sound in the same way at all
-times. Their sounds are made by their vocal organs and are modulated by
-the teeth, the tongue, the palate, and the lips. Their speech is shaded
-into dialects, and the higher forms of animals have higher types of
-speech than the lower ones. The higher types are slightly more complex
-and somewhat more exact in meaning than the lower ones. The present
-state of monkey speech appears to have been reached by development
-from lower forms. Each race or species of monkey has a form of speech
-peculiar to its kind. When caged together for a time they learn the
-meaning of each other’s sounds, but seldom try to utter them. Their
-faculty of speech is commensurate with their mental and social status.
-They utter their speech sounds loud or soft as the condition requires,
-which indicates that they are conscious of the values. The more
-pronounced the gregarious habits of any species, the higher the type of
-speech it has. So far as I am able to discern, there is no intrinsic
-difference between the speech of monkeys and the speech of men.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center heading p0">Monkey Friends&mdash;Jokes&mdash;The Sound of Alarm&mdash;Jennie</p>
-
-
-<p>A few years ago there lived in Charleston, <abbr title="South Carolina">S. C.</abbr>, a fine specimen of
-the brown Cebus. His name is Jokes. He was naturally shy of strangers,
-but on my first visit to him I addressed him in his native tongue, and
-he seemed to regard me very kindly. He ate from my hand and allowed me
-to handle and caress him. He watched me with evident curiosity, and
-invariably responded to the sound that I uttered in his own language.
-On one occasion I tried the effect of the peculiar sound of “alarm” or
-“assault” which I had learned from one of his species. It cannot be
-spelled or represented by letters. While he was eating from my hand I
-gave the peculiar, piercing note. He instantly sprang to a perch in the
-top of the cage, thence almost wild with fear he ran in and out of his
-sleeping apartment. As the sound was repeated his fears increased. No
-amount of coaxing would induce him to return to me or to accept from
-me any overtures of peace. I retired to the distance of a few feet
-from his cage, and his master finally induced him to descend from the
-perch; but he did so with great reluctance. I again gave the sound from
-where I stood, and it produced a similar result. The monkey gave out a
-singular sound in response to my efforts to appease him, but he refused
-to become reconciled.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</span></p>
-
-<p>After the lapse of eight or ten days I had not been able to reinstate
-myself in his good graces or to induce him to accept anything from
-me. At this juncture I resorted to harsher means of bringing him to
-terms; I threatened him with a rod. At first he resented this; but
-at length he yielded, and merely through fear he came down from his
-perch. When finally induced to approach, he placed the side of his
-head on the floor, put out his tongue, and uttered a plaintive sound
-having a slightly interrogative inflection. At first this act quite
-defied interpretation; but during the same period I was visiting a
-little monkey called Jack, and in him I found a clue to the meaning
-of this conduct. For strangers, Jack and I were very good friends. He
-allowed me many liberties, which the family assured me he had uniformly
-refused to others. On a certain visit to him he displayed his temper
-and made an attack upon me, because I refused to let go a saucer from
-which he was drinking milk. I jerked him up by the chain and slapped
-him; whereupon he instantly laid the side of his head on the floor, put
-out his tongue, and made just such a sound as Jokes had made on the
-occasion mentioned. It occurred to me that it was a sign of surrender.
-Subsequent tests confirmed this opinion.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. M. French Sheldon, in her journey through East Africa, shot a
-small monkey in a forest near Lake Charla. She graphically describes
-how the little fellow stood high up in the bough of a tree and
-chattered to her in a clear, musical voice until at the discharge of
-her gun he fell mortally wounded. When he was laid dying at her feet,
-he turned his bright little eyes pleadingly upon her as if<span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</span> to ask
-for pity. Touched by his appeal, she took the little creature in her
-arms and tried to soothe him. Again and again he touched his tongue
-to her hand as if kissing it, and seemed to wish in the hour of death
-to be caressed by the hand that had taken from him without reward
-that sweet life which could be of no value except it were spared to
-the wild forest where his kindred live. From her description of the
-actions of that monkey, his conduct was identical with that of the
-Cebus, and may justly be interpreted to mean “Pity me!” or “Spare me!”
-A Scotch naturalist, commenting on my description of this act and its
-interpretation, quite agrees with me, and states that he has observed
-the same thing in other species of monkeys.</p>
-
-<p>During a period of many weeks I visited Jokes almost daily; but after
-the lapse of more than two months I had not won him back nor quieted
-his suspicions against me. On my approach he usually manifested fear
-and went through the act of humiliation above described.</p>
-
-<p>Observing that he entertained an intense hatred for a negro boy who
-teased and vexed him, I had the boy come near the cage. Jokes fairly
-raved with anger. I took a stick and pretended to beat the boy. This
-greatly delighted Jokes. I held the boy near enough to the cage to
-allow the monkey to scratch and pull his clothes. This filled his
-little simian soul with joy. Releasing the boy, I drove him away by
-throwing wads of paper at him. This gave Jokes infinite pleasure. I
-repeated this a number of times, and by such means we again became good
-friends. After each encounter with the boy, Jokes came to the bars,
-touched my hand with his tongue, chattered, played with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</span> my fingers,
-and showed every sign of confidence and friendship. He always warned me
-of the approach of any one, and his conduct at such times was largely
-governed by my own. After this he never failed to salute me with the
-proper sound.</p>
-
-<p>During this time I paid a few visits to another little monkey of the
-same species. Her name was Jennie. Her master had warned me in advance
-that she was not well disposed towards strangers. At my request he had
-her chained in a small side yard, which he forbade any of the family
-entering. On approaching the little lady for the first time, I gave her
-the usual salutation, which she responded to and seemed to understand.
-I sat down by her side and fed her from my hands. She viewed me with
-evident interest and curiosity. I studied her with equal interest.
-During the process of this mutual investigation a negro girl, who
-lived with the family, stealthily entered the yard and came up within
-a few feet of us. I determined to sacrifice this girl upon the altar
-of science. Placing her between the monkey and myself, I vigorously
-sounded the “alarm” or “warning.” Jennie flew into a fury. I continued
-to sound the alarm and at the same time pretended to attack the girl
-with a club and some paper wads. The purpose was to make the monkey
-believe that the girl had uttered the alarm and made the assault.
-With a great display of violence I drove the girl from the yard. For
-days afterward she could not feed or approach the little simian. This
-further confirmed the opinion as to the meaning of this sound. This
-sound can be fairly imitated by placing the back of the hand gently
-on the mouth and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</span> kissing it with great force, prolonging the sound.
-This imitation, however, is indifferent, but the quality of the sound
-is especially noticeable when analyzed on the phonograph. The pitch
-corresponds to the highest “F” sharp on a piano, while the word “drink”
-is about two octaves lower, and the word “food” is nearly three.</p>
-
-<p>On one occasion I visited the Zoölogical Garden in Cincinnati, where
-I found in a cage a small Capuchin to whom I gave the name Banquo. It
-was near night and the visitors had left the house. The little monkey,
-worried out by the annoyance of visitors, sat quietly in the back of
-his cage, as though glad that another day was done. I approached the
-cage and uttered the sound which I have translated “drink.” The first
-effort caught his attention and caused him to turn and look at me. He
-rose and answered with the same word. He then came to the front of the
-cage and looked at me as if in doubt. I repeated the word. He again
-responded, and turned to a small pan in the cage. He took it up and
-placed it near the door through which the keeper passed food to him. He
-then turned to me and again uttered the word. I asked the keeper for
-some milk; but he brought me some water instead. The efforts of the
-little simian to secure the glass were very earnest, and his pleading
-manner and tone gave evidence of his thirst. I allowed him to dip his
-hand into the glass and lick the water from his fingers. When the glass
-was kept out of the reach of his hand he repeated the sound and looked
-beseechingly at me as if to say: “Please give me more.” This caused
-me to suspect that the word which I had translated “milk” also meant<span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</span>
-“water.” From this and other tests I finally determined that it meant
-“drink” in a broad sense and possibly also meant “thirst.” It evidently
-expressed his desire for something with which to allay his thirst. The
-sound is very difficult to imitate and quite impossible to write, but
-an idea of it is given elsewhere.</p>
-
-<p>On one of my visits to the Chicago Garden I stood with my side to a
-cage containing a small Capuchin. I uttered the sound which had been
-translated “milk.” It caused him to turn and look at me, and on my
-repeating the sound a few times he answered very distinctly, using the
-same sound. Picking up the pan from which he usually drank, he brought
-it to the front of the cage, set it down, came up to the bars, and
-distinctly uttered the word. He had not been shown any milk or other
-kind of food. The man in charge then brought some milk, which I gave to
-the monkey, who drank it with great delight. I again held up his pan
-and repeated the sound. He used the same sound each time when he wanted
-milk. During this visit I tried many experiments with the word which
-I am now convinced means “food” or “hunger.” I was led to the belief
-that he used the same word for apple, carrot, bread, and banana. Later
-experiments, however, have caused me to modify this view, because the
-phonograph shows slight variations of the sound, and it is probable
-that these faint inflections may indicate different kinds of food. They
-usually recognize this sound, even when poorly imitated. In this word
-may be found a clue to the great secret of speech. And while I have
-taken but one short step toward its solution, these facts point out the
-way that leads to it.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center heading p0">Monkey Ethics&mdash;Sense of Color&mdash;Monkeys Enumerate&mdash;First Principles of
-Art</p>
-
-
-<p>Monkeys have a simple code of ethics. It is not by any means to be
-supposed that their sense of propriety or appreciation of color, form,
-dimension, or quality is of a high order; but that they have the
-rudiments upon which the higher cults of human society are based there
-is no doubt. Among the experiments that I performed along this line
-were some designed to ascertain the strength of these latent faculties
-or the degree to which these have been developed.</p>
-
-<p>In order to ascertain whether or not monkeys have any choice of colors,
-I selected some bright-colored balls, marbles, candies, and bits of
-ribbon. Taking a piece of pasteboard, I placed on it a few pieces of
-candy of different colors. This was offered to a monkey to see if he
-would select a certain color. In order to avoid confusing him, I used
-only two colors at a time, but frequently shifted their places. This
-was to determine whether the color was chosen merely for convenience or
-for the sake of the color itself. By repeating this with a series of
-bright colors and frequent changing of their order it was ascertained
-in many instances that certain monkeys had a distinct choice of color.
-It was found that all monkeys do not select the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</span> same color, and also
-that the same monkey does not at all times choose the same. But, as a
-rule, bright green appeared to be the favorite color of the Capuchins,
-and their second choice was white. In a few instances white appeared
-to be their preference. This experiment was not confined to candies,
-nuts, or other eatables. They appeared to use about the same taste in
-selecting their toys. From the use of artificial flowers, it appeared
-that the choice of green was possibly associated with their selection
-of food. On one occasion I kept a cup for a monkey to drink milk from.
-On one side of this was a picture of some bright flowers and green
-leaves. The monkey would sometimes quit drinking the milk and try to
-pick the flowers off the side of the cup. The fact that she could
-not remove the flowers appeared to annoy her, and she seemed not to
-understand why she could not get hold of them.</p>
-
-<p>In one test I used a board about two feet long, upon which were a few
-pieces of white and pink candies, mixed and arranged in four different
-places on the board. The monkey selected the white from each pile
-before taking the pink, except in one instance, in which the pink
-was taken first. In another experiment I took a white paper ball in
-one hand and a pink one in the other and held my hands out to the
-monkey. He selected the white one almost every time, although from
-time to time I changed hands with the balls. It was not a mere matter
-of convenience with the monkey, for he would sometimes reach over the
-hand containing the pink ball in order to obtain the white one. Most of
-these experiments were performed with the Capuchins, but some of them
-were made with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</span> the Rhesus. The fact that monkeys generally seem to be
-attracted by brilliant colors is doubtless due to the readiness with
-which these catch the attention; but when reduced to a choice between
-two colors, they do not seem to give preference to brilliant ones.</p>
-
-<p>A unique but simple experiment was made in order to ascertain whether
-or not monkeys enumerate. I placed on a small platter one nut and a
-small piece of apple or carrot cut in the shape of a cube. On another
-platter were placed two or three such articles of like color and size.
-Holding the two just out of reach of the monkey, and changing hands
-from time to time, I observed that he tried to reach the platter
-containing the greater number, thus indicating that he discerned which
-contained the greater quantity or number of articles. It was long a
-matter of doubt as to whether it was by number or by quantity that his
-choice was controlled. But by taking one piece larger than the others
-and of different shape, it was ascertained that he appreciated the
-difference of quantity. Then, by taking a platter containing one piece
-and another platter containing several similar pieces, it was seen that
-he could distinguish singular from plural.</p>
-
-<p class="center p0 p2"><span class="figcenter" id="img007">
- <img src="images/007.jpg" class="w75" alt="Monkey Learning to Count" />
-</span></p>
-<p class="center p0 caption">Monkey Learning to Count</p>
-
-<p>Another experiment was to determine to what extent he was able to
-enumerate. To this end I constructed a small square box and made a
-hole in one side of it. The box was cushioned inside so that the
-contents would not rattle. In the box were placed three marbles of the
-same size and color. The hole was just large enough for the monkey to
-withdraw his hand with one marble at a time. After letting him play
-with these for a while, putting them into the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</span> box and taking them out,
-I abstracted one of the marbles and left the other two for him to play
-with. On taking them out of the box, he missed the absent one, felt in
-the box for it, rose, and looked where he had been sitting. Again he
-put his hand into the box and looked at me as if to say he had lost
-something. Failing to find it, he soon became reconciled to the loss
-and began to play with the remaining two. When he had become quite
-content with these, I abstracted a second one. Thereupon he instituted
-search and was quite unwilling to proceed without finding<span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</span> the lost
-marbles. He put his hand into the box, evidently in the hope of finding
-them. He would not continue to play with the one. I restored one of the
-marbles, and when he discovered that I could find the lost marble, he
-appealed to me in each instance to assist him. Then with his little,
-dirty, black fingers he insisted upon opening my lips to see if it was
-concealed in my mouth&mdash;the place where monkeys usually conceal stolen
-goods. I repeated this experiment many times, until quite convinced of
-his ability to count three. Another marble was then added to the number
-and he was allowed to play with the four until he became familiar with
-that number. But when one was taken from the four he did not appear to
-be greatly impressed with the loss. At times he seemed to be in doubt,
-but he did not worry much about it, though seeming to realize that
-something was wrong.</p>
-
-<p>It is not to be supposed that monkeys have names for numerals, but they
-surely have a more or less distinct conception of plurality. The same
-fact is true of birds. It is said that all birds are able to count the
-eggs in their nests. This is certainly true of those that lay only
-three or four eggs.</p>
-
-<p>During the time that these experiments were being made with monkeys in
-this country, the late Professor Romanes was making certain experiments
-with a chimpanzee in London. He succeeded in teaching her to count
-seven, so that she would count and deliver to him on demand any number
-from one up to seven. This she did without prompting, and usually
-without mistake.</p>
-
-<p>Among different specimens of monkeys there seems to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</span> be a wide range
-of tastes. In this respect they vary much the same as human beings do.
-The same is true of their mental powers in general. With some monkeys
-the choice of color is much more definite and of dimension much more
-certain than in others, and most of them appear to assign to different
-numbers a difference of value.</p>
-
-<p>Some monkeys are talkative and others taciturn. Some of them are
-vicious and some stolid, while others are as playful as kittens and as
-cheerful as sunshine. I regard the Cebus as the most intelligent of
-monkeys. In fact I have called him “The Caucasian of monkeys.” The new
-world monkeys seem to be more intelligent and more loquacious than the
-old world stock, but this remark does not include the anthropoid apes.</p>
-
-<p>As a test of the musical taste of monkeys, I took three little bells
-and suspended them by a like number of strings. The bells were all
-alike except that from two of them the clappers had been removed.
-Dropping the bells through the meshes of the cage at a distance of ten
-or twelve inches apart, the monkey was allowed to play with them. He
-soon discovered the one containing the clapper. He played with it and
-became quite absorbed with it. He was then attracted to another part of
-the cage, during which time the position of the bells was changed. On
-his return he found his favorite bell without a clapper. He then turned
-to another, and then another, until he found the one with the clapper.
-This indicated that the sound emitted by the bell was at least a part
-of its attraction.</p>
-
-<p>During the time that I used the phonograph in studying the monkeys,
-I repeated many musical records to them<span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</span> and found that some evinced
-fondness for the music, others were indifferent to it, and a few showed
-aversion to it. It appeared that the monkeys that were most attracted
-by musical sounds enjoy the repetition of a single note rather than the
-melody. It is possible that music, as we understand it, is too high an
-order of sense culture for them. The single note of a certain pitch
-seems to attract and afford pleasure to some of them, but they do not
-seem to appreciate rhythm or melody.</p>
-
-<p>As monkeys discern the larger of two pieces of food, they may be
-said to have the perceptive faculty which enables them to appreciate
-dimension. As they are able to discern singular from plural, and
-two from three or more, they have, in that degree, the faculty of
-enumeration. As they are able to distinguish and select colors, they
-possess the first rudiment of art as dealing with color. As they are
-attracted or repelled by musical sounds, they may be said to possess
-the first rudiment of music. It must not be understood, however, that
-any claim is made that monkeys possess a high degree of mental culture;
-but it will be admitted that they possess the germs of mathematics as
-dealing with form, dimension, and number; of art, as dealing with form
-and color; of music, as dealing with tone and time. It is not probable
-that they have any names for any of these sensations, nor that they
-have any abstract ideas that are not drawn directly from experience.
-But as the concrete must precede the abstract in the development of
-reason, it is more than probable that these creatures now occupy a
-mental horizon such as man has once passed through in the course of
-his evolution. It<span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</span> does not require a great effort of the mind to
-appreciate the possibility that these feeble faculties, in constant
-use and under changed conditions, may develop into a higher degree of
-strength and usefulness. In fact we find in these creatures the embryo
-of every faculty of the human being, including those of reason and
-speech, through the exercise of which are developed the higher moral
-and social traits of man. They appear to have at least the raw material
-from which are made the highest attributes of the human mind, and I
-shall not contest with them the right of exclusive possession.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center heading p0">Pedro’s Speech Recorded&mdash;Delivered to Puck through the
-Phonograph&mdash;Little Darwin Learns a New Word</p>
-
-
-<p>In the Washington collection there was once a Capuchin monkey by the
-name of Pedro. When I first visited this bright little fellow he
-occupied a cage in common with several other monkeys of different
-kinds. All of them seemed to impose upon little Pedro, and a
-mischievous young spider-monkey found special delight in catching him
-by the tail and dragging him about the floor of the cage. I interfered
-on behalf of Pedro and drove the spider-monkey away. Pedro appreciated
-this and began to look upon me as a benefactor. When he saw me he would
-scream to attract my attention and then beg for me to come to him.
-I induced the keeper to place him by himself in a small cage. This
-seemed to please him very much. When I went to record his sounds on
-the phonograph, I held him on my arm. He took the tube into his tiny,
-black hands, held it close up to his mouth and talked into it just like
-a good little boy who knew what to do and how to do it. He sometimes
-laughed, and he frequently chattered to me as long as he could see me.
-He would sit on my hand and kiss my cheeks, put his mouth up to my ear
-and chatter just as though he knew what my ears were for. He was quite
-fond of the head-keeper and also of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</span> director; but he entertained a
-great dislike for one of the assistant keepers. He often told me some
-very bad things about that man, though I could not understand what he
-said. I shall long remember how this dear little monkey used to cuddle
-under my chin and try to make me understand some sad story which seemed
-to be the burden of his life. He readily understood the sounds of his
-own speech when repeated to him, and I made some of the best records of
-his voice that I ever succeeded in making of any monkey. Some of them
-I preserved for a long time. They displayed a wide range of sounds,
-and I studied them with special care and pleasure, because I knew
-that they were addressed to me. Being aware that the little creature
-was uttering these sounds to me with the hope that I would understand
-them, I was more anxious to learn just what he really meant than if it
-had contained only something addressed to another. This little simian
-was born in the Amazon Valley, in Brazil, and was named for the late
-emperor, Dom Pedro.</p>
-
-<p>At one time I borrowed from a dealer a little Capuchin called Puck, and
-had him sent to my apartments, where I had a phonograph. I placed the
-cage in front of the machine, upon which had been adjusted the record
-of my little friend Pedro. I concealed myself in an adjoining room,
-where, through a small hole in the door, I could watch the conduct of
-Puck. A string was attached to the lever of the machine, drawn taut,
-and passed through another hole in the door. By this means the machine
-could be started without attracting the attention of the monkey through
-his seeing anything move. When everything in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</span> the room was quiet the
-machine was set in motion, and Puck was treated to a phonographic
-recital by Pedro. This speech was distinctly delivered through the
-horn to the monkey. From his actions it was evident that he recognized
-it as the voice of one of his tribe. He looked with surprise at the
-horn, made a sound or two, glanced around the room, and again uttered
-two or three sounds. Apparently somewhat afraid, he retired from the
-horn. Again the horn delivered some sounds of pure Capuchin speech.
-Puck seemed to regard them as sounds of some importance. He advanced
-cautiously and made a feeble response; but a quick, sharp sound from
-the horn startled him; and failing to find anything indicating a
-monkey, except the sound of the voice, he looked with evident suspicion
-at the horn, and scarcely ventured to answer any sound it made.</p>
-
-<p>When the contents of the record had been delivered to him I entered the
-room. This relieved his fear of the horn. A little later the apparatus
-was again adjusted, and a small mirror was hung just above the mouth of
-the horn. Again retiring from the room, I left him to examine his new
-surroundings. He soon discovered the monkey in the glass, and began to
-caress it and chatter to it. Again the phonograph was started by means
-of the string, and when the horn began to deliver its simian oration,
-it greatly disconcerted and perplexed Puck. He looked at the image in
-the glass and then into the horn. He retired with a feeble grunt and an
-inquisitive grin, showing his little white teeth, and acting as though
-in doubt whether to regard the affair as a joke, or to treat it as a
-grim and scientific fact. His voice and actions were like those of a
-child, declaring in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</span> words that he was not afraid, and at the same
-time betraying fear in every act. Puck did not cry, but his intense
-fear made the grin on his face rather ghastly. Again he approached the
-mirror and listened to the sounds which came from the horn. His conduct
-betrayed the conflict in his little soul. It was evident that he did
-not believe the monkey which he saw in the glass was making the sounds
-which came from the horn. He repeatedly put his mouth to the glass and
-caressed the image, but tried at the same time to avoid the monkey
-which he heard in the horn. His conduct in this instance was a source
-of surprise, as the sounds contained in the record were all uttered
-in a mood of anxious, earnest entreaty, which contained no sound of
-anger, warning, or alarm, but, on the contrary, appeared to be a kind
-of love-speech. I had not learned the exact meaning of any one of the
-sounds contained in this cylinder, but in a collective and general way
-had ascribed such meaning to them. From Puck’s conduct it was to be
-inferred that this was some kind of complaint against those monkeys
-occupying the other cage. They had made life a burden to little Pedro.
-It was evident that Puck interpreted the actions of the monkey seen in
-the glass to mean one thing, and the sounds that came from the horn to
-mean quite another.</p>
-
-<p>Their language is not capable of relating narratives or giving details
-in a complaint, but in general terms of grievance it may have conveyed
-to Puck the idea of a monkey in distress, and hence his desire to avoid
-it. The image in the glass presented to him a picture of a monkey in a
-happy mood, and he therefore had no cause to shun it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</span></p>
-
-<p>The speech used by monkeys is not of a high order, but it appears to
-have been developed from an inferior type. Some species among them have
-much more copious and expressive forms of speech than others. From
-many experiments with the phonograph I conclude that some have much
-higher phonetic types than others. I have found slight inflections that
-seem to modify the values of their sounds. Certain monkeys do not make
-certain inflections at all, although in other respects the phonation
-of a species is generally uniform. In some cases it appears that the
-inflections differ slightly in the same species, but long and constant
-association tends in some degree to unify these dialects much the same
-as like causes blend and unify the dialects of human speech.</p>
-
-<p>I observed one instance in which a Capuchin had acquired two sounds
-which strictly belonged to the tongue of the white-faced Cebus. At
-first I suspected that these sounds were common to the speech of both
-varieties; but on inquiry it was found that this brown Cebus had been
-confined for some years in a cage with the white-face, during which
-time he had acquired them.</p>
-
-<p>The most interesting case that I have to record is one in which a young
-white-faced Cebus acquired the Capuchin sound for food. This occurred
-under my own observation, and, being attended by such conditions as to
-show that the monkey had a motive in learning the sound, I regard it as
-most noteworthy.</p>
-
-<p>In the room where the monkeys were kept by a dealer in Washington,
-there was a cage containing the young Cebus in question. He was of
-rather more than average<span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</span> intelligence. He was a quiet, sedate, and
-thoughtful little monkey. His gray hair and beard gave him quite a
-venerable aspect, and for this reason I called him Darwin. For some
-reason he was afraid of me, and I gave him but little attention. In
-an adjacent cage lived the little brown Cebus, called Puck. The cages
-were only separated by an open wire partition, through which they could
-easily see and hear each other. For some weeks I visited Puck almost
-daily, and in response to his sound for food, I supplied him with nuts,
-bananas, or other food. I never gave him anything to eat unless he
-asked me for it in his own speech.</p>
-
-<p>On one occasion my attention was attracted by little Darwin, who was
-making a strange sound, such as I had never before heard one of his
-species utter. At first I did not recognize the sound, but finally
-discovered that it was intended to imitate the sound of the brown
-monkey, in response to which I always gave him some nice morsel of
-food. Darwin had observed that when Puck made this sound he was
-always rewarded with something to eat, and his own evident motive
-was to secure a like reward. After this I gave him a bit of food in
-acknowledgment of his efforts. From day to day he improved in making
-the sound, until at length it could scarcely be detected from that
-made by Puck. This was accomplished within a period of less than six
-weeks from the time of my first visit. In this instance, at least, I
-have witnessed one step taken by a monkey, in learning the speech of
-another. This was doubly interesting to me in view of the fact that I
-had long believed, and had announced the belief, that no monkey ever
-tried to acquire the sounds made by one of another<span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</span> species. This
-instance alone was sufficient to cause me to recede from a conclusion
-thus rendered untenable; and the short time in which the feat was
-accomplished would indicate that the difficulty is not so great as it
-had been regarded. As a rule, monkeys do not learn each other’s speech;
-but the rule is not without exceptions. I had previously observed,
-and called attention to the fact, that when two monkeys of different
-species are caged together, each one learns to understand the speech
-of the other, but does not try to speak it. When he replies at all, it
-is in his own vernacular. Monkeys do not essay to carry on a connected
-conversation. Their speech is usually limited to a single sound or
-word, and it is answered in the same manner. To suppose that they
-converse in an elaborate manner is to go beyond the bounds of reason.
-In this respect, the masses fail to understand the real nature of the
-speech of monkeys or other animals.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center heading p0">Five Little Brown Cousins, Mickie, McGinty, Nemo, Dodo, and
-Nigger&mdash;Nemo Apologizes to Dodo</p>
-
-
-<p>During the winter of 1891 there lived in Central Park five little brown
-monkeys, all of the same kind and occupying the same cage. They were
-all of more or less interest, and all of them were my friends. I paid
-them frequent visits and spent much time with them. I have the vanity
-to believe that I was always a welcome guest. We found much pleasure in
-each other’s society. As the monkey house was open to the public after
-nine o’clock, I usually made my visits about sunrise in order to be
-alone with my little friends.</p>
-
-<p>One of the most cunning and happiest of all little monkeys was in this
-group. His name was Mickie, and he was the boss of the school. He was
-not very talkative except when he wished for food or drink, but he was
-very playful and we had many a merry romp. Whenever I entered the cage
-Mickie perched himself above the door to surprise me by jumping on my
-neck. He then affectionately threw his arms around my neck and licked
-my cheeks, pulled my ears, and chattered in his sweet, plaintive tones.
-The other inmates of the cage were jealous of him, but none contested
-his right to do as he pleased. I am sorry to say that Mickie was not
-always as kind to his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</span> little cousins as he might have been. He was
-like some people I have known who are selfish and sometimes cruel; but
-his habitual good nature made amends in some degree for his sudden
-fits of anger. Mickie did not belong to the park. He was only kept as
-a guest of the city during the absence of his master in Europe. He had
-a genuine sense of humor and sometimes played pranks upon the others,
-very much to their annoyance. On one occasion Mickie got the tail of
-another monkey around one of the bars of the cage. He sat down and held
-to it while its owner screamed with rage and scuffled to get away.
-During this time Mickie’s face wore a broad, satanic grin, and he did
-not release his hold until he had tired of the fun.</p>
-
-<p>Another one of these little cousins was named McGinty. McGinty was
-very fond of me; but he was afraid of Mickie, who was much larger
-and stronger than himself. McGinty always wanted to be counted in
-the game. He did not like to have Mickie monopolize my attentions.
-He often climbed upon my shoulders and caressed me very fondly, if
-not interrupted by Mickie; but whenever the latter came, poor little
-McGinty retired in disgust, pouted for a time, and even refused to
-accept food from me. By and by he would yield to my overtures and again
-join in the play. He seemed always to wish to find something that would
-divert my attention from Mickie.</p>
-
-<p>Another inmate of the cage was a fine little monkey that belonged to
-<abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> G. Scribner, of Yonkers, <abbr title="New York">N. Y.</abbr> At the time of my visits I did not
-know the name of this little creature nor who owned him. I called him
-Nemo. He was timid and taciturn, but quite intelligent. He was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</span> gentle
-in manner, kind in disposition, and he possessed a great amount of
-diplomacy. He was thoughtful and peaceable, but “full of guile.” He
-always sought to keep the peace with Mickie, to whom he played the
-sycophant. He would put his little arms about Mickie’s neck in a most
-affectionate manner and hang on to him like a last hope. In all broils
-that concerned Mickie, Nemo was his partisan. If Mickie was diverted,
-Nemo laughed. I have sometimes thought that he would do so if he were
-suffering with the toothache. He seemed to be as completely under the
-control of Mickie as was the curl in Mickie’s tail. When Nemo saw
-Mickie bite my fingers in play, he thought it was done in anger and he
-lost no chance of biting them; but his little teeth were not strong
-enough to hurt very much. At last he discovered that Mickie was only
-biting me in fun, and after that Nemo did it apparently as a duty.
-It scarcely seems that a monkey can be capable of such far-reaching
-purpose or of such diplomacy, but by a careful study of his actions I
-could find no other motive.</p>
-
-<p>One singular thing in the conduct of this monkey was his apologetic
-manner towards another inmate of the cage. Nemo had a soft musical
-voice and remarkable power of facial expression. On two occasions
-he appeared to apologize to a companion called Dodo. This was done
-in a very humble manner. I tried in vain to secure a record of this
-particular speech. His manner, voice, and face expressed contrition;
-but I was never able to learn either the exact cause or the extent of
-his humiliation. He sat in a crouching position, with the left hand
-clasped around the right wrist, and delivered his speech in a most<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</span>
-energetic, though humble, manner. After each effort he made a brief
-pause and repeated what appeared to me to be the same thing. This was
-done three or four times. When he had quite finished this speech, Dodo,
-to whom it had been addressed and who had quietly listened, delivered
-with her right hand a sound blow upon the left side of the face of the
-little penitent. To this he responded with a soft cry, but without
-resentment. The keeper assured me that he had many times witnessed this
-act, but he had no idea of its meaning. As to the details of this act,
-I have no theory; but the state of mind and the purpose were evident.
-They expressed regret, penitence, or submission. I have witnessed
-something similar in other monkeys, but nothing equal in point of
-finish or pathos to that scene between Nemo and Dodo.</p>
-
-<p>Dodo had a bright face and a symmetrical figure. In her I witnessed one
-of the most interesting acts that I have ever seen in any monkey. Her
-combined speech and actions bordered on the histrionic. Her monologue
-was addressed to her keeper, of whom she was especially fond. At almost
-any hour of the day Dodo would stand erect and deliver to her keeper
-the most touching and impassioned address. The keeper went into the
-cage with me, to see if he could handle her. After a little coaxing
-she allowed him to take her into his arms. After he had caressed
-her for a while and assured her that no harm was meant, she put her
-slender little arms about his neck and like an injured child cuddled
-her head up under his chin. She caressed him by licking his cheeks,
-and chattered in a voice full of sympathy. Her display of affection
-was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</span> worthy of a human being. During most of this time she continued
-her pathetic speech. She was not willing he should leave her. The
-only time at which she made any show of anger or threatened me with
-assault was when I attempted to lay hands on her keeper or to release
-him from her embrace. At such times she would fly at me and attempt to
-tear my clothes off. On these occasions she would not allow any other
-inmate of the cage to approach him or to receive his caresses. The
-sounds which she uttered were at times pitiful, and the tale she told
-seemed to be full of sorrow. I have not, so far, been able to translate
-these sounds, but their import cannot be misunderstood. Her speech was
-doubtless a complaint against the other monkeys in the cage, and she
-was probably begging her keeper not to leave her alone in that great
-iron prison with all those big, bad monkeys who were so cruel to her.
-One reason for believing this to be the nature of her speech is that
-in all cases where I have heard this kind of speech and seen these
-gestures, the conditions were such as to indicate that such was their
-nature. It looks, however, very much like a love-making scene of the
-most intense kind.</p>
-
-<p>It is difficult to describe either the sounds or the gestures made
-on these occasions The monkey stood erect upon her feet, crossed her
-hands over her heart, and in the most touching and graceful manner went
-through a series of singular contortions. She swayed her body from side
-to side, turned her head in a coquettish manner, and moved her folded
-hands dramatically. Meanwhile her face was adorned with a broad grin,
-and the soft, rich notes<span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</span> of her voice were perfectly musical. She bent
-her body first into one curve and then into another, moved her feet
-with the grace of the minuet, and continued her fervent speech as long
-as the object of her adoration appeared to be touched by her appeals.
-Her voice ranged from pitch to pitch and from key to key, through the
-whole gamut of simian vocals, and with her arms folded she glided with
-the skill of a ballet girl across the floor of her cage. At times she
-stood with her eyes fixed upon her keeper, and held her face in such a
-position as not for a moment to lose sight of him. Meanwhile she turned
-her body entirely around in her tracks. This was accomplished with a
-skill such as no contortionist has ever attained. During these orations
-her eyes moistened as if in tears, showing that she felt the sentiment
-which her speech was intended to convey.</p>
-
-<p>These little creatures do not shed tears as human beings do; but their
-eyes moisten as a result of the same causes that move the human eyes to
-tears.</p>
-
-<p>These sounds appeal directly to our better feelings. What there is in
-the sound itself we do not really know, but it touches some chord in
-the human heart which vibrates in response to it. It has impressed me
-with the poetic thought that all our senses are like the strings of
-a great harp, each chord having a certain tension, so that any sound
-produced through an emotion finds a response in that chord with which
-it is in unison. Possibly our emotions and sensations are like the
-diatonic scale in music, and the organs through which they act respond
-in tones and semitones. Each multiple of any fundamental<span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</span> tone affects
-the chord in unison, as the strings upon a musical instrument are
-affected. The logical deduction is that our sympathies and affections
-are the chords, and our aversions the discords, of that great harp of
-passion.</p>
-
-<p>The last of this quintette was a frail little fellow called Nigger.
-He was not of much interest, as he was in poor health. He kept mostly
-to himself, because his companions were unkind to him and he was not
-strong enough to defend himself. He was gentle and affectionate. He
-was fond of being caressed and often evinced a sense of gratitude. He
-had a touch of humor which sometimes was very funny. He occasionally
-created a riot in the cage and then stole away to his corner and left
-the others to fight it out. He was the last of the five left in the
-park, but he was the first of them to die. The others were taken away
-by their owners; but poor little Nigger died in that dismal cage from
-whose windows he could see the beautiful trees and warm sunshine of
-springtime, though to him they were only a dream that saddened rather
-than cheered.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="center heading p0">Meeting with Nellie&mdash;Nellie was my Guest&mdash;Her Speech and
-Manners&mdash;Helen Keller and Nellie&mdash;One of Nellie’s Friends&mdash;Her Sight
-and Hearing&mdash;Her Toys and how She Played with Them</p>
-
-
-
-<p>One of the most intelligent of my brown Capuchin friends was little
-Nellie. When she arrived in Washington, I was invited to visit her. I
-introduced myself by speaking to her the sound of food. To that she
-promptly replied. She was rather informal, and we were soon engaged
-in a chat on that subject&mdash;the one that above all others interests a
-monkey. On my second visit she acted like an old acquaintance, and we
-had a fine time. On a later visit she allowed me to put my hands into
-her cage to handle and caress her. On another visit I took her out of
-the cage and we had a real jolly romp. This continued for some days,
-during which time she answered me when I gave the word for food or
-drink. She had grown quite fond of me, and always recognized me when I
-entered the door.</p>
-
-<p>About this time there came to Washington a little girl who was deaf,
-dumb, and blind. It was little Helen Keller. She was accompanied by
-her teacher, who acted as her interpreter. A great desire of Helen’s
-life was to see a live monkey&mdash;that is, to see one with her fingers.
-The owner<span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</span> sent for me to come and show one to her. When any one except
-myself had put hands upon Nellie, she had growled and scolded and
-showed temper. I took her from the cage. When the little blind girl
-first put her hands on Nellie, the shy little monkey did not like it.
-I stroked the child’s hair and cheeks with my own hand and then with
-Nellie’s. She looked up at me and uttered one of those soft, flute-like
-sounds. Then she began to pull at the cheeks and ears of the child.
-Within a few minutes they were like old friends and playmates, and for
-nearly an hour they afforded each other great pleasure. At the end of
-that time they separated with reluctance. The little simian acted as
-if conscious of the sad affliction of the child, but seemed at perfect
-ease with her. She would decline the tenderest approach of others. She
-looked at the child’s eyes, and then at me, as if to indicate that
-she was aware that the child was blind. The little girl appeared not
-to be aware that monkeys could bite. It was a beautiful and touching
-scene, and one in which the lamp of instinct shed its feeble light on
-all around. Helen has now grown into womanhood. I recently paid her a
-visit, and she assured me that she still pleasantly remembered this
-dear little monkey friend.</p>
-
-<p>One day Nellie escaped from her cage and climbed upon a shelf occupied
-by some bird cages. As she climbed over the light wicker cages, some of
-them, with their little yellow occupants, fell to the floor. I tried
-to induce Nellie to return to me; but the falling cages, the cry of
-the birds, the screeching of the parrots, and the vociferous chatter
-of other monkeys frightened poor Nellie almost out of her<span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</span> wits. She,
-thinking I was the cause of all this trouble, because I was present,
-screamed with fright at my approach. Such is the rule that governs
-monkeydom. Monkeys suspect every one of doing wrong except themselves.
-I had her removed to my apartments. She was supplied with bells and
-toys, and was fed on the fat of the land. By this means we finally
-knitted together again the broken bones of our friendship. When once a
-monkey has grown suspicious of you, it seldom entirely recovers from
-aversion. In every act thereafter you are suspected of mischief. I made
-some good records of the speech of this amiable monkey and studied them
-with special care.</p>
-
-<p>A frequent and welcome visitor to my study was a little boy about six
-years old. For him Nellie entertained great fondness. At the sight of
-the boy, Nellie went into perfect raptures, and when leaving him she
-called him so earnestly and whined so pitifully that one could not
-refrain from sympathy. On his return she would laugh audibly and give
-every sign of extreme joy. She never tired of his company, nor gave
-any attention to others while he was present. Some children next door
-found great delight in calling to see Nellie, and she always evinced
-great pleasure at their visits. On these occasions she consciously
-entertained them and showed herself to the best advantage. In order
-to make a good record of her sounds, and especially of her laughter,
-I brought the little boy to my aid. The boy would conceal himself in
-the room, and after Nellie had called him a few times he would jump
-out and surprise her. This would cause her to laugh till she could be
-heard throughout the whole house. In this manner I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</span> secured some of the
-best records I have ever made of the laughter of monkeys. When the boy
-concealed himself again, I secured the peculiar sound which she used
-when trying to attract his attention.</p>
-
-<p>Nellie had spent much of her life in captivity, and had been used to
-the society of children. She rarely ever betrayed any aversion to them.
-She delighted to pat their cheeks, pull their ears, and tangle their
-hair. She took great pleasure in cleaning one’s finger-nails. She did
-this with the skill of a manicure. She found pleasure in picking the
-shreds, ravelings, or specks from one’s clothing. She was not selfish
-in selecting her friends. She was influenced neither by age nor by
-beauty.</p>
-
-<p>To be out of her cage and supplied with toys was all she demanded to
-make her happy. I have sometimes thought she preferred such a life to
-the freedom of her Amazon forests. It is to be regretted that monkeys
-are so destructive that one dare not turn them loose in a room where
-there is anything that can be torn or broken. They enjoy such mischief.
-Nellie often begged me so piteously to be taken from her little iron
-prison that I could not refuse her request, even at the cost of much
-trouble in preparing the room for her.</p>
-
-<p>As we retain these little captives against their will and treat them
-worse than slaves by keeping them in close confinement, we should at
-least try to amuse them. It is true that they do not have to toil;
-but it would be more humane to make them work in the open air than to
-confine them so closely and deprive them of every means of pleasure.
-As an act of humanity and simple justice, I would impress<span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</span> upon those
-who have the charge of these little pets the importance of keeping
-them supplied with toys. In this respect they are just like children.
-For a trifle one can furnish them with such toys as they need. It is
-absolutely cruel to keep these little creatures confined in solitude
-and deny them the simple pleasure they find in playing with a bell, a
-ball, or a few marbles. A trifling outlay in this way will very much
-prolong their lives. Monkeys are always happy if they have plenty to
-eat and something to play with. I recall no investment of mine which
-ever yielded a greater return in pleasure than one little pocket
-match-safe, costing twenty-five cents, which one evening I gave to
-Nellie to play with. I had put into it a small key to make it rattle,
-and also some bits of candy. She rattled the box and found much
-pleasure in the noise it made. I showed her how to press the spring in
-order to open the box; but her little black fingers were not strong
-enough to release the spring and make the lid fly open. However, she
-caught the idea and knew that the spring was the secret which held the
-box closed. When she found that she could not open it with her fingers,
-she tried it with her teeth. Failing in this, she turned to the wall,
-and standing upright on the top of her cage, she took the box in both
-hands and struck the spring against the wall until the lid flew open.
-She was perfectly delighted at the result, and for the hundredth time,
-at least, I closed the box for her to open it again. On the following
-day some friends came in to visit her. I gave her the match-safe to
-open. On this occasion she was in her cage, and through its meshes she
-could not reach the wall. She had nothing against which to strike the
-spring<span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</span> to force it open. After looking around her and striking the
-box a few times against the wires of her cage, she discovered a block
-of wood about six inches square. She took this and mounted her perch.
-Balancing the block on the perch, she held it with the left foot, while
-with the right foot she held to the perch. With her tail wound around
-the meshes of the cage to steady herself, she carefully adjusted the
-match-box in such a manner as to protect her fingers from the blow.
-Then she struck the spring against the block of wood and the lid flew
-open. She fairly screamed with delight and held up the box with pride.
-The lid was again closed in order that she might open it.</p>
-
-<p>The late hours which I kept were beginning to tell on Nellie, and from
-time to time during the day I caught her taking a nap. I determined to
-use some curtains to avoid disturbing her rest. Drawing them around
-the cage, I lapped them over and pinned them down in front. Then I
-turned down the light and kept quiet for a little while to allow her
-to go to sleep. After the lapse of a few minutes I quietly turned up
-the light and resumed writing. In an instant the curtains rustled.
-Looking around, I saw her little brown eyes peeping through the folds
-of the curtains, which she gracefully held apart with her little black
-hands. When she saw what had caused the disturbance she chattered in
-her soft, rich tones, and tried to pull the curtains farther apart. I
-arranged them so she could not look around the room. To see her holding
-the curtains apart in that coquettish manner, turning her head from
-side to side, peeping and smiling at me and talking in such low sweet
-tones, was like a real flirtation. One who has not witnessed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</span> such a
-scene cannot fully appreciate it. Only those who have experienced the
-warm and unselfish friendship of these little creatures can realize how
-strong the attachment becomes. The love of these little creatures is
-proof against gossip, and their tongues are free from it.</p>
-
-<p>Among the many captives of the simian race who spend their lives in
-iron prisons, adding to the wealth and gratifying the cruelty of
-man,&mdash;not to expiate any crime,&mdash;I have many little friends. I am
-attached to them. So far as I can see, their devotion to me is as warm
-and sincere as that of any human being. I must confess that I am too
-obtuse to discern in what way the love they have for me differs from my
-own for them. I cannot see in what respect their love is less sublime
-than human love. I cannot discern in what respect the affection of a
-dog for a kind master differs from that of a child for a kind parent. I
-fail to see in what respect the sense of fear of a cruel master differs
-from that of the child toward a cruel parent. It is mere sentiment
-that ascribes to the passion of a child a higher source than the same
-passion in the dog or the monkey. The dog could have loved or feared
-another master just as well. Filial love or fear reaches out its
-tendrils just as far when all the ties of kindred blood are removed. It
-has been said that for one we are able to assign a reason <em>why</em>,
-while the other feeling is a mere impulse. I am too dull to understand
-how reason actuates to love, and instinct to mere attachment. I do not
-believe that in the intrinsic nature of these passions there is any
-essential difference. Whether it be reason or instinct in man, the
-affections of the lower animals are actuated by<span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</span> the same motives,
-governed by the same conditions, and guided by the same reasons as
-those of man. I shall long remember some of my monkey friends, and I
-feel sure that, far away in the silent niches of their memory, some of
-them have my image enshrined. Sometimes after long months of absence I
-see them again. They always recognize me at sight and often scream with
-pleasure at my return.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="center heading p0">Caged in an African Jungle&mdash;The Cage and its Contents&mdash;Its
-Location&mdash;Its Purpose&mdash;The Jungle&mdash;The Great Forest&mdash;Its Grandeur&mdash;Its
-Silence</p>
-
-
-<p>It will be of interest to the reader to know the manner in which I
-have pursued the study of monkeys in a state of nature, and the means
-employed to that end. I, therefore, give a brief outline of my life in
-a cage in the heart of the African jungle, where I went in order to
-watch the denizens of the forest when free from all restraint.</p>
-
-<p>Having for several years devoted much time to the study of the speech
-and the habits of monkeys in captivity, I formulated a plan of going to
-their native haunts to study them under more favorable conditions.</p>
-
-<p>In the course of my labors up to that time, I had found that monkeys of
-the highest physical types have also higher types of speech than those
-of the inferior kinds. In accordance with this fact, it was logical
-to infer that in the anthropoid apes&mdash;they being next to man in the
-scale of nature&mdash;would be found the faculty of speech developed in a
-higher degree than in the monkeys. The chief object of my study was
-to learn the language of animals. The great apes appeared to be the
-best subjects for that purpose, so I turned my attention to them. The
-gorilla was said to be the most nearly like man, and the chimpanzee<span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</span>
-next. There were none of the former in captivity, and but few of the
-latter; and those few were kept under conditions that forbade all
-efforts to do anything in the line of scientific study of their speech.
