<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER V. HEREDITY </h2>
<p>Facts which I have set forth elsewhere prove that certain dung beetles'
make an exception to the rule of paternal indifference—a general
rule in the insect world—and know something of domestic cooperation.
The father works with almost the same zeal as the mother in providing for
the settlement of the family. Whence do these favored ones derive a gift
that borders on morality?</p>
<p>One might suggest the cost of installing the youngsters. Once they have to
be furnished with a lodging and to be left the wherewithal to live, is it
not an advantage, in the interests of the race, that the father should
come to the mother's assistance? Work divided between the two will ensure
the comfort which solitary work, its strength overtaxed, would deny. This
seems excellent reasoning; but it is much more often contradicted than
confirmed by the facts. Why is the Sisyphus a hard working paterfamilias
and the sacred beetle an idle vagabond? And yet the two pill rollers
practice the same industry and the same method of rearing their young. Why
does the Lunary Copris know what his near kinsman, the Spanish Copris,
does not? The first assists his mate, never forsakes her. The second seeks
a divorce at an early stage and leaves the nuptial roof before the
children's rations are massed and kneaded into shape. Nevertheless, on
both sides, there is the same big outlay on a cellarful of egg-shaped
pills, whose neat rows call for long and watchful supervision. The
similarity of the produce leads one to believe in similarity of manners;
and this is a mistake.</p>
<p>Let us turn elsewhere, to the wasps and bees, who unquestionably come
first in the laying up of a heritage for their offspring. Whether the
treasure hoarded for the benefit of the sons be a pot of honey or a bag of
game, the father never takes the smallest part in the work. He does not so
much as give a sweep of the broom when it comes to tidying the outside of
the dwelling. To do nothing is his invariable rule. The bringing up of the
family, therefore, however expensive it may be in certain cases, has not
given rise to the instinct of paternity. Then where are we to look for a
reply?</p>
<p>Let us make the question a wider one. Let us leave the animal, for a
moment, and occupy ourselves with man. We have our own instincts, some of
which take the name of genius when they attain a degree of might that
towers over the plain of mediocrity. We are amazed by the unusual,
springing out of flat commonplaces; we are spellbound by the luminous
speck shining in the wonted darkness. We admire; and, failing to
understand whence came those glorious harvests in this one or in that, we
say of them: "They have the gift."</p>
<p>A goatherd amuses himself by making combinations with heaps of little
pebbles. He becomes an astoundingly quick and accurate reckoner without
other aid than a moment's reflection. He terrifies us with the conflict of
enormous numbers which blend in an orderly fashion in his mind, but whose
mere statement overwhelms us by its inextricable confusion. This marvelous
arithmetical juggler has an instinct, a genius, a gift for figures.</p>
<p>A second, at the age when most of us delight in tops and marbles, leaves
the company of his boisterous playmates and listens to the echo of
celestial harps singing within him. His head is a cathedral filled with
the strains of an imaginary organ. Rich cadences, a secret concert heard
by him and him alone, steep him in ecstasy. All hail to that predestined
one who, some day, will rouse our noblest emotions with his musical
chords. He has an instinct, a genius, a gift for sounds.</p>
<p>A third, a brat who cannot yet eat his bread and jam without smearing his
face all over, takes a delight in fashioning clay into little figures that
are astonishingly lifelike for all their artless awkwardness. He takes a
knife and makes the briar root grin into all sorts of entertaining masks;
he carves boxwood in the semblance of a horse or sheep; he engraves the
effigy of his dog on sandstone. Leave him alone; and, if Heaven second his
efforts, he may become a famous sculptor. He has an instinct, a gift, a
genius for form.</p>
<p>And so with others in every branch of human activity: art and science,
industry and commerce, literature and philosophy. We have within us, from
the start, that which will distinguish us from the vulgar herd. Now to
what do we owe this distinctive character? To some throwback of atavism,
men tell us. Heredity, direct in one case, remote in another, hands it
down to us, increased or modified by time. Search the records of the
family and you will discover the source of the genius, a mere trickle at
first, then a stream, then a mighty river.</p>
<p>The darkness that lies behind that word heredity! Metaphysical science has
tried to throw a little light upon it and has succeeded only in making
unto itself a barbarous jargon, leaving obscurity more obscure than
before. As for us, who hunger after lucidity, let us relinquish abstruse
theories to whoever delights in them and confine our ambition to
