登陆注册
19621900000043

第43章 CHAPTER IV(12)

We were at this stage, slumbering peacefully in our long-established convictions, when a man entered upon the scene and suddenly showed us that we were wrong and that, for long centuries, we had over looked a truth which was scarcely even covered with a very thin veil. And the strangest thing is that this astonishing discovery, is in no wise the natural consequence of a new invention, of processes or methods hitherto unknown. It owes nothing to the latest acquirements of our knowledge. It springs from the humblest idea which the most primitive man might have conceived in the first days of the earth's existence. It is simply a matter of having a little more patience, confidence and respect for all that which shares our lot in a world whereof we know none of the purposes. It is simply a matter of having a little less pride and of looking a little more fraternally upon existences that are much more fraternal than we believed. There is no secret about the almost puerile ingenuousness of Von Osten's methods and Krall's. They start with the principle that the horse is an ignorant but intelligent child; and they treat him as such. They speak, explain, demonstrate, argue and mete out rewards or punishments like a schoolmaster addressing little boys of five or six. They begin by placing a few skittle-pins in front of their strange pupil. They count them and make him count them by alternately lifting and lowering the horse's hoof. He thus obtains his first notion of numbers. They next add one or two more skittles and say, for instance:

"Three skittles and two skittles are five skittles."

In this way, they explain and teach addition; next, by the reverse process, subtraction, which is followed by multiplication, division and all the rest.

At the beginning, the lessons are extremely laborious and demand an untiring and loving patience, which is the whole secret of the miracle. But; as soon as the first barrier of darkness is passed, the progress becomes bewilderingly rapid.

All this is incontestable; and the facts are there, before which we must need bow. But what upsets all our convictions or, more correctly, all the prejudices which thousands of years have made as invincible as axioms, what we do not succeed in understanding is that the horse at once understands what we want of him; it is that first step, the first tremor of an unexpected intelligence, which suddenly reveals itself as human. At what precise second did the light appear and was the veil rent under? It is impossible to say; but it is certain that, at a given moment, without any visible sign to reveal the prodigious inner transformation, the horse acts and replies as though he suddenly understood the speech of man. What is it that sets the miracle working? We know that, after a time, the horse associates certain words with certain objects that interest him or with three or four events whose infinite repetition forms the humble tissue of his daily life. This is only a sort of mechanical memory which has nothing in common with the most elementary intelligence. But behold, one fine day, without any perceptible transition, he seems to know the meaning of a host of words which possess no interest for him; which represent to him no picture, no memory; which he has never had occasion to connect with any sensation, agreeable or disagreeable. He handles figures, which even to man are nothing but obscure and abstract ideas. He solves problems that cannot possibly be made objective or concrete. He reproduces letters which, from his point of view, correspond with nothing actual. He fixes his attention and makes observations on things or circumstances which in no way affect him, which remain and always will remain alien and indifferent to him. In a word, he steps out of the narrow ring in which he was made to turn by hunger and fear--which have been described as the two great moving powers of all that is not human--to enter the immense circle in which sensations go on being shed till ideas come into view.

Is it possible to believe that the horses really do what they appear to do? Is there no precedent for the marvel? Is there no transition between the Elberfeld stallions and the horses which we have known until this day? It is not easy to answer these questions, for it is only since yesterday that the intellectual powers of our defenseless brothers have been subjected to strictly scientific experiments. We have, it is true more than one collection of anecdotes in which the intelligence of animals is lauded to the skies; but we cannot rely upon these ill-authenticated stories. To find genuine and incontestable instances we must have recourse to the works, rare as yet, of scientific men who have made a special study of the subject. M.

Hachet-Souplet, for example, the director of the Institut de Psychologie Zoologique, mentions the case of a dog who learnt to acquire an abstract idea of weight. You put in front of him eight rounded and polished stones, all of exactly the same size and shape, but of different weights. You tell him to fetch the heaviest or the lightest; he judges their weight by lifting them and, without mistake, picks out the one required.

The same writer also tells the story of a parrot to whom he had taught the word "cupboard" by showing him a little box that could be hung up on the wall at different heights and in which his daily allowance of food was always ostentatiously put away;"I next taught him the names of a number of objects," says M.

Hachet-Souplet, "by holding them out to him. Among them was a ladder; and I prevailed upon the bird to say, 'Climb,' each time that he saw me mount the steps. One morning, when the parrot's cage was brought into the laboratory, the cupboard was hanging near the ceiling, while the little ladder was stowed away in a corner among other objects familiar to the bird. Now the parrot, every day, when I opened the cupboard, used to scream, 'Cupboard!