-As the gorilla and the chimpanzee could both be found in the same
-section of tropical Africa, that region was selected as the best field
-of operation; and, in order to carry out the task assumed, I prepared
-for a journey thither.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p0 p2"><span class="figcenter" id="img008">
- <img src="images/008.jpg" class="w75" alt="NATIVE VILLAGE AT GLASS GABOON (From a Photograph.)" />
-</span></p>
-<p class="center p0 caption">NATIVE VILLAGE AT GLASS GABOON <br />(From a Photograph.)</p>
-
-<p>The locality chosen was along the equator and about two degrees south
-of it. This region is infested with fevers, insects, serpents, and wild
-beasts of divers kinds. To ignore such dangers would be folly; but
-there was no way to see these apes in their freedom, except to go and
-live among them. To lessen in a degree the dangers incurred by such an
-adventure, I devised a cage of steel wire woven into a lattice with a
-mesh one inch and a half wide. This was made in twenty-four panels,
-each three feet and three inches square, set in frames of narrow iron
-strips. Each side of the panels was provided with lugs or half hinges,
-so arranged as to fit any side of any other panel. These could be
-quickly bolted together with small iron rods, and when so joined they
-formed a cage of cubical shape, six feet and six inches square.</p>
-
-<p>Any one or more of the panels could be used as a door. The whole
-structure was painted a dingy green, so that when erected in the forest
-it was almost invisible in the foliage.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p0 p2"><span class="figcenter" id="img009">
- <img src="images/009.jpg" class="w75" alt="A NATIVE CANOE (From a Photograph.)" />
-</span></p>
-<p class="center p0 caption">A NATIVE CANOE <br />(From a Photograph.)</p>
-
-<p>While this cage was not strong enough to withstand a prolonged attack,
-it afforded a certain degree of immunity from being surprised by
-the fierce and stealthy beasts of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</span> the jungle, and would allow its
-occupant time to kill an assailant before the wires would yield to an
-assault from anything except elephants. It was not, indeed, designed
-as a protection against them; but, as they rarely attack a man unless
-provoked to it, there was little danger from that source. Besides,
-there are not many of those huge brutes in the part where this strange
-domicile was set up.</p>
-
-<p>Through this open fabric one could see on all sides without
-obstruction, and yet feel a certain sense of safety from being devoured
-by leopards or panthers.</p>
-
-<p>Over this frail fortress was spread a roof of bamboo leaves. It was
-provided with curtains of canvas, to be hung up in case of rain. The
-floor was of thin boards, steeped in tar. The structure was elevated
-about two feet from the ground and supported by nine small posts or
-stakes, firmly driven into the earth. It was furnished with a bed made
-of heavy canvas. This was supported by two poles of bamboo attached to
-its edges. One of these poles was lashed fast to the side of the cage,
-and the other was suspended at night by strong wire hooks hung from
-the top of the cage. During the day the bed was rolled up on one of
-the poles, so as to be out of the way. I had a light camp chair, which
-folded up. A table was improvised from a broad, short board hung on
-wires. When not in use this was set up by the side of the cage. To this
-outfit a small kerosene stove and a swinging shelf were added. A few
-tin cases contained my wearing apparel, blankets, a pillow, a camera
-and photographic supplies, medicines, and an ample store of canned
-meats, crackers, etc. There were also some tin platters, cups, and
-spoons. A magazine rifle,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</span> a revolver, ammunition, and a few useful
-tools, such as hammer, saw, pliers, files, and a heavy bush-knife,
-completed my stock. The tin plates served for cooking vessels and also
-for table use, instead of dishes, which are heavier and more fragile.</p>
-
-<p class="center p0 p2"><span class="figcenter" id="img010">
- <img src="images/010.jpg" class="w75" alt="THE EDGE OF THE JUNGLE (From a Photograph.)" />
-</span></p>
-<p class="center p0 caption">THE EDGE OF THE JUNGLE<br />(From a Photograph.)</p>
-
-<p>With this equipment I sailed from New York on the 9th of July, 1892,
-<em>via</em> England, to the port of Gaboon, the site of the colonial
-government on the French Congo. This place is within a few miles of
-the equator, and near the borders of the country in which the gorilla
-lives. I arrived there on the 19th of October of that year, and after a
-delay of some weeks in that locality I set out to find the object of my
-search.</p>
-
-<p>Leaving that place, I went up the Ogowé River about two hundred or two
-hundred and fifty miles, and thence through the lake region on the
-south side of it. After some weeks of travel and inquiry, I arrived on
-the south side of Lake Ferran Vaz, in the territory of the Nkami tribe.
-The lake is about thirty miles long, by ten or twelve miles wide, and
-is interspersed with a few islands of various sizes, covered with a
-dense growth of tropical vegetation. The country about the lake is
-mostly low and marshy, traversed by creeks, lagoons, and rivers. Most
-of the land is covered by a deep and dreary jungle, intersected at
-intervals by small, sandy plains, covered with a thin growth of long,
-tough grass.</p>
-
-<p>It is difficult to convey in words an adequate idea of what the jungle
-really is. To those who have never seen one it is almost impossible
-to describe it. But in order that you may have some conception of the
-place in which<span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</span> I lived so long, I shall endeavor to picture some
-characteristic spots.</p>
-
-<p class="center p0 p2"><span class="figcenter" id="img011">
- <img src="images/011.jpg" class="w50" alt="IN THE JUNGLE (From a Photograph.)" />
-</span></p>
-<p class="center p0 caption">IN THE JUNGLE<br />(From a Photograph.)</p>
-
-<p>Spread over a vast extent of the low delta region near the coast is
-a growth of gigantic trees, from five to eight feet in diameter near
-the base and growing to a height of eighty or a hundred feet, having
-long, spreading boughs and broad, dark foliage. This growth of trees
-is sufficiently dense to constitute a great forest. The intertwining
-boughs and the dense leaves form an impenetrable canopy, spreading
-for miles in all directions. This is called the “great forest”.
-Between the stalks and under the boughs of this forest is another
-growth of trees varying in diameter from one to two feet at the base
-and reaching to a height of forty, fifty, or sixty feet. This growth
-alone would constitute another forest as dense as were those of North
-America before the visitation of the white man. This growth is called
-the “middle forest”. Under this is another growth, consisting of
-palms, vines, shrubs, and bushes of almost every kind. This growth
-is so dense, so matted and so intertwined as to be in places quite
-impassable by any living creature, except by slimy reptiles, small
-rodents, venomous insects, and creeping things of many kinds. This is
-called the “under forest.” The three combined growths together properly
-constitute <em>the jungle</em>. From the boughs of the taller trees hang
-long pendants of moss and vines, and from bough to bough hang graceful
-festoons of the same. These are frequently adorned with delicate ferns
-and great clusters of gorgeous orchids. So dense and luxuriant is the
-vegetation in many parts of the forest that no ray of sunlight ever
-penetrates it, and in its dark, damp grottoes,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</span> even at midday, it is
-almost like a twilight. Here and there are found places more open, and
-from these can be had better views of its grandeur. Standing alone in
-the midst of this great wilderness, one cannot fail to be impressed
-with its sublime and awful beauty. From certain points of view the
-banks of leaves rise like terraces, one above another, giving almost
-the appearance of artificial work. From other points are seen groups of
-flowering trees, rising in huge mounds almost to the top of the forest.
-So many and so beautiful are the views from various points that one
-becomes almost lost in a perfect maze of colors, lights, and shadows.
-At times not a sound of any living thing is heard, and the unspeakable
-silence only makes the scene the more impressive. While it is true that
-this great forest teems with life, there are times when it appears to
-be an endless, voiceless solitude. But, remaining for a time within its
-dreary shades, one will behold its many denizens creeping through the
-tangled meshes in quest of food.</p>
-
-<p>Within this vast empire of shadows the fierce wild beasts contend for
-mastery. Among its dark green bowers soar many birds of brilliant
-plumage, and through its silvan naves shriek the wild winds of the
-tornado. Within its deep shadows crouches the leopard awaiting his
-victim, and through its dismal labyrinth the stealthy serpent wends
-his tortuous way. Every breeze is laden with the effluvia of decaying
-plants, and every leaf exhales the odors of death.</p>
-
-<p>In the depths and the gloom of such a forest the gorilla dwells in
-safety and seclusion. In the same wilderness the chimpanzee makes his
-abode. But he is less timid and retiring.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</span></p>
-
-<p>On the south side of this lake, not quite two degrees below the
-equator, and within about twenty miles of the ocean, is the place at
-which I located, in the heart of the primeval forest. Here I erected my
-little fortress and gave it the name of Fort Gorilla. On the 27th of
-April, 1893, I took up my abode in this desolate spot, and began a long
-and solitary vigil.</p>
-
-<p>My sole companion was a young chimpanzee that I named Moses. From time
-to time I had a native boy as a servant. But I found it better to be
-alone and, therefore, when the boy had done his chores he was dismissed
-until such time as his services might be desired.</p>
-
-<p class="center p0 p2"><span class="figcenter" id="img012">
- <img src="images/012.jpg" class="w50" alt="WAITING AND WATCHING IN THE CAGE (From a Photograph.)" />
-</span></p>
-<p class="center p0 caption">WAITING AND WATCHING IN THE CAGE<br />(From a Photograph.)</p>
-
-
-<p>Seated in this cage in the silence of the great forest, I have seen the
-gorilla in all his majesty, strolling at leisure through his sultry
-domain. Under like conditions I have seen the chimpanzee, and the
-happy, chattering monkeys in the freedom of their jungle home.</p>
-
-<p>In this novel hermitage I remained most of the time for one hundred and
-twelve days and nights.</p>
-
-<p>During this period I had opportunities of watching the animals
-following, in perfect freedom, the pursuits of their daily life. With
-such an experience I trust that I shall not be charged with vanity in
-saying that I have seen more of those animals in a state of nature than
-any other white man ever saw, and under conditions more favorable for
-a careful study of their manners and habits than could otherwise be
-possible. Hence what I have to say concerning them is the result of an
-experience which no other man can justly claim.</p>
-
-<p>I do not mean to ignore or impugn what others have said<span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</span> on this
-subject; but the sum of my labors in this field leads me to doubt much
-that has been said and accepted as true. I regret that it devolves upon
-me to controvert many of the stories told about the great apes, but
-finding no germ of truth in some of them, I cannot evade the duty of
-denying them. I regret it all the more, because many of them have been
-woven into the fabric of natural history, have become integral parts of
-our literature, and received the seal of scientific approval; but time
-will justify and sustain me in the denial. I am aware that bigots of
-certain schools will challenge me for pointing out their mistakes; and
-some will assume to know more about these apes than fishes know about
-swimming; but the simple truth should have precedence over all theories.</p>
-
-<p>Before proceeding with an account of the apes I shall relate some of
-the incidents of my hermitage.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center heading p0">Daily Life and Scenes in the Jungle&mdash;How I Passed the Time&mdash;What I Had
-to Eat&mdash;How it was Prepared&mdash;How I Slept&mdash;My Chimpanzee Companion</p>
-
-
-
-<p>I am so frequently asked about the details of my daily life in the
-cage, how the time was occupied, and what I saw besides the apes, that
-I deem it of interest to relate a few of the events of my sojourn in
-that wild spot. I shall, therefore, recount the incidents of a single
-day and night; but from day to day of course this routine varied.</p>
-
-<p>About six o’clock, as the sun first peeps into the forest, it finds
-me with a tin cup of coffee just made on a little kerosene stove. It
-is black and dreggy, but with a little sugar it is not bad. With a
-few dry crackers I break my fast of twelve hours and am now ready for
-the task of the day. My bed having been rolled up out of the way and
-Moses helped to a banana or two, I take my rifle, Moses climbs upon
-my shoulder, and we set out for a walk in the bush. When we return we
-bring from the spring, some three hundred yards away, a supply of water
-for the day. Then Moses climbs about in the bushes and amuses himself,
-while I watch for gorillas. Silence is the order of the day. And here
-I sit alone,&mdash;sometimes for hours,&mdash;in a stillness almost as great as
-that of a tomb.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="center p0 p2"><span class="figcenter" id="img013">
- <img src="images/013.jpg" class="w50" alt="STARTING FOR A STROLL (From a Photograph.)" />
-</span></p>
-<p class="center p0 caption">STARTING FOR A STROLL<br />(From a Photograph.)</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</span></p>
-
-<p>Presently a rustle of the leaves is heard, and a porcupine comes
-waddling into view. He pokes his nose about in search of food, but
-he has not yet discovered my presence. He comes closer. The scent or
-sight of me startles him, and away he goes. Now a civet comes stealing
-through the bush, till he observes me and hastily departs.</p>
-
-<p>After an hour of patient waiting the sound of clashing boughs is
-heard. A few minutes later is seen a school of monkeys, led by a
-solemn-looking old pilot, who doubtless knows every palm tree that
-bears nuts within many miles around. They are now coming to inspect my
-cage and see what new thing this is set up in monkeydom.</p>
-
-<p class="center p0 p2"><span class="figcenter" id="img014">
- <img src="images/014.jpg" class="w75" alt="A Peep at My Cage" />
-</span></p>
-<p class="center p0 caption">A Peep at My Cage</p>
-
-
-<p>As they draw nearer they become more cautious. They<span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</span> find a strong
-bough in the top of a big tree, and the grave old pilot perches himself
-far out on it in order to get a good peep at my cage. Just behind him
-sits the next in rank, resting his hands on the shoulder of the leader,
-while a dozen more occupy similar attitudes behind each other along the
-limb. Each one pushes the one just in front of him to make him move up
-a little closer, but none of them except the pilot seems to want the
-front seat.</p>
-
-<p>They look on in silence, occasionally turning their little heads from
-side to side, as if to be certain it is not an illusion. Again they
-nudge each other, and move up a little closer, meanwhile squinting
-their bright eyes, as if in doubt about the strange sight before them.
-They have made such calls before, but have not yet fully determined
-what kind of an animal it is that occupies the cage. At each successive
-visit they come a little nearer, until they are now not a hundred
-feet away. Now they take alarm at something and hurry off in another
-direction.</p>
-
-<p>Next comes a pangolin, prowling about for insects among the leaves. He
-catches a glimpse of the cage, stands motionless for a moment to see
-what it is, and then like a flash he is gone. During this time birds
-of divers kinds are flying in all directions. Some of them perch on
-the limbs near by, some pick nuts from the palm trees, while others
-scream and screech like so many tin whistles or brass horns. The most
-conspicuous among them are the noisy toucans and parrots. Many of them
-have brilliant and beautiful plumage.</p>
-
-<p>It is now ten o’clock. Not a breath of air stirs a leaf of the great
-forest. The heat is sweltering and oppressive.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</span> The voices of the birds
-grow less and less frequent. Even the insects do not appear to be so
-busy as they were in the earlier hours of the day. Moses has abandoned
-his rambles in the bush, and sits on a fallen tree, with his arms
-folded, as if he had finished work for the day.</p>
-
-<p>Along towards this hour everything in the forest seems to become
-quiet and inactive, and continues so until about two o’clock in the
-afternoon. I was impressed upon more than one occasion with this
-universal rest during the hottest part of the day, and the same thing
-seems to prevail among aquatic animals.</p>
-
-<p>I now prepare my repast for midday by opening a can of meat or fish,
-and warming it on a tin plate on the little stove. I have no vegetables
-or dessert, but with a few crackers broken up and stirred into the
-grease, and plenty of water to drink, I make an ample meal. When it
-is finished, Moses coils up in his little hammock, swung by my side,
-and takes his siesta. The boy, when there, stretches out on the floor
-and does likewise. During the hours about noon, few things are astir,
-though during that time I have seen some interesting sights.</p>
-
-<p>It must not be supposed that the change is sudden at the beginning or
-at the end of this period, for such is not the case. There is no fixed
-time for anything to cease activity. It is by slow degrees that one
-thing after another becomes quiescent, until life appears to be for a
-time almost extinct; but as the sun descends the western sky, life and
-activity revive, and by three o’clock everything is again astir. Now, a
-lone gorilla comes stalking through the bush, looking for the red fruit
-of the <em>batuna</em>, a peculiar<span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</span> fruit that grows near the root of the
-plant. He plucks a bud of some kind, tears it apart with his fingers,
-smells it, and then throws it aside. Now he takes hold of a tall
-sapling, looks up at its shaking branches and turns away. He pauses
-and looks around as if suspicious of danger. He listens to see if
-anything is approaching, but being reassured he resumes his search for
-food. Now he gently parts the tangled vines that intercept his way and
-creeps noiselessly through them. He hesitates, looks carefully around
-him, and then again proceeds. He is coming this way. I see his black
-face as he turns his head from side to side, looking for food. What a
-brutal visage! It has a scowl upon it, as if he were at odds with all
-his race. He is now within a few yards of the cage, but is not aware of
-my presence. He plucks a tendril from a vine, smells it, and puts it
-into his mouth. He plucks another and another. I shall note that vine
-and ascertain what it is. Now he is in a small open space where the
-bush has been cut away so as to afford a better view. He seems to know
-that this is an unusual thing to find in the jungle. He surveys it with
-caution. He comes nearer. Now he has detected me. He sits down upon the
-ground and looks at me as if in utter surprise. A moment more he turns
-aside, looks over his shoulders, and hurries away into the dense jungle.</p>
-
-<p>It is now four o’clock. I hear a wild pig rooting among the fallen
-leaves. I see a small rodent that looks like a diminutive hedgehog. He
-is gnawing the bark from a dead limb, possibly to capture some insect
-secreted under it. But as rodents usually live upon vegetable diet, he
-may have some other reason for this.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</span></p>
-
-<p>It is five o’clock and the shadows in the forest are beginning to
-deepen. I see two little gray monkeys playing in the top of a very
-tall tree. The birds become monotonous and tiresome. Yonder is a small
-snake twined around the limb of a bushy tree. He is probably hunting
-for a nest of young birds. The low muttering sound of distant thunder
-is heard. Little by little it grows louder. It is the familiar voice of
-the coming tornado. I must prepare for it.</p>
-
-<p>The stove is now lighted and a shallow pan of water is set upon it.
-Into it is stirred an ounce of desiccated soup. It is heated to the
-boiling point, and is then set on the swinging table. A can of mutton
-is emptied into another pan of the same kind, and a few crackers are
-broken and stirred into the mutton. The soup is eaten while the meat
-is being warmed. This is now ready, and the flame of the stove is
-turned off. The second course of dinner is now served. It consists of
-canned mutton, crackers, and water. The dishes, consisting of three tin
-platters and a cup, are thrust into the adjacent bush. The ants and
-other insects will clean them during the night.</p>
-
-<p>Moses has now had his supper and has gone to his own little house, to
-find shelter from the approaching storm. The curtains are hung up on
-the side of the cage towards which the tornado is coming. The leaves
-of the forest begin to rustle. It is the first cool breath of the day,
-but it is the herald of the furious wind that is rapidly advancing.
-The tree-tops begin to sway. Now they are lashing each other as if in
-anger. The strong trees are bending from the wind. The lightning is so
-vivid that it is<span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</span> blinding. The thunder is terrific. One shaft after
-another, the burning bolts are hurled through the moaning forest.</p>
-
-<p>Down the frail wires of my cage the water runs in little rivulets.
-Acting as a prism, it refracts the vivid lightning and makes the
-whole fabric look like a latticework of molten fire trickling down
-from the overhanging boughs. Like invisible demons the shrieking
-winds rush through the bending forest, and the unceasing roar of the
-thunder reverberates from the dark recesses of the jungle. Amid the
-din of storming forces is heard the dull thud of falling trees, and
-the crackling limbs are dropping all around. All nature is in a rage.
-Every bird and every beast now seeks a place of refuge from the warring
-elements. No sign of life is visible. No sound is audible save the
-voice of the storm. How unspeakably desolate the jungle is at such
-an hour no fancy can depict. How utterly helpless against the wrath
-of nature a living creature is no one can realize, except by living
-through such an hour in such a place.</p>
-
-<p>On one occasion five large trees were blown down within a radius of a
-few hundred feet of my cage. Scores of limbs were broken off by the
-wind and scattered like straws. Some of them were six or eight inches
-in diameter and ten or twelve feet long. One of them broke the corner
-of the bamboo roof over my cage. The limb was broken off a huge cotton
-tree near by and fell from a height of about sixty feet. It was carried
-by the wind some yards out of a vertical line as it fell, and just
-passed far enough to spare my cage. Had it struck the body of it, the
-cage would have been partly demolished; the main stem of the bough
-was about six inches in diameter and ten feet long.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</span> This particular
-tornado lasted for nearly three hours and was the most violent of all I
-saw during the entire year.</p>
-
-<p>Now the storm subsides, but the darkness is impenetrable. I have no
-light of any kind, for that would alarm the inhabitants of the jungle
-and attract a vast army of insects from all quarters. Moses is fast
-asleep, while I sit listening to the many strange and weird sounds
-heard in the jungle at night. The bush crackles near by. A huge leopard
-is creeping through it. He is coming this way. Slowly, cautiously, he
-approaches. I cannot see him in the deep shadows of the foliage, but
-I can locate him by sound, and identify him by his peculiar tread.
-Perhaps when he gets near enough he will attack the cage. He is
-creeping up closer. He evidently smells prey and is bent on seizing it.
-My rifle stands by my elbow. I silently raise it and lay it across my
-lap. The brute is now crouching within a few yards of me, but I cannot
-see to shoot him. I hear him move again, as if adjusting himself to
-spring upon the cage. He surely cannot see it, but by means of scent he
-has located me. I hear a low rustling of the leaves as he swishes his
-tail preparatory to a leap. If I could only touch a button and turn on
-a bright electric light! He remains crouching near, while I sit with
-the muzzle of the rifle turned towards him. My hand is on the lock. It
-is a trying moment. If he should spring with such force as to break the
-frail network that is between us, there could be but one fate for me.</p>
-
-<p>In the brief space of a few seconds a thousand things run through
-one’s mind. They are not necessarily prompted by fear, but rather by
-suspense. Is it best to fire into the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</span> black shadows or to wait for the
-leopard’s attack? What is his exact pose? What does he intend? How big
-is he? Can he see me? A category of similar questions rises at this
-critical moment.</p>
-
-<p>A clash of bushes and he is gone; not with the stealthy, cautious steps
-with which he advanced, but in hot haste. He has taken alarm, abandoned
-his purpose, and far away can be heard the dry twigs crashing as he
-hurries to some remote nook. He flees as if he thought he was being
-pursued. He is gone, and I feel a sense of relief.</p>
-
-<p>It is ten o’clock. The low rumbling of distant thunder is all that
-remains of the tornado that swept over the forest a few hours ago. The
-stars are shining, but the foliage of the forest is so dense, that one
-can only see here and there a star peeping through the tangled boughs
-overhead. I hear some little waif among the dead leaves, but what it is
-or what it wants can only be surmised.</p>
-
-<p>Another hour has passed, and I retire for the night. The sounds of
-nocturnal birds are fewer now. I hear a strange, tremulous sound from
-the boughs of the bushes near the cage. The leaves are vibrating. The
-sound ceases and again begins at intervals. I listen with attention,
-for it is a singular sound. It is the movement of a huge python in
-search of birds. He reaches out his head, stretches his neck, grasps
-the bough of a slender bush, releases his coil from another, and by
-contraction draws his slimy body forward. The pliant bough yields to
-his heavy weight. The abrasion causes it to tremble and the leaves to
-quake.</p>
-
-<p class="center p0 p2"><span class="figcenter" id="img015">
- <img src="images/015.jpg" class="w50" alt="PREPARING FOR THE NIGHT (From a Photograph.)" />
-</span></p>
-<p class="center p0 caption">PREPARING FOR THE NIGHT<br />(From a Photograph.)</p>
-
-<p>I fall asleep and rest in comfort, while the dew that has fallen upon
-the leaves gathers itself into huge drops; their<span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</span> weight bends the
-leaves, and they fall from their lofty place, striking with a sharp,
-popping sound the big leaves far below them. The hours fly by; but in
-the stillness of early morning is heard a most unearthly scream. It is
-the voice of a king gorilla. He makes every leaf in the forest tremble
-with the sound of his piercing shrieks.</p>
-
-<p>Thus another night is erased from the calendar of time and another
-day begins. The dawn awakes to life the teeming forest, and all its
-denizens again go forth to join the universal chase for food.</p>
-
-<p>All of the incidents here cited are true in every detail, but they did
-not occur every day, nor did all of them occur on the same day, as
-might be inferred from the manner in which they are related. But this
-recital gives a fair idea of the daily routine in the bosom of the
-great forest, although this is a mere glimpse of the scenes of life in
-the jungle. By going out for a day or two at a time, hunting on the
-plains a few miles away, I often relieved the monotony. My menu was
-occasionally varied by a mess of parrot soup, a piece of goat, fish,
-or porcupine; but the general average of it was about as has been
-described.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center heading p0">The Chimpanzee&mdash;The Name&mdash;Two Species&mdash;The Kulu-Kamba
-Distribution&mdash;Color and Complexion</p>
-
-
-<p>Next to man the chimpanzee occupies the highest plane in the scale of
-nature. His mental and social traits, together with his physical type,
-assign him to this place.</p>
-
-<p>In his distribution he is confined to equatorial Africa. His habitat,
-roughly outlined, is from the fourth parallel north of the equator
-to the fifth parallel south of it, along the west coast, and extends
-eastward a little more than halfway across the continent. His range
-cannot be defined with precision, for its exact limits are not yet
-known. Its boundary on the north is defined by the Cameroon valley,
-slightly curving towards the north; but its extent eastward is a matter
-of some doubt. He does not appear to be found anywhere north of that
-river, and it is quite certain that the few specimens attributed to the
-north coast of the Gulf of Guinea do not belong to that territory. On
-the south the boundary of his habitat starts from the coast, at a point
-near the fifth parallel, curves slightly northward, crosses the Congo
-near Stanley Pool, pursues a northeasterly course to about the middle
-of the Congo State, and again curves southward across the Upper Congo,
-not far from the north end of Lake Tanganyika.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</span> Its limits appear to
-conform more to isothermal lines than to the rigid lines of geography.
-Specimens are sometimes secured by collectors beyond these limits, but,
-so far as I have been able to ascertain, they have been captured within
-the territory thus bounded. There are several centers of population.
-This ape is not strictly confined to any definite topography, but
-occupies alike the upland forests or the low basin lands.</p>
-
-<p>In one section he is known to the natives by one name, and in another
-by a name entirely different. The name <em>chimpanzee</em> is of native
-origin. In the Fiote tongue the name of the ape is <em>chimpan</em>,
-which is a slight corruption of the true name. It is properly a
-compound word. The first syllable is from the Fiote word <em>tyi</em>,
-which white men erroneously pronounce like “chee.” It means “small,”
-or inferior, and it is found in many of the native compounds. The last
-syllable is from <em>mpa</em>, a bushman; hence the word literally means,
-in the Fiote tongue, “a small bushman,” or inferior race. The name
-really implies the idea of a lower order of human being. Among other
-tribes a common name of the ape is <em>ntyigo</em>. The latter is derived
-from the Mpongwe word <em>ntyia</em>, blood, race, or breed, and the word
-<em>iga</em>, the forest. It literally means the “breed of the forest.”
-The same idea of its being a low type of humanity is involved in the
-two names. Both convey the oblique suggestion that the animal is more
-nearly allied to man than other animals are.</p>
-
-<p>There are two distinct types of this ape. They are now regarded as
-two species. One of them is distributed throughout the entire habitat
-described, while the other<span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</span> is only known south of the equator and
-between the second and fifth parallels north of the Congo and west
-of Stanley Pool. Both kinds are found within this district, but the
-variety which is confined to that region is called, by the tribes
-that know the ape, the <em>kulu-kamba</em>, in contradistinction from
-the other kind known as <em>ntyigo</em>. This name is derived from
-<em>kulu</em>, the onomatope of the sound made by the animal and the
-native verb, <em>kamba</em>, to speak; hence the name literally means
-“the thing that speaks kulu.”</p>
-
-<p>In certain respects the common variety differs from the
-<em>kulu-kamba</em> in a degree that would indicate that they belong
-to distinct species; but the skulls and the skeletons are so nearly
-alike that no one can identify them from the skeletons alone. In life,
-however, it is not difficult to distinguish them. The <em>ntyigo</em>
-has a longer face and more prominent nose than the <em>kulu</em>. His
-complexion is of all shades of brown, from a light tan to a dark,
-dingy, mummy color. He has a thin coat of short, black hair, which is
-often erroneously described as brown; but that effect is due to the
-blending of the color of his skin with that of his suit. In early life
-his hair is quite black, but in advanced age the ends are tipped with
-a dull white, giving them a dingy gray color. The change is due to
-the same causes that produce gray hairs on the human body. But there
-is one point in which they greatly differ. The entire hair of the
-human becomes white with age, while only the outer end of it does so
-in the chimpanzee. In the human one hair becomes white, while others
-retain their natural color; but in this ape all the hairs appear to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</span>
-undergo the same change. In very aged specimens the outer part of the
-hair often assumes a dirty, brownish color. This is due to the want of
-vascular action to supply the color pigment. The same effect is often
-seen in preserved specimens, for the same reason that the hair of an
-Egyptian mummy is brown, though in life it had been, doubtless, a jet
-black. In this ape the hair is uniformly black, except the small tuft
-of white at the base of the spinal column and a few white hairs on the
-lower lip and the chin. I have examined about sixty living specimens,
-and I have never found any other color among them, except from the
-cause mentioned. The normal color of both sexes is the same. The
-<em>kulu</em> has, as a rule, but little hair on the top of the head; but
-that on the back of it and on the neck is much longer than elsewhere on
-the body, and on these parts it is longer than that on other apes.</p>
-
-<p>Much stress is laid by some writers on the bald head of one ape and
-the parted hair on the head of another. These features cannot be
-relied upon as having any specific meaning, unless there are as many
-species as there are apes. Sometimes a specimen has no hair on the
-crown of the head, while another differs from it in this respect alone
-by having a suit of hair more or less dense; and yet in every other
-respect they are alike. Some of them have their hair growing almost
-down to the eyebrows, and all hairs appear to diverge from a common
-center, like the radii of a sphere; another of the same species may
-have the hair parted in the middle as neatly as if it had been combed;
-another may have it in wild disorder. The same<span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</span> thing is noticed in
-certain monkeys, and it is equally true of the human being. As a factor
-in classifying, it signifies nothing. It may be remarked that the
-<em>kulu</em> is inclined to have but little hair upon the crown of the
-head.</p>
-
-<p>Between the two species there is a close alliance. The males differ
-more than the females. This is especially true in the structure of
-certain organs. The face of the young <em>ntyigo</em> is free from hairs,
-but in the adult state there is in both sexes a tendency to the growth
-of a light down upon the cheeks. The color of the skin is not uniform
-in all parts of the body. This is especially true of the face. Some
-specimens have patches of dark color set in a lighter ground. Sometimes
-certain parts of the face are dark and other parts light. I have seen
-one specimen quite freckled. It is said by some that the skin is light
-in color when young, and becomes darker with age; but I find no reason
-to believe that such is the case. It is true that the skin darkens a
-few shades as the cuticle hardens, but there is no transition from one
-color to another, and this slight change of shade is chiefly on the
-exposed parts.</p>
-
-<p>The <em>kulu</em> has a short, round face, much like that of a human. In
-early life it is quite free from hairs, but, like the other, a slight
-down appears with age. He has on his body a heavy suit of black hair.
-It is coarser and longer than that of the <em>ntyigo</em>. It is also
-inclined to wave, thus having a fluffy aspect. The color is jet black,
-except a small tuft of white about the base of the spine. I have seen
-two in which this tuft was perfectly black. The skin varies in color
-less than in the <em>ntyigo</em>, and the darker shades are seldom found.
-The eyes are a shade darker,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</span> and in both species the parts of the eye
-which are white in man are brown in them. But this gradually shades
-off into a yellow near the base of the optic nerve. As a rule, the
-<em>kulu</em> has a clear, open visage, with a kindly expression. It is
-confiding and affectionate to a degree beyond any other animal. It is
-more intelligent than its <em xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">confrère</em>, and displays the faculty of
-reason almost like a human being.</p>
-
-<p>One important point in which these two types of ape differ is in the
-scope and quality of their voices. The <em>kulu</em> makes a greater
-range of vocal sounds. Some of them are soft and musical; but those
-uttered by the <em>ntyigo</em> are fewer in number and harsher in
-quality. One of these sounds resembles the bark of a dog, and another
-is a sharp, screaming sound. The <em>kulu</em> evinces a certain sense
-of gratitude, while the <em>ntyigo</em> appears to be almost devoid of
-that sentiment. There are many traits in which they differ, but human
-beings, even within the same family circle, also differ in these
-qualities. The points in which they coincide are many, and, after
-a brief review of them, we may consider the question of making two
-species of them or assigning them to the same.</p>
-
-<p>The skeletons&mdash;as we have noted&mdash;are the same in form, size, and
-proportion. Their muscular, nervous, and veinous systems are for the
-most part the same. The character of their food and the mode of eating
-are the same in each. In captivity they appear to regard each other as
-one of their own kind; but whether they inter-cross or not remains to
-be learned.</p>
-
-<p>Such is the sum of the likenesses and the differences between the two
-extreme types of this genus. With so<span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</span> many points in common, and so
-few in which they differ, it is a matter of serious doubt whether they
-can be said to constitute two distinct species or only two varieties
-of a common species. This doubt is further emphasized by the fact that
-all the way between these two extremes are gradations of intermediate
-types, so that it is next to impossible to say where one ends and
-another begins.</p>
-
-<p>In view of all these facts, I believe them to be two well-defined
-varieties of the same species. They are the white man and the negro of
-a common stock. They are the patrician and the plebeian of one race,
-or the nobility and the yeomanry of one tribe. They are like different
-phases of the same moon. The <em>kulu-kamba</em> is simply a high order
-of chimpanzee. It is quite true that two varieties of one species
-usually have the same vocal characteristics, and this appears to be the
-strongest point in favor of assigning them to separate species, but it
-is not impossible that even this may be waived. Leaving this question
-for others to decide as they find the evidence to sustain them, we
-shall for the present regard them as one kind, and consider their
-physical, social, and mental characteristics.</p>
-
-<p>Whether they are all of one species, or divided into many, the same
-habits, traits, and modes of life prevail throughout the entire group,
-so that one description will apply to all, so far as we have to deal
-with them as a whole. Elsewhere will be related certain incidents which
-apply to individuals of the two kinds mentioned; but in treating of
-them collectively the term <em>chimpanzee</em> is meant to include the
-whole group, except where it is otherwise specified.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center heading p0">Physical Qualities of the Chimpanzee&mdash;His Social Habits&mdash;Mental
-Characteristics</p>
-
-
-<p>Physically considered, the chimpanzee very closely resembles man, but
-there are certain points in which he differs both from man and from
-other apes. We may notice a few of these points. The model of the
-ear of the chimpanzee closely resembles that of man, but the organ
-is larger in size and thinner in proportion. It is very sensitive to
-sound, but dull to touch. The surface is not well provided with nerves.
-He cannot erect his ear, as most animals do, by the use of the muscles
-at the base; but, like the human ear, the muscles are useless, and in
-this respect the ear is fixed and helpless.</p>
-
-<p>The hand of the chimpanzee is long and narrow. The finger bones are
-larger, in proportion to their size, than those of the human hand. One
-thing peculiar to the hand of the chimpanzee is that the tendons inside
-of the hand (those called the flexors), which are designed to close the
-finders, are shorter than the line of the bones. On this account the
-fingers of the ape are always held in a curve. He cannot straighten
-them. This is probably due to the habit of climbing, in which he
-indulges to such a great extent. He also indulges in the practice of
-hanging suspended by the hands. In making his way through the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</span> bush
-he often swings himself by the arms from bough to bough. Sometimes he
-suspends himself by one arm, while he uses the other to pluck and eat
-fruit. This characteristic is transmitted to the young, and is found in
-the first stages of infancy. The thumb is not truly opposable, but is
-inclined to close towards the palm of the hand. It is of little use to
-him. His nails are thick, dark in color, and not quite so flat as those
-of man.</p>
-
-<p>The great toe, instead of being in line with the others, projects at
-an angle from the side of the foot, something after the manner of the
-human thumb. The foot itself is quite flexible and has great prehensile
-power. In climbing, and in many other ways, it is used as a hand. The
-tendons in the sole of the foot are equal in length to the line of the
-bones, and the digits of the foot can be straightened; but from the
-habitual use of them in climbing, the ape is predisposed to close the
-digits, wherefore the foot is naturally inclined to curve into an arch,
-especially in the line of the first and second digits.</p>
-
-<p>His habit of walking is peculiar. The greater part of the weight is
-borne upon the legs. The sole of the foot is placed almost flat on the
-ground, but the pressure is greatest along the outer edge, in the line
-of the last digit. This is easily noticed where he walks over plastic
-ground. In the act of walking he always uses the hands, but he does
-not place the palms on the ground. He uses the backs of the fingers
-instead. Sometimes only the first joints or phalanges, resting upon the
-nails, are placed on the ground. At other times the first and second
-joints are used. I have seen one specimen that, when walking, employed
-the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</span> backs of all his fingers, from the knuckles to the nails. The
-integument on these parts is not callous, like that of the palm. The
-color pigment is distributed the same as on other exposed parts of the
-body. These facts show that the weight of the body is not borne on the
-fore limbs, as it is in the case of a true quadruped, but indicate that
-the hand is only used to balance the body while in the act of walking
-and to shift the weight from foot to foot. The weight is, therefore,
-not equally distributed between the hands and the feet, and the animal
-cannot truly be said to be a quadruped in habit.</p>
-
-<p>His waddling gait is caused by his short legs, stooping habit, and
-heavy body. All animals having stout bodies and short legs are
-predisposed to a waddling motion, which is due to the wide angle
-between the weight and the changing center of gravity. This motion
-is more conspicuous in bipeds than in quadrupeds, because the base
-supporting the weight is reduced to a single point.</p>
-
-<p>The chimpanzee is neither a true quadruped nor a true biped, but
-combines the habits of both. It appears to be a transition state from
-the former to the latter. Vestiges of this mixed habit are still to be
-found in man. In the act of walking his arms alternate in motion with
-his legs. This suggests the idea that he may have had, at some time, a
-similar habit of locomotion. Such a fact does not necessarily show that
-he was ever an ape, but it does point to the belief that he has once
-occupied a horizon in nature like that now occupied by the ape, and
-that having emerged from it, he still retains traces of the habit. This
-peculiarity is still more easily observed in children than in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</span> adults.
-In early infancy all children are inclined to be bow-legged. In their
-first efforts at walking they invariably press most of their weight on
-the outer edge of the foot and curve the toes inward, as if to grasp
-the surface on which the foot is placed. The instinct of prehension
-cannot be mistaken. It differs in degree in different races, and is
-vastly more pronounced in negro infants than in white ones.</p>
-
-<p>There is another peculiar feature in the walk of the chimpanzee. The
-arms and legs do not alternate in motion with the same degree of
-regularity that they do in man or quadrupeds. This ape uses his arms
-more like crutches. They are moved forward, not quite, but almost at
-the same instant, and the motion of the legs is not at equal intervals.
-To be more explicit: the hands are placed almost opposite each other;
-the right foot is advanced about three times its length; the left
-foot is then placed about one length in front of the right; the arms
-are again moved; the right foot is again advanced about three lengths
-forward of the left; and the left again brought about one length in
-front of that. The same animal does not always use the same foot to
-make the long stride. It will be seen by this that each foot moves
-through the same space, and that, in a line, the tracks of either foot
-are the same distance apart; but the distance from the track of the
-right foot to that of the left is about three times as great as the
-distance from the track of the left foot to that of the right. Or the
-reverse may be the case. The distance from the track of either foot to
-the succeeding track of the other is never the same between the right
-and left tracks, except where the animal is walking at great leisure.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</span></p>
-
-<p>There is, perhaps, no animal more awkward than the chimpanzee, when he
-attempts to run. He sometimes swings his body with such force between
-his arms as to lose his balance and fall backward on the ground.
-Sometimes when he rights himself again, he is half his length backward
-of his starting point.</p>
-
-<p>The chimpanzee is doubtless a better climber than the gorilla. He finds
-much of his food in trees; but he is not, in the proper sense of the
-term, arboreal. To be arboreal, the animal must be able to sleep in a
-tree or on a perch. The chimpanzee cannot do so. He sleeps the same as
-a human being does. He lies down on his back or side, and frequently
-uses his arms for a pillow. I do not believe it possible for him to
-sleep on a perch. He may sometimes doze in that way, but the grasp of
-his foot is only brought into use when he is conscious. I have often
-known Moses to climb down from the trees and lie upon the ground to
-take a nap. I never saw him so much as doze in any other position.</p>
-
-<p>I may here call attention to one fact concerning the arboreal habit.
-There appears to be a rule to which this habit conforms. Among apes
-and monkeys the habit is in keeping with the size of the animal. The
-largest monkeys are found only among the lowest trees, and the small
-monkeys among the taller trees. It is a rare thing to see a large
-monkey in the top of a tall tree. He may venture there for food or
-to make his escape, but it is not his proper element. The same rule
-appears to hold good among the apes. The gibbon has the arboreal
-habit in a more pronounced degree than any other true ape. The<span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</span> orang
-appears to be next; the chimpanzee comes in for third place, and the
-gorilla last. It must not be understood that all of these apes do not
-frequently climb, even to the tops of the highest trees; but that is
-not their normal mode of life, any more than the top of a mast is the
-habitual place for a sailor on a ship.</p>
-
-<p>The chimpanzee is nomadic in habit, and, like the gorilla, seldom or
-never passes two nights in the same spot. As to his building huts or
-nests in trees or elsewhere, I am not prepared to believe that he ever
-does that. For months I hunted in vain and made diligent inquiry in
-several tribes, but failed to find a specimen of any kind of shelter
-built by an ape. I do not assert that it is absolutely untrue that he
-does this, but I have never been able to obtain any evidence of it,
-except the statement of the natives. On the contrary, certain facts
-point to the opposite belief. If the ape built himself a permanent
-home, the natives would soon discover it and there would be no
-difficulty in having it pointed out. If he built a new one every night,
-however rude and primitive it might be, there would be so many of them
-in the forest that there would be no difficulty in finding them. The
-nomadic habit plainly shows that he does not build the former kind, and
-the utter absence of them shows that he does not build the latter kind.
-The whole story appears to be without foundation.</p>
-
-<p>In addition to these facts, one thing to be noticed is that few or none
-of the mammals of the tropics ever build any kind of home. The animals
-that in other climates have the habit of burrowing do not appear to
-do so in the tropics, This is due, no doubt, to the warm climate, in
-which<span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</span> they are not in need of shelter. Of course birds and other
-oviparous animals build nests, as they do elsewhere. The period of
-incubation makes this necessary.</p>
-
-<p>The longevity of these apes is largely a matter of conjecture, but
-from a cursory study of their dentition and other facts of their
-development, it appears that the male reaches the adult stage at an
-age ranging from eight to ten years, while the female matures between
-six and eight. These appear to be the periods at which they pass from
-the state of adolescence. Some of them live to be perhaps forty years
-of age, or upwards, but the average life is probably not more than
-twenty-one to twenty-three years. The average of life is, doubtless,
-more uniform with them than with man. These figures are not mere
-guesswork, but are deduced from reliable data.</p>
-
-<p>The period of gestation in both these apes is a matter that cannot be
-stated with certainty. Some of the natives say that it is nine months,
-while others believe that it is seven months or less. There are some
-facts to support each of these claims, but nothing is quite conclusive.
-The sum of the evidence that I could find rather points to a term of
-four and a half months, or thereabouts, as the true period. During
-the months of January and February the male gorillas are vociferous
-in their screaming, the young adults separate from the families, and
-other things indicate that this is the season of pairing and breeding.
-They may not be strictly confined to this period, but the inference
-that they are so is well founded. It is quite certain that the season
-of bearing the young is from the beginning of May to the end of June.
-It is about this time that the dry<span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</span> season begins, and it continues
-for four months. It would appear that nature has selected this period
-of the year because it is more favorable for rearing the young. During
-this season food is more abundant and can be secured with less effort.
-The lowlands are drier, and this enables the mother to retire with her
-young to the dense jungle, where she is less exposed to danger than
-she would be in the more open forest. It is uncertain whether or not
-the periods are the same with both apes. Native reports differ on this
-point. But it is probable that they are the same. The average of this
-season is about four and a half moons, or eighteen weeks.</p>
-
-<p>From a social point of view the chimpanzee appears to be of a little
-higher caste than other apes. In his marital ideas he is polygamous,
-but is in a certain degree loyal to his family. The paternal instinct
-is a trifle more refined in him than in other simians. He seems to
-appreciate better the relationship of parent and child and to retain
-it longer than others do. Most male animals become estranged from
-their young and discard them at a very early age. The chimpanzee keeps
-his children with him until they are old enough to go away and rear
-families of their own.</p>
-
-<p>The family of the chimpanzee frequently consists of three or four wives
-and ten or twelve children, with one adult male. There are known cases
-in which two or three adult males have been seen in the same family,
-but each one having his own wives and children. In such an event there
-seems to be one who is supreme. This fact suggests the idea that
-among them a form of patriarchal<span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</span> government prevails. The wives and
-children do not apparently question the authority of the patriarch or
-rebel against it. The male parent often plays with his children and is
-seemingly very fond of them.</p>
-
-<p>There is one universal error that I desire here to correct. It is the
-common idea that animals are so strongly possessed of the paternal
-instinct that they nobly sacrifice their own lives in defense of their
-young. I do not wish to dispel any belief that tends to dignify or
-ennoble animals, for I am their friend and champion. But truth demands
-that this statement be qualified. It is quite true that many have
-lost their lives in such acts of defense, but it was not a voluntary
-sacrifice. It is not alone in the defense of their young, but in many
-cases it is an act of self-defense. In other instances it is from a
-lack of judgment. These apes have often been frightened away from
-their young and the latter captured while the parents were fleeing
-from the scene. This may have been the result of sagacity rather than
-of depravity; but the parental instinct in both sexes and in many
-instances has failed to restrain them from flight. If it be a foe
-that appears to come within the measure of their own power, they will
-defend their young, and this sometimes results in the loss of their own
-lives; but if it be one of such formidable aspect as to appear quite
-invincible, the parents leave the young to their fate. This is true of
-all animals, including mankind.</p>
-
-<p>I have no desire to detract from the heroic quality of this instinct
-or to dim the glory it sheds upon the noble deeds ascribed to it, but
-the fact that a parent incurs the risk of its own life in the defense
-of its young is not a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</span> true test of the strength or quality of this
-instinct. It is only in the few isolated cases of a voluntary sacrifice
-of the parent, foreknowing the result, that it can be said the act was
-due to instinct. In most such cases the parent acts under a belief
-in its own ability to rescue the one in danger, the parent not being
-wholly aware of its own peril. I doubt if any animal except man ever
-deliberately offered its own life as a ransom for that of another. Such
-instances in human history are so rare as to immortalize the actor.</p>
-
-<p>To whatever extent the instinct may be found, it is much stronger in
-the female than in the male, and it appears to be stronger in domestic
-animals than in wild ones. To what extent this is due to their contact
-with man, it is difficult to say. The germ may be inherent, but it
-responds to culture.</p>
-
-<p>The fact that the ape deserts its offspring under certain conditions
-may be taken as an evidence of superior intelligence affording it a
-higher appreciation of life and danger, rather than a low, brutish
-impulse. It is the exercise of superior judgment that causes man to act
-with more prudence than other animals. It does not detract from his
-nobleness.</p>
-
-<p>Within the family circle of the chimpanzee the father is supreme;
-but he does not degrade his royalty by being a tyrant. Each member
-of the family seems to have certain rights that are not impugned by
-others. Possession is the right of ownership. When one ape procures
-a certain article of food, the others do not try to dispossess him.