observable facts, without pretending to explain the quackery of the
plasma. Our method certainly will not reveal to us the origin of instinct;
but it will at least show us where it would be waste of time to look for
it.</p>
<p>In this sort of research, a subject known through and through, down to its
most intimate peculiarities, is indispensable. Where shall we find that
subject? There would be a host of them and magnificent ones, if it were
possible to read the sealed pages of others' lives; but no one can sound
an existence outside his own and even then he can think himself lucky if a
retentive memory and the habit of reflection give his soundings the proper
accuracy. As none of us is able to project himself into another's skin, we
must needs, in considering this problem, remain inside our own.</p>
<p>To talk about one's self is hateful, I know. The reader must have the
kindness to excuse me for the sake of the study in hand. I shall take the
silent beetle's place in the witness box, cross-examining myself in all
simplicity of soul, as I do the animal, and asking myself whence that one
of my instincts which stands out above the others is derived.</p>
<p>Since Darwin bestowed upon me the title of 'incomparable observer,' the
epithet has often come back to me, from this side and from that, without
my yet understanding what particular merit I have shown. It seems to me so
natural, so much within everybody's scope, so absorbing to interest one's
self in everything that swarms around us! However, let us pass on and
admit that the compliment is not unfounded.</p>
<p>My hesitation ceases if it is a question of admitting my curiosity in
matters that concern the insect. Yes, I possess the gift, the instinct
that impels me to frequent that singular world; yes, I know that I am
capable of spending on those studies an amount of precious time which
would be better employed in making provision, if possible, for the poverty
of old age; yes, I confess that I am an enthusiastic observer of the
animal. How was this characteristic propensity, at once the torment and
delight of my life, developed? And, to begin with, how much does it owe to
heredity?</p>
<p>The common people have no history: persecuted by the present, they cannot
think of preserving the memory of the past. And yet what surpassingly
instructive records, comforting too and pious, would be the family papers
that should tell us who our forebears were and speak to us of their
patient struggles with harsh fate, their stubborn efforts to build up,
atom by atom, what we are today. No story would come up with that for
individual interest. But by the very force of things the home is
abandoned; and, when the brood has flown, the nest is no longer
recognized.</p>
<p>I, a humble journeyman in the toilers' hive, am therefore very poor in
family recollections. In the second degree of ancestry, my facts become
suddenly obscured. I will linger over them a moment for two reasons:
first, to inquire into the influence of heredity; and, secondly, to leave
my children yet one more page concerning them.</p>
<p>I did not know my maternal grandfather. This venerable ancestor was, I
have been told, a process server in one of the poorest parishes of the
Rouergue. He used to engross on stamped paper in a primitive spelling.
With his well-filled pen case and ink horn, he went drawing out deeds up
hill and down dale, from one insolvent wretch to another more insolvent
still. Amid his atmosphere of pettifoggery, this rudimentary scholar,
waging battle on life's acerbities, certainly paid no attention to the
insect; at most, if he met it, he would crush it under foot. The unknown
animal, suspected of evil doing, deserved no further enquiry. Grandmother,
on her side, apart from her housekeeping and her beads, knew still less
about anything. She looked on the alphabet as a set of hieroglyphics only
fit to spoil your sight for nothing, unless you were scribbling on paper
bearing the government stamp. Who in the world, in her day, among the
small folk, dreamt of knowing how to read and write? That luxury was
reserved for the attorney, who himself made but a sparing use of it. The
insect, I need hardly say, was the least of her cares. If sometimes, when
rinsing her salad at the tap, she found a caterpillar on the lettuce
leaves, with a start of fright she would fling the loathsome thing away,
thus cutting short relations reputed dangerous. In short, to both my
maternal grandparents, the insect was a creature of no interest whatever
and almost always a repulsive object, which one dared not touch with the
tip of one's finger. Beyond a doubt, my taste for animals was not derived
from them.</p>
<p>I have more precise information regarding my grandparents on the father's
side, for their green old age allowed me to know them both. They were
people of the soil, whose quarrel with the alphabet was so great that they
had never opened a book in their lives; and they kept a lean farm on the
cold granite ridge of the Rouergue tableland. The house, standing alone
among the heath and broom, with no neighbor for many a mile around and
visited at intervals by the wolves, was to them the hub of the universe.