同类推荐
  • 紫皇炼度玄科

    紫皇炼度玄科

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 元始天尊说太古经注

    元始天尊说太古经注

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 证治准绳·杂病

    证治准绳·杂病

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 花笺记

    花笺记

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

    润卿鲁望寒夜见访

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 总裁抢妻夺爱36计

    总裁抢妻夺爱36计

    “男人,你简直坏透了!我们离婚!”蓝童恩把离婚协议书扔到妖孽男人眼前。“老婆,闹够了!”男人扔给她一个无聊的眼神。一个不留神,她竟敢带“球”跑了。多年后,他终于抓住了她:“女人,还我儿子!”“没有儿子!”“给我找到,孩子归我!”电话此时传来儿子的叫声:“妈妈,救我!我被人绑架了!”“谁绑架你了?”“一个和我长得一模一样的男人,他说是我爹地。”蓝童恩盯着眼前的妖孽男人,浑身冒着虚汗……
  • 毒妃解爱

    毒妃解爱

    “你知道吗?毒师这一辈子唯一不能解的毒就是情毒,因为解药就是毒师的爱”“如果我不小心中了你的情毒,你愿意替我解毒吗?”“我不会……因为我早就爱上了你”前世钱小乐在一次逛街途中,不慎踩中香蕉皮,跌入下水道,意外投胎到架空时代…………………请大家多多支持落雪轩姐妹组合,在此申明本小说纯属虚构,如有雷同,皆是意外。
  • 辽诗话

    辽诗话

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

    野酸枣

    本书是一部散文集。作者通过对自己母亲、家乡以及周围朋友的怀念,抒发了作者真挚的感情,描写了周围的人和事、真实感人。比如对母亲的描写,通过几件小事反映了农村妇女吃苦耐劳的优良品质。
  • 崛起时空之战

    崛起时空之战

    神秘的宇宙,谁又能说清到底有没有平行的空间?一位在乡下生活了十六年的少年,却是在鸟窝中发现,神秘的身份。一道太空来临的神秘绿光。平淡的生活,就此改变。
  • 道三慕四

    道三慕四

    男主是大学生,在学校里一直属于默默无闻被欺负被无视的对象,自从在学校门口的书店买了本奇怪的古书后研读后身体便起了变化脱胎换骨,从天而降的外语系校花跳楼被他英雄救美成了他的女朋友,学校里欺负人的校霸业被神奇法术整治,从此怪事层出不穷,被迫从高楼耸立的都市丛林转战到仙门争斗不休的超时空古国大陆,最后成为帝君后重回学校过低调的生活。
  • 熊出没之魔法之旅

    熊出没之魔法之旅

    熊大熊二和光头强,在一个山洞获得了魔法,于是再一次踏上了环球之旅
  • 进击的巨人绯色之恋

    进击的巨人绯色之恋

    西奈与利威尔有着最普通的相遇,最普通的相识,这个世界上没有那么多我爱着你,你爱着她,她爱着他,他爱着我,他们从来不需要多余的话,只是放心的将自己交给对方……故事便是从这开始当天空蒙上阴色,不再蔚蓝清明;当河水逆流染上血腥,当红色沾染面颊湿了衣襟……曾经奢求的那点点幸福,化为云烟消失不见。失去了那么多还能失去什么,若不曾与你相遇,生命的意义早已化变为零,只因有你,世界,全部。
  • 青少年科技常识必读(青少年必读常识)

    青少年科技常识必读(青少年必读常识)

    每一朵花,都是一个春天,盛开馥郁芬芳;每一粒沙,都是一个世界,搭建小小天堂;每一颗心,都是一盏灯光,把地球村点亮!借助图书为你的生活添一丝色彩。这是一套包罗生活万象的、有趣的书,向读者介绍了不可不知的中的常识。包括文学常识、地理常识、历史常识、安全常识、文化常识、动物常识、植物常识、科技常识、天文常识、生活常识等。这些都是一些生活常识性的问题,说大不大,说小不小,因为零散,平时想了解又难以查找,我们将这些你们可能感兴趣的、富有趣味的日常生活中日积月累的宝贵经验搜集并编辑成册,以便您在遇到问题时随时查询,轻松解决生活中的问题。
  • 圣碑传说

    圣碑传说

    魔族杀手,为了完成最后一个任务,淬骨为人,灵魂降在一个废柴少爷的身上。且看姜寒如何崛起于极北之地,纵横人魔两族,炼龙魂,浴凤血,参悟圣碑奥妙,以一身之机遇,斗天战地,成就一代传奇!