-It is probably from this source that man inherits the idea of private
-ownership. It is the same principle, amplified,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</span> by which nations claim
-the right of territory. Nations often violate this right, and so do
-chimpanzees, when not held in check by something more potent than a
-mere abstract sense of justice. With all due respect, I do not think
-the ape so much abuses the right by urging his claim beyond his real
-needs as nations sometimes do.</p>
-
-<p>When a member of a family of apes is ill, the others are quite
-conscious of the fact and evince a certain amount of solicitude. Their
-conduct indicates that they have, in a small degree, the passion of
-sympathy, but the emotion is feeble and wavering. So far as I know,
-they do not essay any treatment, except to soothe and comfort the
-sufferer. They surely have some definite idea of what death is, and
-I have sometimes had reason to believe that they have a name for it.
-They do not readily abandon their sick, but when one of them is unable
-to travel with the band the others rove about for days, keeping within
-call of it; but they do not minister to its wants. It is said that if
-one of them is wounded the others will rescue it if possible and convey
-it to a place of safety. I cannot vouch for this, as such an incident
-has never come within my own experience.</p>
-
-<p>One of the most remarkable of all the social habits of the chimpanzee
-is the <em>kanjo</em>, as it is called in the native tongue. The word
-does not mean “dance” in the sense of saltatory gyrations, but it
-implies more the idea of “carnival.” It is believed that more than one
-family take part in these festivities. Here and there in the jungle
-is found a small spot of sonorous earth. It is irregular in shape
-and about two feet across. The surface is of clay and is artificial.
-The clay is superimposed upon a kind of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</span> peat bed, which, being
-porous, acts as a resonance cavity and intensifies the sound. This
-constitutes a kind of drum. It yields rather a dead sound, but this is
-of considerable volume.</p>
-
-<p class="center p0 p2"><span class="figcenter" id="img016">
- <img src="images/016.jpg" class="w75" alt="KANJO NTYIGO-CHIMPANZEE DANCE" />
-</span></p>
-<p class="center p0 caption">KANJO NTYIGO-CHIMPANZEE DANCE</p>
-
-<p>This queer drum is thus made by the chimpanzees. They secure the clay
-along the banks of some stream in the vicinity. They carry it by hand,
-deposit it while in a plastic state, spread it over the place selected,
-and let it dry. I have placed in the museum of Buffalo, <abbr title="New York">N. Y.</abbr>, a part
-of one of these drums that I brought home with me from the Nkami
-forest. It shows the finger-prints of the apes. They were impressed in
-it while the mud was yet soft.</p>
-
-<p>After the drum is quite dry, the chimpanzees assemble by night in great
-numbers and the carnival begins. One or two of them beat violently on
-this dry clay, while others jump up and down in a wild and grotesque
-manner. Some of them utter long, rolling sounds, as if trying to sing.
-When one tires of beating the drum, another relieves him, and in this
-fashion the festivities continue for hours. I know of nothing like this
-in the social system of any other animal, but what it signifies or what
-its origin was is quite beyond my knowledge. They do not indulge in
-this <em>kanjo</em> in all parts of their domain, nor does it occur at
-regular intervals.</p>
-
-<p>The chimpanzee is averse to solitude. He is fond of the society of man
-and is, therefore, easily domesticated. If allowed to go at liberty,
-he is well disposed, and is strongly attached to man. If confined, he
-becomes vicious and ill-tempered. All animals, including man, have the
-same<span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</span> tendency. Mentally the chimpanzee occupies a high plane within
-his own sphere of life, but within those limits the faculties of the
-mind are not called into frequent exercise and, therefore, they are not
-so active as they are in man.</p>
-
-<p>It is difficult to compare the mental status of the ape to that of
-man, because there is no common basis upon which the two rest. Their
-modes of life are so unlike as to afford no common unit of measure.
-Their faculties are developed along different lines. The two have but
-few problems in common to solve. While the scope of the human mind
-is vastly wider than that of the ape, it does not follow that it can
-act in all things with more precision. There are, perhaps, instances
-in which the mind of the ape excels that of man by reason of its
-adaptation to certain conditions. It is not a safe and infallible guide
-to measure all things by the standard of man’s opinion of himself.
-It is quite true that, by such a unit of measure, the comparison is
-much in favor of man; but the conclusion is neither just nor adequate.
-It is a problem of great interest, however, to compare them in this
-manner, and the result indicates that a fair specimen of adult ape
-is in about the same mental horizon as a child of one year old. But
-if the operation were reversed and man were placed under the natural
-conditions of the ape, the comparison would prove much less in favor of
-man. There is no common mental unit between them.</p>
-
-<p>On problems that concern his own comfort or safety the chimpanzee
-exercises the faculty of reason with a fair degree of precision. He
-is quick to interpret motives or to discern intents, and he is a rare
-judge of character. He<span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</span> is inquisitive, but not so imitative as monkeys
-are. He is more observant of the relations of cause and effect. In his
-actions he is controlled by more definite motives. He is docile and
-quickly learns anything that lies within the range of his own mental
-plane.</p>
-
-<p>The opinion has long prevailed that these apes subsist upon a vegetable
-diet. That is a mistake. In this respect their habits are much the same
-as those of man, except that the latter has learned to cook, but the
-former eats his food raw. Their natural tastes are greatly diversified,
-and they are not all equally fond of the same articles of food. Most
-of them are partial to the wild mango, which grows in abundance in
-certain localities in the forest. This is often available when other
-kinds of food are scarce. It thus becomes, as it were, a staple article
-of food. There are many kinds of nuts to be found in their domain, but
-the nut of the oil palm is a great favorite. They sometimes eat the
-kola nut, but they are not partial to it. Several kinds of small fruits
-and berries also form part of their diet. They eat the stalks of some
-plants, the tender buds of others, and the tendrils of certain vines.
-The names of these vines I do not know.</p>
-
-<p>Most of the fruits and plants that are relished by them are either
-acidulous or bitter in taste. They are not especially fond of sweet
-fruits. They prefer those having the flavors mentioned. They eat
-bananas, pineapples, or other sweet fruits, but rarely do so from
-choice. Most of them appear to prefer a lime to an orange, a plantain
-to a banana, a kola nut to a sweet mango. In captivity they acquire a
-taste for sweet foods of all kinds.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</span></p>
-
-<p>In addition to these articles they devour birds, lizards, and small
-rodents. They rob birds of their eggs and their young. They make havoc
-of many kinds of large insects. Those that I have owned were fond of
-cooked meats and salt fish, either raw or cooked.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XII">CHAPTER XII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center heading p0">The Speech of Chimpanzees&mdash;A New System of Phonetic Symbols&mdash;Some
-Common Words&mdash;Gestures</p>
-
-
-<p>The speech of chimpanzees (as of other simians) is limited to a few
-sounds, and these chiefly relate to their natural wants. The entire
-vocabulary of their language embraces perhaps not more than twenty-five
-or thirty words. Many of them are vague or ambiguous, but they express
-the concept of the ape with as much precision as it is defined to his
-mind, and quite distinctly enough for his purpose.</p>
-
-<p>During my researches I have learned ten words of the speech of this
-ape, so that I can understand them and make myself understood by them.
-In tone, pitch, and modulation most of the sounds are within the
-compass of the human voice. Two of them are much greater in volume than
-it is possible for the human lungs to reach, and one of them rises to
-a pitch more than an octave higher than a human voice of middle pitch.
-These two sounds are audible at a great distance, but they do not
-properly fall within the limits of speech.</p>
-
-<p>The vocal organs of the chimpanzee resemble those of man as closely
-as other physical features have been shown to resemble. They differ
-slightly in one respect that is worthy of notice. Just above the
-opening called<span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</span> the glottis (which is the opening between the vocal
-cords) are two small sacs or ventricles. In the ape these are larger
-and more flexible than in man. In the act of speaking they are inflated
-by the air passing out of the lungs into the long tube called the
-larynx. The function of these ventricles is to control and modify the
-sound by increasing or decreasing the pressure of the air that is
-jetted through the tube. They serve at the same time as a reservoir and
-as a gauge.</p>
-
-<p>In the louder sounds uttered by the chimpanzee these ventricles greatly
-distend. This intensifies the voice or increases its volume. It is
-partly due to these little sacs that the ape is able to make such a
-loud and piercing scream. But the pitch and volume of his voice cannot
-be alone due to this cause, for the gorilla (in which these ventricles
-are much smaller) can make a vastly louder sound. We may be mistaken,
-however, about the sound commonly ascribed to him.</p>
-
-<p>Although the sounds made by the chimpanzee can be imitated by the
-human voice, they cannot be expressed or represented by any system of
-phonetic symbols in use among men. Alphabets have been deduced from
-pictographs, and the conventional symbol that is used to represent a
-given sound has no reference to the organs of speech that produced it.
-The few rigid lines that have survived and that now form the alphabets
-are within themselves meaningless, but they have been so long used to
-represent the elementary sounds of speech that it would be difficult to
-supplant them with others.</p>
-
-<p>As no literal formula can be made to represent the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</span> phonetic elements
-of the speech of chimpanzees, I have taken a new step in the art of
-writing. I suggest a system of symbols which is rational in method and
-simple in device.</p>
-
-<p>The organs of speech always act in harmony. A certain movement of the
-lips is always attended by a certain movement of the internal organs of
-speech. This is true of the ape as well as of man. In order to utter
-the same sounds, each would employ the same organs and use them in the
-same manner.</p>
-
-<p>By this means deaf-mutes are able to distinguish the sounds of speech
-and to reproduce them, although they do not hear them. By close study
-and long practice they learn to distinguish the most delicate shades of
-sound.</p>
-
-<p>In this plain fact lies the clue to the method I offer for
-consideration. As yet it is only in the infant stage, but it is
-possible to be made, with a very few symbols, to represent the whole
-range of vocal sounds made by man or other animals.</p>
-
-<p>The chief symbols I employ are the parentheses used in common print.
-The two curved lines placed with the convex sides opposite, thus, (),
-represent the open glottis, in which position the voice utters the
-broad sound of “A,” as in “father.” The glottis about half closed
-utters the sound of “O.” To represent this sound a period is inserted
-between the two curved lines, thus, (.). When the aperture is still
-more contracted it produces the sound of “U,” like “[=oo]” in “woo.”
-To represent this sound a colon is placed between the lines, thus,
-(:). When the aperture is restricted to a still smaller compass the
-sound of “U”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</span> short is uttered, as in “but.” To represent this sound an
-apostrophe is placed between the lines, thus, (.). When the vocal cords
-are brought to a greater tension, and the aperture is almost closed,
-it utters the short sound of “E,” as in “met.” To represent this sound
-a hyphen is inserted between the lines, thus, (-). These are the
-main vowel sounds of all animals, although in man they are sometimes
-modified, and to them is added the sound of “E” long, while in the ape
-the long sounds of “O” and “E” are rarely heard.</p>
-
-<p>From this vowel basis all other sounds may be developed, and by the use
-of diacritics to indicate the movements of the organs of speech the
-consonant elements are indicated.</p>
-
-<p>A single parenthesis, with the concave side to the left, will represent
-the initial sound of “W,” which sometimes occurs in the sounds of
-animals. When used, it is placed on the left side of the leading
-symbol, thus,)(), and this symbol, as it stands, is pronounced nearly
-like “O-A,” the “O” being suppressed until almost inaudible. Turning
-the concave side to the right, and placing it on the right side of
-the symbol, thus, ()(, it represents the vanishing sound of “W.”
-This symbol reads “A-O,” with the latter vocal suppressed into the
-terminal sound of “O.” The apostrophe placed before or after the symbol
-will represent “F” or “V.” The grave accent, thus, è, represents the
-breathing sound of “H,” whether placed before or after the symbol, and
-the acute accent, thus, é, represents the aspirate sound of that letter.</p>
-
-<p>When the symbol is written with a numeral exponent, it indicates the
-degree of pitch. If there is no figure, the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</span> sound is such as would be
-made by the human voice in ordinary speech. The letter “X” indicates a
-repetition of the sound, and the numeral placed after it will show the
-number of times repeated, instead of the pitch. For example, we will
-write the sound (.), which is equivalent to long “O,” made in a normal
-tone; the same symbol written thus (.)<sup>2</sup> indicates that the sound is
-made with greater energy, and about five semitones higher. To write
-it thus, (.)<sup>2</sup>X, indicates that the sound is five semitones above the
-normal pitch of the human voice and is once repeated.</p>
-
-<p>I shall not subject the reader to the tedium of elaborate details of
-the system here outlined. This brief <em xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">exposé</em> of the method of
-representing the sounds of animals is sufficient to convey an idea of
-the means by which it is possible to write the sounds of all animals,
-so that the student of phonetics will recognize at once the character
-of the sound, even if he cannot reproduce it by natural means.</p>
-
-<p>It may be of interest to describe the character and use of some of
-the sounds uttered by the chimpanzee. The most frequent sound made by
-animals is that referring to food, and therefore it may claim the first
-attention. This word in the language of the chimpanzee begins with the
-short sound of the vowel “U,” which blends into a strong breathing
-sound of “H.” The lips are compressed at the sides, and the aperture of
-the mouth is nearly round. It is not difficult to imitate, and the ape
-readily understands it even when poorly made. By the method of writing
-above described it is expressed thus, (<sup>I</sup>)`.</p>
-
-<p>A sound that is of frequent use among them is that used for calling.
-The vowel element is “[=U]” long, slightly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</span> sharpened. It merges into
-a distinct vanishing “W.” Expressed in symbols, it is (:)(. The food
-sound is often repeated two or three times in succession, but the call
-is rarely repeated, except at long intervals.</p>
-
-<p>One sound which is rather soft and musical is an expression of
-friendship or amity. It appears to soften in tone and lengthen in
-duration in a degree commensurate with the intensity of the sentiment.
-The vowel element is a long “U.” It blends into an aspirated “H.” It is
-fairly represented by the symbol (:)´.</p>
-
-<p>The most complex sound that I have so far heard made by them is the one
-elsewhere described as meaning “good.” They often use it in very much
-the same sense as man uses the expression “thanks,” or “thank you.” It
-is not probable that they use it as a polite term, yet the same idea is
-present.</p>
-
-<p>One of the words of warning or alarm contains a vowel element closely
-resembling the short sound of “E.” It terminates with the breathing
-sound of “H.” It is used to announce the approach of anything that the
-animal is familiar with, and not afraid of. If the warning is intended
-to apprise you of the approach of an enemy, or something strange, the
-same vowel element is used, but terminates with the aspirate sound
-of “H” pronounced with energy and distinctness. The vowel element is
-the same in both words, but they differ in the time required to utter
-them, and the final breathing and aspirate effects. There is also a
-difference in the manner of the speaker in the act of delivering the
-word. It plainly indicates that he knows the use and value of the
-sounds. At the approach of danger<span class="pagenum" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</span> the latter word is often given
-almost in a whisper, and at long intervals apart, increasing in
-loudness as the danger approaches. The other word is usually spoken
-distinctly, and frequently repeated. It is worthy of note that the
-natives use a similar word in the same manner and for the same purpose.</p>
-
-<p>There are other sounds which are easily identified but difficult to
-describe, such as that used to signify “cold” or “discomfort”; another
-for “drink” or “thirst,” another referring to “illness,” and still
-another which I have reason to believe means “dead” or “death.” There
-are perhaps a dozen more words that can readily be distinguished, but
-as yet I have not been able to determine their exact meanings. I have
-an opinion concerning some of them, but have not yet reached a final
-conclusion about them.</p>
-
-<p>The chimpanzee makes use of a few signs which may be regarded as
-auxiliary factors of expression. He makes a negative sign by moving
-the head from side to side in the same manner as man does, but the
-gesture is not frequent or pronounced. Another negative sign, which is
-more common, is a wave-like motion of the hand from the body towards
-the person or thing addressed. This sign is sometimes made with great
-emphasis. There is no question as to its meaning. The manner of making
-this sign is not uniform. Sometimes it is done by an urgent motion of
-the hand. Bringing it from his opposite side, with the back forward, it
-is thrust towards the person or thing approaching. The interpretation
-is, that the ape objects to the approach. The same sign is often made
-as a refusal of anything offered him. Another way of making this sign<span class="pagenum" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</span>
-is with the arm extended forward, the hand hanging down, and the back
-towards the person approaching or the thing refused. In addition to
-these negative signs there is one which may be regarded as affirmative.
-It is made simply by extending one arm towards the person or thing
-desired. It sometimes serves the purpose of beckoning. In this act
-there is no motion of the hand. These signs appear to be innate, and
-are very similar in character to those used by men to signify the same
-idea.</p>
-
-<p>It must not be inferred from this small list of words and signs that
-there is nothing left to learn. So far only the first step, as it
-were, has been taken in the study of the speech of apes. As we grow
-more familiar with their sounds, the difficulty of understanding them
-becomes correspondingly less. I have not been disappointed in what I
-hoped to learn from these animals. The total number of words that I
-have been able to distinguish up to this time is about one hundred.
-Of these I have interpreted about thirty. Of late I have given no
-attention to the small monkeys. I shall resume the study of them at
-some future day, as it forms an essential part of the task which I have
-assumed. The fact that animals are able to interpret human speech is
-of itself proof that they possess the speech instinct. But a careful
-study of their habits reveals the further proof that they possess
-and exercise the faculty of speech. In addition to these facts they
-sometimes acquire new speech sounds. This is progress. If an ape can
-take one step in the development of speech, why may he not take two?
-One instance which is cited in the chapter treating of Moses, my ape
-companion, I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</span> regard as the climax of all my efforts in the study or
-training of apes, and that is the fact that I succeeded in teaching him
-one word of human speech. This alone is sufficient to demonstrate that
-the animal has within him the resources of speech.</p>
-
-<p>In conclusion I again assert that the sounds uttered by these apes
-have the characteristics of human speech. The speaker is conscious of
-the meaning of the sound used. The pitch and volume of the voice are
-regulated to suit the condition under which it is used. The ape knows
-the value of sound as a medium of conveying thought. These and many
-other facts show that their sounds are truly speech.</p>
-
-<p>To compare the mental faculties of the wild ape to the domesticated dog
-is not a fair standard by which to measure their respective abilities.
-The dog has acquired much by his long and intimate association with
-man. If the ape were placed under domestication, and kept there as long
-as the dog has been, he would be as far superior to the dog in point of
-sagacity as he is by nature above the wild progenitors of the canine
-race.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIII">CHAPTER XIII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center heading p0">Moses&mdash;His Capture&mdash;His Character&mdash;His Affections&mdash;His Food&mdash;His Daily
-Life&mdash;Anecdotes of Him</p>
-
-
-<p>During my sojourn in the forest I had a fine young chimpanzee, which
-was of ordinary intelligence, and he was of more than ordinary
-interest, because of his history. I gave him the name Moses,&mdash;not in
-derision of the historic Israelite of that name, but owing to the
-circumstances of his capture and his life. He was found all alone in
-a wild papyrus swamp of the Ogowé River. No one knew who his parents
-were. The low bush in which he was crouched when discovered was
-surrounded by water, and thus the poor little waif was cut off from the
-adjacent dry land. As the native approached to capture him, the timid
-little ape tried to climb up among the vines above him and escape;
-but the agile hunter seized him. At first the chimpanzee screamed and
-struggled to get away, because he had perhaps never before seen a man;
-but when he found that he was not going to be hurt, he put his frail
-arms around his captor and clung to him as a friend. Indeed, he seemed
-glad to be rescued from such a dreary place, even by such a strange
-creature as a man. For a moment the man feared that the cries of his
-young prisoner might call its mother to the rescue, and possibly a
-band of others; but if she heard, she did not respond; so<span class="pagenum" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</span> he tied the
-baby captive with a thong of bark, put him into a canoe, and brought
-him away to the village. There he supplied him with food and made him
-quite cosy. The next day he was sold to a trader. About this time I
-passed up the river on my way to the jungle in search of the gorilla
-and other apes. Stopping at the station of the trader, I bought the
-young chimpanzee and took him along with me. We soon became the best of
-friends and constant companions.</p>
-
-<p>It was supposed that the mother chimpanzee had left her babe in the
-tree while she went off in search of food, and had wandered so far away
-that she lost her bearings and could not again find him. He appeared
-to have been for a long time without food, and may have been crouching
-there in the forks of that tree for a day or two; but this was only
-inferred from his hunger, as there was no way to determine how long he
-had remained, or even how he got there.</p>
-
-<p>I designed to bring Moses up in the way that good chimpanzees ought to
-be brought up; so I began to teach him good manners, in the hope that
-some day he would be a shining light to his race, and aid me in my work
-among them. To that end I took great care of him, and devoted much time
-to the study of his natural manners, and to improving them as much as
-his nature would allow.</p>
-
-<p>I built him a neat little house within a few feet of my cage. It was
-enclosed with a thin cloth, and at the door I hung a curtain to keep
-out mosquitoes and other insects. It was supplied with plenty of soft,
-clean leaves, and some canvas bed-clothing. It was covered over with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</span>
-a bamboo roof, and was suspended a few feet from the ground, so as to
-keep out the ants.</p>
-
-<p>Moses soon learned to adjust the curtain and go to bed without my
-aid. He would lie in bed in the morning until he heard me or the boy
-stirring about the cage, when he would poke his little black head out
-and begin to jabber for his breakfast. Then he would climb out and come
-to the cage to see what was going on. He was not confined at all, but
-quite at liberty to go about in the forest, climb the trees and bushes,
-and have a good time of it. He was jealous of the boy, and the boy
-was jealous of him, especially when it came to a question of eating.
-Neither of them seemed to want the other to eat anything that they
-mutually liked, and I had to act as umpire in many of their disputes
-on that grave subject, which seemed to be the central thought of both
-of them. I frequently allowed Moses to dine with me, and I never knew
-him to refuse, or to be late in coming, on such occasions; but his
-table etiquette was not of the best order. I gave him a tin plate and
-a wooden spoon. He did not like to use the latter, but seemed to think
-that it was pure affectation for any one to eat with such an awkward
-thing. He always held it in one hand while he ate with the other or
-drank his soup out of the plate. It was such a task to get washing done
-in that part of the world, that I resorted to all means of economy in
-that matter, and for a tablecloth I used a leaf of newspaper, when I
-had one. To tear that paper afforded Moses an amount of pleasure that
-nothing else would, and in this act his conduct was more like that of
-a naughty child than in anything else he did, When he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</span> would first
-take his place at the table, he would behave in a nice and becoming
-manner; but having eaten till he was quite satisfied, he usually became
-rude and saucy. He would slyly put his foot up over the edge of the
-table, and catch hold of the corner of the paper, meanwhile watching
-me closely, to see if I was going to scold him. If I remained quiet,
-he would tear the paper just a little and wait to see the result. If
-no notice was taken of that, he would tear it a little more, but keep
-watching my face to see when I observed him. If I raised my finger
-to him, he quickly let go, drew his foot down, and began to eat. If
-nothing more was done to stop him, the instant my finger and eyes were
-dropped, that dexterous foot was back on the table and the mischief
-was resumed with more audacity than before. When he carried his fun
-too far, I made him get down from the table and sit on the floor. This
-humiliation he did not like, at best; but when the boy grinned at him
-for it, he would resent it with as much temper as if he had been poked
-with a stick. He certainly was sensitive on this point, and evinced an
-undoubted dislike to being laughed at.</p>
-
-<p class="center p0 p2"><span class="figcenter" id="img017">
- <img src="images/017.jpg" class="w50" alt="NATIVE CARRIER BOY (From a Photograph.)" />
-</span></p>
-<p class="center p0 caption">NATIVE CARRIER BOY (From a Photograph.)</p>
-
-<p>Another habit that Moses had was putting his fingers in the dish to
-help himself. He had to be watched all the time to prevent this, and
-seemed unable to grasp any reason why he should not be allowed to do
-so. He always appeared to think my spoon, knife, and fork were better
-than his own. On one occasion he persisted in begging for my fork until
-I gave it to him. He dipped it into his soup, held it up, and looked
-at it as if disappointed. He again stuck it into his soup. Then he
-examined it, as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</span> if to see how I lifted my food with it. He did not
-seem to notice that I used it in lifting meat instead of soup. After
-repeating this three or four times he licked the fork, smelt it, and
-then deliberately threw it on the floor,&mdash;as if to say, “That’s a
-failure.” He then leaned over and drank his soup from the plate.</p>
-
-<p>The only thing that he cared much to play with was a tin can in which
-I kept some nails. For this he had a kind of mania. He never tired of
-trying to remove the lid. When given the hammer and a nail, he knew
-what they were for, and would set to work to drive the nail into the
-floor of the cage or into the table; but he hurt his fingers a few
-times, and after that he stood the nail on its flat head, removed
-his fingers, and struck it with the hammer; but of course he never
-succeeded in driving it into anything.</p>
-
-<p>A bunch of sugarcane was kept for Moses to eat when he wanted it. To
-aid him in tearing the hard shell away from it, I kept a club to bruise
-it. Sometimes he would go and select a stalk of cane, carry it to the
-block, take the club in both hands, and try to mash the cane; but as
-the jar of the stroke often hurt his hands, he learned to avoid this by
-letting go as the club descended. He never succeeded in crushing the
-cane, but would continue his efforts until some one came to his aid. At
-other times he would drag a stalk of the cane to the cage and poke it
-through the wires, then bring the club and poke it through to get me to
-mash the cane for him.</p>
-
-<p>From time to time I received newspapers sent me from home. Moses could
-not understand what induced me to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</span> sit holding that thing before me,
-but he wished to try it and see. He would take a leaf of it, and hold
-it up before him with both hands, just as he saw me do; but instead of
-looking at the paper, he kept his eyes, most of the time, on me. When
-I turned my paper over, he did the same thing with his, but half the
-time it was upside down. He did not appear to care for the pictures, or
-notice them, except a few times he tried to pick them off the paper.
-One large cut of a dog’s head, when held at a short distance from him,
-he appeared to regard with a little interest, as if he recognized it as
-that of an animal of some kind; but I cannot say just what his ideas
-concerning it really were.</p>
-
-<p>Chimpanzees are not usually so playful or so funny as monkeys, but they
-have a certain degree of mirth in their nature, and at times display
-a marked sense of humor. Moses was fond of playing peek-a-boo. He
-did not try to conceal his body from view, but put his head behind a
-box or something to hide his eyes. Then he would cautiously peep at
-me. He would often put his head behind one of the large tin boxes in
-the cage, leaving his whole body visible. In this attitude he would
-utter a peculiar sound, then draw his head out and look to see if I
-were watching him. If not, he would repeat the act a few times and
-then resort to some other means of amusing himself. But if he could
-gain attention the romp began. He found great pleasure in this simple
-pastime. He would roll over, kick up his heels, and grin with evident
-delight. His favorite hour for this sport was in the early part of the
-afternoon. I spent much time in entertaining him in this way and in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</span>
-many others, feeling amply repaid by the gratification it afforded him.
-I could not resist his overtures to play, as he was my only companion;
-and, living in that solitary manner, we found mutual pleasure in such
-diversions.</p>
-
-<p>Another occasion on which he used to peep at me was when he lay down to
-take his midday nap. For this I had made him a little hammock. It was
-suspended by wires hooked in the top of my cage, so as to be removable
-when not in use. I always hung this near me, so I could swing him to
-sleep like a child. He liked this very much, and I liked equally well
-to indulge him in it. When he was laid in this little hammock, he was
-usually covered up with a small piece of canvas, and in spreading it
-over him I sometimes laid the edge of it over his eyes. But this caused
-him to suspect me of having some motive in doing so. Then he would
-reach his finger up, catch the edge of the cloth and gently draw it
-down, so as to see what I was doing. If he found that he was detected,
-he quickly released the cloth, and cuddled down as though he had drawn
-it down by accident; but the little rogue knew just as well as I did
-that it was not fair to peep.</p>
-
-<p>I also made him another hammock, which was hung a few yards from the
-cage. It was intended that he should get into this without bothering
-me. But he did not seem to care for it, until I brought a young gorilla
-to live with us in our jungle home. As Moses had never used this
-hammock, I assigned it to the new member of the household. Whenever
-the gorilla got into the hammock there was a small row about it. Moses
-would never allow him to occupy it in peace. He seemed to know that it
-was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</span> his own by right, and the gorilla was regarded as an intruder. He
-would push and shove the gorilla, grunt and whine and quarrel until he
-got him out of it. But after doing so he would leave the hammock and
-climb up into the bushes, or go scouting about, hunting something to
-eat. He only wanted to dispossess the intruder, for whom he nursed an
-inordinate jealousy. He never went about the gorilla’s little house,
-which was near another side of my cage. Even after the gorilla died
-Moses kept aloof from its house.</p>
-
-<p>As a rule, I took Moses with me in my rambles into the forest, and I
-found him to be quite useful in one way. His eyes were like the lens
-of a camera; nothing escaped them. When he discovered anything in the
-jungle, he always made it known by a peculiar sound. He could not point
-it out with his finger, but by watching his eyes the object could often
-be located. Frequently during these tours the ape rode on my shoulders.
-At other times the boy carried him; but occasionally he was put down
-on the ground to walk. If we traveled at a very slow pace, and allowed
-him to stroll along at leisure, he was content to do so; but if hurried
-beyond a certain gait, he always made a display of temper. He would
-turn on the boy and attack him if possible; but if the boy escaped, the
-angry little ape would throw himself down on the ground, scream, kick,
-and beat the earth with his own head and hands, in the most violent and
-persistent manner. He sometimes did the same way when not allowed to
-have what he wanted. His conduct was exactly like that of a spoiled or
-ugly child.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</span></p>
-
-<p>He had a certain amount of ingenuity, and often evinced a degree of
-reason which was rather unexpected. It was not a rare thing for him to
-solve some problem that involved a study of cause and effect, but this
-was always in a limited degree. I would not be understood to mean that
-he could work out any abstract problem, such as belongs to the realm of
-mathematics, but only simple, concrete problems, the object of which
-was present.</p>
-
-<p>On one occasion while walking through the forest, we came to a small
-stream of water. The boy and myself stepped across it, leaving Moses
-to get over without help. He disliked getting his feet wet, and paused
-to be lifted across. We walked a few steps away and waited. He looked
-up and down the branch to see if there was any way to avoid it. He
-walked back and forth a few yards, but found no way to cross. He sat
-down on the bank and declined to wade. After a few moments he waddled
-along the bank about ten or twelve feet to a clump of tall, slender
-bushes growing by the edge of the stream. Here he halted, whined, and
-looked up thoughtfully into them. At length he began to climb one of
-them that leaned over the water. As he climbed up, the stalk bent with
-his weight, and in an instant he was swung safely across the little
-brook. He let go the plant, and came hobbling along to me with a look
-of triumph on his face that plainly indicated he was fully conscious of
-having performed a very clever feat.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p0 p2"><span class="figcenter" id="img018">
- <img src="images/018.jpg" class="w50" alt="A STROLL IN THE JUNGLE - MR. GARNER, MOSES, AND NATIVE BOY" />
-</span></p>
-<p class="center p0 caption">A STROLL IN THE JUNGLE&mdash;<abbr title="mister">MR.</abbr> GARNER, MOSES, AND NATIVE BOY<br /> (From a Photograph.)</p>
-
-<p>One dark, rainy night I felt something pulling at my blanket and
-mosquito bar. I could not for a moment imagine what it was, but knew
-that it was something on<span class="pagenum" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</span> the outside of my cage. I lay for a few
-seconds, and then I felt another strong pull. In an instant some cold,
-damp, rough thing touched my face. I found it was his hand poked
-through the meshes and groping about for something. I spoke to him,
-and he replied with a series of plaintive sounds which assured me that
-something must be wrong. I rose and lighted a candle. His little brown
-face was pressed up against the wires, and wore a sad, weary look. He
-could not tell me in words what troubled him, but every sign, look, and
-gesture bespoke trouble. Taking the candle in one hand and my revolver
-in the other, I stepped out of the cage and went to his domicile. There
-I discovered that a colony of ants had invaded his quarters. These ants
-are a great pest when they attack anything, and when they make a raid
-on a house the only thing to be done is to leave it until they have
-devoured everything about it that they can eat. When they leave a house
-there is not a roach, rat, bug, or insect left in it. As the house of
-Moses was so small, it was not difficult to dispossess the ants by
-saturating it with kerosene. This was quickly done, and the little
-occupant was allowed to return and go to bed. He watched the procedure
-with evident interest, and seemed perfectly aware that I could rid
-him of his savage assailants. In a wild state he would doubtless have
-abandoned his claim and fled to some other place, without an attempt to
-drive the ants away; but in this instance he had acquired the idea of
-the rights of possession.</p>
-
-<p>Moses was especially fond of corned beef and sardines, and would
-recognize a can of either as far away as he could<span class="pagenum" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</span> see it. He also
-knew the instrument used in opening the cans. But he did not appear
-to appreciate the fact that when the contents had once been taken out
-it was useless to open the can again; so he often brought the empty
-cans that had been thrown into the bush, got the can-opener down, and
-wanted me to use it for him! I never saw him try to open a can himself
-otherwise than with his fingers. Sometimes, when about to prepare my
-own meals, I would open the case in which I kept stored a supply of
-canned meats and allow Moses to select a can for the purpose. He never
-failed to pull out one of the cans of beef bearing the blue label. If I
-put it back, he would again select the same kind, and he could not be
-deceived in his choice. It was not accidental, because he would hunt
-until he found the right sort. I don’t know what he thought when his
-choice was not served for dinner. I often exchanged it for another kind
-without consulting him.</p>
-
-<p>I kept my supply of water in a large jug, which was placed in the shade
-of the bushes near the cage. I also kept a small pan for Moses to drink
-out of. He would sometimes ask for water by using his own word for it.
-He would place his pan by the side of the jug and repeat the sound a
-few times. If he was not attended to, he proceeded to help himself. He
-could take the cork out of the jug quite as well as I could. He would
-then put his eye to the mouth of the vessel and look down into it to
-see if there was any water. Of course the shadow of his head would
-darken the interior of the jug so that he could not see anything. Then,
-removing his eye from the mouth of it, he would poke his hand into it.
-But I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</span> reproved him for this until I broke him of the habit. After a
-careful examination of the jug he would try to pour the water out. He
-knew how it ought to be done, but was not able to handle the vessel.
-He always placed the pan on the lower side of the jug; then he leaned
-the jug towards the pan and let go. He would rarely ever get the water
-into the pan, but always turned the jug with the neck down grade. As a
-hydraulic engineer he was not a great success, but he certainly knew
-the first principles of the science.</p>
-
-<p>I tried to teach Moses to be cleanly, but it was a hard task. He would
-listen to my precepts as if they had made a deep impression, but he
-would not wash his hands of his own accord. He would permit me or the
-boy to wash them, but when it came to taking a bath or even wetting
-his face, he was a rank heretic on the subject, and no amount of logic
-would convince him that he needed it. When he was given a bath he would
-scream and fight during the whole process. When it was finished he
-would climb upon the roof of the cage and spread himself out in the
-sun. These were the only occasions on which I ever knew him to get upon
-the roof. I don’t know why he disliked the bath so much. He did not
-mind getting wet in the rain, but rather seemed to like that.</p>
-
-<p>He had a great dislike for ants and certain large bugs. Whenever one
-such came near him he would talk like a magpie, and brush at the insect
-with his hands until he got rid of it. He always used a certain sound
-for this kind of annoyance; it differed slightly from those I have
-described as warning.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</span></p>
-
-<p>Moses tried to be honest, but he was affected with a species of
-kleptomania and could not resist the temptation to purloin anything
-that came in his way. The small stove upon which I prepared my food was
-placed on a shelf in one corner of the cage, about halfway between the
-floor and the top. Whenever anything was set on the stove to cook, he
-had to be watched to keep him from climbing up the side of the cage,
-reaching his arm through the meshes, and stealing the food. He was
-sometimes very persevering in this matter. One day I set a tin can of
-water on the stove to heat, in order to make some coffee. He silently
-climbed up, reached his hand through, stuck it in the can, and began to
-search for anything it might contain. I threw out the water, refilled
-the can, and drove him away. In a few minutes he returned and repeated
-the act. I had a piece of canvas hung up on the outside of the cage
-to keep him away. The can of water was placed on the stove for the
-third time, but within a minute he found his way by climbing up under
-the curtain, and between that and the cage. I determined to teach him
-a lesson. He was allowed to explore the can, but finding nothing, he
-withdrew his hand and sat there clinging to the side of the cage.
-Again he tried, but found nothing. The water was getting warmer, but
-was still not hot. At length, for the third or fourth time, he stuck
-his hand in it up to the wrist. By this time the water was so hot that
-it scalded his hand. It was not severe enough to do him any harm, but
-quite enough so for a good lesson. He jerked his hand out with such
-violence that he threw the cup over and spilt the water all over that
-side of the cage. From that time to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</span> end of his life he always
-refused anything that had steam or smoke about it. If anything having
-steam or smoke was offered him at the table, he would climb down at
-once and retire from the scene. Poor little Moses! I knew beforehand
-what would happen. I did not wish to see him hurt, but nothing else
-would serve to impress him with the danger and keep him out of mischief.</p>
-
-<p>Anything that he saw me eat he never failed to beg. No matter what
-he had himself, he wanted to try everything else that he saw me eat.
-One thing in which these apes appear to be wiser than man is, that
-when they eat or drink enough to satisfy their wants they quit. Men
-sometimes do not. Apes never drink water or anything else during their
-meal, but having finished eating, they want, as a rule, something to
-drink. The native custom is the same. I have never known the native
-African to use any kind of diet drink, but always when he has finished
-eating he takes a draught of water.</p>
-
-<p>Moses knew the use of nearly all the tools that I carried with me in
-the jungle. He could not use them for the purpose for which they were
-intended, and I do not know to what extent he appreciated their use;
-but he knew quite well the manner of using them. I have mentioned the
-incident of his using the hammer and nails; but he also knew the way
-to use the saw; however, he always applied the back of it, because the
-teeth were too rough; but he gave it the motion. When allowed to have
-it, he would put the back of it across a stick and saw with the energy
-of a man on a big salary. When given a file, he would file everything
-that came in his way. If he had applied himself in learning<span class="pagenum" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</span> to talk
-human words as closely and with as much zeal as he tried to use my
-pliers, he would have succeeded in a very short time.</p>
-
-<p>Whether these creatures are actuated by reason or by instinct in such
-acts as I have mentioned, the caviller may settle for himself; but the
-actions accomplish the purpose of the actors in a logical and practical
-manner, and they are perfectly conscious of the fact.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIV">CHAPTER XIV</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center heading p0">The Character of Moses&mdash;He Learns a Human Word&mdash;He Signs His Name to a
-Document&mdash;His Illness&mdash;Death</p>
-
-
-<p>I know of nothing in the way of affection and loyalty among animals
-that can exceed the devotion of my Moses. Not only was he tame and
-tractable, but he never tired of caressing me and being caressed by
-me. For hours together he would cling to my neck, play with my ears,
-lips, and nose, bite my cheek, and hug me like a last hope. He was
-never willing for me to put him down from my lap, never willing for me
-to leave my cage without him, never willing for me to caress anything
-else but himself, and never willing for me to discontinue caressing
-him. He would cry and fret for me whenever we were separated; and I
-must confess that my absence from him during a journey of three weeks
-hastened his sad and untimely death.</p>
-
-<p>From the second day after we became associated he appeared to regard
-me as the one in authority. He would not resent anything I did to him.
-I could take his food out of his hands, but he would permit no one
-else to do so. He would follow me and cry after me like a child. As
-time went by, his attachment grew stronger and stronger. He gave every
-evidence of pleasure at my attentions, and evinced a certain degree of
-appreciation and gratitude in return. He would divide any morsel of
-food with me.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</span> This is, perhaps, the highest test of the affection of
-any animal. I cannot affirm that such an act was genuine benevolence,
-or an earnest of affection in a true sense of the term; but nothing
-except deep affection or abject fear impels such actions in animals;
-and certainly fear was not his motive.</p>
-
-<p>There were others whom he liked and made himself familiar with; there
-were some that he feared, and others that he hated; but his manner
-towards me was that of deep affection. It was not alone in return for
-the food he received, for my boy gave him food more frequently than
-I did, and many others from time to time fed him. His attachment was
-like an infatuation that had no apparent motive; it was unselfish and
-supreme.</p>
-
-<p>The chief purpose of my living among the animals being to study the
-sounds they utter, I gave strict attention to those made by Moses.
-For a time it was difficult to detect more than two or three distinct
-sounds, but as I grew more and more familiar with them I could detect a
-variety of them, and by constantly watching his actions and associating
-them with his sounds I learned to interpret certain ones to mean
-certain things.</p>
-
-<p>In the course of my sojourn with him I learned one sound that he always
-uttered when he saw anything that he was familiar with,&mdash;such as a man
-or a dog,&mdash;but he could not tell me which of the two it was. If he
-saw anything strange to him, he could tell me; but not so that I knew
-whether it was a snake, or a leopard, or a monkey; yet I knew that it
-was some strange creature. I learned a certain word for food, hunger,
-eating, etc., but he could not<span class="pagenum" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</span> go into any details about it, except
-that a certain sound indicated “good” or “satisfaction,” and another
-meant the opposite.</p>
-
-<p>Among the sounds that I learned was one that is used by a chimpanzee
-in calling another to come to it. Some of the natives assured me that
-the mothers always use it in calling their young to them. When Moses
-wandered away from the cage into the jungle, he would sometimes call me
-with this sound. I cannot express it in letters of the alphabet, nor
-describe it so as to give a very clear idea of its character. It is a
-single sound, or word of one syllable, and can be easily imitated by
-the human voice. At any time that I wanted Moses to come to me I used
-this word, and the fact that he always obeyed it by coming confirmed my
-opinion as to its meaning. I do not think that when he addressed it to
-me he expected me to come to him, but he perhaps wanted to locate me in
-order to be guided back to the cage by means of the sound. As he grew
-more familiar with the surrounding forest he used it less frequently,
-but he always employed it in calling me or the boy. When he was called
-by it he answered with the same sound; but one fact that we noticed
-was, that if he could see the one who called he never made any reply.
-He would obey the call, but not answer. He probably thought that if
-he could see the one who called he could be seen by him, and it was
-therefore useless to reply.</p>
-
-<p>The speech of these animals is very limited, but it is sufficient
-for their purpose. It is none the less real because of its being
-restricted, but it is more difficult for man to learn, because his
-modes of thought are so much<span class="pagenum" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</span> more ample and distinct. Yet when one is
-reduced to the necessity of making his wants known in a strange tongue
-he can express many things in a very few words. I was once thrown among
-a tribe of whose language I knew less than fifty words, but with little
-difficulty I succeeded in conversing with them on two or three topics.
-Much depends upon necessity, and more upon practice. In talking to
-Moses I used his own language mostly, and was surprised at times to
-see how readily we understood each other. I could repeat about all the
-sounds he made except one or two, but I was not able in the time we
-were together to interpret all of them. These sounds were more than a
-mere series of grunts or whines, and he never confused them in their
-meaning. When any one of them was properly delivered to him, he clearly
-understood and acted upon it.</p>
-
-<p>It had never been any part of my purpose to teach a monkey to talk;
-but after I became familiar with the qualities and range of the voice
-of Moses, I determined to see if he might not be taught to speak a
-few simple words of human speech. To effect this in the easiest way
-and shortest time, I carefully observed the movements of his lips and
-vocal organs in order to select such words for him to try as were best
-adapted to his ability.</p>
-
-<p>I selected the word <em>mamma</em>, which may be considered almost a
-universal word of human speech; the French word <em xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">feu</em>, fire; the
-German word <em xml:lang="de" lang="de">wie</em>, how; and the native Nkami word <em>nkgwe</em>,
-mother. Every day I took him on my lap and tried to induce him to say
-one or more of these words. For a long time he made no effort to learn
-them;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</span> but after some weeks of persistent labor and a bribe of corned
-beef, he began to see dimly what I wanted him to do. The native word
-quoted is very similar to one of the sounds of his own speech, which
-means “good” or “satisfaction.” The vowel element differs in them, and
-he was not able in the time he was under tuition to change them; but he
-distinguished them from other words.</p>
-
-<p>In his attempt to say <em>mamma</em> he worked his lips without making
-any sound, although he really tried to do so. I believe that in the
-course of time he would have succeeded. He observed the movement of
-my lips and tried to imitate it, but he seemed to think that the lips
-alone produced the sound. With <em xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">feu</em> he succeeded fairly well,
-except that the consonant element, as he uttered it, resembled “v”
-more than “f,” so that the sound was more like <em xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">vu</em>, making the
-“u” short as in “nut.” It was quite as nearly perfect as most people
-of other tongues ever learn to speak the same word in French, and, if
-it had been uttered in a sentence, any one knowing that language would
-recognize it as meaning fire. In his efforts to pronounce <em xml:lang="de" lang="de">wie</em> he
-always gave the vowel element like German “u” with the <em xml:lang="de" lang="de">umlaut</em>,
-but the “w” element was more like the English than the German sound of
-that letter.</p>
-
-<p>Taking into consideration the fact that he was only a little more than
-a year old, and was in training less than three months, his progress
-was all that could have been desired, and vastly more than had been
-hoped for. It is my belief that, had he lived until this time, he
-would have mastered these and other words of human speech to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</span>
-satisfaction of the most exacting linguist. If he had only learned one
-word in a whole lifetime, he would have shown at least that the race is
-capable of being improved and elevated in some degree.</p>
-
-<p>Another experiment that I tried with him was one that I had used before
-in testing the ability of a monkey to distinguish forms. I cut a round
-hole in one end of a board and a square hole in the other, and made a
-block to fit into each one of them. The blocks were then given to him
-to see if he could fit them into the proper holes. After being shown a
-few times how to do this, he fitted the blocks in without difficulty;
-but when he was not rewarded for the task by receiving a morsel of
-corned beef or a sardine, he did not attempt it. He did not care to
-work for the fun alone.</p>
-
-<p>In colors he had but little choice, unless it was something to eat; but
-he could distinguish them with ease if the shades were pronounced. I
-had no means of testing his taste for music or sense of musical sounds.</p>
-
-<p>I must here take occasion to mention one incident in the life of Moses,
-such as perhaps never before occurred in the life of any chimpanzee.