But for a few surrounding villages, whither the calves were driven on fair
days, the rest was only very vaguely known by hearsay. In this wild
solitude, the mossy fens, with their quagmires oozing with iridescent
pools, supplied the cows, the principal source of wealth, with rich, wet
grass. In summer, on the short swards of the slopes, the sheep were penned
day and night, protected from beasts of prey by a fence of hurdles propped
up with pitchforks. When the grass was cropped close at one spot, the fold
was shifted elsewhere. In the center was the shepherd's rolling hut, a
straw cabin. Two watchdogs, equipped with spiked collars, were answerable
for tranquillity if the thieving wolf appeared in the night from out the
neighboring woods.</p>
<p>Padded with a perpetual layer of cow dung, in which I sank to my knees,
broken up with shimmering puddles of dark brown liquid manure, the
farmyard also boasted a numerous population. Here the lambs skipped, the
geese trumpeted, the fowls scratched the ground and the sow grunted with
her swarm of little pigs hanging to her dugs.</p>
<p>The harshness of the climate did not give husbandry the same chances. In a
propitious season, they would set fire to a stretch of moorland bristling
with gorse and send the swing plow across the ground enriched with the
cinders of the blaze. This yielded a few acres of rye, oats and potatoes.
The best corners were kept for hemp, which furnished the distaffs and
spindles of the house with the material for linen and was looked upon as
grandmother's private crop.</p>
<p>Grandfather, therefore, was, before all, a herdsman versed in matters of
cows and sheep, but completely ignorant of aught else. How dumbfounded he
would have been to learn that, in the remote future, one of his family
would become enamoured of those insignificant animals to which he had
never vouchsafed a glance in his life! Had he guessed that that lunatic
was myself, the scapegrace seated at the table by his side, what a smack I
should have caught in the neck, what a wrathful look!</p>
<p>"The idea of wasting one's time with that nonsense!" he would have
thundered.</p>
<p>For the patriarch was not given to joking. I can still see his serious
face, his unclipped head of hair, often brought back behind his ears with
a flick of the thumb and spreading its ancient Gallic mane over his
shoulders. I see his little three-cornered hat, his small clothes buckled
at the knees, his wooden shoes, stuffed with straw, that echoed as he
walked. Ah, no! Once childhood's games were past, it would never have done
to rear the Grasshopper and unearth the Dung beetle from his natural
surroundings.</p>
<p>Grandmother, pious soul, used to wear the eccentric headdress of the
Rouergue highlanders: a large disk of black felt, stiff as a plank,
adorned in the middle with a crown a finger's breadth high and hardly
wider across than a six franc piece. A black ribbon fastened under the
chin maintained the equilibrium of this elegant, but unsteady circle.