-While it may not be of scientific value, it is at least amusing.</p>
-
-<p>While living in the jungle I received a letter enclosing a contract to
-be signed by myself and a witness. Having no means of finding a witness
-to sign the paper, I called Moses from the bushes, placed him at the
-table, gave him a pen, and had him sign the document as witness. He did
-not write his name himself, as he had not mastered the art of writing;
-but he made his cross mark between the names,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</span> as many a good man had
-done before him. I wrote in the blank the name,</p>
-
-<p class="center p0">
-<small><em>His</em></small><br />
-“MOSES X NTYIGO”<br />
-<small><em>mark</em></small><br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="p0">(the cross mark being omitted), and had him with his own hand make the
-cross as it is legally done by persons who cannot write. With this
-signature the contract was returned in good faith to stand the test
-of the law courts of civilization; and thus for the first time in the
-history of the race a chimpanzee signed his name.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>When I prepared to start on a journey across the Esyira country, it was
-not practicable for me to take Moses along, so I arranged to leave him
-in charge of a missionary. Shortly after my departure the man was taken
-with fever, and the chimpanzee was left to the care of a native boy
-belonging to the mission. The little prisoner was kept confined by a
-small rope attached to his cage. This was done in order to keep him out
-of mischief. It was during the dry season, when the dews are heavy and
-the nights chilly; and the winds at that season are fresh and frequent.</p>
-
-<p>Within a week after I had left him he contracted a severe cold. This
-soon developed into acute pulmonary troubles of a complex type, and
-he began to decline. After an absence of three weeks and three days I
-returned and found him in a condition beyond the reach of treatment.
-He was emaciated to a living skeleton; his eyes were sunken deep into
-their orbits, and his steps were feeble<span class="pagenum" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</span> and tottering; his voice
-was hoarse and piping; his appetite was gone, and he was utterly
-indifferent to everything around him.</p>
-
-<p>During my journey I had secured a companion for him, and when I
-disembarked from the canoe I hastened to him with this new addition to
-our little family. I had not been told that he was ill, and, of course,
-was not prepared to see him looking so ghastly. When he discovered me
-approaching, he rose up and began to call me, as he had been wont to
-do before I left him; but his weak voice was like a death-knell to my
-ears. My heart sunk within me as I saw him trying to reach out his
-long, bony arms to welcome my return. Poor, faithful Moses! I could not
-repress the tears of pity and regret at this sudden change, for to me
-it seemed the work of a moment. I had last seen him in the vigor of a
-strong and robust youth, but now I beheld him in the decrepitude of a
-feeble senility. What a transformation!</p>
-
-<p>I diagnosed his case as well as I was able and began to treat him, but
-it was evident that he was so far gone that I could not expect him to
-recover. My conscience smote me for having left him, yet I felt that I
-had not done wrong. It was not neglect or cruelty for me to leave him
-while I went in pursuit of the chief object of my search, and I had
-no cause to reproach myself for having done so. But emotions that are
-stirred by such incidents are not to be controlled by reason or hushed
-by argument, and the pain caused me was more than I can tell.</p>
-
-<p>If I had done wrong, the only restitution possible for me to make was
-to nurse him patiently and tenderly to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</span> the end, or till health and
-strength should return. This was conscientiously done, and I have the
-comfort of knowing that the last sad days of his life were soothed
-by every care that kindness could suggest. Hour after hour during
-that time he lay silent and content upon my lap. That appeared to be
-a panacea to all his pains. He would roll up his dark brown eyes and
-look into my face, as if to be assured that I had been restored to
-him. With his long fingers he stroked my face as if to say that he
-was again happy. He took the medicines I gave him as if he knew their
-purpose and effect. His suffering was not intense, and he bore it like
-a philosopher. He seemed to have some vague idea of his own condition,
-but I do not know that he foresaw the result. He lingered on from
-day to day for a whole week, slowly sinking and growing feebler; but
-his love for me was manifest to the last, and I dare confess that I
-returned it with all my heart.</p>
-
-<p>Is it wrong that I should requite such devotion and fidelity with
-reciprocal emotion? No. I should not deserve the love of any creature
-if I were indifferent to the love of Moses. That affectionate little
-creature had lived with me in the dismal shadows of that primeval
-forest for many long days and dreary nights; had romped and played with
-me when far away from the pleasures of home; and had been a constant
-friend, alike through sunshine and storm. To say that I did not love
-him would be to confess myself an ingrate and unworthy of my race.</p>
-
-<p>The last spark of life passed away in the night. Death was not attended
-by acute pain or struggling; but, falling into a deep and quiet sleep,
-he woke no more.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</span></p>
-
-<p>Moses will live in history. He deserves to do so, because he was the
-first of his race that ever spoke a word of human speech; because he
-was the first that ever conversed in his own language with a human
-being; and because he was the first that ever signed his name to any
-document. Fame will not deny him a niche in her temple among the heroes
-who have led the races of the world.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XV">CHAPTER XV</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center heading p0">Aaron&mdash;His Capture&mdash;Mental Powers&mdash;Acquaintance with Moses&mdash;His Conduct
-during Moses’ Illness</p>
-
-
-<p>Having arranged my affairs in Ferran Vaz so as to make a journey across
-the great forest that lies to the south of the Nkami country and
-separates it from that of the Esyira tribe, I set out by canoe to a
-point on the Rembo about three days’ journey from the place where I had
-so long lived in my cage. At a village called Tyimba I disembarked and,
-after a journey of five days and a delay of three more days, caused by
-an attack of fever, I arrived at a trading station near the head of a
-small river called Noogo. It empties into the sea at Sette Kama, about
-four degrees south of the equator. The trading post is about a hundred
-miles inland, at a native village called Ntyi-ne-nye-ni,&mdash;which,
-strange to say, means, in the native tongue, “Some Other Place.”</p>
-
-<p>About the time I reached the trading post, two Esyira hunters arrived
-from a distant village and brought with them a smart young chimpanzee
-of the kind known in that country as the kulu-kamba. He was quite the
-finest specimen of his race that I have ever seen. His frank, open
-countenance, big brown eyes, and shapely physique, free from mark or
-blemish of any kind, would attract the notice of any one not absolutely
-stupid. It is not derogatory to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</span> the memory of Moses that I should say
-this, nor does it lessen my affection for him. Our passions are not
-moved by visible forces nor measured by fixed units. They disdain all
-laws of logic, spurn the narrow bounds of reason, and conform to no
-theory of action.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as I saw this little ape I expressed a desire to own him. So
-the trader in charge bought him and presented him to me. As it had
-been intended that he should be the friend and ally of Moses, although
-not his brother, I conferred upon him the name of Aaron. The two names
-are so intimately associated in history that the mention of one always
-suggests the other.</p>
-
-<p>Aaron was captured in the Esyira jungle by the hunters, about one day’s
-journey from the place where I secured him; and with this event began a
-series of sad scenes in the brief but varied life of this little hero
-such as seldom come within the experience of any creature.</p>
-
-<p>At the time of his capture his mother was killed in the act of
-defending him from the cruel hunters. When she fell to the earth,
-mortally wounded, this brave little fellow stood by her trembling body
-defending it against her slayers, until he was overcome by superior
-force, seized by his captors, bound with strips of bark, and carried
-away into captivity. No human can refrain from admiring his conduct in
-this act, whether it was prompted by the instinct of self-preservation
-or by a sentiment of loyalty to his mother, for he was exercising that
-prime law of nature which actuates all creatures to defend themselves
-against attack, and his wild, young heart throbbed with sensations like
-to those of a human under similar ordeal.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</span></p>
-
-<p>I do not wish to appear sentimental by offering a rebuke to those who
-indulge in the sport of hunting; but much cruelty could be obviated
-without losing any of the pleasure of the hunt. I have always made
-it a rule to spare the mother with her young. Whether or not animals
-feel the same degree of mental and physical pain as man, they do,
-in these tragic moments, evince for one another a certain amount of
-concern. This imparts a tinge of sympathy that must appeal to any one
-who is not devoid of every sense of mercy. It is true that it is often
-difficult&mdash;and sometimes impossible&mdash;to secure the young by other
-means; but the manner of getting them often mars the pleasure of having
-them; and while Aaron was to me a charming pet and a valuable subject
-for study, I confess the story of his capture always touched me in a
-tender spot.</p>
-
-<p>I may here mention that the few chimpanzees that reach the civilized
-parts of the world are but a small percentage of the great number that
-are captured. Some die on their way to the coast, others die after
-reaching it, and scores of them die on board the ships to which they
-have been consigned for various ports of Europe and other countries.
-Death results not often from neglect or cruelty, but usually from a
-change of food, climate, or condition; yet the creature suffers just
-the same whether the cause is from design or accident. One fruitful
-source of death among them is pulmonary trouble of various types.</p>
-
-<p>One look at the portrait of Aaron will impress any one with the high
-mental qualities of this little captive; but to see and study them in
-life would convince a heretic of his superior character. In every look
-and gesture there was a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</span> touch of the human that no one could fail to
-observe. The range of facial expression surpassed that of any other
-animal I have ever studied. In repose his quaint face wore a look of
-wisdom becoming to a sage; while in play it was crowned with a grin
-of genuine mirth. The deep, searching look he gave to a stranger was
-a study for the psychologist. The serious, earnest look of inquiry
-when he was perplexed would have amused a stoic. All these changing
-moods were depicted in his mobile face with such intensity as to leave
-no room to doubt the activity of certain faculties of the mind to a
-degree far beyond that of animals in general; and his conduct in many
-instances showed the exercise of mental powers of a higher order than
-that limited agency known as instinct. In addition to these facts, his
-voice was of better quality and more flexible than that of any other
-specimen I have ever known. It was clear and smooth in uttering sounds
-of any pitch within its scope, while the voices of most of them are
-inclined to be harsh or husky, especially in sounds of high pitch.</p>
-
-<p>Before leaving the village where I secured him, I made a kind of sling
-for him to be carried in. It consisted of a short canvas sack, having
-two holes cut in the bottom for his legs to pass through. To the top
-of this was attached a broad band of the same cloth by which to hang
-it over the head of the carrier boy to whom the little prisoner was
-consigned. This afforded the ape a comfortable seat, and at the same
-time reduced the labor of carrying him. It left his arms and legs free,
-so he could change his position and rest, while it also allowed the boy
-the use of his own hands in passing any difficult place in the jungle
-along the way.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</span></p>
-
-<p>From the trading post to the Rembo was a journey of five days on foot.
-Along the way were a few straggling villages; but most of the route lay
-through a wild and desolate forest, traversed by low, broad marshes,
-through which wind shallow sloughs of filthy, greenish water, seeking
-its way among bending roots and fallen leaves. From the foul bosom of
-these marshes rise the effluvia of decaying plants, breeding pestilence
-and death. Here and there across the dreary tracts is found the trail
-of elephants, where the great beasts have broken their tortuous way
-through the dense barriers of bush and vine. These trails serve as
-roads for the native traveler and afford the only way of crossing
-these otherwise trackless jungles. The only means of passing the
-dismal swamps is to wade through the thin, slimy mud, often more than
-knee-deep, and sometimes extending many hundred feet in width. The
-traveler is intercepted at almost every step by the tangled roots of
-mangrove trees under foot or clusters of vines hanging from the boughs
-overhead.</p>
-
-<p>Such was the route we came. But Aaron did not realize how severe was
-the task of his carrier in trudging his way through such places, and
-the little rogue often added to the labor by seizing hold of limbs
-or vines that hung within his reach in passing. Thus he retarded the
-progress of the boy, who strongly protested against the ape’s amusing
-himself in this manner. The latter seemed to know of no reason why
-he should not do so, and the former did not deign to give one. So
-the quarrel went on until we reached the river; but by that time
-each of them had imbibed a hatred for the other that nothing in the
-future ever allayed.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</span> Neither of them ever forgot it while they were
-associated, and both of them evinced their aversion on all occasions.
-The boy gave vent to his dislike by making ugly faces at the ape, and
-the latter showed his resentment by screaming and trying to bite him.
-Aaron refused to eat any food given him by the boy, and the boy would
-not give him a morsel except when required to do so. At times the feud
-became ridiculous. It ended only with their final separation. The last
-time I ever saw the boy, I asked him if he wanted to go with me to my
-country to take care of Aaron; but he shook his head and said: “He’s
-a bad man.” This was the only person for whom I ever knew Aaron to
-conceive a deep and bitter dislike, but the boy he hated with his whole
-heart.</p>
-
-<p>On my return to Ferran Vaz, where I had left Moses, I found him in a
-feeble state of health, as related elsewhere. When Aaron was set down
-before him, he merely gave the little stranger a casual glance, but
-held out his long, lean arms for me to take him in mine. His wish was
-gratified, and I indulged him in a long stroll. When we returned I
-set him down by the side of his new friend, who evinced every sign of
-pleasure and interest. He was like a small boy when there is a new baby
-in the house. He cuddled up close to Moses and made many overtures to
-become friends; but, while the latter did not repel them, he treated
-them with indifference. Aaron tried in many ways to attract the
-attention of Moses, or to elicit from him some sign of approval, but it
-was in vain.</p>
-
-<p>No doubt Moses’ manners were due to his sickness, and Aaron seemed to
-realize it. He sat for a long time holding<span class="pagenum" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</span> a banana in his hand and
-looking with evident concern into the face of his little sick cousin.
-At length he lifted the fruit to the lips of the invalid and uttered a
-low sound; but the kindness was not accepted. The act was purely one of
-his own volition, to which he was not prompted by any suggestion from
-others. Every look and motion indicated a desire to relieve or comfort
-his friend. His manner was gentle and humane, and his face was an image
-of pity.</p>
-
-<p>Failing to get any sign of attention from Moses, Aaron moved up closer
-to his side and put his arms around him in the manner that is shown
-in the picture of him with Elisheba. During the days that followed,
-he sat hour after hour in the same attitude, and refused to allow any
-one except myself to touch his patient; but on my approach he always
-resigned him to me, while he watched with interest to see what I did
-for him.</p>
-
-<p>Among other things, I gave Moses twice a day a tabloid of quinine and
-iron. This was dissolved in a little water and given to him in a small
-tin cup kept for the purpose. When not in use, the cup was hung upon
-a tall post. Aaron soon learned to know the use of it, and whenever I
-went to Moses, Aaron would climb up the post and bring me the cup to
-administer the medicine. It is not to be inferred that he knew anything
-about the nature or effect of the medicine, but he knew the use, and
-the only use, to which that cup was put.</p>
-
-<p>Aaron displayed a marked interest during the act of administering
-the dose, and seemed to realize that it was intended for the good of
-the patient. He would sit close up to one side of the sick one and
-watch every movement<span class="pagenum" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</span> of his face, as if to see what effect was being
-produced, while the changing expressions of his own visage plainly
-showed that he was not indifferent to the actions of the patient.</p>
-
-<p>While I was present with the sick one, Aaron appeared to feel a certain
-sense of relief from the care of him, and frequently went climbing
-about as if to rest and recreate himself by a change of routine.
-Whenever I took Moses for a walk, or sat with him on my lap, his little
-nurse was perfectly content; but the instant they were left alone,
-Aaron would again fold him in his arms, as if he felt it a duty to do
-so.</p>
-
-<p>It was only natural that Moses, in such a state of health, should be
-cross and peevish at times, as human beings in a like condition are;
-but I never once saw Aaron resent anything Moses did, or display the
-least ill-temper towards him. On the contrary, his conduct was so
-patient and forbearing that it was hard to forego the belief that it
-was prompted by the same motives of kindness and sympathy that move
-the human heart to deeds of tenderness and mercy. At night, when they
-were put to rest, they lay cuddled up in each other’s arms, and in the
-morning they were always found in the same close embrace.</p>
-
-<p>But on the morning Moses died the conduct of Aaron was unlike anything
-I had observed before. When I approached their snug little house and
-drew aside the curtain, I found him sitting in one corner of the cage.
-His face wore a look of concern, as if he were aware that something
-awful had occurred. When I opened the door he neither moved nor uttered
-any sound. I do not know whether or not apes have any name for death,
-but they surely know what it is.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</span></p>
-
-<p>Moses was dead. His cold body lay in its usual place; but it was
-entirely covered over with the piece of canvas kept in the cage for
-bed-clothing. I do not know whether or not Aaron had covered him up,
-but he seemed to realize the situation. I took him by the hand and
-lifted him out of the cage, but he was reluctant. I had the body
-removed and placed on a bench about thirty feet away, in order to
-dissect it and prepare the skin and the skeleton for preservation.</p>
-
-<p>When I proceeded to do this, I had Aaron confined to the cage, lest he
-should annoy and hinder me at the work; but he cried and fretted until
-he was released. It is not meant that he shed tears over the loss of
-his companion, for the lachrymal glands and ducts are not developed in
-these apes; but they manifest concern and regret, which are motives of
-the passion of sorrow. But being left alone was the cause of Aaron’s
-sorrow. When released he came and took his seat near the dead body,
-where he sat the whole day long and watched the operation.</p>
-
-<p>After this Aaron was never quiet for a moment if he could see or hear
-me, until I secured another of his kind as a companion for him; then
-his interest in me abated in a measure, but his affection for me
-remained intact. His conduct towards Moses always impressed me with the
-belief that he appreciated the fact that the sick one was in distress
-or pain, and while he may not have foreseen the result, when he saw
-death he certainly knew what it was. Whether it is instinct or reason
-that causes man to shrink from death, the same influence works to the
-same end in the ape; and the demeanor of this ape towards his later
-companion, Elisheba, only confirmed this opinion.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XVI">CHAPTER XVI</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center heading p0">Aaron and Elisheba&mdash;Their Characteristics&mdash;Anecdotes&mdash;Jealousy of Aaron</p>
-
-
-<p>Four days after the death of Moses I secured passage on a trading
-boat that came into the lake. The boat was a small affair, intended
-for towing canoes, and not in any way prepared to carry passengers
-or cargo; but I found room in one of the canoes to set the cage I
-had provided for Aaron, stowed the rest of my effects wherever space
-permitted, and embarked for the coast.</p>
-
-<p>Our progress was slow and the journey tedious. The only passage out of
-the lake at that season is through a long, narrow, winding creek beset
-by sand bars, rocks, logs, and snags, and in some places overhung by
-low, bending trees. But the wild, weird scenery is grand and beautiful.
-Long lines of bamboo, broken here and there by groups of pendanus or
-stately palms; islands of lilies, and long sweeps of papyrus spreading
-away from the banks on either side; the gorgeous foliage of aquatic
-plants, drooping along the margin like a massive fringe and relieved by
-clumps of tall, waving grass, forms a perfect Eden for the birds and
-the monkeys that dwell among those scenes of eternal summer.</p>
-
-<p>After a delay of eight days at Cape Lopez, we secured passage on a
-small French gunboat called the <em>Komo</em>, by which we came to
-Gaboon. There I found another kulu-kamba.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</span> She was in the hands of a
-generous friend, <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Adolph Strohm, who presented her to me. I gave her
-to Aaron as a wife and called her Elisheba,&mdash;after the name of the wife
-of the great high-priest. Elisheba had been captured on the head-waters
-of the Nguni River, in about the same latitude that Aaron was found
-in, but more than a hundred miles to the east of that point and a few
-minutes north of it. I did not learn the history of her capture.</p>
-
-<p>It would be difficult to find any two human beings more unlike in
-taste and temperament than these two apes were. Aaron was one of the
-most amiable of creatures; he was affectionate and faithful to those
-who treated him kindly; he was merry and playful by nature, and often
-evinced a marked sense of humor; he was fond of human society and
-strongly averse to solitude or confinement.</p>
-
-<p>Elisheba was a perfect shrew. She often reminded me of certain women
-that I have seen who had soured on the world. She was treacherous,
-ungrateful, and cruel in every thought and act; she was utterly devoid
-of affection; she was selfish, sullen, and morose at all times; she was
-often vicious and always obstinate; she was indifferent to caresses,
-and quite as well content when alone as in the best of company. It is
-true that she was in poor health, and had been badly treated before she
-fell into my hands; but she was by nature endowed with a bad temper and
-depraved instincts.</p>
-
-<p>It is not at all rare to see a vast difference of manners,
-intelligence, and temperament among specimens that belong to one
-species. In these respects they vary as much in proportion to their
-mental scope as human beings do; but<span class="pagenum" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</span> I have never seen, in any two
-apes of the same species, the two extremes so widely removed from one
-another.</p>
-
-<p>While waiting at Gaboon for a steamer I had my own cage erected for the
-apes to live in, as it was large and gave them ample room for play and
-exercise. In one corner of it was suspended a small, cosy house for
-them to sleep in. It was furnished with a good supply of clean straw
-and some pieces of canvas for bedclothes. In the center of the cage was
-a swing, or trapeze, for them to use at their pleasure. Aaron found
-this a means of amusement, and often indulged in a series of gymnastics
-that might evoke the envy of a king of athletic sports.</p>
-
-<p>Elisheba had no taste for such pastime, but her depravity could never
-resist the impulse to interrupt Aaron in his jolly exercise. She would
-climb up and contend for possession of the swing, until she would drive
-him away. Then she would perch herself on it and sit there for a time
-in stolid content; but she would neither swing nor play. Frequently
-during the day, when Aaron was lying quietly on the straw, she would
-go into the snug little house and raise a row with him by pulling the
-straw from under him, a handful at a time, and throwing it out of the
-box till there was none left in it. No matter what kind or quantity of
-food was given them, she always wanted the piece he had, and would fuss
-with him to get it; but having got it, she would sit holding it in her
-hand without eating it; for there were some things that he liked which
-she would not eat at all.</p>
-
-<p>When we went out for a walk, no matter which way we started, Elisheba
-always contended to go some other way.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</span> If I yielded, she would again
-change her mind and start off in some other direction. If forced to
-submit, she would scream and struggle as if for life. I cannot forego
-the belief that these freaks were due to a base and perverse nature,
-and I could find no higher motive in her stubborn conduct.</p>
-
-<p>Aaron was very fond of her and rarely ever opposed her inflexible will.
-He clung to her and let her lead the way. I have often felt vexed at
-him because he complied so readily with her wishes. The only case in
-which he took sides against her was in her conduct towards me.</p>
-
-<p>When I first secured her she had the temper of a demon, and with the
-smallest pretext she would assault me and try to bite me or tear my
-clothes. In these attacks Aaron was always with me, and the loyal
-little champion would fly at her in the greatest fury. He would strike
-her over the head and back with his hands, and bite her and flog her
-till she desisted. If she returned the blow he would grasp her hand and
-bite it, or strike her in the face. He would continue to fight till she
-submitted. Then he would celebrate his victory by jumping up and down
-in a most grotesque fashion, stamping his feet, slapping his hands on
-the ground, and grinning like a mask. He seemed as conscious of what he
-had done and as proud of it as any human could have been; but no matter
-what she did to others, he was always on her side of the question. If
-any one else annoyed her, he would always resent it with violence.</p>
-
-<p>About the premises there were natives all the time passing to and fro,
-and these two little captives were objects of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</span> special interest to
-them. They would stand by the cage hour after hour and watch them. The
-ruling impulse of nearly all natives appears to be cruelty, and they
-cannot resist the temptation to tease and torture anything that is
-not able to retaliate. They were so persistent in poking sticks at my
-chimpanzees that I had to keep a boy on watch all the time to prevent
-it; but the boy could not be trusted, so I had to watch <em>him</em>.</p>
-
-<p>In the rear of the room that I occupied was a window through which,
-from time to time, I watched the boy and the natives, and when
-anything went wrong I would call out to the boy. Aaron soon observed
-this and found that he could get my attention himself by calling out
-when any one annoyed him, and he also knew that the boy was put there
-as a protector. Whenever any of the natives came about the cage he
-would call for me in his peculiar manner, which I well understood and
-promptly responded to. The boy also knew what the call meant and would
-rush to the rescue. If I were away from the house and the boy were
-aware of the fact, he was apt to be tardy in coming to the relief of
-the ape, and sometimes he did not come at all. In the latter event the
-two would crawl into their house and pull down the curtain so that they
-could not be seen. Here they would remain until the natives had left or
-some one came to their aid.</p>
-
-<p>Neither of the apes ever resented anything the natives did to them,
-unless they could see me about; but whenever I came in sight they
-would make battle with their tormentors, and, if liberated from the
-big cage, they would chase the last one of them out of the yard. Aaron
-knew<span class="pagenum" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</span> perfectly well that they were not allowed to molest him or his
-companion; and when he knew that he had my support he was ready to
-carry on the war to a finish. But it was really funny to see how meek
-and patient he was when left to defend himself alone against the native
-with a stick, and then to note the change in him when he knew that he
-was backed up by a friend upon whom he could rely.</p>
-
-<p><abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Strohm, the trader, previously mentioned, with whom I found
-hospitality at this place, kept a cow in the lot where the cage was.
-She was a small black animal, the first cow that Aaron had ever seen.
-He never ceased to contemplate her with wonder and with fear. If she
-came near the cage when no one was about, he hurried into his box and
-from there peeped out in silence until she went away. The cow was
-equally amazed at the cage and its strange occupants, though she was
-less afraid than they, and frequently came near to inspect them. She
-would stand a few yards away with her head lifted high, her eyes arched
-and her ears thrown forward, waiting for them to come out of that
-mysterious box. But they would not venture out of their asylum while
-she remained. At last, tired of waiting, she would switch her tail,
-shake her head, and turn away.</p>
-
-<p>When taken out of the cage Aaron had special delight in driving the cow
-away; and if she was around he would grasp me by the hand and start
-towards her. He would stamp the ground with his foot, strike with all
-force with his long arm, slap the ground with his hand, and scream at
-her at the top of his voice. If she moved away, he would let go my hand
-and rush towards her as though he intended<span class="pagenum" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</span> to tear her up; but if the
-cow turned suddenly towards him, the little fraud would run to me,
-grasp my leg, and scream with fright. The cow was afraid of a man, and
-as long as she was followed by one she would continue to go; but when
-she discovered the ape to be alone in the pursuit, she would turn and
-look as if trying to determine what manner of thing it was. Elisheba
-never seemed to take any special notice of the cow except when she
-approached too near the cage, and then it was due to the conduct of
-Aaron that she made any fuss about it.</p>
-
-<p>On board the steamer in which we sailed for home there was a young
-elephant that had been sent by a trader, for sale. He was kept on
-deck in a strong stall built for his quarters. There were wide cracks
-between the boards, and the elephant had the habit of reaching his
-trunk through them in search of anything he might find. With his long,
-flexible proboscis extended, he would twist and coil it in all manner
-of writhing forms. This was the crowning terror of the lives of those
-two apes; it was the bogie-man of their existence, and nothing could
-induce either of them to go near it. If they saw me approach it, they
-would scream and yell until I came away. If Aaron could get hold of me
-without getting too near the elephant, he clung to me until he almost
-tore my clothes, to keep me away from it. It was the one thing that
-Elisheba was afraid of, and the only one against which she ever gave me
-warning.</p>
-
-<p>They did not manifest the same concern for others, but sat watching
-them without offering any protest. Even the stowaway who fed them and
-attended to their cage was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</span> permitted to approach the elephant; but
-their solicitude for me was remarked by every man on board. I was never
-able to tell what their opinion of the thing was. They were much less
-afraid of the elephant when they could see all of him, than they were
-of the trunk when they saw that alone. They may have thought the latter
-to be a big snake; but this is only a conjecture.</p>
-
-<p>At the beginning of the voyage I took six panels of my own cage and
-made a small cage for them. I taught them to drink water from a beer
-bottle with a long neck that could be put through a mesh of the wires.
-They preferred this mode of drinking and appeared to look upon it as an
-advanced idea. Elisheba always insisted on being served first; being
-a female, her wish was complied with. When she had finished, Aaron
-would climb up by the wires and take his turn. There is a certain
-sound, or word, which the chimpanzee always uses to express “good” or
-“satisfaction,” and he made frequent use of it. He would drink a few
-swallows of the water and then utter the sound, whereupon Elisheba
-would climb up again and taste. She seemed to think it something better
-than she was drinking, but finding it the same as she had had, she
-would again give way for him. Every time he used the sound she would
-take another taste and turn away; but she never failed to try it if he
-uttered the sound.</p>
-
-<p>The boy who cared for them on the voyage was disposed to play tricks on
-them. One of these ugly pranks was to turn the bottle up so that when
-they had finished drinking and took their lips away, the water would
-spill out and run down over them. Several times they declined to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</span> drink
-from the bottle while he was holding it, but when he let it go, it hung
-in such a position that they could not get the water out of it at all.
-At length Aaron solved the problem by climbing up one side of the cage
-and getting on a level with the bottle; then he reached across the
-angle formed by the two sides of the cage and drank. In this position
-it was no matter to him how much the water ran out; it couldn’t touch
-him. Elisheba watched him until she quite grasped the idea; then she
-climbed up in the same manner and slaked her thirst. I scolded the
-boy for serving them with such cruel tricks; but it taught me another
-lesson of value concerning the mental resources of the chimpanzee, for
-no philosopher could have found a much better scheme to obviate the
-trouble than did this cunning little sage in the hour of necessity.</p>
-
-<p>I have never regarded the training of animals as the true measure of
-their mental powers. The real test is to reduce the animal to his own
-resources, and see how he will conduct himself under conditions that
-present new problems. Animals may be taught to do many things in a
-mechanical way, and without any motive that relates to the action; but
-when they can work out the solution without the aid of man, it is only
-the faculty of reason that can guide them.</p>
-
-<p>One thing that Aaron could never figure out was&mdash;what became of the
-chimpanzee that he saw in a mirror. I have seen him hunt for that
-mysterious ape an hour at a time. He once broke a piece off a mirror I
-had in trying to find the other fellow, but he never succeeded. I have
-held the glass firmly before him, while he put his face up close<span class="pagenum" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</span> to
-it&mdash;sometimes almost in contact. He would quietly gaze at the image and
-then reach his hand around the glass to feel for it. Not finding it, he
-would peep around the side of the glass and then look into it again. He
-would take hold of it and turn it around, lay it on the ground, look at
-the image again, and put his hand under the edge of the glass. The look
-of inquiry in that quaint face was so striking as to make one pity him.
-But he was hard to discourage. He resumed the search whenever he had
-the mirror.</p>
-
-<p>Elisheba never worried herself much about it. When she saw the image in
-the glass she seemed to recognize it as one of her kind; but when it
-vanished she let it go without trying to find it. In fact, she often
-turned away from it as though she did not admire it. She rarely ever
-took hold of the glass, and she never felt behind it for the other ape.</p>
-
-<p>Altogether Elisheba was an odd specimen of her tribe&mdash;eccentric and
-whimsical beyond anything I have ever known among animals; yet, with
-all her freaks, Aaron was fond of her and she afforded him company; but
-he was extremely jealous of her, and permitted no stranger to take any
-liberties with her with impunity. He did not object to their doing so
-with him. He rarely took offense at any degree of familiarity, for he
-would make friends with any one who was gentle with him; but he could
-not tolerate their attentions to her. She betrayed no sign of affection
-for him except when some one annoyed or vexed him; but in that event
-she never failed to take his part against all odds. At such times she
-became frantic with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</span> rage, and if the cause was prolonged, she often
-for hours afterwards refused to eat.</p>
-
-<p>On the voyage homeward there was on board another chimpanzee, belonging
-to a sailor who was bringing him home for sale. This one was about
-two years older than Aaron and fully twice as large. He was tame and
-gentle, but was kept in a close cage by himself. He saw the others
-roaming about the deck and tried to make up with them; but they evinced
-no desire to become intimate with one who was confined in such a manner.</p>
-
-<p>One bright Sunday morning, as we rode the calm waters near the Canary
-Islands, I induced the sailor to release his prisoner on the main deck
-with my own, to see how they would act towards each other. He did so,
-and in a moment the big ape came ambling along the deck towards Aaron
-and Elisheba, who were sitting on the top of a hatch, absorbed in
-gnawing some turkey bones.</p>
-
-<p>As the stranger came near he slackened his pace and gazed earnestly
-at the others. Aaron ceased eating and stared at the visitor with a
-look of surprise, but Elisheba barely noticed him. He scanned Aaron
-from head to foot, and Aaron did the same with him. He advanced until
-his nose almost touched that of Aaron, and in this position the two
-remained for some seconds. Then the big one proceeded to salute
-Elisheba in the same manner, but she gave him little attention. She
-continued to gnaw the bone in her hand, and he had no reason to feel
-flattered at the impression he appeared to have made on her. Aaron
-watched him with deep concern, but without uttering a sound.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</span></p>
-
-<p>Turning again to Aaron, the big ape reached out for his turkey bone;
-but the hospitality of the little host was not equal to the demand.
-He drew back with a shrug of his shoulder, holding the bone closer to
-himself, and then he resumed eating. Then a steward gave a bone to the
-visitor. He climbed upon the hatch and took a seat on the right of
-Elisheba, Aaron being seated at her left. As soon as the big one had
-taken his seat, Aaron resigned his place and crowded himself in between
-them. The three sat for a few moments in this order, till the big one
-got up and deliberately walked around to the other side of Elisheba and
-sat down again beside her. Again Aaron forced himself in between them.</p>
-
-<p>This act was repeated six or eight times; then Elisheba left the hatch
-and took a seat on a spar that lay on deck. The big ape immediately
-moved over and sat down near her; but by the time he was seated Aaron
-again got in between them, and as he did so he struck his rival a smart
-blow on the back. They sat in this manner for a minute or so. Then
-Aaron drew back his hand and struck again. He continued his blows, all
-the while increasing them in force and frequency; but the other did
-not resent them. His manner was one of dignified contempt, as if he
-regarded the inferior strength of his assailant unworthy of his own
-prowess. It would be absurd to suppose that he was constrained by any
-principle of honor, but his demeanor was patronizing and forbearing,
-like that of a considerate man towards a small boy.</p>
-
-<p>One amusing feature of the affair was the half-serious and half-jocular
-manner of Aaron. When striking, he did<span class="pagenum" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</span> not turn his face to look at
-his rival, and the instant the blow was delivered he withdrew his hand
-as if to avoid being detected. He gave no sign of anger though he made
-no effort to conceal his jealousy; and the other seemed to be aware of
-the cause of his disquietude. The smirk of indifference on the little
-lover’s face belied the state of mind that impelled his action, and it
-was patent to all who witnessed the tilt that Aaron was jealous of his
-guest. From time to time Elisheba would change her seat. Then a similar
-scene would ensue.</p>
-
-<p>The whole affair was so comical and yet so real that one could not
-repress the laughter it evoked. It was the drama of “love’s young
-dream” in real life, in which every man, at some period of his young
-career, has played each part the same as these two rivals played. Every
-detail of plot and line was the duplicate of a like incident in the
-experience of boyhood.</p>
-
-<p>Elisheba did not seem to encourage the suit of this simian beau, but
-she did not rebuff him as a true and faithful spouse should do, and I
-never blamed Aaron for not liking it. She had no right to tolerate the
-attentions of a total stranger; but she was feminine, and, perhaps,
-endowed with all the vanity of her sex, and fond of adulation. However,
-my sympathies for the devoted little Aaron were too strong for me to
-permit him to be imposed upon by a rival twice as big and three times
-as strong as himself; so I took him and Elisheba away to the after
-deck, where they had a good time alone.</p>
-
-<p>Elisheba was never very much devoted to me, but in the early part of
-her career she began to realize the fact that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</span> I was her master and her
-friend. She had no gratitude in her nature, but she had sense enough
-to see that all her food and comfort were due to me, and as a matter
-of policy she became submissive; but she was never tractable. She was
-doubtless a plebeian among her own race and was not capable of being
-brought up to a high standard of culture. She could not be controlled
-by kindness alone, for she was by nature sordid and perverse. I was
-never cruel or severe in dealing with her, but it was necessary to be
-strict and firm. Her poor health, however, often caused me to indulge
-her in whims that otherwise would have brought her under a more rigid
-discipline. The patient conduct of Aaron appeared to be tempered by the
-same consideration.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XVII">CHAPTER XVII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center heading p0">Illness of Elisheba&mdash;Aaron’s Care of Her&mdash;Her Death&mdash;Illness and Death
-of Aaron</p>
-
-
-<p>At the end of forty-two long days at sea we arrived at Liverpool. It
-was near the end of autumn. The weather was cold and foggy. Elisheba
-was failing in health, as I feared she would do, having come from the
-warm, humid climate along the equator, and, at the same time, having
-undergone a change of food.</p>
-
-<p>On arriving at the end of our long and arduous voyage, I secured
-quarters for the apes and quickly had them stowed away in a warm,
-sunny cage. Elisheba began to recover from the fatigue and worry of
-the journey, and for a while was more cheerful than she had been at
-any time since I had known her. Her appetite returned, the symptoms of
-fever passed away, and she seemed benefited rather than injured by the
-voyage. Aaron was in the best of health and had shown no signs of any
-evil results from the trip.</p>
-
-<p>On reaching the landing-stage in Liverpool, some friends who met us
-there expressed a desire to see the apes, and for that purpose I opened
-their cage in the waiting-room. When they beheld the throng of huge
-figures with white faces, long skirts, and big coats, they were almost
-frantic with fear. They had never before seen anything like it,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</span> and
-they crouched back in the corner of the cage, clinging to each other
-and screaming in terror. When they saw me standing by them, they rushed
-to me, seized me by the legs, and climbed up to my arms. Finding they
-were safe here, they stared for a moment, as if amazed at the crowd;
-then Elisheba buried her face under my chin and refused to look at any
-one. They were both trembling with fright, and I could scarcely get
-them into their cage again; but after they were installed in their
-quarters with <abbr title="doctor">Dr.</abbr> Cross, who was to have charge of them, they became
-reconciled to the sight of strangers in such costumes. In their own
-country they had never seen anything like it, for the natives, to whom
-they were accustomed, wear, as a rule, no clothing except a small piece
-of cloth tied round the waist, and the few white men they had seen
-were mostly dressed in white; but here was a great crowd of creatures
-in skirts and overcoats, and I have no doubt that to them it was a
-startling sight when seen for the first time.</p>
-
-<p>During the first two weeks after arriving at Liverpool, Elisheba
-improved in health and temper, until she was not like the same
-creature; but about the end of that time she contracted a severe cold.
-A deep, dry cough, attended by pains in the chest and sides, together
-with a piping hoarseness, betrayed the nature of her disease and gave
-just cause for apprehension. During frequent paroxysms of coughing she
-pressed her hands upon her breast or side, to arrest the shock and thus
-lessen the pain it caused. When quiet, she sat holding her hands on her
-throat, her head bowed down and her eyes drooping or closed. Day by day
-the serpent of disease drew his deadly coils closer<span class="pagenum" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</span> and closer about
-her wasting form; but she bore it with a patience worthy of a human
-being.</p>
-
-<p class="center p0 p2"><span class="figcenter" id="img019">
- <img src="images/019.jpg" class="w75" alt="ELISHEBA AND AARON (From a Photograph.)" />
-</span></p>
-<p class="center p0 caption">ELISHEBA AND AARON<br /> (From a Photograph.)</p>
-
-
-<p>The sympathy and forbearance of Aaron were again called into action,
-and the demand was not in vain. Hour after hour he sat holding her
-locked in his arms, as he is seen in the portrait given herewith. He
-was not posing for a picture, nor was he aware how deeply his manners
-touched the human heart. Even the brawny men who work about the place
-paused to watch him in his tender offices to her, and his staid keeper
-was moved to pity by his kindness and his patience. For days she
-lingered on the verge of death. She became too feeble to sit up; but
-as she lay on her bed of straw, he sat by her side, resting his folded
-arms upon her and refusing to allow any one to touch her. His look of
-deep concern showed that he felt the gravity of her case in a degree
-that bordered on grief. He was grave and silent, as if he foresaw the
-sad end that was near at hand. My frequent visits were a source of
-comfort to him, and he evinced a pleasure in my coming that bespoke his
-confidence in me and his faith in my ability to relieve his suffering
-companion; but, alas! she was beyond the aid of human skill.</p>
-
-<p>On the morning of her decease I found him sitting by her as usual.
-At my approach he quietly rose to his feet and advanced to the front
-of the cage. Opening the door, I put my arm in and caressed him. He
-looked into my face and then at the prostrate form of his mate. The
-last dim sparks of life were not yet gone out, as the slight motion of
-the breast betrayed; but the limbs were cold and limp. While I leaned
-over to examine more closely,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</span> he crouched down by her side and watched
-with deep concern to see the result. I laid my hand upon her heart to
-ascertain if the last hope was gone; he looked at me, and then placed
-his own hand by the side of mine, and held it there as if he knew the
-purport of the act. Of course to him this had no real meaning, but it
-was an index to the desire which prompted it. He seemed to think that
-anything that I did would be good for her, and his purpose, doubtless,
-was to aid me. When I removed my hand, he removed his; when I returned
-mine, he did the same; and to the last he gave evidence of his faith in
-my friendship and good intentions. His ready approval of anything I did
-showed that he had a vague idea of my purpose.</p>
-
-<p>At length the breast grew still, and the feeble beating of the heart
-ceased. The lips were parted, and the dim eyes were halfway closed;
-but he sat by as if she were asleep. The sturdy keeper came to remove
-the body from the cage; but Aaron clung to it and refused to allow him
-to touch it. I took the little mourner in my arms, but he watched the
-keeper jealously and did not want him to remove or disturb the body. It
-was laid on a bunch of straw in front of the cage, and he was returned
-to his place; but he clung to me so firmly that it was difficult to
-release his hold. He cried in a piteous tone and fretted and worried,
-as if he fully realized the worst. The body was then removed from view,
-but poor little Aaron was not consoled. How I pitied him! How I wished
-that he was again in his native land, where he might find friends of
-his own race!</p>
-
-<p>After this he grew more attached to me than ever. When I went to visit
-him he was happy and cheerful in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</span> my presence; but the keeper said that
-while I was away he was often gloomy and morose. As long as he could
-see me or hear my voice, he would fret and cry for me to come to him.
-When I had left him, he would scream as long as he had any hope of
-inducing me to return.</p>
-
-<p>A few days after the death of Elisheba the keeper put a young monkey
-in the cage with him, for company. This gave him some relief from the
-monotony of his own society, but never quite filled the place of the
-lost one. With this little friend, however, he amused himself in many
-ways. He nursed it so zealously and hugged it so tightly that the poor
-little monkey was often glad to escape from him in order to have a
-rest. But the task of catching it again afforded him almost as much
-pleasure as he found in nursing it.</p>
-
-<p>Thus for a few weeks he passed his time; then he was seized by a sudden
-cold, which in a few days developed into an acute type of pneumonia.
-I was in London at the time and was not aware of his sickness; but
-feeling anxious about him, I wrote to <abbr title="doctor">Dr.</abbr> Cross, in whose care he was
-left, and received a note in reply, stating that Aaron was very ill
-and not expected to live. I prepared to go to visit him the next day,
-but just before I left the hotel I received a telegram stating that he
-was dead. The news contained in the letter was a greater shock to me
-than that in the telegram, for which in part the former had prepared
-me; but no one can imagine how deeply these evil tidings affected me. I
-could not bring myself to a full sense of the fact. I was unwilling to
-believe that I had been thus deprived of my devoted friend. I could not
-realize that fate could be so cruel to me; but, alas! it was true.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</span></p>
-
-<p>Not having been present during his short illness or at the time of
-his death, I cannot relate any of the scenes accompanying them; but
-the kind old keeper who attended him declares that he never became
-reconciled to the death of Elisheba, and that his loneliness preyed
-upon him almost as much as the disease. When I looked upon his cold,
-lifeless body, I felt that I was indeed bereft of one of the dearest
-and most loyal pets that any mortal had ever known. His fidelity to me
-had been shown in a hundred ways, and his affections had never wavered.
-How could any one requite such integrity with anything unkind?</p>
-
-<p>To those who possess the higher instincts of humanity it will not be
-thought absurd in me to confess that the conduct of these creatures
-awoke in me a feeling more exalted than a mere sense of kindness. It
-touched some chord of nature that yields a richer tone. But only those
-who have known such pets as I have known them can feel towards them as
-I have felt.</p>
-
-<p>I have no desire to bias the calm judgment or bribe the sentiment of
-him who scorns the love of nature, by clothing these humble creatures
-in the garb of human dignity; but to him who is not so imbued with
-self-conceit as to be blind to all evidence and deaf to all reason,
-it must appear that they are gifted with faculties and passions like
-to those of man; differing in degree, but not in kind. Moved by such
-conviction, who could fail to pity that poor, lone captive in his iron
-cell, far from his native land, slowly dying? It may be a mere freak of
-sentiment that I regret not having been with him to soothe and comfort
-his last hours, but I do regret it deeply. He had the right to expect
-it of me, as a duty.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</span></p>
-
-<p>Poor little Aaron! In the brief span of half a year he had seen his own
-mother die at the hands of the cruel hunters; he had been seized and
-sold into captivity; he had seen the lingering torch of life go out
-of the frail body of Moses; he had watched the demon of death binding
-his cold shackles on Elisheba; and now he had himself passed through
-the deep shadows of that ordeal. What a sad and vast experience for
-one short year! He had shared with me the toils and the dangers of sea
-and land over many a weary mile. He seemed to feel that the death of
-his two friends had been a common loss to us; and if there is any one
-thing which more than another knits the web of sympathy about two alien
-hearts, it is the experience of a common grief.</p>
-
-<p>Thus ended the career of my kulu-kamba friend, the last of my
-chimpanzee pets. In him were centered many cherished hopes; but they
-did not perish with him, for I shall some day find another one of his
-kind in whom I may realize all that I had hoped for in him. I cannot
-expect to find a specimen of superior qualities, for he was certainly
-one of the jolliest and one of the wisest of his race. However fine and
-intelligent his successor may be, he can never supplant either Moses or
-Aaron in my affections; for these two little heroes shared with me so
-many of the sad vicissitudes of time and fortune that I should be an
-ingrate to forget them or allow the deeds of others to dim the glory
-of their memory. I have all of them preserved, and when I look at them
-the past comes back to me, and I recall so vividly the scenes in which
-they played the leading <em>rôles</em>; it is like the panorama of their
-lives.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XVIII">CHAPTER XVIII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center heading p0">Other Chimpanzees&mdash;The Village Pet&mdash;A Chimpanzee as Diner-Out&mdash;Notable
-Specimens in Captivity</p>
-
-
-<p>Among the number of chimpanzees that I have seen are some whose actions
-are worthy of record; but as many of them were the repetitions of
-similar acts of other specimens which are elsewhere described, I shall
-omit mention of them and relate only such other acts as may tend to
-widen the circle of our knowledge, and more fully illustrate the mental
-range of this interesting tribe of apes.</p>
-
-<p>In passing through the country of the Esyira tribe I came to a small
-village, where I halted for a rest. On entering the open space between
-two rows of bamboo huts, I saw a group of native children at the
-opposite end of the space, and among them was a fine big chimpanzee,
-sharing in their play. When they discovered the presence of a white
-man in the town, they left their sport and came to inspect me. The ape
-also came, and he showed as much interest in the matter as any one else
-did. I was seated in a native chair in front of the king’s hut, and the
-people, as usual, stood around me at a respectful distance, looking on
-as if I had been some wild beast captured in the jungle.</p>
-
-<p>The ape was aware that I was not a familiar kind of thing, and he
-appeared in doubt as to how he should act towards me. He sat down on
-the ground among the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</span> people and stared at me in surprise, from time to
-time glancing at those around him as if to ascertain what they thought
-of me. As they became satisfied with looking they retired one by one
-from the scene, until most of them had gone; but the ape remained.
-He changed his place a few times, but only to get a better view. The
-people were amused at his manner, but no one molested him.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p0 p2"><span class="figcenter" id="img020">
- <img src="images/020.jpg" class="w75" alt="Native Village, Interior of Nyanza (From a Photograph.)" />
-</span></p>
-<p class="center p0 caption">Native Village, Interior of Nyanza<br /> (From a Photograph.)</p>
-
-<p>At length I spoke to him in his own language, using the sound which
-they use for calling one another. He looked as if he knew what it
-meant, but made no reply. I repeated<span class="pagenum" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</span> the sound, and he rose up and
-stood on his feet, as if he intended to come to me. Again I uttered
-it, and he came a few feet closer, but shied to one side as if to
-flank my position and get behind me. He stopped again to look, and I
-repeated the word, in response to which he came up near my right side
-and began to examine my clothing. He plucked at my coat sleeve a few
-times, then at the leg of my trousers and at the top of my boot. He
-was getting rather familiar for a stranger; but I felt myself to blame
-for having given him the license to do so. For a while he continued
-his investigations, then he deliberately put his left hand on my right
-shoulder, his right foot on my knee, and climbed into my lap. He now
-began to examine my helmet, ears, nose, chin, and mouth. He became a
-little rough, and I tried to get him down out of my lap, but he was not
-disposed to go. Finally I told my boy&mdash;who acted as interpreter&mdash;to
-tell the native lads to come and take the ape away. This amused them
-very much, for they saw that I was bigger than the ape, and they
-thought I ought, therefore, to manage him myself. They complied,
-however; but his apeship declined to go until one of the men of the
-town interfered and compelled him to do so.</p>
-
-<p>As he got down from my lap one of the boys bantered him to play. He
-accepted the challenge and ran after the lad until they reached the
-end of the open space between the houses, when the boy fell upon the
-ground, and the ape fell on him. They rolled and wallowed on the ground
-for a time. Then the ape released himself and ran away to the other end
-of the opening, the boy pursuing him.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</span> When they reached the end of the
-street they again fell upon each other, and another scuffle ensued.
-It was plain to be seen that the boy could run much faster than the
-ape, but the ape did not try to elude him. The other children crowded
-around them or followed them, looking on, laughing and shouting in the
-greatest glee. First one boy and then another took his turn in the
-play, but the ape did not lose interest in me. He stopped from time to
-time to take another survey, but did not try again to get upon my lap.</p>
-
-<p>After a long time at this sport the ape quit playing and sat down by
-the wall of a house, with his back against it; the children tried in
-vain to induce him to resume; but he firmly declined, and sat there
-like a tired athlete, picking his teeth with a bamboo splinter which
-he had pulled off the side of the house. His conduct was so much like
-that of the children with whom he was playing that one could not have
-distinguished him from them except by his physique. He enjoyed the
-game as much as they did and showed that he knew how to gain or use an
-advantage over his adversary. In a scuffle he was stronger and more
-active than the boys, but in the race they were the more fleet. He
-screamed and yelled with delight, and in every way appeared to enter
-into the spirit of the fun.</p>
-
-<p>This ape was about five years old, and his history, as it was given to
-me, showed that he had been captured, when quite young, in the forest
-near that place and ever since that time had lived in the village.
-He had been the constant playmate of the children, ate with them,
-and slept in the same houses with them. He was perfectly tame and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</span>
-harmless; he knew by name every one in the village, and knew his own
-name.</p>
-
-<p>The king’s son&mdash;to whom he belonged&mdash;assured me that the ape could
-talk, and that he himself could understand what the animal said; but
-he declined to gratify my request to hear it. However, he called the
-ape by name, telling him to come, and the ape obeyed. The man then gave
-him a long-necked gourd and told him to go to the spring and bring
-some water. The animal hesitated, but after the command had been two
-or three times repeated he reluctantly obeyed. After a few minutes he
-returned with the gourd about half filled with water. In carrying the
-vessel he held it by the neck, but this deprived him of the use of one
-hand. He waddled along on his feet, using the other hand, but now and
-then he set the gourd on the ground, still holding to it, and using it
-something after the manner of a short stick. On delivering the gourd
-of water to his master, he gave evidence of knowing that he had done a
-clever thing.</p>
-
-<p>I expressed a desire to see him fill the gourd at the spring. The
-water was then emptied out, and the gourd was again given to him. On
-this occasion we followed him to the place where he got the water.
-On arriving he leaned over the spring and pressed the gourd into the
-water, but the mouth of it was turned down so that the water could
-not flow into it. As he lifted the gourd out it turned to one side,
-and a small quantity flowed into it. He repeated the act a number of
-times and seemed to know how it ought to be done, although he was very
-awkward in trying to do it. Whenever the water in the mouth<span class="pagenum" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</span> of the
-gourd bubbled, he dipped it back again and was evidently aware that it
-was not filled. Finally, raising the vessel, he turned and offered it
-to his master, who declined to relieve him of it. We turned to go back
-into the town, and the ape followed us with the gourd; but all the way
-along he continued to mutter a sound of complaint.</p>
-
-<p>He was next sent into the edge of the forest to bring firewood. He had
-been gone only a few minutes when he returned with a small branch of
-dead wood which he had picked up from the ground. He was again sent,
-together with three or four children. When he returned on this occasion
-he had three sticks in his hand. The man explained to me that when the
-ape went alone he would never bring but one twig at a time, and this
-was sometimes not bigger than a lead pencil; but if the children went
-with him and brought wood, he would bring as much as he could grasp in
-one hand. He also told me that the animal would sit down on the ground
-and lay the sticks across one arm in the same manner as the children
-did, but he invariably dropped them when he rose up. Then he would
-seize what he could hold in one hand and bring it along. The man also
-said that, in carrying a single stick, the ape always used only the
-hand in which he held it; but that if he had three or four pieces he
-always curved his arm inwards, holding the wood against his side, and
-hobbled along with his feet and the other hand.</p>
-
-<p>The next thing with which the man entertained me was sending the ape
-to call some one in the village. He first sent him to bring a certain
-one of the man’s wives. She was several doors away from where we sat.
-The ape went<span class="pagenum" id="Page_181">[Pg 181]</span> to one house, sat down at the door for a moment, looking
-inside, and then moved slowly along to the next, which he entered.
-Within a minute he appeared at the door, holding the cloth that the
-woman wore tied around her, and in this manner led her to his master.
-He was next sent to bring a certain boy. This he did in a similar
-manner, except that the boy had on no clothing of any kind, and the ape
-held him by the leg.</p>
-
-<p>During all these feats the man talked to him, as far as I could tell,
-in the native language only; though he declared to me that some of the
-words that he had used were those of the ape’s own speech. However,
-he said that many words that the ape knew were of the native speech,
-and that the ape had no such words in his language. One thing that
-especially impressed me was a sound which I have elsewhere described
-as meaning “good” or “satisfaction,” which this man said was the word
-which these apes use to mean “mother.” My own servant had told me the
-same thing, but I am still of the opinion that they are mistaken in
-the meaning of the sound, although it is almost exactly the same as
-the word for mother in the native speech. The difference being in the
-vowel element only, it is possible, I grant, that the word may have
-both meanings. A little later one of the women came to the door of
-a house and said, in the native language, that something was ready
-to eat; whereupon the children and the ape at once started. In the
-mean time she set in front of the house an earthen pot, containing
-boiled plantains, from which all the children and the ape alike
-helped themselves. In brief, the ape was a part of the family and was
-so regarded by<span class="pagenum" id="Page_182">[Pg 182]</span> all in the town. I do not know to what extent those
-natives may have played upon my credulity, but so far as I could
-discern, their statements concerning the animal were verified.</p>
-
-<p>I proposed to buy the ape, but the price asked was nearly twice that
-of a slave. I could have bought any child in the town at a smaller
-cost. I have never seen any other chimpanzee that I so much coveted.
-When standing in an upright position, he was quite four feet in height,
-strongly built and well proportioned. He was in a fine, healthy
-condition and in the very prime of his life. He was not handsome in the
-face, but his coat of hair was of good color and texture. He was of the
-common variety, but a fine specimen.</p>
-
-<p><abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Otto Handmann, formerly the German consul at Gaboon, had a very
-fair specimen of this same species of chimpanzee. He was a rough, burly
-creature, but was well disposed and had in his face a look of wisdom
-that was almost comical. He had been for some months a captive in a
-native town, during which time he had become quite tame and docile. By
-nature he was not humorous, but he appeared to acquire a sense of fun
-as he grew older and became more familiar with the manners of men.</p>
-
-<p>On my return from the interior I was invited by the consul to take
-breakfast with himself and a few friends; but owing to a prior
-engagement, I was not able to be present. It was proposed by some one
-of the guests that my vacant seat at the table should be filled by the
-chimpanzee. He was brought into the room and permitted to occupy the
-seat. He behaved himself with becoming gravity and was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_183">[Pg 183]</span> not abashed
-in the presence of so many guests. He was served with such things as
-were best suited to his liking, and his demeanor was such as to amuse
-all present. On the proposal of a toast all the guests beat with their
-hands upon the table, and in this the chimpanzee joined with apparent
-pleasure. After a few rounds of this kind, one of the guests occupying
-the seat next to the chimpanzee failed to respond with the usual
-beating; the chimpanzee observed the fact, turned upon the guest, and
-began to claw, scream, and pound him on the back and arm until the
-gentleman proceeded to beat; whereupon the ape resumed his place and
-joined in the applause. On this occasion he acquitted himself with
-credit; but an hour later he had fallen into disgrace by drinking beer
-until he was actually drunk, when he awkwardly climbed off the chair,
-crawled under the table, and went to sleep.</p>
-
-<p>One of the clerks in the employ of the consul had a fair specimen of
-this species. It was a female, perhaps two years younger than the one
-just described, but equally addicted to the habit of drinking beer. It
-is the custom among people on the coast to offer to a guest something
-to drink, and on these occasions this young lady ape always expected to
-partake with the others. If she was overlooked in pouring out the beer,
-she always set up a complaint until she got her glass. If it was not
-given to her, she would go from one to another, holding out her hand
-and begging for a drink. If she failed to secure it, she watched her
-opportunity, and while the guest was not looking would stealthily reach
-up, take his glass off the table, drink the contents, and return the
-glass to its place. She would<span class="pagenum" id="Page_184">[Pg 184]</span> do this with each one in turn until she
-had taken the last glass; but if a glass was given to her at the same
-time that the others were served, she was content with it and made no
-attempt to steal that of another. In this act she evinced a skill and
-caution worthy of a confirmed thief; she would secrete herself under
-the table or behind a chair and watch her chance. She made no attempt
-to steal the glass while it was being watched, but the instant she
-discovered that she was not observed, or thought she was not, the theft
-was committed.</p>
-
-<p>Her master frequently gave her a glass and a bottle of beer so that she
-might help herself. She could pour the beer with dexterity. She often
-spilt a portion of it and sometimes filled the glass to overflowing,
-but she always set the bottle right end up, lifted the glass with both
-hands, drained it, and refilled it as long as there was any in the
-bottle. She could also drink from the bottle and would resort to this
-method if no glass were given her. She knew an empty bottle from one
-that contained beer. I may remark here that I have known at least five
-or six chimpanzees that were fond of beer, and whenever they could get
-it would drink until they were drunk. I have never seen one, that I am
-aware of, that would drink spirits.</p>
-
-<p>This ape was very much attached to her master, would follow him and cry
-after him like a child. She was affectionate to him; but she had been
-so much annoyed by strangers that her temper was spoiled, and she was
-irritable.</p>
-
-<p>Arriving on the south side of Lake Izanga, I found a young chimpanzee
-at the house of a white trader. It was tied to a post in the yard,
-where it was annoyed by the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_185">[Pg 185]</span> natives who came to the place to trade. On
-approaching it for the first time, I spoke to it in its own language,
-using the word for food. It recognized the sound at once and responded
-to it. As I came nearer, it advanced as far towards me as the string
-with which it was tied would allow. Standing erect and holding out its
-hands, it repeated the sound two or three times. I gave it some dried
-fish. This it ate with relish, and we at once became friends. Its
-master permitted me to release it on the condition that I should not
-allow it to escape. I untied the cord and took the little captive in my
-arms. It put its arms around my neck as if I had been the only friend
-it had on earth. It clung to me and would not consent for me to leave
-it. I could but pity the poor, neglected creature. There it was, tied
-in the hot sun, hungry, lonely, and exposed to the tortures of every
-heartless native that chose to tease it. When it was not in my arms
-it followed me around and would not leave me for a moment. Its master
-cared but little for it and left it to the charge of his boy, who, like
-all other natives, had no thought or concern for the comfort of any
-creature but himself. I tried to purchase it, but the price was too
-much, and after two days our friendship was broken forever. But I was
-glad to learn soon after this that another of the traders had secretly
-released it and let it escape into the forest. The man who did this
-told me that he did it as an act of mercy. I often recall this little
-prisoner to mind, and always feel a sense of gladness at knowing that
-he was set at liberty by a humane friend. Whatever may have been his
-fate in the forest, it could have been no<span class="pagenum" id="Page_186">[Pg 186]</span> worse than to be confined,
-starved, and tormented, as he was while in captivity.</p>
-
-<p>Another small specimen which I saw at Gaboon was not of much interest
-except from one fact, and that was it was broken out with an
-eruptive disease prevalent among the natives. This disease is called
-<em>craw-craw</em>, or <em>kra-kra</em>. It is said to originate from the
-water, either by external or internal use of that fluid. This animal
-was infected in the same way and on the same parts of the body as men
-are affected by the same disease, and is another instance of apes being
-subject to the same maladies as those of man. The specimen itself also
-exemplified the difference in intellect among these animals, for this
-one had in its face a look of mental weakness, and every act confirmed
-the fact. It was silent, inactive, and obtuse.</p>
-
-<p>During my residence in the cage I saw fewer chimpanzees than gorillas;
-but from those I did see it was an easy matter to determine that they
-are much less shy and timid than the gorillas.</p>
-
-<p>On one occasion I heard a chimpanzee in the bush not far away from the
-cage. I called him with the usual sound. He answered, but did not come
-to the cage. It is probable that he could see it and was afraid of it.
-I tried to induce Moses to call him, and he did once utter the sound;
-but he appeared to regret having made the attempt. I called again and
-the stranger answered, and from the manner in which Moses behaved it
-was evident that the call had been understood. Moses would not attempt
-the call again, but clung to my neck with his face buried under my
-chin. It was probably jealousy that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_187">[Pg 187]</span> caused him to refuse, because he
-did not want the other to share my attentions. I gave the food sound,
-but I could not induce the visitor to come nearer. I failed to get a
-view of him so as to tell how large he was, but from his voice I judged
-that he must have been about full-grown. Whether he was quite alone or
-not I was not able to tell; but only the one voice could be heard.</p>
-
-<p>Another time while I was sitting quite alone, a young chimpanzee,
-perhaps five or six years old, appeared at the edge of a small opening
-of the bush. He plucked a bud or leaf from a small plant. He raised it
-to his nose and smelt it. He picked three or four buds of different
-kinds, one or two of which he put in his mouth. He turned aside the
-dead leaves that were lying on the ground, as if he expected to
-find something under them. I spoke to him, using the call sound; he
-instantly turned his eyes towards me, but made no reply. I uttered
-the food sound, and he replied but did not move. He betrayed no sign
-of fear and but little of surprise. He surveyed the cage and myself.
-I repeated the sound two or three times. He refused to approach any
-nearer. He turned his head from side to side for a moment, as if in
-doubt which way to go; then he turned aside and disappeared in the
-bush. He did not run or start away as if in great fear, but by the
-sound of the shaking bushes it could be told that he increased his
-speed after he had once disappeared from view.</p>
-
-<p>One day I had been for a stroll with Moses and the boy. As we returned
-to the cage we saw a chimpanzee about half grown; he was crossing a
-rugged little path about<span class="pagenum" id="Page_188">[Pg 188]</span> thirty yards away from us. He paused for a
-moment to look at us, and we stopped. I tried to induce Moses to call
-out to him, but he declined to do so. As the stranger turned aside I
-called to him myself, but he neither stopped nor answered. This one
-appeared to be quite brown, but the boy assured me the hair was jet
-black, and that the light skin gave the appearance of brown color. To
-satisfy myself, I had Moses placed in the same attitude and position,
-and, looking at him from the same distance, I became convinced that the
-boy was right.</p>
-
-<p>One morning, having started with Moses for a walk, we had gone only
-some forty yards away from the cage when he made a sound of warning. I
-instantly looked up and saw a large chimpanzee standing in the bush not
-more than twenty yards away. I paused to observe him. He stood for a
-moment, looking straight at us. I spoke to him, but he made no reply;
-he moved off in a line almost parallel to the little path we were in,
-and I returned towards the cage. He did not come any nearer to us,
-but kept his course almost parallel with ours. From time to time he
-turned his head to look, but gave no sign of attack. I called to him
-several times, but he made no answer. When I had reached a place in
-front of the cage I called again, and after the lapse of a few seconds
-he stopped. By this time he was concealed from view. He halted only
-for a moment, changed his course, and resumed his journey. This was
-the largest chimpanzee I saw in the forest. Once, while sitting in the
-cage, I heard the sound of something making its way through the bush
-not more than twenty yards away; presently a chimpanzee came into<span class="pagenum" id="Page_189">[Pg 189]</span>
-view. As it crossed the path near by, I called three or four times, but
-it neither stopped nor answered. As well as I could tell, it appeared
-to be a female and quite grown.</p>
-
-<p>I may take occasion to remark that, while the chimpanzee is mostly
-found in large family groups,&mdash;as I have reason to believe, from native
-accounts of them and from what has been told me by white men,&mdash;I have
-never been able to see a family of them together. Each of these that I
-have mentioned, so far as I could tell, was quite alone. Whether or not
-the others were scattered through the forest in like manner, hunting
-for food, and all came together after this, I cannot say.</p>
-
-<p>Another thing worthy of mention is the fact that both these apes, the
-chimpanzee and the gorilla, live in the same forest, and twice on the
-same day I have seen both kinds. This is contrary to the common idea
-that they do not inhabit the same jungle. It appears that where there
-is a great number of the one kind there are but a few of the other.
-The natives say that in combat between the chimpanzee and the gorilla
-the former is always victor, and on this account the gorilla fears the
-chimpanzee. I believe this to be true, because the chimpanzee, although
-not so strong as the gorilla, is more active and more intelligent.</p>
-
-<p>The chimpanzee will not approach or attack man if he can avoid him, but
-he does not shrink from him as the gorilla does. One instance that will
-illustrate this phase of his character I shall relate. On one occasion
-recently, while I was on the coast, a native boy started across a small
-plain near the trading station. With him was a dog<span class="pagenum" id="Page_190">[Pg 190]</span> that belonged to
-the white trader of the place. The dog was in advance of the boy, and
-as the latter emerged from a small clump of the bush he heard the dog
-bark in a playful manner, and discovered him not more than thirty yards
-away, prancing, jumping, and barking in a jolly way with a chimpanzee
-which appeared to be five or six years old. The ape was standing in the
-path along which the boy was proceeding. He was slapping at the dog
-with his hands and did not seem to relish the sport; yet he was not
-resenting it in anger. The dog thought the ape was playing with him,
-and he was taking the whole thing in fun. The boy looked at them for a
-few moments and retreated. As soon as he disappeared the dog desisted
-and followed him to the house. The boy was afraid of the ape and made
-no attempt to capture him. The ape was taken by surprise by the dog and
-the boy, and thus had no time to escape. He did not strike to harm the
-dog, but only to ward him off. The dog made no attempt to bite the ape,
-but would jump up against him and knock him out of balance, and this
-annoyed him. The ape didn’t seem to understand just what the dog meant.</p>
-
-<p>I shall not describe those apes that have been kept in captivity and
-are well known; but I will mention some of them. The largest specimen
-of the chimpanzee that I have ever seen was Chico, who belonged to <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr>
-James A. Bailey of New York. He was as large perhaps as these apes ever
-become, although he was less than ten years old when he died.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps the most valuable specimen for scientific use that has ever
-been in captivity is Johanna, who belongs<span class="pagenum" id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</span> to the same gentleman. The
-history that is given of her, however, is hardly to be taken in full
-faith. Her age cannot be determined with certainty, but it is said that
-she is about thirteen years old. I have reason to doubt that, although
-I cannot positively deny it. Whatever may be her exact age, it is
-certain that she has now reached a complete adult state. She has grown
-to be quite as large as Chico was at the time of his death. She is not
-of amiable temper, but is much less vicious than he was. She has some
-of the marks of a kulu-kamba.</p>
-
-<p>In order to justify my doubts upon the subject of Johanna’s age, I may
-state that Chico was hardly ten years of age when he died, but he had
-reached the adult period; and as males of any genus of the primates do
-not reach that state sooner than the females, it is not probable, since
-he was mature at ten, that she was not so until twelve. In the next
-place, her captors claim to have seen her within a few hours after her
-birth, and state that they watched her and her mother from time to time
-until she was one year old. Then they killed the mother and captured
-the babe. The claim is absurd. These apes are nomadic in habit and are
-rarely ever seen twice in the same place. They claim that she was born
-on January 19, but, from what I know of these apes, I conclude that is
-not their season of bearing. I doubt if any of them <em>were</em> ever
-born during that month. Again, it is claimed that she was captured by
-Portuguese explorers in the Congo, but the Portuguese do not possess
-along that river any territory in which these apes are ever found. They
-claim the territory around Kabinda, which would indicate that she<span class="pagenum" id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</span> came
-from the Loango valley instead of the Congo; but the cupidity of the
-average Portuguese would never allow anything to go at liberty for a
-year if it could be sold before that time.</p>
-
-<p>Johanna is accredited with a great deal of intelligence, but I do not
-regard her as being above the average of her race. Since the death
-of her companion, Chico, she has received the sole attention of her
-keeper, and since that time has been taught a few things which are
-neither marvelous nor difficult. In point of intellect she cannot be
-regarded as an extraordinary specimen of her tribe. I do not mean to
-detract from her reputation, but I have failed to discover in her any
-high order of mental qualities.</p>
-
-<p>The reason why Johanna may be regarded as the most valuable specimen
-for study is the fact that she is the only female of her race that has
-ever, in captivity, reached the state of puberty. She has done so,
-and this fact enables us to determine certain things which have never
-heretofore been known. This affords the zoologists an opportunity for
-the study of her sexual developments which may not again present itself
-in many years to come. From this important point of view she presents
-the student with many new problems in that branch of science. I have
-elsewhere stated my opinion that the female chimpanzee reaches the
-age of puberty at seven to nine years, and I have many reasons which
-I will not here recount that cause me to adhere to that belief. But
-the uncertainty of the age of this ape does not destroy her value as a
-subject of scientific study.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_193">[Pg 193]</span></p>
-
-<p>The most sagacious specimen of the race that I have been brought in
-contact with is Consul II, who is now an inmate of the Bellevue Garden
-in Manchester, England. He has not been educated to perform mere tricks
-to gratify the visitor, in the way that animals are usually trained,
-but most of the feats that he performs are prompted by his own desire
-and for his own pleasure. There is a vast difference in the motives
-that prompt animals in the execution of these feats. I have elsewhere
-mentioned the fact that animals that are caused to act from fear do so
-mechanically, and the acts are not a true index to their intellect.
-While Consul and a few other apes that I have seen do many things by
-imitation, they do not do them by coercion. They seem to understand the
-purpose and foresee the result, and these impel them to act.</p>
-
-<p>Some of the feats performed by this ape I have never seen attempted by
-any other. One accomplishment is the riding of a tricycle. He knows the
-machine by the name of “bike,” although it is not really a bicycle. He
-can adjust it and mount it with the skill of an acrobat. The ease and
-grace with which he rides are sufficient to provoke the envy of any
-boy in England. He propels it with great skill and steers it with the
-accuracy of an expert. He guides it around angles and obstacles with
-absolute precision. He is allowed to go at liberty a great deal of his
-time; and this is the proper way to treat these apes in captivity. He
-rides the wheel for his own diversion. He does not do it to gratify
-strangers or to “show off.”</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p0 p2"><span class="figcenter" id="img021">
- <img src="images/021.jpg" class="w50" alt="CONSUL II RIDING A TRICYCLE (From a Photograph.)" />
-</span></p>
-<p class="center p0 caption">CONSUL II RIDING A TRICYCLE<br /> (From a Photograph.)</p>
-
-<p>Another accomplishment which Consul has is that of smoking a pipe,
-a cigar, or a cigarette. This may not be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</span> commended from a moral
-standpoint, but it appears to afford him quite as much pleasure as it
-does the average boy when he first acquires the habit. He has also
-formed the habit of spitting as he smokes,&mdash;but he has the good manners
-not to spit on the floor. When Consul has his pipe lighted he usually
-sits on the floor to enjoy a smoke, and he spreads down before him a
-sheet of paper to spit on. When he has finished smoking he rolls up
-the paper and throws it into some corner, out of the way. When playing
-about the grounds he often finds a cigar stub. He knows what it is,
-picks it up, puts it into his mouth, and at once goes to his keeper for
-a light. He will not attempt to light his pipe or cigar, because he is
-afraid of burning his fingers; but he will light a match and hand it to
-his keeper to hold while lighting the pipe. He sometimes takes a piece
-of paper, lights it in the fire, and hands it to some one else to light
-his pipe for him. He is afraid of the fire and will not hold the paper
-while it is burning. If any one hesitates to take it, he throws it at
-him and then gets out of the way. He is not fond of cigarettes, because
-he gets the tobacco in his mouth, and he does not like the taste of it.</p>
-
-<p>When Consul is furnished with a piece of chalk he begins to draw some
-huge figure on the wall or the floor. He never attempts to make a small
-design with chalk, but if given a pencil and paper, he executes some
-peculiar figure of smaller design. Those made with the chalk or the
-pencil are usually round or oval in shape, but if given a pen and ink,
-he at once begins to make a series of small figures containing many
-acute angles. Whether these<span class="pagenum" id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</span> results are from design or accident I
-cannot say, but he appears to have a well-defined idea as to the use of
-the instrument. Whether he can distinguish between writing and drawing
-I am unable to say.</p>
-
-<p>The only abstract thing that his keeper has tried to teach him is to
-select from the letters of the alphabet. He has learned to distinguish
-the first three. These are made upon the faces of cubical blocks of
-wood; each block contains one letter on each of its faces. He selects
-with very few mistakes the letter asked for, and errors appear to
-result from indifference rather than from ignorance.</p>
-
-<p>Consul is very fond of play, and he makes friends with some strangers
-on sight, but to others he takes an aversion without any apparent
-cause; and, while he is not disposed to be vicious when not annoyed, he
-resents with anger the approaches of certain persons. He is the only
-ape I have seen that can use a knife and fork with very much skill;
-but he cuts up his food with almost as much ease as a boy of the same
-age would do, and he uses his fork in eating. He has been taught to do
-this, until he rarely uses his fingers in the act. He is fond of coffee
-and beer, but does not care for spirits.</p>
-
-<p>There is nothing that so much delights Consul as to get into the large
-cage of monkeys and baboons kept in the garden. Most of them are afraid
-of him. But one large Guinea baboon is not so, and on every occasion he
-shows his dislike for the ape. The latter takes many chances in teasing
-him, but always manages to evade his attack. He displays much skill and
-a great degree of caution in playing these pranks upon the baboon when
-at close range. Upon<span class="pagenum" id="Page_197">[Pg 197]</span> the approach of the ape the other animals in the
-cage all seek some refuge, and he finds great diversion in stealing up
-to their place of concealment to frighten them. Consul is very strong
-and can lift objects of surprising weight. It is awkward for him to
-stand in an upright position, but he does so with more ease than any
-other chimpanzee that I have ever seen. If any one will take hold of
-his hand, he will stroll for a long time and without apparent fatigue.</p>
-
-<p>Owing to the sudden changes of temperature in that part of England
-where he is kept, he is provided with a coat and is often required to
-wear it when going out of doors. He does not like to be hampered with
-such a garment, and if for a moment he is not watched, he removes it
-and sometimes hides it to keep from wearing it. He is also provided
-with trousers; these he dislikes more if possible than his coat, but,
-above all other articles of wearing apparel, he dislikes shoes. His
-keeper often puts them on him, but whenever he gets out of sight he
-unties and removes them. He cannot tie the laces, but can untie them
-in an instant. He does not evince so much aversion to a hat or a cap
-and will sometimes put one on without being told; but he has a perfect
-mania for a silk hat and, if allowed to do so, he would demolish that
-of every stranger who comes to the garden. He has a decided vein of
-humor and a love of approbation. When he does anything that is funny
-or clever, he is perfectly aware of the fact; and when by any act he
-evokes a laugh from any one, he is happy and recognizes the approval by
-a broad chimpanzee grin.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</span></p>
-
-<p>In the corner of the monkey house is a room set apart for the keeper,
-and in this room supplies of food for the inmates are kept. In a small
-cupboard in one corner is kept a supply of bananas and other fruits.
-Consul knows this and has tried many times to burglarize it. On one
-occasion he secured a large screw-driver and attempted to prise open
-the door. He found the resistance to be greatest at the place where the
-door locked, and at this point he forced the instrument in the crevice
-and broke off a piece of the wood, about an inch wide, from the edge
-of the door. At this juncture he was discovered and reproved for his
-conduct; but he never fails to stick his fingers in this crack and try
-to open the door. He has not been able to unlock it when the key is
-given him, although he knows the use of the key and has often tried it;
-but his keeper has never imparted the secret to him, and his method of
-using the key has been to prise with it or pull it, instead of turning
-it after putting it in the keyhole.</p>
-
-<p>The young keeper, <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Webb, deserves great credit for his untiring
-attention to this valuable young ape, and the results of his zeal are
-worthy of the recognition of every man who is interested in the study
-of animals.</p>
-
-<p>Another specimen that may be regarded as an intermediate type was
-recently kept in Bellevue Gardens at Manchester. He was playful and
-full of mischief. He had been taught to use a stick or broom in fight,
-and with such a weapon in his hand he would run all over the building,
-hunting some one to attack. He did not appear to be serious in his
-assault, but treated it as fun. It is a bad thing to teach to apes,
-because they grow pugnacious as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</span> they grow older, and all animals kept
-closely confined acquire a bad temper.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p0 p2"><span class="figcenter" id="img022">
- <img src="images/022.jpg" class="w50" alt="MR. CROWLEY, LATE OF THE NEW YORK ZOÖLOGICAL GARDEN" />
-</span></p>
-<p class="center p0 caption"><abbr title="mister">MR.</abbr> CROWLEY, LATE OF THE NEW YORK ZOÖLOGICAL GARDEN<br /> (Taken from Life.)</p>
-
-<p>In an adjoining cage was kept a young orang, and the two ate at the
-same table. The chimpanzee appeared to entertain a species of contempt
-for the orang. The keeper had taught him to pass the bread to his
-neighbor, but he obeyed with such reluctance that his manner betrayed
-more disgust than kindness. A few small pieces of bread were placed on
-a tin plate, and the kulu was required to lift the plate in his hand
-and offer it to the orang before he himself was allowed to eat. He
-would lift the plate a few inches above the table and hold it before
-the orang’s face; when the latter had taken a piece of the bread, the
-chimpanzee withdrew the plate, held it for a moment, and dropped it.
-Meanwhile he kept his eyes fixed on the orang. The manner in which he
-dropped the plate looked as if he did so in contempt. When the meal was
-finished, the kulu would drink his milk from a cup, wipe his mouth with
-the serviette, and then get down from the table. The orang would slowly
-climb down and go back to his cage. We shall not describe the details
-of their home life, but they were two jolly young bachelors, one of
-which was as stupid as the other was bright.</p>
-
-<p>The specimens that were kept in the Gardens in New York were very
-fine. One of them was mentally equal to any other specimen hitherto
-in captivity. There were two kept in the Cincinnati Gardens which
-were also very fine. So far as I am aware, there have never been but
-nine of these apes brought to America; but six of these lived longer,
-and four of them grew to be larger, than any other<span class="pagenum" id="Page_201">[Pg 201]</span> specimens of this
-race have ever done in captivity. For some reason they never survive
-long in England or other parts of Europe. This is probably due to
-some condition of the atmosphere. It cannot be from a difference of
-treatment.</p>
-
-<p>I have seen a large number of chimpanzees; most of them were in
-captivity; yet I have seen enough of them in a wild state to gain some
-idea of their habits and manner. Those described will be sufficient to
-show the mental character of the genus.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_202">[Pg 202]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIX">CHAPTER XIX</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center heading p0">Other Kulu-Kambas&mdash;A Knotty Problem&mdash;Instinct or Reason&mdash;Various Types</p>
-
-
-<p>Whether the kulu-kamba is a distinct species of ape, or only a
-well-marked variety of the chimpanzee, he is by far the finest
-representative of his genus. Among those that I have seen are some very
-good specimens, and the clever things that I have witnessed in them are
-sufficient to stamp them as the highest type of all apes.</p>
-
-<p>On board a small river steamer that plies the Ogowé was a young female
-kulu that belonged to the captain. Her face was not by any means
-handsome, and her complexion was darker than that of any other kulu
-I have ever seen. It was almost a coffee color. There were two or
-three spots yet darker in shade, but not well defined in outline. The
-dark spots looked as if they had been artificially put on the face.
-The color was not solid, but looked as if dry burnt umber had been
-rubbed or sprinkled over a surface of lighter brown. Although she was
-young (perhaps not more than two years old), her face looked almost
-like that of a woman of forty. Her short, flat nose, big, flexible
-lips, protruding jaws, and prominent arches over the eyes, with a low,
-receding forehead, conspired to make her look like a certain type of
-human<span class="pagenum" id="Page_203">[Pg 203]</span> being one frequently sees. This gave her what is known as a
-dish-face, or concave profile.</p>
-
-<p>She had a habit of compressing her nose by contracting the muscles of
-the face, curling her lips as if in scorn and at the same time glancing
-at those around her as if to express the most profound contempt.
-Whatever may have been the sentiment in her mind, her face was a
-picture of disdain, and the circumstances under which she made use of
-these grimaces certainly pointed to the fact that she felt just as
-she looked. At other times her visage would be covered with a perfect
-smile. It was something more than a grin, and the fact that it was
-used only at a time when she was pleased or diverted showed that the
-emotion which gave rise to it was perfectly in keeping with the face
-itself. In repose her face was neither pretty nor ugly. It did not
-strongly depict a high mental status, nor yet portray the instincts of
-a brute; but her countenance was a safe index to her mind. This is true
-of the chimpanzee more, perhaps, than of any other ape. The gorilla
-doubtless feels the sense of pleasure, but his face does not yield
-to the emotion, while the opposite passions are expressed with great
-intensity, and with the common chimpanzee it is the same way, but not
-to the same extent.</p>
-
-<p>The kulu in question was more a coquette than a shrew. She plainly
-showed that she was fond of flattery; not perhaps in the same sense
-that a human being is, but she was certainly conscious of approbation
-and fond of applause. When she accomplished anything difficult, she
-seemed aware of it; and when she succeeded in doing a thing which she
-ought not to do, she never failed to express<span class="pagenum" id="Page_204">[Pg 204]</span> herself in the manner
-described above. She always appeared to be perfectly conscious of being
-observed by others, but she was defiant and composed. There is nothing
-known in the catalogue of mischief that she was not ready to tackle at
-any moment and take her chances on the result. From the stokehole to
-the funnel, from the jack-staff to the rudder, she explored that boat.
-To keep her out of mischief, she was tied on the saloon deck with a
-long line; but no one aboard the vessel was able to tie a knot in the
-line which she could not untie with dexterity and ease. Her master, who
-was a sailor and an expert in the art of tying knots, exhausted his
-efforts in trying to make one that would defy her skill.</p>
-
-<p>On one occasion I was aboard the little steamer when the culprit was
-brought up from the main deck, where she had been in some mischief, and
-was tied to one of the rails along the side of the boat. The question
-of tying her was discussed, and at length a new plan was devised. In
-the act of untying a knot she always began with the part of the knot
-that was nearest to her. It was now agreed to tie the line around one
-of the rails on the side of the deck, about halfway between the two
-stanchions that supported it, then to carry the loose ends of the line
-to the stanchion, and make them fast in the angle of the stanchion
-and the rail. As soon as she was left alone she began to examine the
-knots. She made no attempt at first to untie them, but she felt them,
-as if to see how firmly they were made. She then climbed upon the iron
-rail around which the middle of the line was tied and slackened the
-knot. She pulled first at one strand and then at the other; but one<span class="pagenum" id="Page_205">[Pg 205]</span>
-end was tied to the stanchion and the other to her neck, and she could
-find no loose end to draw through. First one way and then the other
-she drew this noose. She saw that in some way it was connected with
-the stanchion. She drew the noose along the rail until it was near the
-post; she climbed down upon the deck, then around the post and back
-again; she climbed up over the rails and down on the outside, and again
-carefully examined the knot; she climbed back, then through between the
-rails and back, then under the rails and back, but she could find no
-way to get this first knot out of the line. For a moment she sat down
-on the deck and viewed the situation with evident concern. She slowly
-rose to her feet and again examined the knot; she moved the noose back
-to its place in the middle of the rail, climbed up by it, and again
-drew it out as far as the strands would allow. Again she closed it;
-she took one strand in her hand and traced it from the loop to the
-stanchion; then she took the other end in the same manner and traced it
-from the loop to her neck. She looked at the loop and then slowly drew
-it out as far as it would come. She sat for a while holding it in one
-hand, and with the other moved each strand of the knot. She was in a
-deep study and did not even deign a glance at those who were watching
-her. At length she took the loop in both hands, deliberately put it
-over her head and crawled through it. The line thus released dropped
-to the deck; she quickly descended, took hold of it near her neck, and
-found that it was untied; she gathered it up as she advanced towards
-the other end that was tied to the post, and at once began to loosen
-the knots about it. In<span class="pagenum" id="Page_206">[Pg 206]</span> a minute more the last knot was released. She
-then gathered the whole line into a bundle, looked at those around her
-with that look of contempt which we have described, and departed at
-once in search of other mischief. Her air of triumph and content was
-enough to convince any one of her opinion of what she had done.</p>
-
-<p>If this feat was the result of instinct, the lexicons must give another
-definition for that word. There were six white men who witnessed the
-act, and the verdict of all of them was that she had solved a problem
-which few children of her own age could have done. Every movement
-was controlled by reason. The tracing out of cause and effect was
-too evident for any one to doubt. Almost any animal can be taught to
-perform certain feats, but that does not show innate capacity. The
-only true measure of the faculty of reason is to reduce the actor to
-his own resources and see how he will handle himself under some new
-condition; otherwise the act will be, at least in part, mechanical or
-imitative. In all my efforts to study the mental caliber of animals I
-have confined them strictly to their own judgment, and left them to
-work out the problem alone. By this means only can we estimate to what
-extent they apply the faculty of reason. No one doubts that all animals
-have minds which are receptive in some degree. But it has often been
-said that they are devoid of reason and controlled alone by some vague
-attribute called instinct. Such is not the case. It is the same faculty
-of the mind that men employ to solve the problems that arise in every
-sphere of life, the one which sages and philosophers have used in every
-phase of science, differing only in degree.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_207">[Pg 207]</span></p>
-
-<p>This kulu-kamba knew the use of a corkscrew. This knowledge she had
-acquired from seeing it applied by men. While she could not use it
-herself with success, she often tried, and she never applied it to
-a wrong purpose. She would take the deck broom and scrub the deck,
-unless there were water on it; in that event she always left the job.
-She did not seem to know the purpose of sweeping the deck, and never
-swept the dirt before the broom. The action was doubtless imitative.
-She only grasped the idea that a broom was used to scrub the deck, but
-she failed to observe the effect produced. However, it cannot be said
-with certainty to what extent she was aware of the effect, but it is
-inferred from the fact that she did not try to remove the dirt. She
-knew what coal was intended for, and she often climbed into the bunker
-and threw it down by the furnace door. The furnace door and steam gauge
-were two things that escaped her busy fingers. I do not know how she
-learned the danger of them, but she never touched them. She had to be
-watched to keep her from seizing the machinery. For this she seemed to
-have a strong desire, but did not know the danger she might incur.</p>
-
-<p>I was aboard a ship when a trader brought off from the beach a young
-kulu to be sent to England. The little captive sat upright on the deck
-and seemed aware that he was being sent away. At any rate, his face
-wore a look of deep concern, as if he had no friend to whom he could
-appeal. On approaching him I spoke to him, using his own word for food.
-He looked up and promptly answered it. He looked as if in doubt as to
-whether I was a big ape<span class="pagenum" id="Page_208">[Pg 208]</span> or something else. I repeated the sound, and
-he repeated the answer and came towards me. As he approached me I again
-gave the sound. He came up and sat by my feet for a moment, looking
-into my face. I uttered the sound again, when he took hold of my leg
-and began to climb up as if it had been a tree. He climbed up to my
-neck and began to play with my lips, nose, and ears. We at once became
-friends, and I tried to buy him; but the price asked was more than I
-desired to pay. I regretted to part with him, but he was taken back to
-the beach, and I never saw him again.</p>
-
-<p>On another occasion one was brought aboard, and after speaking to him
-I gave him an orange; he began to eat it and at the same time caught
-hold of the leg of my trousers as if he did not wish me to leave him. I
-petted and caressed him for a moment and turned away, but he held on to
-me. He waddled about over the deck, holding on to my clothes, and would
-not release me. He was afraid of his master and the native boy who had
-him in charge. He was a timid creature, but was quite intelligent, and
-I felt sorry for him because he seemed to realize his situation.</p>
-
-<p>On the same voyage I saw one in the hands of a German trader. It was a
-young male, about one year old. He promptly answered the food sound.
-Then I called him to come to me; but this sound he neither answered nor
-complied with. He looked at me as if to ask where I had learned his
-language. I repeated the sound several times, but elicited no answer.
-I have elsewhere called attention to the fact that these apes do not
-answer the call when they can see the one who makes it, and they do
-not always<span class="pagenum" id="Page_209">[Pg 209]</span> comply with it. In this respect they behave very much like
-young children, and it may be remarked that one difficulty in all apes
-is to secure fixed attention. This is exactly the same with young
-children. Even when they clearly understand, sometimes they betray no
-sign of having heard. At other times they show that they both hear and
-understand, but do not comply.</p>
-
-<p>Another specimen that was brought aboard a ship when I was present
-was a young male, something less than two years old. He was sullen
-and morose. He did not resent my approaches, but he did not encourage
-them. I first spoke to him with the food sound, but he gave no heed.
-I retired a little distance from him and called him, but he paid no
-attention. I then used the sound of warning; he raised his head and
-looked in the direction from which the sound came. I repeated it, and
-he looked at me for a moment and turned his head away. I repeated it
-again. He looked at me, then looked around as if to see what it meant,
-and again resumed his attitude of repose.</p>
-
-<p>On my last voyage to the coast I saw a very good specimen in the Congo.
-It was a female, a little more than two years old. She was also of a
-dark complexion, but quite intelligent. She had been captured north of
-there, and within the limits elsewhere described. At the time I saw her
-she was ill and under treatment; but her master, the British consul,
-told me that when she was well she was bright and sociable. I made no
-attempt to talk with her, except some time after having left her I gave
-the call sound. She answered by looking around the corner of the house.
-I do not know whether she would have come or<span class="pagenum" id="Page_210">[Pg 210]</span> not, as she was tied and
-could not have come had she desired to do so.</p>
-
-<p>I have seen a few specimens of this ape, and most of them appear to
-be of a somewhat higher order than the ordinary chimpanzee; but there
-is among them a wide range of intelligence. It would be a risk to say
-whether the lowest specimen of kulu is higher or lower than the highest
-specimen of the common chimpanzee, but taken as a whole they are much
-superior. I shall not describe the specimens which have been known in
-captivity, since most of them have been amply described by others.</p>
-
-<p>If proper conditions were afforded to keep a pair of kulus in training
-for some years, it is difficult to say what they might not be taught.
-They are not only apt in learning what they are taught, but they are
-well disposed and can apply their accomplishment to some useful end.
-We cannot say to what extent they may be able to apply what they learn
-from man, because the necessity of using such knowledge is removed by
-the attention given to them.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_211">[Pg 211]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XX">CHAPTER XX</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center heading p0">The Gorilla&mdash;His Habitat&mdash;Skeleton&mdash;Skull&mdash;Color&mdash;Structural
-Peculiarities</p>
-
-
-<p>In the order of nature the gorilla occupies the second place below man.
-His habitat is the lowlands of tropical West Africa, and it is confined
-to very narrow limits. The vague lines which bound his realm cannot be
-defined with absolute precision, but those generally given in books
-that treat of him are not correct. If he ever occupied any part of the
-coast north of the equator, he has long since become extinct in that
-part; but there is nothing to show that he ever did exist there. So
-far as I have been able to trace the lines that define the extent of
-his native haunts, they appear to confine him to the low delta country
-lying between the equator and the Loango valley along the coast, and
-reaching eastward to the interior&mdash;an average distance of less than
-one hundred miles. The eastern boundary is very irregular. The extreme
-limit on the north side is about the Gaboon River, eastward to the
-foothills of the Crystal Mountains; thence southward to the Ogowé River
-to the vicinity of the mouth of the Nguni; thence up that river twenty
-or thirty miles; thence by a zigzag line along the western base of the
-dividing lands between the Congo basin and the Atlantic watershed, to
-the head-waters of the Chi Loango River, and with that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_212">[Pg 212]</span> valley to the
-coast. Beyond these lines I have found no reliable trace of him, and
-along this boundary only now and then is he found, except along the
-coast.</p>
-
-<p>I have seen two adult skulls and two infant skulls of the gorilla
-that were brought by <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> <abbr title="William">Wm.</abbr> S. Cherry from the Kisanga valley, which
-lies on the north side of the middle Congo, into which the Kisanga
-River flows. The skulls are the only evidence I have found of this ape
-existing so far eastward; but they were said to have come from that
-part of the valley lying directly under the equator. <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Cherry himself
-did not collect them. He secured them from natives, and he does not
-claim to have seen any of those apes alive.</p>
-
-<p>There appear to be three centers of gorilla population. The first is in
-the basin of Izanga Lake; the second is on the south side of the basin
-of Lake Nkami; and the third is in the basin of the lake east of Sette
-Kama and west of the Nkami River. The gorilla is rarely, if ever, found
-in high or hilly districts. He appears to be restricted to the hummock
-lands, which are elevated only a few feet above tide-level. This is
-all the more singular from the fact that the ape appears to have a
-morbid dislike for water, and it is doubtful whether or not he can
-swim. It is true that he has one peculiar characteristic that belongs
-to aquatic animals. He has a kind of web between the digits; but its
-purpose cannot be to aid in swimming. I have been told that the gorilla
-can swim, and the statement may be true; but I have never observed
-anything in his habits to confirm this, and I have noted many facts
-that controvert it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_213">[Pg 213]</span></p>
-
-<p>I know of no valid reason why he should be confined to the limits
-mentioned, unless it be on account of climatic conditions which are
-peculiar to this district. South of it the climate along the coast is
-much cooler. The country east of it is hilly and comparatively barren.