Pickles, hemp, chickens, curds and whey, butter; washing the clothes,
minding the children, seeing to the meals of the household: say that and
you have summed up the strenuous woman's round of ideas. On her left side,
the distaff, with its load of flax; in her right hand, the spindle turning
under a quick twist of her thumb, moistened at intervals with her tongue:
so she went through life, unwearied, attending to the order and the
welfare of the house. I see her in my mind's eye particularly on winter
evenings, which were more favorable to family talk. When the hour came for
meals, all of us, big and little, would take our seats round a long table,
on a couple of benches, deal planks supported by four rickety legs. Each
found his wooden bowl and his tin spoon in front of him. At one end of the
table always stood an enormous rye loaf, the size of a cartwheel, wrapped
in a linen cloth with a pleasant smell of washing, and remained until
nothing was left of it. With a vigorous stroke, grandfather would cut off
enough for the needs of the moment; then he would divide the piece among
us with the one knife which he alone was entitled to wield. It was now
each one's business to break up his bit with his fingers and to fill his
bowl as he pleased.</p>
<p>Next came grandmother's turn. A capacious pot bubbled lustily and sang
upon the flames in the hearth, exhaling an appetizing savor of bacon and
turnips. Armed with a long metal ladle, grandmother would take from it,
for each of us in turn, first the broth, wherein to soak the bread, and
next the ration of turnips and bacon, partly fat and partly lean, filling
the bowl to the top. At the other end of the table was the pitcher, from
which the thirsty were free to drink at will. What appetites we had and
what festive meals those were, especially when a cream cheese, homemade,
was there to complete the banquet!</p>
<p>Near us blazed the huge fireplace, in which whole tree trunks were
consumed in the extreme cold weather. From a corner of that monumental,
soot-glazed chimney, projected, at a convenient height, a bracket with a
slate shelf, which served to light the kitchen when we sat up late. On
this we burnt chips of pine wood, selected among the most translucent,
those containing the most resin. They shed over the room a lurid red
light, which saved the walnut oil in the lamp.</p>
<p>When the bowls were emptied and the last crumb of cheese scraped up,
grandam went back to her distaff, on a stool by the chimney corner. We
children, boys and girls, squatting on our heels and putting out our hands
to the cheerful fire of furze, formed a circle round her and listened to
her with eager ears. She told us stories, not greatly varied, it is true,
but still wonderful, for the wolf often played a part in them. I should
have very much liked to see this wolf, the hero of so many tales that made
our flesh creep; but the shepherd always refused to take me into his straw
hut, in the middle of the fold, at night. When we had done talking about
the horrid wolf, the dragon and the serpent and when the resinous
splinters had given out their last gleams, we went to sleep the sweet
sleep that toil gives. As the youngest of the household, I had a right to
the mattress, a sack stuffed with oat chaff. The others had to be content
with straw.</p>
<p>I owe a great deal to you, dear grandmother: it was in your lap that I
found consolation for my first sorrows. You have handed down to me,
perhaps, a little of your physical vigor, a little of your love of work;
but certainly you were no more accountable than grandfather for my passion
for insects.</p>
<p>Nor was either of my own parents. My mother, who was quite illiterate,
having known no teacher than the bitter experience of a harassed life, was
the exact opposite of what my tastes required for their development. My
peculiarity must seek its origin elsewhere: that I will swear. But I do
not find it in my father, either. The excellent man, who was hard working
and sturdily built like granddad, had been to school as a child. He knew
how to write, though he took the greatest liberties with spelling; he knew
how to read and understood what he read, provided the reading presented no
more serious literary difficulties than occurred in the stories in the
almanac. He was the first of his line to allow himself to be tempted by
the town and he lived to regret it. Badly off, having but little outlet
for his industry, making God knows what shifts to pick up a livelihood, he
went through all the disappointments of the countryman turned townsman.
Persecuted by bad luck, borne down by the burden, for all his energy and
good will, he was far indeed from starting me in entomology. He had other
cares, cares more direct and more serious. A good cuff or two when he saw
me pinning an insect to a cork was all the encouragement that I received
from him. Perhaps he was right.</p>
<p>The conclusion is positive: there is nothing in heredity to explain my
taste for observation. You may say that I do not go far enough back. Well,
what should I find beyond the grandparents where my facts come to a stop?