-North of the equator is a land of almost perpetual rain. Within this
-district dry and rainy seasons are more equally divided and more
-uniform in temperature.</p>
-
-<p>The gorilla appears to be an indigenous product which does not bear
-transplanting. He thrives only in a low, hot, and humid region,
-infested by malaria, miasma, and fevers. It is doubtful if he can long
-survive in a pure atmosphere. The only specimen that I have ever heard
-of north of the equator was one on the south side of the Komo River,
-which is the north branch of the Gaboon. The point at which I heard of
-his being was within a few miles of the equator. I also heard of five
-having been seen a few miles southwest from Njole, which is located on
-the equator on the north bank of the Ogowé, a little way east of the
-Nguni. They were said to be the first and only ones ever seen in that
-region within the memory of man. As to their being found between Gaboon
-and Cameroon, I find no trace along the coast of one ever having been
-seen in that part.</p>
-
-<p>Certain writers have mentioned the fact that, in 1851 and 1852,
-gorillas came in great numbers from the interior to the coast. The
-fact is that then the gorilla was practically unknown to science. He
-had been reported by Ford, Savage, and others, but prior to that time
-there are no data to show whether or not they were more numerous<span class="pagenum" id="Page_214">[Pg 214]</span>
-in the years mentioned. There had never been a specimen brought to
-civilization. It was about that time that <abbr title="doctor">Dr.</abbr> Ford sent a skeleton
-to America, and one had been previously sent to England. Some years
-earlier <abbr title="doctor">Dr.</abbr> Savage had announced the existence of such a creature and
-had sent sketches of a skull, but it was more than ten years after the
-period in question that Paul du Chaillu brought out the first skins of
-gorillas and gave detailed accounts of their character, habits, and
-geographical distribution. From these facts it is not rash to conclude
-that the migrations of 1851 and 1852 are mere matters of fancy.</p>
-
-<p>Gorillas are found in the Ogowé delta, about one degree south latitude;
-but not one has ever been known to come from the Crystal Mountains. At
-the time above mentioned neither traders nor missionaries had ascended
-the Gaboon River above Parrot Island (which is less than twenty miles
-from the mouth), except to make a flying trip by canoe. Nothing was
-known of those parts except what was learned from the natives, and that
-was very little. During my first voyage I went up the river as far as
-Nenge Nenge, about seventy-five miles from the coast. At that place I
-spent two days with a white trader, who had been stationed there for a
-year. I was assured by him that there were no gorillas in that section.
-The natives report that they have been found in the lowlands south
-of there, in the direction of the Ogowé basin; but their reports are
-conflicting, and none of them, so far as I could learn, claims that
-they are found north of there, nor in the mountains eastward. I admit
-that they may have been found in, and may yet inhabit, the strip of
-land between the Gaboon and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_215">[Pg 215]</span> the Ogowé; but I repeat that there is no
-tangible proof that they were ever found north of the Gaboon. With due
-respect to Sir Richard Owen and other writers who have never been in
-that country, I insist that they are mistaken. It is true that one of
-the tribes living north of the Gaboon has a name for this animal; but
-it does not follow that the ape lives in that country. The Orungu tribe
-has a name for lion, but there is not such a beast within two hundred
-miles of their country. Not one of that tribe ever saw a lion.</p>
-
-<p>A number of specimens of gorillas have been secured at Gaboon, but
-they have been brought there from far away. It is the chief town of
-the colony, and there are more white men there than elsewhere to buy
-them. It is not possible for a stranger to ascertain what part of the
-country a specimen is brought from. The native hunter will not tell the
-truth, lest some one else should find the game and thus deprive him of
-its capture and sale. I saw a specimen at Cameroon, and was told it had
-been captured in that valley, fifty miles from the coast; but I hunted
-up its history and found with absolute certainty that it was captured
-near Mayumba, two hundred miles south of Gaboon.</p>
-
-<p>Even with the greatest care in hunting up the history of a specimen,
-one may fail, and often does fail, in tracing it to its true source;
-but every one, so far, that I have followed up has been brought from
-somewhere within the limits I have laid down. Contrary to the statement
-of some authorities that these apes “have never been seen on the coast
-since 1852,” I assert that by far the greatest number of them are found
-near the coast. I do not mean to say<span class="pagenum" id="Page_216">[Pg 216]</span> that they sit on the sand along
-the beach, or bathe in the surf, but they live in the jungle of the low
-coast belt. Along the lower Congo the gorilla is known only by name,
-and scores of the natives do not know even that. The nearest point to
-that river that I have been able to locate the gorilla as a native is
-in the territory about sixty or seventy miles northwest of Stanley Pool.</p>
-
-<p>I am much indebted to the late Carl Steckelman, who was an old resident
-of the coast, a good explorer, a careful observer, and an extensive
-traveler. He was drowned at Mayumba in my presence in October, 1895.
-I knew him well and secured from him much information concerning the
-gorilla. On a map he traced out for me what he believed to be the south
-and southeast limits of the gorilla’s habitat. Not thirty minutes
-before the accident in which he lost his life I had closed arrangements
-with him to make an expedition from Mayumba to the Congo, near Stanley
-Pool, by one route and return by another, but his death prevented the
-fulfillment of this plan.</p>
-
-<p><abbr title="doctor">Dr.</abbr> Wilson, who was the first missionary at Gaboon, located there in
-1842. About six years after that time he wrote a lexicon of the native
-language. In this the name of the gorilla does not appear at all. If
-the ape had been so very common, it is not probable that his name would
-have been omitted from this lexicon. Eight years later <abbr title="doctor">Dr.</abbr> Walker, in
-a revision of the book, gave the definition, “a monkey larger than a
-man.” But he had never seen a specimen of the ape, except the skulls
-and a skeleton which had been brought from other parts. It is true
-that at Gaboon <abbr title="doctor">Dr.</abbr> Savage first learned about the gorilla and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_217">[Pg 217]</span> there
-secured a skull. From this he made drawings, on which account his name
-was attached to that of the animal in natural history. It was still a
-few years later that <abbr title="doctor">Dr.</abbr> Ford sent the first skeleton to America, and
-Captain Harris sent the first to England. The former skeleton is in the
-Museum of Zoölogy at Philadelphia. Both of these specimens may have
-come from any place a hundred miles away from Gaboon.</p>
-
-<p>It is possible that at this early date the gorilla may have occupied
-the peninsula south of the Gaboon River in greater numbers than he
-has since done, because up to that time there had been no demand for
-specimens. If this was true at that time, it is not so now; and if
-he is not extinct in that part, he is so rare as to make it doubtful
-whether or not he is found there at all as a native. In four journeys
-along the Ogowé River and the lakes of that valley I made careful
-inquiries at many of the towns, and the natives always assured me
-that the gorillas lived on the south side of that river. I spent five
-days at the village of Moiro, which is located on the north side of
-the river and about fifty miles from the coast. There I was told by
-the native woodsmen that no gorillas lived on the north side of the
-river, but that there were plenty of them along the lakes south of the
-river. They said that in the forest back of their town were plenty of
-chimpanzees, and that they were sometimes mistaken for gorillas, but
-there were absolutely none of the latter in that part.</p>
-
-<p>In view of these and countless other facts I deem it safe to say
-that few or no gorillas can be found at any point north of the Ogowé
-River; and I doubt if the specimen heard of on the Komo was a genuine
-gorilla. The natives<span class="pagenum" id="Page_218">[Pg 218]</span> sometimes claim to have something of the kind
-for sale, in order to get a bonus from some trader, when in truth they
-may not have anything of the kind. The only point north of the Ogowé
-at which I have had any reason to believe a gorilla was ever found
-was in the neighborhood of a small lake called Inenga. This lake is
-nearly due west from the mouth of the Nguni River and something more
-than a hundred miles from the coast. Certain reports along that part
-appeared to have a flavor of truth; but there was no evidence except
-the statement of the natives.</p>
-
-<p>In the lake region south of the river they are fairly abundant as far
-south as the head-waters of the Rembo, Nkami, and through the low
-country of the Esyira tribe; but they are very rare in the remote
-forests and unknown in the highlands and plains of that country. South
-of the Chi Loango they are quite unknown, and south of the Congo they
-are never heard of.</p>
-
-<p>There are no possible means of estimating their number; but they are
-not so numerous as has been supposed, and from the reckless slaughter
-carried on by the natives in order to secure specimens for white men,
-they may ultimately become extinct. Up to this time their ferocity
-alone has saved them from such a fate. But the use of improved arms
-will soon overcome that barrier.</p>
-
-<p>The skeleton of the gorilla is so nearly the same as that of
-the chimpanzee&mdash;which has elsewhere been compared to the human
-skeleton&mdash;that we shall not review the comparison at length; but we
-must note one marked feature in the external form of the skull, which
-differs alike from other apes and from man.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_219">[Pg 219]</span></p>
-
-<p>The skull of the young gorilla is much like that of the chimpanzee and
-remains so until it approaches the adult state. At this period the
-ridge above the eyes becomes more prominent, and at the same time a
-sharp, bony ridge begins to develop along the temples and continues
-around the back of the head on that part of the skull called the
-occiput. At this point it is intersected by another ridge at right
-angles to it. This is called the sagittal ridge. It runs along the top
-of the head towards the face; but on the forehead it flattens nearly to
-the level of the skull and divides into two very low ridges, which turn
-off to a point above the eyes and merge into that ridge. These form a
-continuous part of the skull and are not joined to it by sutures. The
-mesial crest in a very old specimen rises to the height of nearly two
-inches above the surface of the skull, and imparts to it a fierce and
-savage aspect; but in the living animal the crests are not seen, as the
-depressions between them are filled with large muscles, which make the
-head look very much larger than it otherwise would. These crests affect
-only the exterior of the skull and do not appear to alter the form or
-size of the brain cavity, which is slightly larger in proportion than
-that of the chimpanzee. These crests are peculiar to the male gorilla.
-The female skull shows no trace of them.</p>
-
-<p>There is at least one case in which the male gorilla has failed to
-develop this crest. In the series of skulls found in the cuts given
-herewith, <abbr title="Number">No.</abbr> 6 is that of an adult male gorilla. I know it to be such,
-for I dissected the animal and prepared the skeleton for preservation.
-He was killed in the basin of Lake Ferran Vaz, not more than three or<span class="pagenum" id="Page_221">[Pg 221]</span>
-four hours’ walk from my cage, and his body was at once brought to me.
-A good idea of his size can be obtained by reference to another cut
-given herewith. This cut is copied from a photograph taken by me. It
-shows some natives in the act of skinning the gorilla.</p>
-
-<p class="center p0 p2"><span class="figcenter" id="img023">
- <img src="images/023.jpg" class="w75" alt="SKULLS OF GORILLAS - FRONT VIEW" />
-</span></p>
-<p class="center p0 caption">SKULLS OF GORILLAS&mdash;FRONT VIEW<br /> (From a Photograph in Buffalo Museum.)</p>
-
-<p class="center p0 p2"><span class="figcenter" id="img024">
- <img src="images/024.jpg" class="w75" alt="SKULLS OF GORILLAS - PROFILE VIEW" />
-</span></p>
-<p class="center p0 caption">SKULLS OF GORILLAS&mdash;PROFILE VIEW<br /> (From a Photograph in Buffalo Museum.)</p>
-
-
-<p>In this picture the gorilla is sitting flat on the sand; his body is
-limp and is somewhat shorter than it was in life. Yet it can be seen
-that the top of his head is higher than the hip of the man who is
-holding him. In the foreground, on the left of the gorilla, sits the
-man who killed him. He is sitting on a log and is thereby a little more
-elevated than the gorilla. It did not occur to me to place them side
-by side in order to make a comparison. As he sits, the body and head
-of this gorilla measure nearly four feet from the base of the spinal
-column to the top of the head. I had no means of weighing him, but made
-an estimate by lifting him. I estimate that he weighed at least two
-hundred and forty pounds. He was not an old specimen, but comparing the
-skull with <abbr title="Number">No.</abbr> 7, in which the crests are well developed, it is found
-to be larger, and other things point to the conclusion that he was
-older than <abbr title="Number">No.</abbr> 7.</p>
-
-<p>I am aware that one specimen does not of itself establish anything, but
-in this case it shows that the male gorilla does not always develop
-the crest. The head of this specimen was surmounted by the red crown
-which I have elsewhere described. <abbr title="Number">No.</abbr> 1, which is the skull of my pet,
-Othello, had the same mark. He was captured near the place where <abbr title="Number">No.</abbr> 6
-was killed.</p>
-
-<p><abbr title="Number">No.</abbr> 2 is the skull of a female nearly four years old. She had the same
-mark. She was also captured in the same<span class="pagenum" id="Page_223">[Pg 223]</span> basin, but on the opposite
-side of the lake. The facial bones of <abbr title="Number">No.</abbr> 6 show that he had received a
-severe blow early in life; but the fragments had knit together, and the
-effect could not be seen in the face of the ape while alive.</p>
-
-<p><abbr title="Number">No.</abbr> 8 is the skull of a large male from Lake Izanga, which is on the
-south side of the Ogowé River, more than a hundred miles from the
-coast. This is one of the three centers of population mentioned. I do
-not know the history of this specimen. It was presented to me by <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr>
-James Deemin, an English trader, with whom I traveled many days on the
-Ogowé River, and who extended to me many courtesies.</p>
-
-<p><abbr title="Number">No.</abbr> 5 is the skull of an adult female. By comparing it in profile with
-<abbr title="Number">No.</abbr> 6, it will be seen that they resemble each other closely, except
-that the muzzle of the latter projects a little more, and the curvature
-of the skull across the top is less; but the transverse distance is a
-little greater. <abbr title="Numbers">Nos.</abbr> 2, 3, 4, and 5 are females; the others are males.</p>
-
-<p class="center p0 p2"><span class="figcenter" id="img025">
- <img src="images/025.jpg" class="w75" alt="NATIVES SKINNING A GORILLA (From a Photograph.)" />
-</span></p>
-<p class="center p0 caption">NATIVES SKINNING A GORILLA<br /> (From a Photograph.)</p>
-
-<p>While this series is not complete in either sex, it is an excellent one
-for comparative study. I do not know whether or not the heads of those
-with the crests were the same color as <abbr title="Number">No.</abbr> 6, but the <em>ntyii</em>,
-which I have mentioned as possibly a new specimen of the gorilla, does
-not have this crown of red. His ears are also said to be larger than
-those of the gorilla, but smaller than the chimpanzee’s. He is reputed
-to grow to a larger size than either of them. The skin of the gorilla
-is a dull black or mummy color over the body; but over the face it is a
-jet black, quite smooth and soft. It looks almost like velvet.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_224">[Pg 224]</span></p>
-
-<p>One fact peculiar to this ape is that the palms of both the hands
-and the feet are perfectly black. In other animals these are usually
-lighter in color than the exposed parts. In most other apes, monkeys,
-baboons, and lemurs, as in all races of men, the palms are lighter
-than the backs of the hands and feet. The thumb of the gorilla is more
-perfect than that of the chimpanzee, yet it is smaller in proportion to
-the hand than in man. The hand is very large, but has more the shape of
-the hand of a woman than that of a man. The fingers taper in a graceful
-manner, but by reason of the web alluded to they appear much shorter
-than they really are. It is not really a web in the true sense, but the
-integument between the fingers is extended down almost to the second
-joint. The forward edge of this is concave when the fingers are spread.
-When the fingers are brought together the skin on the knuckles becomes
-wrinkled, and the web almost disappears. This is more readily noticed
-in the living animal than in the dead. The texture of the skin in the
-palms is coarsely granulated, and the palmar lines are indistinct. The
-great toe sets at an angle from the side of the foot, thus resembling
-a thumb. It has more prehension than the corresponding member of the
-hand. The foot is less flexible than the hand, but it has greater
-strength and prehension.</p>
-
-<p>At this point I wish to draw attention to one important fact. The
-tendons of the foot, which open and close the digits, are imbedded in
-the palm in a deep layer of coarse, gristly matter, which forms a pad,
-as it were, under the soles of the foot and prevents it from bending.
-Therefore it is not possible for a gorilla to sleep on a perch.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_225">[Pg 225]</span> In
-this respect he resembles man more than the chimpanzee does, but it
-is quite certain that neither of them has the true arboreal habit.
-The gorilla is an expert climber, but he cannot sleep in a tree. In
-the hand the tendons which close the fingers are the same length as
-the line of the bones, and this permits him to open the fingers to a
-straight line, which the chimpanzee cannot do.</p>
-
-<p>One other important point I desire to mention. The muscles in the leg
-of the gorilla will not permit the animal to stand or walk erect. The
-large muscle at the back of the leg is shorter than the line of the
-bones of the leg above and below the knee. When this muscle is brought
-to a tension, those bones form an angle of from 130° to 160°, or
-thereabouts. So long as the sum of two sides of a triangle is greater
-than the other side, a gorilla can never bring his leg into a straight
-line. In the infant state, while the muscles are elastic and the bones
-less rigid, the leg can be forced nearly straight. The habit of hanging
-by the arms and walking with them in a straight line develops the
-corresponding muscle in those members so that the bones can be brought
-in line and the limbs straightened.</p>
-
-<p>The gorilla can stand upon his feet alone and walk a few steps in that
-position; but his motion is very awkward; his knees turn outward,
-forming an angle of 40° or 50° on either side of the mesial plane. He
-never attempts to walk in this position except at perfect leisure, and
-then he holds on to something with his hands.</p>
-
-<p class="center p0 p2"><span class="figcenter" id="img026">
- <img src="images/026.jpg" class="w50" alt="YOUNG GORILLA WALKING (From a Drawing.)" />
-</span></p>
-<p class="center p0 caption">YOUNG GORILLA WALKING<br /> (From a Drawing.)</p>
-
-<p>The leg of the gorilla from the knee to the ankle is almost the same
-in size. In the human leg there is what<span class="pagenum" id="Page_227">[Pg 227]</span> is called the “calf” of the
-leg, but in the apes this is very small. However, there is a tendency
-in the ape to develop that feature. In the human species the calf of
-the leg appears to belong to the higher types of men. As we descend
-from the highest races of mankind this characteristic decreases, and
-it almost disappears in the lowest savage. The pygmies and the bushmen
-have smaller calves than any other men. It is not to be inferred from
-this that apes would ever have this feature developed in them by their
-elevation to a higher plane. So long as they remain apes they will
-retain this characteristic, which is one of the distinctive features
-of their apehood. One thing which makes the calf appear smaller in
-the gorilla is the large size of the muscles about the ankle and the
-flexibility of that joint. Also the fact that the joint of the knee is
-larger in proportion to the leg makes it appear smaller than it really
-is. The corresponding parts of the arm are more like those of the human
-body.</p>
-
-<p>In a sitting posture the gorilla rests his body upon the ischial bones
-and sits with his legs extended or crossed. The chimpanzee usually
-squats, resting the ischial bones upon his heels. He sometimes sits,
-but more frequently he squats. When in either of these attitudes both
-kinds usually fold their arms across their breasts.</p>
-
-<p>The hair of the gorilla is irregular in growth. It is more dense than
-that of the chimpanzee, but less uniform in size and distribution.
-On the breast it is very sparse, while on the back it is dense and
-interspersed with long, coarse hairs. The hair on the arms is long and
-coarse. The ground color is black, but the extreme end of the hair<span class="pagenum" id="Page_228">[Pg 228]</span>
-is tipped with pale white. This is so even in early youth. With age
-the white encroaches, until in extreme age the animal becomes quite
-gray. The top of the head is covered with a growth of short hair. In
-certain specimens this crest is of a dark tan color. It looks almost
-like a wig. This mark seems to be peculiar to certain localities. It is
-uniform among those captured in the Ferran Vaz basin.</p>
-
-<p>A white trader living on Ferran Vaz Lake claims to have seen a gorilla
-which was perfectly white. It was said to have been seen on a plain
-near the lake in company with three or four others. It was thought to
-be an albino. In my opinion it was only a very aged specimen turned
-gray. A few of them have been secured that were almost white. It is
-not, however, such a shade of white as would be found in an animal
-whose normal color is white. I cannot vouch for the color of this ape
-seen on the plain, but there must have been something peculiar in it to
-attract attention among the natives. They regarded it as something very
-extraordinary.</p>
-
-<p>So far, only one species of this ape is known to science; but there
-are certain reasons to believe that two species exist. In the forest
-regions of Esyira the natives described to me another kind of ape,
-which they averred was a half-brother to the gorilla. They know the
-gorilla by the native name <em>njina</em>, and the other type by the
-name <em>ntyii</em>. They do not confuse this with the native name
-<em>ntyigo</em>, which is the name of the chimpanzee. Neither is it a
-local name for the <em>kulu-kamba</em>. All of those apes are known to
-the natives. They described in detail, and quite correctly, the three
-known kinds of ape. In addition they<span class="pagenum" id="Page_229">[Pg 229]</span> gave me a minute account of the
-appearance and habits of a fourth kind, which I believe to be another
-species of the gorilla. They claim that he is more intelligent and
-human-like than any one of the others. They say that his superior
-wisdom makes him more alert and, therefore, more difficult to find. He
-is said always to live in parts of the forest more remote from human
-habitation. On my next voyage I mean to hunt for this new species.</p>
-
-<p>The dental formula of the gorilla is the same as that of man; but the
-teeth are larger and stronger, and the canine teeth are developed into
-tusks. One thing to be remarked is the great variety of malformations
-in the teeth of this animal. It is a rare thing to find among them a
-perfect set of teeth, except in infancy. The cause of this deficiency
-appears to be violence.</p>
-
-<p>The eyes of the gorilla are large, dark, and expressive, but there
-is no trace of white in them. That part of the eye which is white in
-man is a dark coffee-brown in the gorilla. It becomes lighter as it
-approaches the base of the optic nerve. The taxidermist or the artist
-who often furnishes him with a white spot in the corner of his eye does
-violence to the subject. Those who pose him with his mouth opened like
-a fly-trap, and his arms raised like a lancer, ought to be banished
-from good society. It is true that such things lend an aspect of
-ferocity to the creature, but they are caricatures of the thing they
-mean to portray.</p>
-
-<p>The ears of the gorilla are very small and lie close to the sides of
-the head. The model of them is much like the human ear. The lower lip
-is massive, and the animal<span class="pagenum" id="Page_230">[Pg 230]</span> frequently relaxes it, so that a small red
-line is visible between the lips. The usual height of the adult male
-gorilla, if standing quite erect, is about five feet ten inches. The
-tallest specimen that has ever been taken is a trifle more than six
-feet two inches.</p>
-
-<p>I shall not pursue the comparison into minute details, but shall leave
-that to the specialist, in whose hands it will be treated with more
-skill and greater scope. As my especial line of research has been
-in the study of the speech and the habits of these animals, I shall
-confine myself to that. But the general comparison made is necessary to
-a better understanding of these subjects.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_231">[Pg 231]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXI">CHAPTER XXI</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center heading p0">Habits of the Gorilla&mdash;Social Traits&mdash;Government&mdash;Justice&mdash;Mode of
-Attack&mdash;Screaming and Beating&mdash;Food</p>
-
-
-<p>Studying the habits of the gorilla in a wild state is attended with
-much difficulty, but the results obtained during my sojourn of nearly
-four months among them in the forest are an ample reward for the
-efforts made. In captivity the habits of animals are made to conform
-in a measure to their surroundings, and since those are different from
-their natural environment, many of their habits differ in a like degree
-from the normal. Some are foregone, others modified, and new ones are
-acquired. Therefore, it is difficult to know exactly what the animal
-was in a state of nature.</p>
-
-<p>In the social life of the gorilla there are certain things in which he
-differs from the chimpanzee, but there are others in which they closely
-resemble each other. From the native accounts of the modes of life
-of these two apes there would appear to be a much greater difference
-than a systematic study of them reveals. The native version of things
-frequently has a germ of truth which may serve as a clue to the facts
-in the case; and while we cannot safely rely upon all the details of
-the tales they relate, we forgive their mendacity and make use of the
-suggestions they furnish.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_232">[Pg 232]</span></p>
-
-<p>The gorilla is polygamous in habit, and he has an incipient idea of
-government. Within certain limits he has a faint perception of order
-and justice, if not of right and wrong. I do not mean to ascribe to him
-the highest attributes of man or to exalt him above the plane to which
-his faculties justly assign him; but there are reasons to justify the
-belief that he occupies a higher social and mental sphere than other
-animals, except the chimpanzee.</p>
-
-<p>In the beginning of his career of independent life the young gorilla
-selects a wife with whom thereafter he appears to sustain the conjugal
-relation, and he maintains a certain degree of marital fidelity. From
-time to time he adopts a new wife, but does not discard the old one. In
-this manner he gathers around him a numerous family, consisting of his
-wives and children. Each mother nurses and cares for her own young, but
-all of them grow up together as the children of one family. The mother
-sometimes corrects and sometimes chastises her young. This presupposes
-some idea of propriety.</p>
-
-<p>The father exercises the function of patriarch in the sense of a ruler,
-and the natives call him <em>ikomba njina</em>, which means “gorilla
-chief.” This term is derived from the third person singular of the
-verb <em>kamba</em>, “to speak”&mdash;<em>i kamba</em>, “he speaks.” Hence
-“spokesman,” or one that speaks for others. To him all the others show
-a certain amount of deference. Whether this is due to fear or respect
-is not certain; but here is at least the first principle of dignity.</p>
-
-<p>The gorilla family of one adult male and a number of females and
-their young practically constitutes within itself a nation. There do
-not appear to be any social<span class="pagenum" id="Page_233">[Pg 233]</span> relations between different families,
-but within the same household there is apparent harmony. The gorilla
-is nomadic and rarely ever spends two nights in the same place. Each
-family roams about from place to place in the bush in search of food,
-and wherever they may be when night comes on, there they select a place
-to sleep.</p>
-
-<p>The largest family of gorillas that I ever heard of was estimated to
-contain twenty members. The usual number is rarely ever more than ten
-or twelve. The chimpanzees appear to go in somewhat larger groups than
-these. Sometimes in a single group of chimpanzees as many as three,
-or even four, adult males have been seen. When the young gorilla
-approaches the adult state he leaves the family group, finds himself
-a mate, and sets out in the world for himself. I observe that, as a
-rule, when one gorilla is seen alone in the forest it is usually a
-young male about reaching the state of manhood. It is probable that
-he has then set out for himself, and that he is in search of a wife.
-When two only are seen together they usually prove to be a young male
-and a young female. It sometimes occurs that three adults are seen
-with two or three children. In large families are seen young ones of
-different ages, from one year old to five or six years old. The older
-children are always fewer in number than the younger ones. I have once
-seen a large female quite alone except for her babe. Whether she lived
-alone or was only temporarily absent from her family I had no means of
-ascertaining.</p>
-
-<p>The gorilla chief does not provide food for his family. On the
-contrary, it is said that they provide for him. I have been informed,
-on two occasions and from different<span class="pagenum" id="Page_234">[Pg 234]</span> sources, that the gorilla chief
-has been seen sitting quietly eating under the shade of a tree while
-the others collected and brought to him his food. I have never myself
-witnessed such a scene, but it seems probable that the same story
-coming from two sources has some foundation of fact.</p>
-
-<p>In the matter of government the gorilla appears to be somewhat more
-advanced than most animals. The chief leads the others on the march
-and selects their feeding grounds and their places to sleep. He breaks
-camp, and the others all obey him in these respects. Other gregarious
-animals do the same, but, in addition to these things, the gorillas
-from time to time hold a rude form of court, or council, in the jungle.
-It is said that the king presides on these occasions; that he sits
-alone in the center, while the others stand or sit in a semicircle
-about him and talk in an excited manner. Sometimes all of them are
-talking at once. Many of the natives claim to have witnessed these
-proceedings; but what they mean or allude to no native undertakes
-to say, except that there appears to be something of the nature of
-a quarrel. To what extent the chief gorilla exercises the judicial
-function is a matter of doubt, but there appears to be some real ground
-for the story.</p>
-
-<p>As to the succession of the kingship there is no authoritative
-information as yet to be had; but from the meager data upon this point
-the belief is that on the death of the <em>ikomba</em> if there be an
-adult male he assumes the royal prerogative; otherwise the family
-disbands and eventually becomes absorbed by or attached to other
-families. Whether this new leader is elected in the manner in which
-other animals appoint a leader, or assumes it by reason of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_235">[Pg 235]</span> his age,
-cannot now be stated. There is no doubt that in many instances families
-remain intact for a long time after the death of their <em>ikomba</em>.</p>
-
-<p>It has been stated by many writers that the gorilla builds a rude hut
-for himself and family. I have found no evidence that such is the fact.
-The natives declare that he does this, and some white men affirm the
-same. During my travels through the country of the gorilla I offered
-frequent and liberal rewards to any native who would show me a specimen
-of this simian architecture; but I was never able to find a trace of
-one made or occupied by any ape. Sometimes they take shelter from
-the tornadoes, but it is usually under some fallen tree or a cluster
-of broad leaves. There is absolutely nothing to indicate that they
-rearrange any part of tree or leaves. So far as I could find, there is
-absolutely no proof that any gorilla ever put two sticks together with
-the idea of building a shelter. As to his throwing sticks or stones at
-an enemy, there is nothing to verify it, but much to controvert it. It
-is a mere freak of fancy.</p>
-
-<p>The current opinion that a gorilla will attack a man without being
-provoked to it is another popular error. He is shy and timid. He
-shrinks alike from man and from other large animals. When he is in a
-rage he is both fierce and powerful; but his ferocity and strength are
-rated above their value. In combat no doubt he is a stubborn foe, but
-no one I have ever met has seen him thus engaged. His mode of attack,
-as described by certain travelers, is a mere theory. It is said that
-in this act he walks erect, furiously beats upon his breast, roars,
-and yells. In this<span class="pagenum" id="Page_236">[Pg 236]</span> manner he first terrorizes and then seizes his
-adversary, tears open his breast and drinks the blood. I have never
-seen a large gorilla in the act of assault.</p>
-
-<p>During my stay in the jungle I had a young gorilla in captivity. I made
-use of him in studying the habits of his race. I kept him tied with a
-long line which allowed him room to play or climb about in the bushes,
-and at the same time prevented him from escaping into the forest, as he
-always tried to do the instant he was released. I frequently released
-him for the purpose of watching his mode of attack when recaptured.
-While being pursued he rarely looked back, but when overtaken he
-invariably assailed his captor. This gave me an opportunity of seeing
-his method of attack. In this he displayed both skill and judgment. As
-my native boy approached him he calmly turned one side to the foe and,
-without facing the boy, rolled his eyes in such a manner as to see him
-and at the same time conceal his own purpose. When the boy came within
-reach, the gorilla grasped him by thrusting the arm to one side and
-obliquely backwards. When he had seized his adversary by the leg, he
-instantly swung the other arm around with a long sweep, so as to strike
-the boy a hard blow. Then he used his teeth. He seemed to depend more
-upon the blow than upon the grasp, but the latter served to hold the
-object of attack within reach. In every case he kept one arm and one
-leg in reserve until he had seized his adversary.</p>
-
-<p>It is true that these attacks were made upon an enemy in pursuit, but
-his mode of doing this appeared to be natural to him. He struck a
-severe blow and showed no<span class="pagenum" id="Page_237">[Pg 237]</span> sign of tearing or scratching his opponent.
-In these attacks he made no sound. I do not say that other gorillas
-never scream or tear their victims, but I take it that the habits of
-the young are much, if not quite, the same as those of their elders;
-and from a study of this specimen I am forced to modify many opinions
-imbibed from reading or from pictures and museum specimens which I
-have seen. Many of them represent the gorilla in absurd and sometimes
-impossible attitudes. They certainly do not represent him as I have
-seen him in his native wilds. I had a young female gorilla as a subject
-for study for a short time. Her mode of attack was about the same as
-that just described, but she was too large to risk very far in such
-experiments.</p>
-
-<p>When the chimpanzee attacks,&mdash;so far as I have seen among my own
-specimens,&mdash;he approaches his enemy and strikes with both hands, one
-slightly in advance of the other. After striking a few blows he grasps
-his opponent and uses his teeth. Then, shoving him away, he again uses
-the hands. Usually, on beginning the attack, he accompanies the assault
-with a loud, piercing scream. Neither he nor the gorilla closes the
-hand to strike or uses any weapon except the hands and the teeth.</p>
-
-<p>I have read and heard descriptions of the sounds made by gorillas, but
-nothing ever conveyed to my mind an adequate idea of their real nature
-until I heard them myself within about a hundred feet of my cage in
-the dead of night. By some it has been called roaring, and by others
-howling; but it is neither a roar nor a howl. They utter a peculiar
-combination of sounds, beginning in a low, smooth<span class="pagenum" id="Page_238">[Pg 238]</span> tone, which rapidly
-increases in pitch and frequency, until it becomes a terrific scream.
-The first sound of the series and each alternate sound are made by
-expiration; the intermediate ones appear to be by inspiration. How this
-is accomplished it is difficult to say. The sound as a whole resembles
-the braying of an ass, except that the notes are shorter, the climax is
-higher, and the sound is louder. A gorilla does not yell in this manner
-every night, but when he does so it is usually between two and five
-o’clock in the morning. I have never heard the sound during the day nor
-in the early part of the night. When screaming he repeats the series
-from ten to twenty times, at intervals of one or two minutes apart. I
-know of nothing in the way of vocal sounds that can inspire such terror
-as the voice of the gorilla. It can be heard over a distance of three
-or four miles. I can assign no definite meaning to it unless it is
-intended to alarm some intruder.</p>
-
-<p>One morning, between three and four o’clock, I heard two of them
-screaming at the same time. I do not mean at the same instant, but at
-intervals during the same period of time. One of them was within about
-a third of a mile of me, and the other in another direction, perhaps
-a mile away. The points we respectively occupied formed a scalene
-triangle. The sounds made by the two apes did not appear to have any
-reference to each other. Sometimes they would alternate, and at other
-times they would interrupt each other. They were both made by giants of
-their kind, and every leaf in the forest vibrated with the sound. This
-was during the latter part of May. They scream in this way from time to
-time throughout the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_239">[Pg 239]</span> year, but it is most frequent and violent during
-February and March.</p>
-
-<p>This wild screaming is sometimes accompanied by a peculiar beating
-sound. It has been vaguely and variously described by travelers, and
-currently believed to be made by the animal beating with his hands upon
-his breast; but that is not the fact. The sound cannot be made by that
-means. The quality of the sound shows that such cannot be the means
-employed. I have several times heard this beating and have paid marked
-attention to its character. At a great distance it would be difficult
-to determine its exact quality.</p>
-
-<p>On one occasion, while passing the night in a native town, I was
-aroused from sleep by a gorilla screaming and beating within a few
-hundred yards of the village. I drew on my boots, took my rifle, and
-cautiously crossed the open ground between the village and the forest.
-This brought me within about two hundred yards of the animal. The moon
-was faintly shining, but I could not see the beast, and I had no desire
-to approach nearer at such a time. I distinctly heard every stroke. I
-believe the sound was made by beating upon a log or piece of dead wood.
-He was beating with both hands. The alternating strokes were made with
-great rapidity. The order of the strokes was not unlike that produced
-by the natives in beating their drums, except that in this instance
-each hand made the same number of strokes, and the strokes were in a
-constant series, rising and falling from very soft to very loud, and
-<em>vice versa</em>. A number of these runs followed one another during
-the time the voice continued. Between<span class="pagenum" id="Page_240">[Pg 240]</span> the first and second strokes the
-interval was slightly longer than that between the second and third,
-and so on through the scale. As the beating increased in loudness the
-interval shortened in an inverse degree, while in descending the scale
-the intervals lengthened as the beating softened, and the author of the
-sound was conscious of the fact.</p>
-
-<p>I could trace no relation in time or harmony between the sound of the
-voice and the beating, except that they began at the same time and
-ended at the same time. The same series of vocal sounds was repeated
-each time, beginning on the low note and ending in each case with the
-note of the highest pitch, while the rise and fall of the series of
-the beaten sounds were not measured by the duration of the voice. The
-series each time began with a soft note, but ended at any part of the
-scale at which it happened to be at the time the voice ceased. The
-coinciding notes were not the same in every case.</p>
-
-<p>No doubt the gorilla sometimes beats upon his breast. He has been seen
-to do this in captivity, but the sounds described above were not so
-made. Since the gorilla makes these sounds only at night, it is not
-probable that any man ever saw him in the act. It does not require
-a delicate sense of hearing to distinguish a sound made by beating
-the breast from that made by beating on dead wood or other similar
-substance.</p>
-
-<p>I have attributed the above sound to the gorilla, because I have been
-assured by many white men and scores of natives that it was made by
-him; but since my return from Africa I have had time to consider and
-digest certain facts tabulated on my first voyage, and, as a result of
-these<span class="pagenum" id="Page_241">[Pg 241]</span> reflections, I doubt whether this sound is made by the gorilla.
-There are reasons to believe that it is made by the chimpanzee.</p>
-
-<p>I observed that my own chimpanzees made a sound exactly the same as
-that I heard in the forest, except that it was less in volume. This was
-due to the age of the apes that made it. I could induce them at any
-time to make the sound, and frequently did so in order to study it.
-After my arrival in New York I found that Chico&mdash;the big chimpanzee
-belonging to <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Bailey&mdash;frequently made the same sound. This he
-always did at night. The cry was said to be so loud and piercing
-that it fairly shook the stately walls of Madison Square Garden.
-From reading the description given by the late Professor Romanes of
-the sound made by “Sally” in the London Gardens, it appears that she
-made the same sound. It is well known to the natives that chimpanzees
-beat on some sonorous body, which the natives call a drum. In 1890 I
-called attention to the beating practiced by the two chimpanzees in
-the Cincinnati Gardens. They frequently indulged in beating with their
-knuckles upon the floor of their cage. This was done chiefly by the
-male. The late E. J. Glave described to me the same thing as being done
-by the chimpanzees in the middle Congo basin.</p>
-
-<p>It is not probable that two animals of different genera utter the
-same exact sound, and this is more especially true of a sound that is
-complex or prolonged. Neither is it likely that the two would have a
-common habit, such as beating on any sonorous body. Since it is certain
-that one of these apes does make the sound described, it is more<span class="pagenum" id="Page_242">[Pg 242]</span>
-than probable that the other does not. The same logic applies to the
-beating. Many things that are known to the chimpanzee are taken for
-granted in the gorilla; but it is erroneous to suppose that in such
-habits as these they would be identical. In view of the facts I am
-inclined to believe the sounds described are made by the chimpanzee and
-not by the gorilla.</p>
-
-<p>There is another case in which the gorilla is wrongly portrayed. The
-female gorilla is represented as carrying her young clinging to her
-waist. I have seen the mother in the forest, with her young mounted
-upon her back, its arms around her neck, and its feet hooked in her
-armpits. I have never seen the male carry the young, but in a number
-of specimens of advanced age I have seen and called attention to the
-mark upon the back and sides which indicates that he does this. It is
-in the same place that the young one rests upon the back of the mother.
-In form it is like an inverted Y, with the base resting on the neck and
-the prongs reaching under the arms. This mark is not one of nature. It
-is the imprint of something carried there. In some specimens the hair
-is worn off until the skin is almost bare. The prongs are more worn
-than the stem of the figure. This is due to the fact that the abrasion
-is greater upon those parts than elsewhere. I do not assert that such
-is the cause, but I do assert that such is the fact.</p>
-
-<p>The gorilla is averse to human society. In captivity he is morose and
-sullen. He frets and pines for his liberty. His face appears to be
-incapable of expressing anything resembling a smile, but when in repose
-it is not repugnant. In anger his visage depicts the savage instincts
-of his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_244">[Pg 244]</span> nature. He does not seem to bear captivity well, even when not
-removed from his native climate. The longest any one of them has ever
-been known to live in captivity was about three and a half years. The
-one shown in the accompanying cut belonged to a trader by the name of
-Jones. The name of the gorilla was Sally, and I have called her Sally
-Jones. She lived with her master three years and a half and died of
-grief at his absence.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p0 p2"><span class="figcenter" id="img027">
- <img src="images/027.jpg" class="w75" alt="SALLY JONES (YOUNG GORILLA) CAUGHT NAPPING (From a Photograph.)" />
-</span></p>
-<p class="center p0 caption">SALLY JONES (YOUNG GORILLA) CAUGHT NAPPING<br /> (From a Photograph.)</p>
-
-<p>The gorilla which lived with me for a time in the forest was a sober,
-solemn, stoical creature, and nothing could arouse in him a spirit of
-mirth. The only pastime he cared to indulge in was turning somersaults.
-Almost every day, at intervals of an hour or so, he would stand up for
-a moment, then put his head upon the ground, turn over, rise to his
-feet again, and look at me as if expecting my applause. His actions in
-this feat were very much like those of a boy. He frequently repeated
-this act a dozen times or more, but never smiled or evinced any sign of
-pleasure. He was selfish, cruel, vindictive, and retiring.</p>
-
-<p>One peculiar habit of the gorilla, both wild and in captivity, is that
-of relaxing the lower lip when in repose. It is not done when the
-creature is in a sullen mood, but frequently, when perplexed or in a
-deep study, this occurs. Another habit is that of protruding the end
-of the tongue between the lips, until it is about even with the outer
-edge of them. The end of the tongue is somewhat more blunted than that
-of the human. This habit is so frequent with the young gorilla that it
-would appear to have some meaning; but I cannot suggest what it is.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_245">[Pg 245]</span></p>
-
-<p>In sleeping, the habit of the gorilla is to lie upon the back or
-side, with one or both arms placed under the head as a pillow. He
-cannot sleep on a perch,&mdash;as we have already noted,&mdash;but lies upon
-the ground at night. I had pointed out to me the place at the base of
-a large tree where a school of them had slept the night before. One
-imprint was quite distinct. The stories told about the king gorilla, or
-<em>ikomba</em>, placing his family in a tree while he sits on watch at
-the base is another case of supposition.</p>
-
-<p>The food of the gorilla is not confined to plants and fruits. He is
-fond of meat and eats it either raw or cooked. He secures a supply of
-this kind of food by catching small rodents of various kinds, lizards,
-toads, etc. It is also well known that he robs the nests of birds,
-taking the eggs or the young. A native once pointed out to me the
-quills and bones of a porcupine which had been left by a gorilla who
-had eaten the carcass. It is not at all rare for them to do this. The
-fruits and plants upon which they chiefly live are acidulous in taste,
-and some of them are bitter. They often eat the fruit of the plantain,
-but they prefer the stalk of that plant; this they twist or break open
-and eat the succulent heart. They do the same with the batuna, which
-grows all through the forest. The fruit of this plant is a red pod
-filled with seeds imbedded in a soft pulp. It is slightly acid and
-astringent. The wild mangrove, which forms a staple article of food
-for the chimpanzee, is rarely if ever eaten by the gorilla. I once
-saw a gorilla try to seize a dog, but whether or not it was for the
-purpose of eating the flesh I cannot say. One, however, did catch and
-devour a small dog on board the steamer<span class="pagenum" id="Page_246">[Pg 246]</span> Nubia, while on a voyage home
-from Africa. Both animals belonged to Captain Button, and from him I
-learned of the incident. Gorillas have no fixed hours for eating, but
-they usually eat in the early morning or the late afternoon. In a few
-instances I have seen them refuse meat. They are perhaps less devoted
-to eating flesh than the chimpanzee is.</p>
-
-<p>In the act of drinking, the gorilla takes a cup, places the rim in his
-mouth, and drinks in the same manner as a human being does. He does
-this without being taught, while the chimpanzee prefers to put both
-lips in the vessel. I have never known a gorilla that would drink beer,
-spirits, coffee, or soup. Their drink is limited to milk or water. The
-chimpanzee drinks beer and various other things.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_247">[Pg 247]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXII">CHAPTER XXII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center heading p0">Othello and Other Gorillas&mdash;Othello and Moses&mdash;Gorilla
-Visitors&mdash;Gorilla Mother and Child&mdash;Scarcity of Gorillas&mdash;Unauthentic
-Tales</p>
-
-
-<p>While I was living in my cage in the jungle I secured the young gorilla
-to whom I gave the name Othello. He was about six months old, strong,
-hardy, and robust. I found him to be a fine subject for study and made
-the best use of him for that purpose. I have elsewhere described his
-character, but his illness and death are matters of interest.</p>
-
-<p>At noon on the day of his decease he appeared to be quite well and in
-fine humor. He was turning somersaults and playing like a child with
-a native boy. He evinced much interest in his play, and his actions
-indicated that it gave him pleasure; but his face never once betrayed
-the fact. It was amusing to see him with the actions of a romping child
-and the face of a cynic.</p>
-
-<p>He was supplied with plenty of his favorite food, had a good appetite,
-and ate with a relish. Just after noon I sent the boy on an errand.
-Near the middle of the afternoon I observed that Othello was ill. He
-declined to eat or drink and lay on his back on the ground, with his
-arms under his head as a pillow. I tried to induce him to walk with
-me, to play, or to sit up, but he refused. By four o’clock he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_248">[Pg 248]</span> was
-very ill. He rolled from side to side and groaned in evident pain. He
-kept one hand upon his stomach, where the pain appeared to be located.
-He displayed all the symptoms of gastric poisoning, and I have reason
-to believe now that the boy had given him poison. I should regret to
-foster this suspicion against an innocent person, but it is based upon
-certain facts that I have learned since that time.</p>
-
-<p>While I sat in my cage watching Othello, who lay on the ground a short
-distance away, I discovered a native approaching him from the jungle.
-The man had an uplifted spear in his hand, as if in the act of hurling
-it at something. He had not seen me, but it did not for a moment occur
-to me that he had designs upon my pet. I spoke to him in the native
-language, whereupon he explained that he had seen the young gorilla and
-suspected that there was an old one close at hand, and being in fear of
-an attack, he was prepared. He said he was not afraid of a little one,
-but desired to capture him. I informed him that the gorilla was ill. He
-made an examination and assured me that Othello would die.</p>
-
-<p>The man departed, and Othello continued to grow worse. His sighing and
-groaning were really touching. I gave him an emetic, which produced
-good results. I also used some vaporoles to resuscitate him, but my
-skill was not sufficient to meet the demands of his case. His conduct
-was so like that of a human being that it deeply impressed me, and
-being alone with him in the silence of the dreary forest at the time of
-his death, the scene had a touch of sadness that impressed me with a
-deeper sense of its reality.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_249">[Pg 249]</span> Moses watched the dying ape as if he knew
-what death meant. He showed no signs of regret, but his manner was such
-as to suggest that he knew it was a trying hour.</p>
-
-<p>Othello died just before sunset, but for a long time prior to this he
-was unconscious. The only movements made by him were spasmodic actions
-caused by pain. The fixed and vacant stare of his eyes in his last
-hour was so like that of man in the hour of dissolution that no one
-could look upon the scene and fail to realize the solemn fact that this
-was death. The next day I dissected him and prepared the skin and the
-skeleton to bring home with me. They are now, with those of Moses and
-others, in the Museum of the University of Toronto.</p>
-
-<p>When I first secured this ape and brought him to my house in the bush,
-he was placed on the ground a few feet from my cage. Near him were laid
-some bananas and sugarcane belonging to Moses, who had not yet seen the
-stranger. The gorilla was in a box with one side open, so that he could
-easily be seen. My purpose was to see how each would act on discovering
-the other. When Moses observed the food he proceeded to help himself.
-On seeing the gorilla he paused a moment and gave me an alarm. He was
-not himself deterred from taking a banana. He seized one and retreated.
-While he was eating the banana, I took the gorilla from the cage and
-set him on the ground by it. I petted him and gave him some food. Moses
-looked on but did not interfere.</p>
-
-<p>When I returned to my cage Moses proceeded to investigate the new ape.
-He approached slowly and cautiously<span class="pagenum" id="Page_250">[Pg 250]</span> within about three feet of it. He
-walked around the gorilla a couple of times, keeping his face towards
-it, and gradually getting a little nearer. At length he came up within
-a few inches of one side of the gorilla and stopped. He stood almost
-on tiptoe, with only the ends of his fingers touching the ground. The
-gorilla continued to eat his food without so much as giving Moses a
-look. Moses placed his mouth near the ear of the gorilla and gave
-one terrific yell. The gorilla did not flinch or even turn his eyes.
-Moses stood for a moment looking as if in surprise that he had made
-no impression. After this time he made some friendly overtures to the
-gorilla, but the latter did not entertain them with favor, beyond
-maintaining terms of peace. They never quarreled, but Othello always
-treated Moses as an inferior. I do not know if he entertained a real
-feeling of contempt, but his manner was haughty and condescending.</p>
-
-<p>There were but few articles of food that he and Moses liked in common,
-and, therefore, they had no occasion to quarrel; but they never played
-together or cultivated any friendly terms, as the chimpanzees did among
-themselves. This may have been due to the fact that the gorilla was
-so exclusive in his demeanor towards the chimpanzee as to forbid all
-attempts of the latter to become intimate. The chimpanzee by nature is
-more sociable and is fond of human society. He imitates the actions
-of man in many things and quickly adapts himself to new conditions,
-while the gorilla is selfish and retiring. He can seldom be reconciled
-to human society. He does not imitate man nor readily yield to the
-influence of civilization.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_251">[Pg 251]</span></p>
-
-<p>One special trait of the gorilla which I wish to emphasize is that
-he is one of the most taciturn of all the family. This fact does not
-confirm my theory as to their faculty of speech; but it is a fact, so
-far as I observed, although the natives say that he is as loquacious
-as the chimpanzee. Among the specimens that I have studied, both wild
-and in captivity, I have never heard but four sounds that differed from
-each other, and of these only two could properly be defined as speech.
-I do not include the screaming sound described in another chapter. I
-have not been able, so far, to translate the sounds that I have heard,
-and they cannot be spelled with our letters.</p>
-
-<p>There is one sound which Othello often used. It was not a speech
-sound, but a kind of whine, always coupled with a deep sigh. When left
-alone for a time he became oppressed with solitude. At such times he
-often heaved a deep sigh and uttered this strange sound. The tone and
-manner strongly appealed to the feelings of others, and while he did
-not appear to address it to any one or have any design in making it,
-it always touched a sympathetic chord, and I was sometimes tempted to
-release him. Another sound which was not within the pale of speech was
-a kind of grumbling sound. This frequently occurred when he was eating.
-It was not exactly a growl, but a kind of complaint. Twice I heard
-this same sound made by wild ones in the forest near my cage. The only
-thing that I can compare it to is the habit that cats have of growling
-while eating. It appears to be done only when something is near. It is
-possibly intended to deter others from trying to take the food.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_252">[Pg 252]</span></p>
-
-<p>During my life in the cage I saw twenty-two gorillas; but I shall
-describe only a few of them, as their actions in most instances were
-similar. The first one that I had the pleasure of seeing in the jungle
-came within a few yards of the cage before it was yet in order to
-receive. He was exactly half grown. He must have been attracted by the
-noise made in putting the cage together. He advanced with caution,
-and when I discovered him he was peering through the bushes, as if to
-ascertain the cause of the sounds. When he saw me, he tarried only a
-few seconds and hurried off into the jungle. I did not disturb or shoot
-at him, because I desired him to return.</p>
-
-<p>On the third day after I went to live in the cage a family of ten
-gorillas was seen to cross an open space along the back of a batch of
-plantains near one of the villages. A small native boy was within about
-twenty yards of them when they crossed the path in front of him. A few
-minutes later I was notified of their vicinity. I took my rifle and
-followed them into the jungle until I lost the trail. A few hours after
-this they were again seen by some natives not far away from my cage,
-but they did not come near enough to be seen or heard. The next day a
-family came within some thirty yards of the cage. The bush was so dense
-that I could not see them, but I could distinguish four or five voices.
-They seemed to be engaged in a broil of some kind. I suppose it was the
-family that had been seen the day before. The second night after that I
-heard the screams of one in the forest some distance from me, but I do
-not know whether it was the king of this family or another.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_253">[Pg 253]</span></p>
-
-<p>One day as I sat alone a young gorilla, perhaps five years old, came
-within six or seven yards of the cage and took a peep. I do not know
-whether or not he was aware of its being there until he was so near. He
-stood for a time, almost erect, with one hand holding on to a bough.
-His lower lip was relaxed, showing the red line mentioned elsewhere,
-and the end of his tongue could be seen between his parted lips. He did
-not evince either fear or anger, but rather appeared to be amazed. I
-heard him creeping through the bush a few seconds before I saw him. As
-a rule, they move so stealthily as not to be heard. I know of no other
-animal of equal size that makes so little noise in going through the
-forest. During the short time he stood gazing at me I sat still as a
-statue, and I think he was in doubt as to whether or not I was alive.
-He did not run away, but after a brief pause turned off at an angle and
-quietly departed. He lost no time, but made no great haste. The only
-sound he made was a low grunt, and this he did not repeat.</p>
-
-<p>At another time I heard two making a noise among the plantains near me.
-I could obtain only a glimpse of them, but as well as I could see they
-were of good size, being almost grown. They were making a low sound
-from time to time, something such as I have described; but I could
-not see them well enough to frame any opinion as to what it meant.
-They were certainly not quarreling, and I was not sure that they were
-eating. I afterwards went and looked to see if I could find where they
-had broken any of the stalks. Their trail was visible through the grass
-and weeds, but I could find no broken stalk. They were<span class="pagenum" id="Page_254">[Pg 254]</span> moving at a
-very leisurely gait and must have been within hearing distance some ten
-or twelve minutes. They were quite alike in color and appeared to be so
-in size, although the adult male attains a much greater size than the
-female.</p>
-
-<p>On one occasion I was standing outside of the cage some twenty yards
-away, and Moses was sitting on a dead log near by. I turned to him
-and was in the act of sitting down by him when he gave alarm. This he
-did in an undertone, apparently to avoid attracting the attention of
-the thing against which the warning was intended. I looked around,
-and discovered a gorilla standing not twenty yards away. He had just
-discovered us. He gazed for a moment and started on, moving obliquely
-towards the cage. I turned to retreat. At this instant Moses gave one
-of his piercing screams, which frightened the gorilla and he fled. He
-changed his course almost at right angles. He was going at a good rate
-before Moses screamed, but he at once increased his pace.</p>
-
-<p>One day I heard three sounds which a native boy assured me were made
-by gorillas; they were in different directions from the cage. It was
-not a scream nor a howl, but somewhat resembled the human voice calling
-out with a sound like “he-oo!” These sounds were repeated at intervals,
-but did not appear to be in the relation of call and answer; and the
-animals making them did not approach each other while calling. The
-sounds were the same except in volume. One of them appeared to be
-made by an animal much larger than the animals that had made the two
-other sounds. I should state that this sound rarely occurred within my
-hearing during my stay in that part,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_255">[Pg 255]</span> and with one exception I never
-heard a gorilla make any loud sound during the day.</p>
-
-<p>Another interesting specimen came prowling through the jungle as if he
-had lost his way. He found a small opening, or tunnel, which I had cut
-through the foliage in order to get a better view. Turning into that,
-he came a few steps towards the cage before he discovered it. Suddenly
-he stopped and squatted on the ground. He did not sit flat down. For
-a few seconds he was motionless. So was I. He slowly raised one arm
-till his hand was above his head, in which position he sat for a few
-moments. Then he moved his hand quickly forward, as if to motion at me.
-He did not drop his hand to the ground, but held it for a short time
-at an angle from his face. Then he slowly let it down till it reached
-the ground. During this time he kept his eyes fixed on me. At length
-he raised the other arm and seized hold of a strong bush, by which he
-slowly drew himself to a half-standing position. Thus he stood for a
-few seconds, with one hand resting on the ground. Suddenly he turned
-to one side, parted the bushes, and disappeared. He uttered no sound
-whatever. Another came within about thirty yards of my retreat. When he
-discovered me he stopped and stared in a perplexed manner. He turned
-away to retreat, but, after going a few feet, turned round and sat
-down on the ground. He remained in that attitude for more than half a
-minute; then he rose and retired in the direction from which he had
-come.</p>
-
-<p>The finest specimen of which I ever had a view, and at the same time
-the best subject for study, was a large<span class="pagenum" id="Page_256">[Pg 256]</span> female that came within a
-trifle more than three yards of me. A dog that belonged to one of the
-native villages had become attached to me and had found its way through
-the bush to my cage. He frequently came to visit me, and I was always
-glad to welcome him. One afternoon about three o’clock he came, and I
-let him into the cage for a while, to pass the usual greetings. I had a
-bone which I had saved from my last meal, and I threw this out to him
-in the bush a few feet away from the cage. He seized the bone and began
-to gnaw it where it lay. His body was in the opening of a rough path
-cut through the jungle near the cage, but his head was concealed under
-a clump of leaves. All at once I caught a glimpse of some moving object
-at the edge of the path on the opposite side of the cage. It was a huge
-female gorilla carrying a young one on her back.</p>
-
-<p>When I first saw her she was not more than fifty feet away. She was
-creeping along the edge of the bushes and watching the dog. He was busy
-with the bone. Her tread was so stealthy that I could not hear the
-rustling of a leaf. She advanced a few feet, crouched under the edge
-of the bushes, and cautiously peeped at the dog. Again she advanced
-a little way, halted, crouched, and peeped. It was evident that her
-purpose was to attack the dog. Her approach was so wary as to leave
-no doubt of her dexterity in attacking a foe. Every movement was the
-embodiment of stealth. Her face wore a look of anxiety with a touch of
-ferocity. Her movements were quick but accurate, and her advance was
-not delayed by any indecision. The dog had not discovered her approach.
-The smell of the bone<span class="pagenum" id="Page_258">[Pg 258]</span> and the noise he was making with it prevented
-him from either smelling or hearing her. I could not warn him without
-alarming her. If he could have seen her before she made the attack,
-I should have left him to take his chances by flight or by battle. I
-should have been glad of an opportunity to witness such a combat and to
-study the actions of the belligerents, but I could not consent to see a
-friendly dog taken at such disadvantage. She was now rapidly covering
-the distance between them, and the dog had not yet discovered her.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p0 p2"><span class="figcenter" id="img028">
- <img src="images/028.jpg" class="w75" alt="GORILLA MOTHER WITH YOUNG" />
-</span></p>
-<p class="center p0 caption">GORILLA MOTHER WITH YOUNG</p>
-
-
-<p>When she reached a point within about ten feet of him I determined to
-break the silence. I cocked my rifle. The click of the trigger caught
-her attention. I think this was the first that she was aware of my
-presence. She instantly stopped, turned her face and body towards the
-cage, and sat down on the ground in front of it. She gave me such a
-look that I almost felt ashamed for having interfered. She sat for
-more than a minute staring at me as if she had been transfixed. There
-was no trace of anger or fear, but the look of surprise was on every
-feature. I could see her eyes move from my head to my feet. She scanned
-me as closely as if her purpose had been to purchase me. At length she
-glanced at the dog who was still gnawing the bone, then turned her head
-uneasily, as if to search for some way of escape. She then rose and
-retraced her steps with moderate haste. She did not run, although she
-lost no time. From time to time she glanced back to see that she was
-not pursued. She uttered no sound of any kind.</p>
-
-<p>From the time this ape came in view until she departed was about
-four minutes, and during that time I was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_259">[Pg 259]</span> afforded an opportunity
-of studying her in a way that no one else has ever been able to do.
-I watched every movement of her body, face, and eyes. Being in the
-cage, I sat with perfect composure and studied her without the fear
-of attack. With due respect for the temerity of men, I do not believe
-that any sane man could calmly sit and watch one of these huge beasts
-approach so near him without feeling a tremor of fear, unless he were
-protected as I was. Any man would either shoot or retreat, and he could
-not possibly study the subject with equanimity.</p>
-
-<p>The temptation to shoot her was almost too great to resist, and the
-desire to capture her babe made it all the more so. But I refrained
-from firing my gun anywhere within a radius of half a mile or so of my
-cage, and the natives had agreed to the same thing. My purpose in doing
-so was to avoid frightening the apes away from the locality. I had been
-told by the native hunters that if I wounded one of the apes the others
-would leave the vicinity and perhaps not return for weeks. It is said
-that if you kill one the others do not notice it so much as if you
-merely wounded it. Although they seem to be conscious of the fact of
-the killing, and for the time depart, they will return within a short
-time.</p>
-
-<p>I could have shot this one with perfect ease and safety. As she
-approached, her head and breast were towards me; just before she
-discovered me her left side was in plain view, and when she sat down
-her breast was perfectly exposed. I could have shot her in the heart,
-the breast, or the head. Her baby hung upon her back, with its arms
-embracing her neck and its feet caught under her arms.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_260">[Pg 260]</span> The cunning
-little imp saw me long before the mother did, but it gave her no
-warning of danger. It lay with its cheek resting on the back of her
-head. Its black face looked as smooth and soft as velvet. Its big,
-brown eyes were looking straight at me, but it betrayed no sign of fear
-or even of concern. It really had a pleased expression and wore the
-nearest approach to a smile I have ever seen on the face of a gorilla.
-I believe that this is their method of carrying the young and have
-elsewhere assigned other reasons for this belief. In this case it is
-not a matter of belief, but one of knowledge, and everything that I
-have observed conspires to show that this is not an exception to the
-rule.</p>
-
-<p>During my sojourn of nearly four months in the jungle, where, it was
-said, a greater number of gorillas could be found than in any other
-place in the basin of that lake, I saw a total of only twenty-two. I
-saw one other at a time while I was hunting in the forest. I caught
-only a glimpse of him, and should not even have done that had not the
-native guide discovered and pointed him out to me. I believe that no
-other white man has ever seen an equal number of these animals in a
-wild state, and it is certain that no other has ever seen them under
-such favorable conditions for study. I have compared notes with many
-white men along that part of the coast, but I have never found any
-reliable man who claims to have seen an equal number. All of them admit
-that my cage is the best possible means of seeing the apes. I know men
-who have lived in that part for years and who frequently hunt in the
-forest for days at a time, but never yet have seen a live gorilla.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_261">[Pg 261]</span> I
-met one man on my last voyage who has lived on the edge of the gorilla
-country forty-nine years, making frequent journeys through the bush
-and along the water-courses in the interest of trade. This man told me
-himself that in all that time he had never seen a wild gorilla.</p>
-
-<p>I would cite <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> James A. Deemin as an expert woodsman and a cool,
-daring hunter. I have enjoyed several hunts with him. He had traveled,
-traded, and hunted through the gorilla country for more than thirteen
-years. He told me that with two exceptions he had never seen a wild
-gorilla. The first he ever saw was a young one, and he once saw a
-school of them at a distance. On this latter occasion he was in a canoe
-and under the cover of the bushes along the side of a river. Unobserved
-he came near them.</p>
-
-<p>Another man, whose name I am at liberty to mention, is <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> J. H. Drake
-of Liverpool. By those who know him <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Drake has never been suspected
-of lacking courage in the hunt or of being given to romance. Yet in
-many years on the coast he saw but one school of these apes, and that
-was the same one that <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Deemin saw when the two men were traveling
-together. Others could be cited who testify that it is a rare thing for
-the most expert woodsman ever to see one of these creatures, and many
-of the stories told by the casual traveler cannot be received at par.
-I do not mean to impeach the veracity of others, but the temptation to
-romance is too great for some people to resist. While we cannot prove
-the negative by direct evidence, we must be permitted to doubt whether
-or not these apes are so frequently met in the jungle as they are<span class="pagenum" id="Page_262">[Pg 262]</span>
-alleged to be. I will give some reasons for being a sceptic on this
-subject.</p>
-
-<p>Almost every yarn told by the novice is about the same in substance,
-and much the same in detail, as those related by others. It seems that
-most of them meet the same old gorilla, still beating his breast and
-screaming just as he did forty years ago. The number of gun-barrels
-that he is accused of having chewed up would make an arsenal sufficient
-to arm the volunteers. What becomes of all those that are attacked by
-this fierce monarch of the jungle? Not one of them ever gets killed,
-and not one of them ever kills the gorilla. Does he merely do this as
-a bluff and then recede from the attack? Or does he follow it up and
-seize his victim, tear him open, and drink his blood, as he is supposed
-to do? How does the victim escape? What becomes of the assailant? Who
-lives to tell the tale?</p>
-
-<p>The gorilla has good ears, good eyes, and is a skillful bushman. One
-man walking through the jungle will make more noise than half a dozen
-gorillas make. The gorilla almost always sees and hears a man before
-he is seen or heard by him. He is shy and will not attack a man unless
-wounded or provoked to it. He is always on the alert for danger and
-rarely comes into the open parts of the bush except for food. He can
-conceal himself with more ease than a man can and has every advantage
-in making his escape. I do not believe that he will ever approach a man
-if he can evade him, but I quite believe that he will make a strong
-defense if surprised or attacked. I do not believe it possible for any
-one to see a great number of gorillas in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_263">[Pg 263]</span> any length of time unless he
-goes to some one place and remains there, as I have done. Even then
-he must sometimes wait for days without a trace of one. Silence and
-patience alone will enable him to see them. When the gorilla sees a
-man, he retires as soon as he discovers the nature of the thing before
-him. He does not always flee in haste, as some other animals do, but is
-more deliberate and cool about it. He will retreat in good order and
-always starts in time, if possible, to escape without being observed. I
-trust that I may be pardoned for not being able to believe that every
-stranger who visits that country is attacked by a gorilla.</p>
-
-<p>Many people labor under the popular delusion that they have seen a
-gorilla with some itinerant menagerie, and it may be cruel of me to
-undeceive them. Up to this time there has been but one gorilla landed
-alive in America. This one arrived in Boston in the autumn of 1897.
-It was a mere baby and lived only five days. It was exhibited to the
-public during only a part of two days. The many alleged gorillas
-offered by mendacious showmen are vile fakes, and the exhibitors should
-be dealt with as impostors.</p>
-
-<p>I regret that I have been compelled to deny much that has been said,
-but I make no apology for having done so. In this work I have sought to
-place these apes before the reader as I have seen them in their native
-forests. I have not clothed them in fine raiment or invested them with
-glamour. But I trust that this contribution may be found worthy of the
-approval of all men who love nature and respect fidelity.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_264">[Pg 264]</span></p>
-
-<p>I have the vanity to believe that the methods of study which I have
-employed will be made the means of farther research by more able
-students than the writer. In addition to those apes that I have seen in
-a wild state, I have seen about ten in captivity. Two of those were my
-own. They were good subjects for study, and I made the best use of them
-during the time I had them.</p>
-
-<p>While in the jungle I accomplished one thing, in which I feel a just
-sense of pride, and that was making a gorilla take a portrait of
-himself. This will interest the amateur in the art of snapshots, and I
-shall relate it.</p>
-
-<p>I selected a place in the forest where I found some tracks of the
-animal along the edge of a dense thicket of batuna. Under cover of the
-foliage I set up two pairs of stakes which were crossed at the tops,
-and to them was lashed a short pole forming something like a sawbuck.
-To this was fastened the camera, to which had been attached a trigger
-made of bamboo splits. One end of a string was fastened to the trigger,
-and the other end carried under a yoke to a distance of eight feet
-from the lens. At this point were attached a fresh plantain stalk
-and a nice bunch of the red fruit of the batuna. Upon this point the
-camera was focused, the trigger was set, and it was left to await the
-gorilla. That afternoon I returned to find that something had taken the
-bait, broken the string, sprung the trigger, and snapped the camera.
-I developed the plate, but could find no image of anything except the
-leaves in front of it. I repeated the experiment, with similar results,
-but could not understand how anything could steal the bait and yet not
-be shown in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_265">[Pg 265]</span> picture. The third time I did this I was gratified to
-find the image of a gorilla, and also to discover the cause why the
-other experiments had not succeeded.</p>
-
-<p>The deep shadows of the forest make it difficult to take a photograph
-without giving it a time exposure, and when the sun is under a cloud or
-on the wrong side of an object success is quite impossible. The leaves
-which were shown in the first two plates were only those which were
-most exposed to the light, and all the lower part of the picture was
-without detail. In the third trial it could be seen that the sun was
-shining at the instant of exposure. A part of the body of the gorilla
-was in the light, but most of it was in the shadow of the leaves above
-it. The left side of the head and face was quite distinct, so likewise
-were the left shoulder and arm. The hand and the bait could not have
-been distinguished except by their context. The right side of the head,
-the arm, and most of the body were lost in the view. The picture showed
-that the gorilla had taken the bait with his left hand, and that he was
-in a crouching posture at the moment.</p>
-
-<p>While the photograph was very poor as a work of art, it was full of
-interest as an experiment. Although it did not result in getting a good
-picture, I did not regard the effort as a failure. It shows at least
-that such a thing is possible, and by careful efforts, often repeated,
-it could be made a means of obtaining some novel pictures. A little
-ingenuity would widen the scope of this device and make it possible to
-photograph birds, elephants, and everything else in the forest. When I
-return to that place on a like journey I shall carry the scheme into
-better effect.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_266">[Pg 266]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXIII">CHAPTER XXIII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center heading p0">Other Apes&mdash;The Apes in History&mdash;Habitat&mdash;The Orangs&mdash;The Gibbon</p>
-
-
-<p>In the various records that constitute the history of these apes are
-found many novel and incoherent tales, but most of them appear to
-rest upon some basis of truth. In order to arrive at a more definite
-knowledge concerning them, we may review the data at our command.</p>
-
-<p>In the annals of the world, the first record that alludes to these
-manlike apes is that of Hanno, who made a voyage from Carthage to the
-west coast of Africa, nearly five hundred years before the Christian
-era. He described an ape which was found in the locality about Sierra
-Leone. It is singular that the description which he gave of those apes
-should coincide so fully with the apes known at the present day; but it
-is quite certain that the apes of which he gave an account were neither
-gorillas nor chimpanzees. There is nothing to show that either of these
-apes ever occupied that part of the world, or that any similar type has
-done so.</p>
-
-<p>The ape described by Hanno was certainly not an anthropoid, but a large
-dog-faced monkey or baboon, technically called <em>cynocephalus</em>.
-These animals are found all along the north coast of the Gulf of
-Guinea, but there is no trustworthy evidence of any true ape living
-north of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_267">[Pg 267]</span> Cameroon valley. The river that waters it empties into the
-sea about four degrees north of the equator. Here begins the first
-trace of the chimpanzee. As we pass along the windward coast, casual
-reports are current to the effect that gorillas and chimpanzees occupy
-the interior north of there; but when these reports are sifted down to
-solid facts, it turns out to be a big baboon or a monkey upon which the
-story rests. Its likeness to man, as described by Hanno, was doubtless
-the work of fancy, and the name <em>troglodytes</em> which he gave to it
-shows that he knew but little of its habits, or cared but little for
-the exactness of his statements.</p>
-
-<p>The account given by Henry Battel, in 1590, contains a thread of
-truth woven into a web of fantasy. He must have heard the stories he
-relates, or seen some specimens along the coast north of the Congo.
-There are certain facts which point to this conclusion. The name
-<em>pongo</em> which he gave to one of them belongs to the Fiote tongue,
-which is spoken by the native tribes around Loango. Those people use
-the name, and it is commonly understood to be synonymous with the name
-<em>njina</em>, used by the tribes north of there. It is always applied
-to the gorilla. To me, however, it appears to coincide with the name
-<em>ntyii</em>, as used by the Esyira people for another ape, which
-is described in the chapter devoted to gorillas. It was from Loango
-that <abbr title="doctor">Dr.</abbr> Falkenstein, in 1876, secured an ape under that name. It is
-singular that Baron Wurmb, in 1780, makes use of the name <em>pongo</em>
-for an orang. I have not been able to learn where he acquired this
-name, but it appears to be a native Fiote name for more than four<span class="pagenum" id="Page_268">[Pg 268]</span>
-hundred years, and the history of their language is fairly well known.</p>
-
-<p>The name <em>enjocko</em>, given by Battel to another ape, is beyond a
-doubt a corruption of the native name <em>ntyigo</em> (<em>ntcheego</em>),
-and this name belongs north of the Congo from Mayumba to Gaboon. He
-may have inferred that these apes occupied Angola, but there is not a
-vestige of proof that any ape exists in that part of Africa. Even the
-native tribes of that part have no indigenous name for either of these
-apes. Other parts of his account are erroneous, and while he may have
-believed that these apes “go in bodies to kill many natives that travel
-in the wood,” and the natives may have told him such a thing, the apes
-do not practice such a habit. With all their sagacity, they have no
-idea of unity of action. If a band of them were attacked, they would no
-doubt act together in defense, but it is not to be believed that they
-ever preconcert any plan of attack. Neither do these apes ever assault
-an elephant. He is the one animal they hold in mortal dread. I have
-incidentally mentioned elsewhere the conduct of my two <em>kulus</em> on
-board the ship when they saw a young elephant. Chico, the big ape that
-has also been mentioned, was often vicious and stubborn. Whenever he
-refused to obey his keeper or became violent, an elephant was brought
-in sight of his cage. On seeing it he became as meek as a lamb and
-showed every sign of the most intense fear. <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Bailey himself told me
-of the dread both of his apes had of an elephant. Battel was also wrong
-in the mode he described of the mother carrying her young, and that of
-the apes in using sticks and clubs.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_269">[Pg 269]</span></p>
-
-<p>The ape known as <em>Mafuka</em>, which was exhibited in Dresden in
-1875, was also brought from the Loango coast, and it is possible
-that this is the ape to which the native name <em>pongo</em> really
-belonged. This specimen in many respects conforms to the description
-of the <em>ntyii</em> given, but the idea suggested by certain writers
-that <em>Mafuka</em> was a cross between the gorilla and the chimpanzee
-is not, to my mind, a tenable supposition. It would be difficult to
-believe that two apes of different species in a wild state would cross,
-but to believe that two that belonged to different genera would do so
-is yet more illogical. I may state, however, that some of the Esyira
-people advance such a theory concerning the <em>ntyii</em>, but the
-belief is not general, and those best skilled in woodcraft regard them
-as distinct species.</p>
-
-<p>To quote, in “pidjin” English, the exact version of their relationship,
-as it was given to me by my interpreter while in that country, may
-be of interest to the reader. I may remark, by way of explaining the
-nature of the “pidjin” English, that it is a literal translation of the
-native mode of thought into English words. The statement was:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“<em>Ntyii</em> ’e one; <em>njina</em> ’e one; all two ’e one, one.
-<em>Ntyii</em> ’e one mudder; <em>njina</em> ’e one mudder; all two ’e one,
-one. <em>Ntyii</em> ’e one fader; <em>njina</em> ’e one fader. All two ’e
-one.” By which the native means to say that the <em>ntyii</em> has one
-mother, and the <em>njina</em> has one mother, so that the two have two
-mothers, but both have one father, therefore they are half-brothers.</p>
-
-<p>The other version given in denial of this statement is as follows:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_270">[Pg 270]</span></p>
-
-<p>“<em>Ntyii</em> ’e one mudder; <em>njina</em>, ’e one mudder. ’E one,
-one. <em>Ntyii</em> ’e one fader; <em>njina</em> ’e one fader. ’E one,
-one. All two ’e one, one. <em>Ntyii</em> ’e one mudder; <em>njina</em> ’e
-one mudder. All two ’e one, one. ’E brudder. <em>Ntyii</em> ’im fader;
-<em>njina</em> ’im ’e brudder. All two ’e one, one.” The translation is
-that the <em>ntyii</em> has a mother, and the <em>njina</em> has a mother,
-which are not the same, but are sisters. The <em>ntyii</em> has a father,
-and the <em>njina</em> has a father, which are not the same, but are
-brothers; and therefore the two apes are only cousins, which in the
-native esteem is a remote degree of kinship.</p>
-
-<p>The ape described by Lopez certainly belonged to the territory north of
-the Congo, which coast he explored, and gave his name to a cape about
-forty miles south of the equator. It still bears the name Cape Lopez.
-However, it is probable that at that time most of the low country now
-occupied by these apes was covered with water; that the lakes of that
-region were then all embraced in one great estuary, reaching from
-Ferran Vaz to Nazavine Bay, and extending eastward to the foothills
-below Lamberene. There is abundant evidence to show that such a state
-has once existed there, but it is not probable that these apes have
-ever changed their latitude.</p>
-
-<p>The name <em>soko</em> appears to be a local name for the ordinary type
-of chimpanzee found throughout the whole range of their domain, and
-known in other parts by other names. In Malimbu the name <em>kulu</em>
-appears to apply to the same species, while in the southwestern part
-of their habitat that name, coupled with the verb <em>kamba</em>, is
-confined strictly to the other type. Along the northern borders of
-the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_272">[Pg 272]</span> district to which that species belongs, but where he is very
-seldom found and little known to the natives, he is called by the Nkami
-tribe <em>kanga ntyigo</em>, to distinguish him from the common variety,
-to which the latter name only is applied.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p0 p2"><span class="figcenter" id="img029">
- <img src="images/029.jpg" class="w75" alt="PLAIN AND EDGE OF FOREST IN THE COUNTRY OF THE APES" />
-</span></p>
-<p class="center p0 caption">PLAIN AND EDGE OF FOREST IN THE COUNTRY OF THE APES</p>
-
-<p>The etymology of the name <em>kanga</em> as applied to this ape is
-rather obscure. In common use it is a verb, with the normal meaning
-“to parch” or “fry,” and hence the secondary meaning “to prepare.”
-Since this ape is said to be of a higher order of the race, the term
-is used to signify that he is “better prepared” than the other; that
-is to say, he is prepared to think and talk in a better manner. But
-another history of this word appears to be more probable. The ape to
-which the name is applied lives between the Nkami country and the
-Congo. The name is possibly a perversion of <em>kongo</em> and implies
-the kind of <em>ntyigo</em> that lives towards the great river of that
-name. The etymology of African names is always difficult because there
-is no record of them; but many of them can be traced out with great
-precision, and some of them are unique.</p>
-
-<p>The name <em>M’Bouve</em>, as given by Du Chaillu, I have not been able
-to identify. In one part of the country I was told that the word meant
-the “chief” or head of a family. In another part it was said to mean
-something like an advocate or champion, and was applied to only one
-ape in a family group. The <abbr title="reverend">Rev.</abbr> A. C. Goode, a missionary who recently
-died near Batanga, was stationed for twelve years at Gaboon. During
-that time he traveled all through the Ogowé and Gaboon valleys. He was
-familiar with the languages of that part, and he explained the word in
-about the same way.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_273">[Pg 273]</span></p>
-
-<p>Whatever may be said concerning the veracity of Paul du Chaillu, there
-is one thing that must be said to his credit. He gave to the world more
-knowledge of these apes than all other men had ever done before; and
-while he may have given a touch of color to many incidents, and related
-some native yarns, he told a vast amount of valuable truth; and I can
-forgive him for whatever he may have misstated, except one thing; that
-is, the starting of that story about gorillas chewing up gun-barrels.
-It has been a staple yarn, in stock ever since, and the instant you ask
-a native any question about the habits of the gorilla he begins with a
-stereotype edition of that improbable story.</p>
-
-<p>In view of the fact that I have made careful and methodic efforts to
-determine the exact boundary of the habitat and the real habits of
-these two apes, I feel at liberty to speak with an air of authority.
-I have acquired my knowledge on the subject by going to their own
-country and living in their own jungle, and I have thus obtained their
-secrets from first-hand. With due respect to those who write books and
-speak freely upon subjects of which they know but little, I beg leave
-to suggest that if the authors had gone into the jungle and lived
-among those animals, instead of consulting others who know less than
-themselves about the subject, many of them would have written in a very
-different strain. I do not mean this as a rebuke to any one, but seeing
-the same old stories repeated year after year, and knowing that there
-is no truth in them, I feel it incumbent as a duty to challenge them.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_274">[Pg 274]</span></p>
-
-<p>I believe that in the future it will be shown that there are two types
-of gorilla as distinct from each other as the two chimpanzees are. This
-second variety of gorilla will be found between the third and fifth
-parallels south and east of the delta district, but west of the Congo.
-I believe it was represented in the ape <em>Mafuka</em>.</p>
-
-<p>My researches among the apes have been confined chiefly to the
-two kinds heretofore described, but I have seen and studied in a
-superficial way the orang and the gibbon. I am not prepared as yet to
-discuss the habits of those two apes, but, as they form a part of the
-group of anthropoids, we cannot dismiss them without honorable mention.</p>
-
-<p>The orang-outang, as he is commonly called, is known to zoölogy by the
-first of these terms alone. He is a native of Borneo and Sumatra, and
-opinions differ as to whether there are two species or only one.</p>
-
-<p>The general plan of the skeleton of the orang is very much the same as
-that of the other apes. The chief points of difference are that it has
-one bone more in the wrist and one joint less in the spinal column than
-is found in man. He has thirteen pairs of ribs, which appear to be more
-constant in their number than in man. His arms are longer, and his legs
-shorter, in proportion to his body than the other two apes. The type of
-the skull is peculiar and combines to a certain extent more human-like
-form in one part with a more beast-like form in another. The usual
-height of an adult male is about fifty-one inches.</p>
-
-<p>I have never had an opportunity of studying this ape in a wild state
-and have had access to only a few of them<span class="pagenum" id="Page_275">[Pg 275]</span> in captivity. All of these
-were young, and most of them were inferior specimens. He is the most
-stupid and obtuse of the four great apes. Except for his skeleton
-alone, he would be assigned a place below the gibbon, for in point
-of speech and mental caliber he is far inferior. Perhaps the best
-authorities upon the habits of this ape in a wild state are <abbr title="misters">Messrs.</abbr> W.
-T. Hornaday and Alfred R. Wallace.</p>
-
-<p class="center p0 p2"><span class="figcenter" id="img030">
- <img src="images/030.jpg" class="w75" alt="Young Orangs (From a Photograph.)" />
-</span></p>
-<p class="center p0 caption">Young Orangs (From a Photograph.)</p>
-
-<p>The smallest and last in order of the anthropoid apes is the gibbon.
-He is much smaller in size, greater in variety,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_276">[Pg 276]</span> and more active than
-any other of the group. His habitat is in the southeast of Asia; its
-outline is vaguely defined, but it includes the Malay Peninsula and
-many of the contiguous islands east and south of it.</p>
-
-<p>In model and texture the skeleton of the gibbon is the most delicate
-and graceful of all the apes, and in this respect is superior to that
-of man. He is the only one of the four apes that can walk in an erect
-position. In doing this the gibbon is awkward and often uses his arms
-to balance himself. Sometimes he touches his hands to the ground. At
-other times he raises them above his head or extends them on either
-side. The length of them is such that he can touch the fingers to the
-ground while the body is nearly or quite erect. In the spinal column
-he has two, and sometimes three, sections more than man. His digits
-are very much longer, but his legs are nearly the same length, in
-proportion to his body, as those of man. He has fourteen pairs of ribs.</p>
-
-<p>The gibbon is the most active and probably the most intelligent of all
-apes. He is more arboreal in habit than any other. Many stories are
-told of his agility in climbing, and leaping from limb to limb. One
-authentic report credits one of these apes with leaping a distance of
-forty-two feet, from the limb of one tree to that of another. Perhaps
-a better term is to call it swinging, rather than leaping, as these
-flights are performed chiefly by the arms. Another account is that a
-gibbon swinging by one hand propelled himself a horizontal distance of
-eighteen feet through the air, seized a bird in flight, and alighted
-safely upon another limb, with his prey in hand.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_277">[Pg 277]</span></p>
-
-<p>There are several known species of this ape. The largest of these is
-about three feet high; but the usual height is not more than thirty
-inches. The voice of one species is remarkable for its strength, scope,
-and quality, being in these regards superior to that of all other
-apes. Most of the members of this genus are endowed with better vocal
-qualities than other animals.</p>
-
-<p>This ends the list of the manlike apes. Next in order after them come
-the monkeys, then the baboons, and, last, the lemurs.</p>
-
-<p>The descent, as we have elsewhere observed, from the highest ape to the
-lowest monkey presents one unbroken scale of imbricating planes. We
-have seen in what degree man is related to the higher apes. From thence
-we may discern in what degree his physical nature is the same as that
-of all the order to which he belongs. No matter in what respect man may
-differ in his mental and moral nature, his likeness to them should at
-least restrain his pride, evoke his sympathy, and cause him to share
-the bounty of his benevolence. Let him realize in full extent that he
-is one in nature with the rest of animate creatures, and they will
-receive the benign influence of his dignity without impairing it, while
-he will elevate himself by having given it.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_278">[Pg 278]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXIV">CHAPTER XXIV</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center heading p0">The Treatment of Apes in
-Captivity&mdash;Temperature&mdash;Building&mdash;Food&mdash;Occupation</p>
-
-
-<p>In conclusion I deem it in order to offer a few remarks with regard to
-the causes of death among these apes, and to say something regarding
-the treatment of animals in captivity. We know so little and assume so
-much concerning them that we often violate the very laws which we are
-trying to enforce.</p>
-
-<p>We have already noticed the fact that the gorilla is confined by
-nature to a low, humid region, reeking with miasma and the effluvia of
-decaying vegetation. The atmosphere in which he thrives is one in which
-human life can hardly exist. We know in part why man cannot live in
-such an atmosphere and under such conditions, but we cannot say with
-certainty why the ape does do so. It would seem that the very element
-that is fatal to man gives strength and vitality to the gorilla. We
-know that all forms of animal life are not affected in the same way by
-the same causes; and while it may be said in round numbers that what is
-good for man is good for apes, that is not a fact.</p>
-
-<p>The human race is the most widely distributed of any genus of mammals,
-and, as a race, it can undergo greater extremes of change in climate,
-food, or condition than any<span class="pagenum" id="Page_279">[Pg 279]</span> other kind of animal. Man’s migratory
-habits, both inherent and acquired, have fitted him for a life of
-vicissitudes, and such a life inures him, as an individual, to all
-extremes. On the other hand, the gorilla, as a genus, is confined to a
-small habitat, which is uniform in climate, products, and topography.
-Having been so restricted to these conditions he is unfitted for any
-radical change, and when such is forced upon him the result must always
-be to his injury.</p>
-
-<p>In certain parts of the American tropics there is found a rich gray
-moss growing in great profusion in these localities and on certain
-kinds of trees. It is not confined to any special level, but thrives
-best on low elevations. Under favorable conditions it grows at
-altitudes far above the surrounding swamps. Its character and quantity,
-however, are measured by the altitude at which it grows. It is an
-aërial plant, and it may be detached from the boughs of one tree and
-transplanted upon those of another. It may be taken with safety to a
-great distance, so long as an atmosphere is supplied to it that is
-suited to its nature, but when removed from its normal conditions and
-placed in a purer air it begins to languish and soon dies. If returned
-in time, however, to its former place or one of like character, it will
-revive and continue to grow.</p>
-
-<p>What element this plant extracts from the impure air is unknown. It
-cannot be carbonic acid gas, which is the chief food of plants, nor can
-it be any form of nitrogen. It is well known that the plant cannot long
-survive in a pure atmosphere. Whatever the ingredient extracted may
-be, it is certain that it is one that is deadly to human life<span class="pagenum" id="Page_280">[Pg 280]</span> and one
-that other plants refuse. Moisture and heat alone will not account for
-it. We have another striking instance in the eucalyptus, which lives
-upon the poison of the air around it. There are many other such cases
-in vegetable life; and while the animal is a higher organism than the
-plant, there are certain laws of life that obtain in both kingdoms and
-involve the same principles.</p>
-
-<p>Between the case of the gorilla and that of the plant there is some
-analogy. It may not be the same element that sustains them both, but it
-is possible that the very microbes which germinate disease and prove
-fatal to man sustain the life of the ape in the prime of health. The
-poison which destroys life in man preserves it in the ape.</p>
-
-<p>The chimpanzee is distributed over a much greater range than the
-gorilla and is capable of undergoing a much greater degree of change
-in food and temperature. The history of these apes in captivity shows
-that in that state the chimpanzee lives much the longer and requires
-much less care. From my own observation I assert that all these apes
-can undergo a greater range of temperature than of humidity. The latter
-appears to be one of the essential things to the life of a gorilla.
-One fatal mistake made in treating him is furnishing him with a dry,
-warm atmosphere and depriving him of the poison contained in the
-malarious air in which he naturally spends his life. Both of these apes
-need humidity. In a dry air the chimpanzee will live longer than the
-gorilla, but neither of them can long survive it; and it would appear
-that a salt atmosphere is best for the gorilla.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_281">[Pg 281]</span></p>
-
-<p>I believe that one of these apes could be kept in good condition for
-any length of time if he were supplied with a normal humidity in an
-atmosphere laden with miasma and allowed to vary in its temperature. A
-constant degree of heat is not good for any animal. There is no place
-in all the earth where nature sustains a uniform degree of heat. We
-need not go to either extreme, but a change is requisite to bring into
-play all the organs of the body.</p>
-
-<p>The treatment which I would recommend for the care of apes is to build
-them a house entirely apart from that of other animals. It should be
-eighteen or twenty feet wide by thirty-five or forty feet long, and at
-least fifteen feet high. It should have no floor except earth, and that
-should be of sandy loam or vegetable earth. In one end of this building
-there should be a pool of water twelve or fifteen feet in diameter;
-and, imbedded in mold under the water, there should be a steam coil
-to regulate the temperature as may be desired. In this pool should be
-grown a dense crop of water plants such as are found in the marshes of
-the country in which the gorilla lives. This pool should not be cleaned
-out nor the water changed; but the plants should be allowed to grow and
-decay in a natural way. Neither the pool nor the house should be kept
-at a uniform heat, but the temperature should be allowed to vary from
-60° to 90°.</p>
-
-<p>In addition to the things above mentioned, the place should be provided
-with the means of giving it a spray of tepid water, which should be
-turned on once or twice a day and allowed to continue for at least
-an hour at a time. The water for this purpose should be taken from
-the pool,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_282">[Pg 282]</span> but should never be warmer than the usual temperature of
-tropical rain. The animal should not be required to take a bath in this
-way, but should be left to his own choice about it.</p>
-
-<p>The house should contain a thin partition that could be removed at
-will, and the end of the building farthest from the pool should be
-occupied by a strong tree, either dead or alive, to afford the inmates
-proper exercise. The south side of the house should be of glass, and
-at least half of the top should be of the same. These parts should
-be provided with heavy canvas curtains, to be drawn over them so as
-to adjust or regulate the sunlight. In the summer time the building
-should be kept quite open, so as to admit the air and the rain. The
-rule that strangers or visitors should not annoy or tease them should
-be enforced without respect to person, time, or rank. No visitor should
-be allowed on any terms to give them any kind of food. The reasons for
-these precautions are obvious to any one familiar with the keeping of
-animals; but in the case of the gorilla their observance cannot be
-waived with impunity.</p>
-
-<p>The ape does not need to be pampered. On the contrary, he should be
-permitted to rough it. Half of the gorillas that have ever been in
-captivity have died from overnursing. By nature they are strong and
-robust if the proper conditions exist; but when these are changed they
-become frail and tender creatures. They should not be restricted to
-a vegetable diet nor limited to a few articles of food, but should
-be allowed to select such things as they prefer to eat. I have grave
-doubts as to the wisdom of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_283">[Pg 283]</span> limiting the quantity. One mistake is
-often committed in the treatment of animals, and that is to continue
-the same diet at all times and to limit that to one or two items. It
-may be observed that the higher the form of organism the more diverse
-the taste becomes. Very hardy animals or those of low forms may be
-restricted to one kind of staple food. The higher form demands a change.</p>
-
-<p>One thing above all others that I would inhibit is the use of straw
-of any kind in the cage, for beds or for any other purpose. If it
-be desired to furnish them with such a comfort, nothing should ever
-be used but dead leaves, if they can be supplied. In their absence
-a canvas mattress or wire matting should be used. There are certain
-kinds of dust given off by the dry straw of all cereal plants. This is
-deleterious to the health of man, but vastly more so to these apes.
-It is taken into the lungs and through them acts upon other parts of
-the body by suppressing the circulation and respiration. No matter
-how clean the straw may be, the effect will be the same in the end.
-Hay is less harmful than straw, but even the use of hay should not be
-permitted.</p>
-
-<p>Another thing which is necessary is to entertain or amuse the apes in
-some way, otherwise they become despondent and gloomy. It is believed
-by those who are familiar with these creatures that loneliness or
-solitude is a fruitful cause of death. This is especially true of the
-gorilla.</p>
-
-<p>Another important fact, little known, is that tobacco smoke is usually
-fatal to a gorilla. Every native hunter<span class="pagenum" id="Page_284">[Pg 284]</span> that I met in Africa testifies
-that this simple thing will kill any gorilla in the forest if he is
-subjected to the fumes for a sufficient time. I have reason to believe
-that this is true. It may not invariably prove fatal, but it will be
-so in many instances. The chimpanzee is not so much affected by it,
-although he dislikes it. The gorilla detests it and shows at all times
-his strong aversion to it. I have no doubt that this is one of the
-reasons why these apes die on board the ships by which they are brought
-from Africa.</p>
-
-<p>Both of these apes are possessed, in a degree, of savage and resentful
-instincts; but these are much stronger in the gorilla than in the
-chimpanzee. The gorilla, therefore, requires firm and consistent
-treatment. This can be used without severity or cruelty, but the
-intellect of the gorilla must not be underrated. He studies with a keen
-perception the motives and intentions of man, and is seldom mistaken
-in his interpretation of them. He often manifests a violent dislike
-for certain persons, and when this is discovered to be the case, the
-object of his dislike should not be permitted in his presence, for the
-result is to enrage the ape and excite his nervous nature. When he
-becomes sullen or obstinate, he should not be coaxed or indulged, nor
-yet used with harshness. He should either be left alone for a time or
-be diverted by a change of treatment.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_285">[Pg 285]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_287">[Pg 287]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="INDEX">INDEX</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<ul class="index">
-<li class="ifrst"><span id="aaron">“Aaron”</span></li>
-<li class="isuba">his intelligent expression, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_147">147</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">his capture, <a href="#Page_145">145</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">on the journey, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>, <a href="#Page_148">148</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">his tricks, <a href="#Page_148">148</a></li>
-<li class="isubb">”&nbsp; one aversion, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>, <a href="#Page_149">149</a></li>
-<li class="isubb">”&nbsp; sympathy for Moses, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>-<a href="#Page_152">152</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">realization of death, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>, <a href="#Page_152">152</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">loses his mate, <a href="#Page_170">170</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">his illness and death, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>-<a href="#Page_174">174</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><span id="aaronw">“Aaron” with “Elisheba”</span></li>
-<li class="isuba">acts as a protector, <a href="#Page_156">156</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">his reliance on human aid, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>, <a href="#Page_158">158</a>-<a href="#Page_159">159</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">driving the cow, <a href="#Page_158">158</a>, <a href="#Page_159">159</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">we start for Liverpool, <a href="#Page_159">159</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">the bogie on the steamer, <a href="#Page_159">159</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">solicitude of the apes, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>-<a href="#Page_160">160</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">their ingenuity, <a href="#Page_161">161</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">the ape in the mirror, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>-<a href="#Page_162">162</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">Aaron’s jealousy, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>-<a href="#Page_165">165</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">the rivals, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>-<a href="#Page_165">165</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">arrival at Liverpool, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>, <a href="#Page_168">168</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">Elisheba’s illness, <a href="#Page_168">168</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">Aaron again becomes nurse, <a href="#Page_170">170</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Abstract ideas in simians, Lack of, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_36">36</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Affection in animals not mere instinct, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>-<a href="#Page_59">59</a>, <a href="#Page_173">173</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Age of maturity in apes, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>, <a href="#Page_191">191</a>, <a href="#Page_192">192</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Amusement (of captives)</li>
-<li class="isuba">captives should have, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>-<a href="#Page_56">56</a>, <a href="#Page_283">283</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">means of, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>-<a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>-<a href="#Page_56">56</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><em>Angola</em>, <a href="#Page_268">268</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><span id="anthro">Anthropoid</span> or manlike apes (see also <em><a href="#chimp">Chimpanzee</a></em>, <em><a href="#gorilla">Gorilla</a></em>, <em><a href="#gibbon">Gibbon</a></em>, <em><a href="#orang">Orang</a></em>, and references under <em><a href="#captive">Chimpanzee captives</a></em>)</li>
-<li class="isuba">the group, <a href="#Page_3">3</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">superior intelligence, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_60">60</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><span id="ape">Apes</span> (see also <em><a href="#simian">Simians</a></em> and references under <em><a href="#anthro">Anthropoid apes</a></em>)</li>
-<li class="isuba">resemblance to man, <a href="#Page_2">2</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">described, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>-<a href="#Page_98">98</a>, <a href="#Page_223">223</a> ff.</li>
-<li class="isuba">anthropoid or manlike group, <a href="#Page_3">3</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">skeleton a duplicate of man’s, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_7">7</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">superior intelligence of anthropoid, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_60">60</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">travelers’ stories untrue, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>-<a href="#Page_72">72</a>, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>-<a href="#Page_236">236</a>, <a href="#Page_266">266</a> ff.</li>
-<li class="isuba">do not act in concert, <a href="#Page_268">268</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Approval, Apes’ love of, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>, <a href="#Page_203">203</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Arboreal habit, The, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>-<a href="#Page_97">97</a>, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>-<a href="#Page_225">225</a>, <a href="#Page_245">245</a></li>
-</ul>
-<ul class="index">
-<li class="ifrst">Baboon, The, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>-<a href="#Page_197">197</a>, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>, <a href="#Page_266">266</a>, <a href="#Page_277">277</a></li>
-<li><span class="pagenum" id="Page_288">[Pg 288]</span></li>
-<li class="isuba">relative plane, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_277">277</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Bailey, <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> James A., New York City</li>
-<li class="isuba">his valuable apes, <a href="#Page_190">190</a>-<a href="#Page_191">191</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">corroborative testimony, <a href="#Page_268">268</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">“Banquo,” <a href="#Page_28">28</a>-<a href="#Page_29">29</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><span id="battel">Battel</span>, Henry (1590), <a href="#Page_267">267</a>, <a href="#Page_268">268</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><em>Batuna</em> (plant), <a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_245">245</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Bellevue Gardens, Manchester, England (see also <em><a href="#consul">Consul II</a></em>)</li>
-<li class="isuba">Consul II, <a href="#Page_193">193</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">a pugnacious ape, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>-<a href="#Page_200">200</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">chimpanzee and orang, <a href="#Page_200">200</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Borneo, <a href="#Page_274">274</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Buffalo (<abbr title="New York">N. Y.</abbr>) Museum, Specimens in, <a href="#Page_104">104</a></li>
-</ul>
-<ul class="index">
-<li class="ifrst">Cage in the jungle, The</li>
-<li class="isuba">idea first conceived, <a href="#Page_60">60</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">exceptional opportunities it afforded, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_260">260</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">its construction, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>-<a href="#Page_64">64</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">its furniture, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>-<a href="#Page_66">66</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">date of occupancy, <a href="#Page_71">71</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">length of occupancy, <a href="#Page_71">71</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">my chimpanzee companion, <a href="#Page_71">71</a></li>
-<li class="isubb">(see also <em>Moses</em>)</li>
-<li class="isuba">the native boy, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>-<a href="#Page_149">149</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">program for the day, <a href="#Page_73">73</a> ff.</li>
-<li class="isuba">my menu, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>, <a href="#Page_84">84</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">wild visitors, <a href="#Page_75">75</a> ff., <a href="#Page_186">186</a>-<a href="#Page_190">190</a>, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>-<a href="#Page_260">260</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">the tornado, <a href="#Page_79">79</a> ff.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><em>Cameroon</em> (valley), <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>, <a href="#Page_267">267</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><span id="capu">Capuchin monkey</span>, The (see also under <em><a href="#monkey">Monkey</a></em>), <a href="#Page_18">18</a>-<a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>, <a href="#Page_52">52</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Care of simian captives</li>
-<li class="isuba">amusement of, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>-<a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>-<a href="#Page_56">56</a>, <a href="#Page_283">283</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">their short lives, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_200">200</a>, <a href="#Page_201">201</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">effects of confinement, <a href="#Page_231">231</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">cannot live in pure air, <a href="#Page_280">280</a>, <a href="#Page_281">281</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">condition compared to a certain</li>
-<li class="isuba">tropical moss, <a href="#Page_279">279</a>-<a href="#Page_280">280</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">humidity essential, <a href="#Page_280">280</a>-<a href="#Page_282">282</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">diet, <a href="#Page_282">282</a>-<a href="#Page_283">283</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">dust of straw injurious, <a href="#Page_283">283</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">tobacco fatal to the gorilla, <a href="#Page_283">283</a>-<a href="#Page_284">284</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Catarrhini, <a href="#Page_3">3</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">“Caucasian of monkeys, The,” <a href="#Page_35">35</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><span id="cebus">Cebus monkey</span>, The (see also under <em><a href="#monkey">Monkey</a></em>)</li>
-<li class="isuba">brown species, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_42">42</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">experiments with, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>, <a href="#Page_18">18</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">superior intelligence, <a href="#Page_35">35</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">white-faced species, <a href="#Page_42">42</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><em>Charla</em> (lake), <a href="#Page_25">25</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Charleston, <abbr title="South Carolina">S. C.</abbr>, Experiments at, <a href="#Page_24">24</a> ff.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Cherry, <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> William S., African traveler, <a href="#Page_212">212</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Chicago Gardens, Experiments at, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><span id="chico">“Chico”</span></li>
-<li class="isuba">his unusual size, <a href="#Page_190">190</a></li>
-<li class="isubb">”&nbsp; scream, <a href="#Page_241">241</a></li>
-<li class="isubb">”&nbsp; fear of an elephant, <a href="#Page_268">268</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><em>Chi Loango</em> (river), <a href="#Page_211">211</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><span id="chimp">Chimpanzee</span>, The (see also <em><a href="#kulu">Kulu-kamba</a></em>, <em><a href="#ntyigo">Ntyigo</a></em>, and references under <em><a href="#captive">Chimpanzee captives</a></em>)</li>
-<li class="isuba">order of intelligence, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>-<a href="#Page_106">106</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">perception of number, <a href="#Page_34">34</a></li>
-<li><span class="pagenum" id="Page_289">[Pg 289]</span></li>
-<li class="isuba">resemblance to man (see also <em>Skeleton</em>), <a href="#Page_60">60</a>-<a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_92">92</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">in native haunts, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_186">186</a>-<a href="#Page_190">190</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">habitat, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>-<a href="#Page_87">87</a>, <a href="#Page_280">280</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">derivation and meaning of name, <a href="#Page_86">86</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">two species, <a href="#Page_86">86</a> ff.</li>
-<li class="isuba">described in detail, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>-<a href="#Page_98">98</a>, <a href="#Page_188">188</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">position in sleep, <a href="#Page_96">96</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">longevity, <a href="#Page_98">98</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">age of maturity, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>, <a href="#Page_191">191</a>, <a href="#Page_192">192</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">breeding season, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>-<a href="#Page_99">99</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">social traits and government, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>-<a href="#Page_105">105</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">reasoning power and mental status, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>, <a href="#Page_206">206</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">does not bear captivity well, <a href="#Page_146">146</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">pulmonary trouble common, <a href="#Page_146">146</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">maladies resemble man’s, <a href="#Page_186">186</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">seen from the cage, <a href="#Page_186">186</a>-<a href="#Page_190">190</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">climate of America favorable, <a href="#Page_200">200</a>-<a href="#Page_201">201</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">mode of attack, <a href="#Page_237">237</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">scream and beating sound, <a href="#Page_240">240</a>-<a href="#Page_242">242</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">disposition, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>, <a href="#Page_284">284</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><span id="chimpspeech">Chimpanzees, Speech of</span></li>
-<li class="isuba">extent of vocabulary, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_136">136</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">number of words interpreted, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href="#Page_115">115</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">pitch of voice, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>, <a href="#Page_116">116</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">vocal organs, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>-<a href="#Page_110">110</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">phonetic symbols invented by author, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>-<a href="#Page_113">113</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">method of producing sounds, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>-<a href="#Page_111">111</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">character and meaning of sounds, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>-<a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>-<a href="#Page_137">137</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">quality of voice, <a href="#Page_113">113</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">use of gestures, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>-<a href="#Page_115">115</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">possibility of development, <a href="#Page_139">139</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">resemblance to human speech, <a href="#Page_116">116</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">constant meanings of sounds, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>, <a href="#Page_137">137</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><span id="captive">Chimpanzee captives</span>, Some (see <em><a href="#aaron">Aaron</a></em>; <em><a href="#eli">Elisheba</a></em>; <em><a href="#sailor">Sailor’s pet</a></em>; <em><a href="#pet">Village pet</a></em>; <em><a href="#gabcap">Gaboon, captives at</a></em>; <em><a href="#izanga">Izanga</a></em>; <em><a href="#chico">Chico</a></em>; <em><a href="#johanna">Johanna</a></em>; <em><a href="#consul">Consul II</a></em>; <em><a href="#clever">Clever kulu</a></em>; <em><a href="#five">Five young kulus</a></em>; <em><a href="#sally">Sally</a></em>)</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Cincinnati Zoölogical Garden, Experiments at, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>, <a href="#Page_200">200</a>, <a href="#Page_241">241</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Classification of simians, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>-<a href="#Page_4">4</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><span id="clever">Clever kulu, A</span></li>
-<li class="isuba">her color, <a href="#Page_202">202</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">facial expression, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>, <a href="#Page_206">206</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">love of approval, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>, <a href="#Page_204">204</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">always in mischief, <a href="#Page_204">204</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">unties complicated knots, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>-<a href="#Page_206">206</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">evidence of reasoning power, <a href="#Page_206">206</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Color, Simians’ perception of, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>-<a href="#Page_32">32</a>, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Concrete ideas, Simians can express only, <a href="#Page_36">36</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><em>Congo</em> (river), <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_191">191</a>, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>, <a href="#Page_241">241</a>, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>, <a href="#Page_268">268</a>, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>, <a href="#Page_272">272</a></li>
-
-<li><span class="pagenum" id="Page_290">[Pg 290]</span></li>
-<li class="ifrst">Constant meanings of sounds in simian speech, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>-<a href="#Page_137">137</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><span id="consul">“Consul II”</span></li>
-<li class="isuba">his remarkable sagacity, <a href="#Page_193">193</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">rides a “bike,” <a href="#Page_193">193</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">smokes a pipe, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>-<a href="#Page_195">195</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">draws with chalk or pencil, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>, <a href="#Page_196">196</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">distinguishes three letters, <a href="#Page_196">196</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">love of teasing, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>-<a href="#Page_197">197</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">aversion to being clothed, <a href="#Page_197">197</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">loves approval, <a href="#Page_197">197</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">attempts at burglary, <a href="#Page_198">198</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">his keeper’s zeal, <a href="#Page_198">198</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Cranio-facial angles</li>
-<li class="isuba">of man, <a href="#Page_8">8</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">”&nbsp; apes, <a href="#Page_9">9</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">”&nbsp; monkeys, <a href="#Page_9">9</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">”&nbsp; reptiles, <a href="#Page_10">10</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Cross, <abbr title="doctor">Dr.</abbr>, Liverpool, England</li>
-<li class="isuba">guardian of Aaron and Elisheba, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>, <a href="#Page_172">172</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Cruelty</li>
-<li class="isuba">unnecessary in hunting, <a href="#Page_146">146</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">inherent in natives, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>-<a href="#Page_185">185</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Crystal Mountains, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>, <a href="#Page_214">214</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Cynocephalus, <a href="#Page_266">266</a></li>
-</ul>
-<ul class="index">
-<li class="ifrst">“Darwin”</li>
-<li class="isuba">learns Puck’s sound for “food,” <a href="#Page_43">43</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Deaf-mutes, Method of teaching applied to simian speech, <a href="#Page_110">110</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Death, Apes’ realization of, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>, <a href="#Page_259">259</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Deemin, <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> James, English trader, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>, <a href="#Page_261">261</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Descriptions of simians</li>
-<li class="isuba">of monkeys, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_224">224</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">”&nbsp; chimpanzee, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>-<a href="#Page_98">98</a>, <a href="#Page_224">224</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">”&nbsp; gorilla, <a href="#Page_223">223</a> ff.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Development of “calf” a means of comparison, <a href="#Page_227">227</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><span id="dex">Dexterity and ingenuity</span></li>
-<li class="isuba">of apes, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>-<a href="#Page_198">198</a>, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>-<a href="#Page_206">206</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">of monkeys, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>-<a href="#Page_57">57</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Dialects (see <em><a href="#type">types</a></em> under <em><a href="#monkeyspeech">Monkeys, Speech of</a></em>)</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Dimension, Simians’ perception of, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>, <a href="#Page_36">36</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">“Dodo”</li>
-<li class="isuba">Nemo’s apologetic speech, <a href="#Page_47">47</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">her appeal to her keeper, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>-<a href="#Page_50">50</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Drake, <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> J. H., African traveler, <a href="#Page_261">261</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Drum, The (see <em><a href="#kanjo">Kanjo</a></em>)</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><span id="duc">Du Chaillu</span>, Paul, African traveler, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>, <a href="#Page_272">272</a>, <a href="#Page_273">273</a></li>
-</ul>
-<ul class="index">
-<li class="ifrst"><span id="early">Early</span> reports of apes (see <em><a href="#ford">Ford</a></em>, <em><a href="#savage">Savage</a></em>, <em><a href="#wilson">Wilson</a></em>, <em><a href="#walker">Walker</a></em>, <em><a href="#hanno">Hanno</a></em>, <em><a href="#battel">Battel</a></em>, <em><a href="#duc">Du Chaillu</a></em>)</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><span id="eli">“Elisheba”</span> (see also <em><a href="#aaronw">Aaron with Elisheba</a></em>)</li>
-<li class="isuba">where captured, <a href="#Page_154">154</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">her shrewish temper, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>-<a href="#Page_156">156</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">her selfishness and perversity, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>-<a href="#Page_156">156</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">her champion and slave, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>-<a href="#Page_165">165</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">a suitor rebuffed, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>-<a href="#Page_165">165</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">submissive only from policy, <a href="#Page_166">166</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">her illness and death, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>-<a href="#Page_171">171</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Eloquence of monkeys’ speech, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>-<a href="#Page_50">50</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Emotions, Simians display human</li>
-<li class="isuba">sympathy, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>-<a href="#Page_152">152</a>, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>-<a href="#Page_171">171</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">aversion, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>-<a href="#Page_149">149</a></li>
-<li><span class="pagenum" id="Page_291">[Pg 291]</span></li>
-<li class="isuba">sorrow, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>, <a href="#Page_170">170</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">jealousy, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>-<a href="#Page_165">165</a>, <a href="#Page_186">186</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">contempt, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>, <a href="#Page_250">250</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">affection, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>-<a href="#Page_59">59</a>, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>-<a href="#Page_135">135</a>, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>, <a href="#Page_174">174</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><em>Enjocko</em>, <a href="#Page_268">268</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Enumeration (see <em><a href="#num">Number, Perception of</a></em>)</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><em>Esyira</em> (tribe and country), <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>, <a href="#Page_269">269</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Ethics, Monkeys’ code of, <a href="#Page_30">30</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Etymology of native names, <a href="#Page_232">232</a>, <a href="#Page_272">272</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Evolution, <a href="#Page_36">36</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Expression (see also <em><a href="#facial">Facial expression</a></em>)</li>
-<li class="isuba">defined, <a href="#Page_13">13</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">speech a means of, <a href="#Page_13">13</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">animals’ limit of, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>, <a href="#Page_23">23</a></li>
-</ul>
-<ul class="index">
-<li class="ifrst"><span id="facial">Facial expression of simians</span>, <a href="#Page_1">1</a>, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>-<a href="#Page_147">147</a>, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>-<a href="#Page_204">204</a>, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>, <a href="#Page_207">207</a>, <a href="#Page_229">229</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Falkenstein, <abbr title="doctor">Dr.</abbr>, <a href="#Page_267">267</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Ferocity of apes exaggerated, <a href="#Page_229">229</a>, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>-<a href="#Page_236">236</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><em>Ferran Vaz</em> (lake), <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>, <a href="#Page_270">270</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><em>Fiote</em> (tribe and language), <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_267">267</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><span id="five">Five young kulus</span>, <a href="#Page_207">207</a>-<a href="#Page_210">210</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Food</li>
-<li class="isuba">of chimpanzee, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>-<a href="#Page_107">107</a>, <a href="#Page_128">128</a>-<a href="#Page_129">129</a>, <a href="#Page_132">132</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">of gorilla, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>-<a href="#Page_246">246</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><span id="ford">Ford</span>, <abbr title="doctor">Dr.</abbr>, African traveler, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>, <a href="#Page_217">217</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Form, Simians’ perception of, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>, <a href="#Page_196">196</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Fort Gorilla, <a href="#Page_71">71</a></li>
-</ul>
-<ul class="index">
-<li class="ifrst"><em><span id="gaboon">Gaboon</span></em> (town and river), <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>-<a href="#Page_217">217</a>, <a href="#Page_268">268</a>, <a href="#Page_272">272</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><span id="gabcap">Gaboon, Some captives at</span>, <a href="#Page_182">182</a> ff.</li>
-<li class="isuba">their table manners, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>-<a href="#Page_184">184</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">their love of beer, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>-<a href="#Page_184">184</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">their dexterity, <a href="#Page_184">184</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">maladies resemble man’s, <a href="#Page_186">186</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><span id="gibbon">Gibbon</span>, The</li>
-<li class="isuba">order of intelligence, <a href="#Page_4">4</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">arboreal habit, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>, <a href="#Page_276">276</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">size and activity, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>-<a href="#Page_276">276</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">skeleton, <a href="#Page_276">276</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">can stand erect, <a href="#Page_276">276</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">wonderful leaping power, <a href="#Page_276">276</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">several known species, <a href="#Page_277">277</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">vocal qualities, <a href="#Page_277">277</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Glave, E. J., African traveler, <a href="#Page_241">241</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Goode, <abbr title="reverend">Rev.</abbr> A. C., late missionary at Batanga, <a href="#Page_272">272</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><span id="gorilla">Gorilla</span>, The</li>
-<li class="isuba">order of intelligence, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>, <a href="#Page_232">232</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">resemblance to man, <a href="#Page_60">60</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">in native haunts, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>, <a href="#Page_71">71</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">seen from the cage, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>-<a href="#Page_78">78</a>, <a href="#Page_186">186</a>, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>-<a href="#Page_260">260</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">his scream and beating sound, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>-<a href="#Page_242">242</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">arboreal habit, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>-<a href="#Page_97">97</a>, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>-<a href="#Page_225">225</a>, <a href="#Page_245">245</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">nomadic, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>, <a href="#Page_233">233</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">habitat, <a href="#Page_211">211</a> ff., <a href="#Page_273">273</a>, <a href="#Page_278">278</a>-<a href="#Page_279">279</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">early reports of (see references under <em><a href="#early">Early reports</a></em>)</li>
-<li class="isuba"><span id="gorskel">skeleton</span>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>-<a href="#Page_223">223</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">described in detail, <a href="#Page_223">223</a> ff.</li>
-<li class="isuba">cannot walk erect, <a href="#Page_225">225</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">the “calf” as means of comparison, <a href="#Page_227">227</a></li>
-<li><span class="pagenum" id="Page_292">[Pg 292]</span></li>
-<li class="isuba">species, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>, <a href="#Page_274">274</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">compared with other apes and with man, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>-<a href="#Page_231">231</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">social traits and government, <a href="#Page_231">231</a> ff.</li>
-<li class="isuba">derivation of name, <a href="#Page_232">232</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">in council, <a href="#Page_234">234</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">ferocity exaggerated, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>-<a href="#Page_236">236</a>, <a href="#Page_262">262</a>, <a href="#Page_273">273</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">mode of attack, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>-<a href="#Page_237">237</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">sounds wrongly attributed to, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>, <a href="#Page_240">240</a>-<a href="#Page_242">242</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">method of carrying young, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>, <a href="#Page_259">259</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">disposition, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>-<a href="#Page_251">251</a>, <a href="#Page_284">284</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">food, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>-<a href="#Page_246">246</a>, <a href="#Page_282">282</a>-<a href="#Page_283">283</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">stealthiness, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>, <a href="#Page_262">262</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">calling sound, <a href="#Page_254">254</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">difficult to find, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>-<a href="#Page_263">263</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">only one ever brought to America, <a href="#Page_263">263</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">a wild gorilla takes his own photograph, <a href="#Page_264">264</a>-<a href="#Page_265">265</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">care in captivity, <a href="#Page_278">278</a> ff.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Great forest, The, <a href="#Page_68">68</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Guinea, Gulf of, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_266">266</a></li>
-</ul>
-<ul class="index">
-<li class="ifrst">Habitat</li>
-<li class="isuba">of gorilla, <a href="#Page_211">211</a> ff., <a href="#Page_273">273</a>, <a href="#Page_278">278</a>-<a href="#Page_279">279</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">of chimpanzee, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>-<a href="#Page_87">87</a>, <a href="#Page_280">280</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">of orang, <a href="#Page_274">274</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">of gibbon, <a href="#Page_276">276</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Handmann, <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Otto, German consul at Gaboon, <a href="#Page_182">182</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><span id="hanno">Hanno</span>, 500 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>, earliest mention of the ape, <a href="#Page_266">266</a>-<a href="#Page_267">267</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Harris, Captain, African traveler, <a href="#Page_217">217</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Harvard Medical School Collection, <a href="#Page_6">6</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Hornaday, W. T., authority on orang, <a href="#Page_275">275</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Human faculties, embryo of all, exists in simians, <a href="#Page_37">37</a></li>
-</ul>
-<ul class="index">
-<li class="ifrst"><em>Ikomba njina</em>, <a href="#Page_232">232</a>, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>, <a href="#Page_235">235</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><em>Inenga</em> (lake), <a href="#Page_218">218</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Ingenuity of simians (see <em><a href="#dex">Dexterity</a></em>)</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><span id="izanga"><em>Izanga</em></span> (lake), <a href="#Page_184">184</a>, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>, <a href="#Page_223">223</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">an unhappy captive at, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>-<a href="#Page_185">185</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">an act of mercy, <a href="#Page_185">185</a></li>
-</ul>
-<ul class="index">
-<li class="ifrst">“Jack,” <a href="#Page_25">25</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">“Jennie,” <a href="#Page_27">27</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><span id="johanna">“Johanna”</span></li>
-<li class="isuba">her value for scientific use, <a href="#Page_190">190</a>, <a href="#Page_192">192</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">probable age, <a href="#Page_191">191</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">size, <a href="#Page_191">191</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">intellectual plane, <a href="#Page_192">192</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">“Jokes” <a href="#Page_24">24</a> ff.</li>
-<li class="isuba">his fright, <a href="#Page_24">24</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">the reconciliation, <a href="#Page_26">26</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Journeys in the jungle</li>
-<li class="isuba">to the chimpanzee country, <a href="#Page_66">66</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">a five days’ journey on foot, <a href="#Page_148">148</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">to the coast, <a href="#Page_153">153</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Jungle, the African</li>
-<li class="isuba">described, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>-<a href="#Page_70">70</a>, <a href="#Page_153">153</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">daily life in, <a href="#Page_73">73</a> ff.</li>
-<li class="isuba">the quiet hour, <a href="#Page_77">77</a></li>
-<li><span class="pagenum" id="Page_293">[Pg 293]</span></li>
-<li class="isuba">a tornado, <a href="#Page_79">79</a> ff.</li>
-</ul>
-<ul class="index">
-<li class="ifrst"><em>Kabinda</em> (town), <a href="#Page_191">191</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><em>Kanga ntyigo</em></li>
-<li class="isuba">etymology of the name, <a href="#Page_272">272</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><span id="kanjo"><em>Kanjo</em></span>, The, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>-<a href="#Page_104">104</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">the drum, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_241">241</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Keller, Helen</li>
-<li class="isuba">with Nellie, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>-<a href="#Page_53">53</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><em>Kisanga</em> (valley and river), <a href="#Page_212">212</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><em>Komo</em> (river, also name of gunboat), <a href="#Page_153">153</a>, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>, <a href="#Page_217">217</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><em>Kongo</em>, <a href="#Page_272">272</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><span id="kulu"><em>Kulu-kamba</em></span> (see also under <em><a href="#chimp">Chimpanzee</a></em>, and references under <em><a href="#captive">Chimpanzee captives</a></em>)</li>
-<li class="isuba">its habitat, <a href="#Page_87">87</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">described and compared with <em>ntyigo</em>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>-<a href="#Page_91">91</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">Moses’ successor, <a href="#Page_144">144</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">highest type of all apes, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>, <a href="#Page_210">210</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">name applied to different types, <a href="#Page_270">270</a></li>
-</ul>
-<ul class="index">
-<li class="ifrst"><em>Lamberene</em> (town), <a href="#Page_270">270</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Lemur, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_224">224</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">relative plane, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_277">277</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><em>Loango</em> (valley), <a href="#Page_192">192</a>, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>, <a href="#Page_269">269</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Longevity of chimpanzee, <a href="#Page_98">98</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Lopez, African explorer, <a href="#Page_270">270</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Lopez, Cape, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>, <a href="#Page_270">270</a></li>
-</ul>
-<ul class="index">
-<li class="ifrst"><em>Mafuka</em>, <a href="#Page_269">269</a>, <a href="#Page_274">274</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Maladies of simians</li>
-<li class="isuba">pulmonary trouble common, <a href="#Page_146">146</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">resemble man’s, <a href="#Page_186">186</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Malay Peninsula, <a href="#Page_276">276</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Mandrill, The, <a href="#Page_14">14</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><em>Mayumba</em> (town), <a href="#Page_215">215</a>, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>, <a href="#Page_268">268</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><em>M’Bouve</em>, <a href="#Page_272">272</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">“McGinty”</li>
-<li class="isuba">his jealousy, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>, <a href="#Page_46">46</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Meanings of certain sounds in simian speech (see also under <em><a href="#monkeyspeech">Monkeys, Speech of</a></em>, and <em><a href="#chimpspeech">Chimpanzees, Speech of</a></em>)</li>
-<li class="isuba">sound meaning “food,” <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>-<a href="#Page_113">113</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">sound meaning “drink,” <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">sound meaning “warning,” <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_113">113</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">sound meaning “alarm,” <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_113">113</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">sound meaning “friendship,” <a href="#Page_113">113</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">sound meaning “good,” <a href="#Page_160">160</a>, <a href="#Page_181">181</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">calling sound, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>-<a href="#Page_113">113</a>, <a href="#Page_136">136</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Mental power and status of simians (see also under <em><a href="#ape">Ape</a></em>, <em><a href="#chimp">Chimpanzee</a></em>, <em><a href="#monkey">Monkey</a></em>, <em><a href="#gorilla">Gorilla</a></em>, “<em><a href="#aaron">Aaron</a></em>,” “<em><a href="#moses">Moses</a></em>,” etc.)</li>
-<li class="isuba">compared to man, <a href="#Page_105">105</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">compared to the dog, <a href="#Page_116">116</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Menu, My daily, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>, <a href="#Page_84">84</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Mesial crest (see <em><a href="#gorskel">Gorilla, Skeleton of</a></em>)</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">“Mickie”</li>
-<li class="isuba">the boss of the school, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>-<a href="#Page_46">46</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">his tricks, <a href="#Page_46">46</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Middle forest, The, <a href="#Page_68">68</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Mirror, Experiments with, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>-<a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>-<a href="#Page_162">162</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Mode of attack</li>
-<li class="isuba">of chimpanzee, <a href="#Page_237">237</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">of gorilla, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>-<a href="#Page_237">237</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><em>Moiro</em>, <a href="#Page_217">217</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><span id="monkey">Monkey</span>, The (see also <em><a href="#simian">Simians</a></em>)</li>
-<li class="isuba">human appearance, <a href="#Page_1">1</a></li>
-<li><span class="pagenum" id="Page_294">[Pg 294]</span></li>
-<li class="isuba">relative plane, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_277">277</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">relationship to man, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_277">277</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">all simians not monkeys, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>-<a href="#Page_3">3</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">described, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_224">224</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">old world and new world, <a href="#Page_3">3</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">cranio-facial angles, <a href="#Page_9">9</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">Cebus species (see <em><a href="#cebus">Cebus</a></em>)</li>
-<li class="isuba">Capuchin species (see <em><a href="#capu">Capuchin</a></em>)</li>
-<li class="isuba">perception of sound, color, form, dimension, quality, number, music, etc., <a href="#Page_30">30</a>-<a href="#Page_37">37</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">code of ethics, <a href="#Page_30">30</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">Rhesus species (see <em><a href="#rhesus">Rhesus</a></em>)</li>
-<li class="isuba">difference in traits and tastes, <a href="#Page_35">35</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">express emotion, <a href="#Page_50">50</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">affection not mere instinct, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>-<a href="#Page_59">59</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Monkeys, Laughter of, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>-<a href="#Page_55">55</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><span id="monkeyspeech">Monkeys, Speech of</span></li>
-<li class="isuba">study of, <a href="#Page_14">14</a> ff.</li>
-<li class="isuba">poor success of first efforts, <a href="#Page_15">15</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">sound meaning “alarm” or “warning,” <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_27">27</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">phonograph first used, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>-<a href="#Page_18">18</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">sounds have constant meanings, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>, <a href="#Page_23">23</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">number of sounds interpreted, <a href="#Page_18">18</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">sounds described, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>-<a href="#Page_20">20</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">speech monophrastic and monophonetic, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_44">44</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">pitch of voice, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>, <a href="#Page_50">50</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">resemblance to human speech, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>-<a href="#Page_23">23</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">each species has its own speech, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_44">44</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">sign of surrender, <a href="#Page_25">25</a> ff.</li>
-<li class="isuba">sound meaning “food,” <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">sound meaning “drink,” <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">musical quality of voices, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>, <a href="#Page_57">57</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">eloquence, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>-<a href="#Page_50">50</a></li>
-<li class="isuba"><span id="type">types</span> of speech and inflections, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>, <a href="#Page_60">60</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><span id="moses">“Moses”</span></li>
-<li class="isuba">my sole companion in the cage, <a href="#Page_71">71</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">his breakfast, <a href="#Page_73">73</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">his amusements, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>-<a href="#Page_124">124</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">his siesta, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_124">124</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">position in sleep, <a href="#Page_96">96</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">learns a word of human speech, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>-<a href="#Page_116">116</a>, <a href="#Page_137">137</a>-<a href="#Page_138">138</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">his capture, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>-<a href="#Page_118">118</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">his moral training, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>-<a href="#Page_121">121</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>-<a href="#Page_132">132</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">his tricks, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>-<a href="#Page_121">121</a>, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>-<a href="#Page_124">124</a>, <a href="#Page_131">131</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">dexterity and ingenuity, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>-<a href="#Page_130">130</a>, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>-<a href="#Page_133">133</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">reading the newspaper, <a href="#Page_123">123</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">his jealousy and temper, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>, <a href="#Page_186">186</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">our walks in the jungle, <a href="#Page_125">125</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">understood rights of possession, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>, <a href="#Page_128">128</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">preferences in food, <a href="#Page_128">128</a>, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>, <a href="#Page_132">132</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">meaning of sounds, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>-<a href="#Page_137">137</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">his quick vision, <a href="#Page_125">125</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">a severe lesson, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>-<a href="#Page_132">132</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">reasoning power, <a href="#Page_133">133</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">his devotion, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>-<a href="#Page_135">135</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">perception of form, color, music, etc., <a href="#Page_139">139</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">he signs a legal document, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>-<a href="#Page_140">140</a></li>
-<li><span class="pagenum" id="Page_295">[Pg 295]</span></li><li class="isuba">last illness, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>-<a href="#Page_142">142</a>, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>-<a href="#Page_151">151</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">his chimpanzee nurse, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>-<a href="#Page_152">152</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">his death, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>, <a href="#Page_152">152</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">his claims to fame, <a href="#Page_143">143</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><em>Mpongwe</em>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Music, Simians’ perception of, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>-<a href="#Page_36">36</a></li>
-</ul>
-<ul class="index">
-<li class="ifrst">Native explanation of relationships, <a href="#Page_269">269</a>-<a href="#Page_270">270</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Native reports unreliable, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>, <a href="#Page_231">231</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><em>Nazavine</em> (bay), <a href="#Page_270">270</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">“Nellie”</li>
-<li class="isuba">her love of companionship, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_22">22</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">warns me of danger, <a href="#Page_21">21</a> ff.</li>
-<li class="isuba">her perception of sound, <a href="#Page_22">22</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">with Helen Keller, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>-<a href="#Page_53">53</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">her ingenuity, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>-<a href="#Page_57">57</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">“Nemo”</li>
-<li class="isuba">his diplomacy, <a href="#Page_47">47</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">his abject apology, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>-<a href="#Page_48">48</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><em>Nenge Nenge</em> (town), <a href="#Page_214">214</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">New world monkeys, <a href="#Page_3">3</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">their superior intelligence, <a href="#Page_35">35</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">New York Zoölogical Gardens, Experiments at, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>-<a href="#Page_51">51</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><em>Nguni</em> (river), <a href="#Page_154">154</a>, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">“Nigger,” <a href="#Page_45">45</a>, <a href="#Page_51">51</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><em>Njina</em>, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>, <a href="#Page_269">269</a>, <a href="#Page_270">270</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><em>Njole</em> (town), <a href="#Page_213">213</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><em>Nkami</em> (tribe, lake, and river), <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>, <a href="#Page_272">272</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><em>Noogo</em> (river), <a href="#Page_144">144</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Nose a distinguishing feature, The, <a href="#Page_3">3</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><em>Ntcheego</em>, <a href="#Page_268">268</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><span id="ntyigo"><em>Ntyigo</em></span> (see also under <em><a href="#chimp">Chimpanzee</a></em>)</li>
-<li class="isuba">its habitat, <a href="#Page_87">87</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">described, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>-<a href="#Page_90">90</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">compared with <em>kulu-kamba</em>, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>-<a href="#Page_91">91</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">distinguished from <em>ntyii</em>, <a href="#Page_228">228</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><em>Ntyii</em>, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>, <a href="#Page_269">269</a>-<a href="#Page_270">270</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><em>Ntyi-ne-nye-ni</em> (village), <a href="#Page_144">144</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><span id="num">Number, Perception of</span></li>
-<li class="isuba">by simians, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>-<a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_36">36</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">by birds, <a href="#Page_34">34</a></li>
-</ul>
-<ul class="index">
-<li class="ifrst"><em>Ogowé</em> (river, delta, and basin), <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>, <a href="#Page_272">272</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Old world monkeys, <a href="#Page_3">3</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><span id="orang">Orang, The</span></li>
-<li class="isuba">order of intelligence, <a href="#Page_4">4</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">arboreal habit, <a href="#Page_97">97</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">a captive at Bellevue, <a href="#Page_200">200</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">compared, <a href="#Page_274">274</a>, <a href="#Page_275">275</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><em>Orungu</em> (tribe), <a href="#Page_215">215</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">“Othello”</li>
-<li class="isuba">place of capture, <a href="#Page_221">221</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">absence of humor, <a href="#Page_244">244</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">illness and death, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>-<a href="#Page_249">249</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">with Moses, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>, <a href="#Page_250">250</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">his speech sounds, <a href="#Page_251">251</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Owen, Sir Richard, writer on Africa, <a href="#Page_215">215</a></li>
-</ul>
-<ul class="index">
-<li class="ifrst">Parrot Island, <a href="#Page_214">214</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Paternal instinct in animals, <a href="#Page_100">100</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">“Pedro”</li>
-<li class="isuba">his troubles, <a href="#Page_38">38</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">appreciation of kindness, <a href="#Page_38">38</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">recording his sounds, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_39">39</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">his tale of woe, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_41">41</a></li>
-<li><span class="pagenum" id="Page_296">[Pg 296]</span></li>
-<li class="isuba">speech repeated to Puck, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>-<a href="#Page_41">41</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Philadelphia Museum of Zoölogy, Specimens at, <a href="#Page_217">217</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><span id="phono">Phonograph</span> as a means of recording speech of monkeys, <a href="#Page_15">15</a> ff.</li>
-<li class="isuba">first experiments, <a href="#Page_16">16</a> ff.</li>
-<li class="isuba">behavior of monkeys on hearing, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>-<a href="#Page_18">18</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">speech and reply recorded, <a href="#Page_18">18</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">Pedro’s speech recorded, <a href="#Page_38">38</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">experiment with Puck, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>-<a href="#Page_41">41</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Pitch of voice</li>
-<li class="isuba">in monkeys, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_28">28</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">in apes, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>-<a href="#Page_112">112</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Platarrhini, <a href="#Page_3">3</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><em>Pongo</em>, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>, <a href="#Page_269">269</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Program, A day’s, <a href="#Page_73">73</a> ff.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">“Puck,” his perplexity on hearing phonograph, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>-<a href="#Page_41">41</a></li>
-</ul>
-<ul class="index">
-<li class="ifrst">Quality, Simians’ perception of, <a href="#Page_30">30</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Quantity, Simians’ perception of, <a href="#Page_32">32</a></li>
-</ul>
-<ul class="index">
-<li class="ifrst">Reasoning power in simians, Evidences of, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>-<a href="#Page_18">18</a>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>-<a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>, <a href="#Page_206">206</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Records of speech sounds (see <em><a href="#phono">Phonograph</a></em>)</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><em>Rembo</em> (river), <a href="#Page_144">144</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Resemblances between simians and man</li>
-<li class="isuba">in body, <a href="#Page_1">1</a>, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>-<a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_186">186</a>, <a href="#Page_277">277</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">in speech, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>-<a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_116">116</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">in affections, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>-<a href="#Page_59">59</a>, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>, <a href="#Page_174">174</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><span id="rhesus">Rhesus monkey</span>, <a href="#Page_32">32</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Romanes, Professor</li>
-<li class="isuba">experiments with chimpanzee, <a href="#Page_34">34</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">experiments with “Sally,” <a href="#Page_241">241</a></li>
-</ul>
-<ul class="index">
-<li class="ifrst">Sacrum (see <em><a href="#skel">Skeleton</a></em>)</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Sagittal ridge (see <em><a href="#gorskel">Gorilla, Skeleton of</a></em>)</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><span id="sailor">Sailor’s pet, A</span></li>
-<li class="isuba">his suit rejected, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>-<a href="#Page_165">165</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><span id="sally">“Sally,”</span> <a href="#Page_241">241</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">“Sally Jones,” <a href="#Page_244">244</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><span id="savage">Savage,</span> <abbr title="doctor">Dr.</abbr>, African traveler, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>, <a href="#Page_216">216</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Scream of gorilla and chimpanzee, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>-<a href="#Page_242">242</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><em>Sette Kama</em> (town), <a href="#Page_144">144</a>, <a href="#Page_212">212</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Sheldon, Mrs. M. French, African traveler, <a href="#Page_25">25</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Sierra Leone, <a href="#Page_266">266</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><span id="simian">Simians</span> (see <em><a href="#ape">Apes</a></em>, <em><a href="#monkey">Monkeys</a></em>, etc.)</li>
-<li class="isuba">wide range of types, <a href="#Page_2">2</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">different forms described, <a href="#Page_3">3</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">two grand divisions, how distinguished, <a href="#Page_3">3</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Simian speech (see <em><a href="#monkeyspeech">Monkeys, Speech of</a></em>, and <em><a href="#chimpspeech">Chimpanzees, Speech of</a></em>)</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Size of apes, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>, <a href="#Page_190">190</a>, <a href="#Page_191">191</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, <a href="#Page_230">230</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><span id="skel">Skeleton, The</span></li>
-<li class="isuba">as basis of comparison, <a href="#Page_4">4</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">chief point of difference, <a href="#Page_4">4</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">sacrum, peculiarities of, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>-<a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_8">8</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">vertebræ, number of, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>-<a href="#Page_6">6</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">causes of difference in sacrum and vertebræ, <a href="#Page_6">6</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">sternum, differences in, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_7">7</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">skull, differences in, <a href="#Page_8">8</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">general comparison, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>-<a href="#Page_8">8</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">of gorilla, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>-<a href="#Page_223">223</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">of gibbon, <a href="#Page_276">276</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Smithsonian Institution, Experiments at, <a href="#Page_15">15</a> ff., <a href="#Page_38">38</a></li>
-
-<li><span class="pagenum" id="Page_297">[Pg 297]</span></li>
-<li class="ifrst">Snapshot, A unique, <a href="#Page_264">264</a>-<a href="#Page_265">265</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Social traits and government</li>
-<li class="isuba">of chimpanzee, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>-<a href="#Page_105">105</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">of gorilla, <a href="#Page_231">231</a> ff.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><em>Soko</em>, <a href="#Page_270">270</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Speech defined, <a href="#Page_12">12</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><span id="speech">Speech of animals</span> (see also <em><a href="#monkeyspeech">Monkeys, Speech of</a></em>, and <em><a href="#chimpspeech">Chimpanzees, Speech of</a></em>)</li>
-<li class="isuba">author’s interest in, <a href="#Page_12">12</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">grounds of belief in, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_13">13</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">vocabularies limited, <a href="#Page_13">13</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">can express what they conceive, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>, <a href="#Page_23">23</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">development of interest, <a href="#Page_14">14</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Spider-monkey, <a href="#Page_38">38</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Stanley Pool, <a href="#Page_216">216</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Steckelman, Carl, African explorer, <a href="#Page_216">216</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Sternum (see <em><a href="#skel">Skeleton</a></em>)</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Stories of travelers and writers often untrue, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>-<a href="#Page_72">72</a>, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>-<a href="#Page_236">236</a>, <a href="#Page_261">261</a>-<a href="#Page_263">263</a>, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>, <a href="#Page_268">268</a>, <a href="#Page_273">273</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Strohm, <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Adolph, trader at Gaboon, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>, <a href="#Page_158">158</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Sumatra, <a href="#Page_274">274</a></li>
-</ul>
-<ul class="index">
-<li class="ifrst">Threadbare story, A, <a href="#Page_262">262</a>, <a href="#Page_273">273</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Tornado in the jungle, <a href="#Page_79">79</a> ff.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Translations of native reports, Literal, <a href="#Page_269">269</a>, <a href="#Page_270">270</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Troglodytes, <a href="#Page_267">267</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><em>Tyimba</em> (village), <a href="#Page_144">144</a></li>
-</ul>
-<ul class="index">
-<li class="ifrst">Under forest, The, <a href="#Page_68">68</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">University of Toronto Collection, <a href="#Page_249">249</a></li>
-</ul>
-<ul class="index">
-<li class="ifrst"><span id="pet">Village pet</span>, A</li>
-<li class="isuba">the children’s playmate, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>-<a href="#Page_178">178</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">understood names and commands, <a href="#Page_179">179</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">brought water and wood, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>-<a href="#Page_180">180</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">brought persons named, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>-<a href="#Page_181">181</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">price double that of a slave, <a href="#Page_182">182</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Vocabularies of animals (see <em><a href="#speech">Speech of Animals</a></em>; <em><a href="#monkeyspeech">Monkeys, Speech of</a></em>, and <em><a href="#chimpspeech">Chimpanzees, Speech of</a></em>)</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst"><span id="walker">Walker</span>, <abbr title="doctor">Dr.</abbr>, revises Wilson’s lexicon of native language, <a href="#Page_216">216</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Wallace, <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Alfred R., authority on orang, <a href="#Page_275">275</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><span id="webber">Webber</span>, <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr>, keeper of ape at Bellevue</li>
-<li class="isuba">his success in training, <a href="#Page_198">198</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Wild visitors to the cage, <a href="#Page_75">75</a> ff., <a href="#Page_81">81</a>-<a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_186">186</a>-<a href="#Page_190">190</a>, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>-<a href="#Page_260">260</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">did not usually evince fear, <a href="#Page_253">253</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">retreated in good order, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>, <a href="#Page_255">255</a>, <a href="#Page_258">258</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">Moses frightens one away, <a href="#Page_254">254</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">a gorilla beckons, <a href="#Page_255">255</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">a narrow escape, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>-<a href="#Page_258">258</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">an exceptional opportunity, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>-<a href="#Page_259">259</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">a brave baby, <a href="#Page_260">260</a></li>
-<li class="isuba">a gorilla takes his own photograph, <a href="#Page_264">264</a>-<a href="#Page_265">265</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><span id="wilson">Wilson</span>, <abbr title="doctor">Dr.</abbr>, first missionary at Gaboon</li>
-<li class="isuba">wrote lexicon of native language, <a href="#Page_216">216</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Wurmb, Baron, <a href="#Page_267">267</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
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-<h2 class="nobreak" id="Books_on_Out-of-Door_Life">Books on Out-of-Door Life</h2>
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-<h3>WAYS OF WOOD FOLK</h3>
-
-<p class="center p0">By William J. Long</p>
-
-<p>Fascinating descriptions of animals and birds as seen at play in their
-homes. Illustrated with 7 full-page engravings on wood from drawings
-by Charles Copeland and William Hamilton Gibson, and numerous smaller
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-<p>Square 12mo. Cloth. 214 pages. 75 cents.</p>
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-interesting style that makes its predecessor so popular. With 7
-full-page illustrations and numerous illustrative initials and
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