I know, partly. I should find even more uncultured ancestors: sons of the
soil, plowmen, sowers of rye, neat herds; one and all, by the very force
of things, of not the least account in the nice matters of observation.</p>
<p>And yet, in me, the observer, the inquirer into things began to take shape
almost in infancy. Why should I not describe my first discoveries? They
are ingenuous in the extreme, but will serve notwithstanding to tell us
something of the way in which tendencies first show themselves. I was five
or six years old. That the poor household might have one mouth less to
feed, I had been placed in grandmother's care, as I have just been saying.
Here, in solitude, my first gleams of intelligence were awakened amidst
the geese, the calves and the sheep. Everything before that is
impenetrable darkness. My real birth is at that moment when the dawn of
personality rises, dispersing the mists of unconsciousness and leaving a
lasting memory. I can see myself plainly, clad in a soiled frieze frock
flapping against my bare heels; I remember the handkerchief hanging from
my waist by a bit of string, a handkerchief often lost and replaced by the
back of my sleeve.</p>
<p>There I stand one day, a pensive urchin, with my hands behind my back and
my face turned to the sun. The dazzling splendor fascinates me. I am the
Moth attracted by the light of the lamp. With what am I enjoying the
glorious radiance: with my mouth or my eyes? That is the question put by
my budding scientific curiosity. Reader, do not smile: the future observer
is already practicing and experimenting. I open my mouth wide and close my
eyes: the glory disappears. I open my eyes and shut my mouth: the glory
reappears. I repeat the performance, with the same result. The question's
solved: I have learnt by deduction that I see the sun with my eyes. Oh,
what a discovery! That evening, I told the whole house all about it.
Grandmother smiled fondly at my simplicity: the others laughed at it. 'Tis
the way of the world.</p>
<p>Another find. At nightfall, amidst the neighboring bushes, a sort of
jingle attracted my attention, sounding very faintly and softly through
the evening silence. Who is making that noise? Is it a little bird
chirping in his nest? We must look into the matter and that quickly. True,
there is the wolf, who comes out of the woods at this time, so they tell
me. Let's go all the same, but not too far: just there, behind that clump
of groom. I stand on the look out for long, but all in vain. At the
faintest sound of movement in the brushwood, the jingle ceases. I try
again next day and the day after. This time, my stubborn watch succeeds.
Whoosh! A grab of my hand and I hold the singer. It is not a bird; it is a
kind of Grasshopper whose hind legs my playfellows have taught me to like:
a poor recompense for my prolonged ambush. The best part of the business
is not the two haunches with the shrimpy flavor, but what I have just
learnt. I now know, from personal observation, that the Grasshopper sings.
I did not publish my discovery, for fear of the same laughter that greeted
my story about the sun.</p>
<p>Oh, what pretty flowers, in a field close to the house! They seem to smile
to me with their great violet eyes. Later on, I see, in their place,
bunches of big red cherries. I taste them. They are not nice and they have
no stones. What can those cherries be? At the end of the summer,
grandfather comes with a spade and turns my field of observation
topsy-turvy. From under ground there comes, by the basketful and sackful,
a sort of round root. I know that root; it abounds in the house; time
after time I have cooked it in the peat stove. It is the potato. Its
violet flower and its red fruit are pigeonholed for good and all in my
memory.</p>
<p>With an ever watchful eye for animals and plants, the future observer, the
little six-year-old monkey, practiced by himself, all unawares. He went to
the flower, he went to the insect, even as the large white butterfly goes
to the cabbage and the red admiral to the thistle. He looked and inquired,
drawn by a curiosity whereof heredity did not know the secret. He bore
within him the germ of a faculty unknown to his family; he kept alive a
glimmer that was foreign to the ancestral hearth. What will become of that
infinitesimal spark of childish fancy? It will die out, beyond a doubt,
unless education intervene, giving it the fuel of example, fanning it with
the breath of experience. In that case, schooling will explain what
heredity leaves unexplained. This is what we will examine in the next
chapter.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />