
HISTORY OF ANIMALS
350 BC
ARISTOTLE
384 BC - 322 BC
Translated by D'Arcy Wentworth Thompson
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by Aristotle
BOOK NINE
Part 1
Of the animals that are comparatively obscure
and short-lived the characters or dispositions
are not so obvious to recognition as are
those of animals that are longer-lived. These
latter animals appear to have a natural capacity
corresponding to each of the passions: to
cunning or simplicity, courage or timidity,
to good temper or to bad, and to other similar
dispositions of mind.
Some also are capable of giving or receiving
instruction-of receiving it from one another
or from man: those that have the faculty
of hearing, for instance; and, not to limit
the matter to audible sound, such as can
differentiate the suggested meanings of word
and gesture.
In all genera in which the distinction of
male and female is found, Nature makes a
similar differentiation in the mental characteristics
of the two sexes. This differentiation is
the most obvious in the case of human kind
and in that of the larger animals and the
viviparous quadrupeds. In the case of these
latter the female softer in character, is
the sooner tamed, admits more readily of
caressing, is more apt in the way of learning;
as, for instance, in the Laconian breed of
dogs the female is cleverer than the male.
Of the Molossian breed of dogs, such as are
employed in the chase are pretty much the
same as those elsewhere; but sheep-dogs of
this breed are superior to the others in
size, and in the courage with which they
face the attacks of wild animals.
Dogs that are born of a mixed breed between
these two kinds are remarkable for courage
and endurance of hard labour.
In all cases, excepting those of the bear
and leopard, the female is less spirited
than the male; in regard to the two exceptional
cases, the superiority in courage rests with
the female. With all other animals the female
is softer in disposition than the male, is
more mischievous, less simple, more impulsive,
and more attentive to the nurture of the
young: the male, on the other hand, is more
spirited than the female, more savage, more
simple and less cunning. The traces of these
differentiated characteristics are more or
less visible everywhere, but they are especially
visible where character is the more developed,
and most of all in man.
The fact is, the nature of man is the most
rounded off and complete, and consequently
in man the qualities or capacities above
referred to are found in their perfection.
Hence woman is more compassionate than man,
more easily moved to tears, at the same time
is more jealous, more querulous, more apt
to scold and to strike. She is, furthermore,
more prone to despondency and less hopeful
than the man, more void of shame or self-respect,
more false of speech, more deceptive, and
of more retentive memory. She is also more
wakeful, more shrinking, more difficult to
rouse to action, and requires a smaller quantity
of nutriment.
As was previously stated, the male is more
courageous than the female, and more sympathetic
in the way of standing by to help. Even in
the case of molluscs, when the cuttle-fish
is struck with the trident the male stands
by to help the female; but when the male
is struck the female runs away.
There is enmity between such animals as dwell
in the same localities or subsist on the
food. If the means of subsistence run short,
creatures of like kind will fight together.
Thus it is said that seals which inhabit
one and the same district will fight, male
with male, and female with female, until
one combatant kills the other, or one is
driven away by the other; and their young
do even in like manner.
All creatures are at enmity with the carnivores,
and the carnivores with all the rest, for
they all subsist on living creatures. Soothsayers
take notice of cases where animals keep apart
from one another, and cases where they congregate
together; calling those that live at war
with one another 'dissociates', and those
that dwell in peace with one another 'associates'.
One may go so far as to say that if there
were no lack or stint of food, then those
animals that are now afraid of man or are
wild by nature would be tame and familiar
with him, and in like manner with one another.
This is shown by the way animals are treated
in Egypt, for owing to the fact that food
is constantly supplied to them the very fiercest
creatures live peaceably together. The fact
is they are tamed by kindness, and in some
places crocodiles are tame to their priestly
keeper from being fed by him. And elsewhere
also the same phenomenon is to be observed.
The eagle and the snake are enemies, for
the eagle lives on snakes; so are the ichneumon
and the venom-spider, for the ichneumon preys
upon the latter. In the case of birds, there
is mutual enmity between the poecilis, the
crested lark, the woodpecker (?), and the
chloreus, for they devour one another's eggs;
so also between the crow and the owl; for,
owing to the fact that the owl is dim-sighted
by day, the crow at midday preys upon the
owl's eggs, and the owl at night upon the
crow's, each having the whip-hand of the
other, turn and turn about, night and day.
There is enmity also between the owl and
the wren; for the latter also devours the
owl's eggs. In the daytime all other little
birds flutter round the owl-a practice which
is popularly termed 'admiring him'-buffet
him, and pluck out his feathers; in consequence
of this habit, bird-catchers use the owl
as a decoy for catching little birds of all
kinds.
The so-called presbys or 'old man' is at
war with the weasel and the crow, for they
prey on her eggs and her brood; and so the
turtle-dove with the pyrallis, for they live
in the same districts and on the same food;
and so with the green wood pecker and the
libyus; and so with kite and the raven, for,
owing to his having the advantage from stronger
talons and more rapid flight the former can
steal whatever the latter is holding, so
that it is food also that makes enemies of
these. In like manner there is war between
birds that get their living from the sea,
as between the brenthus, the gull, and the
harpe; and so between the buzzard on one
side and the toad and snake on the other,
for the buzzard preys upon the eggs of the
two others; and so between the turtle-dove
and the chloreus; the chloreus kills the
dove, and the crow kills the so-called drummer-bird.
The aegolius, and birds of prey in general,
prey upon the calaris, and consequently there
is war between it and them; and so is there
war between the gecko-lizard and the spider,
for the former preys upon the latter; and
so between the woodpecker and the heron,
for the former preys upon the eggs and brood
of the latter. And so between the aegithus
and the ass, owing to the fact that the ass,
in passing a furze-bush, rubs its sore and
itching parts against the prickles; by so
doing, and all the more if it brays, it topples
the eggs and the brood out of the nest, the
young ones tumble out in fright, and the
mother-bird, to avenge this wrong, flies
at the beast and pecks at his sore places.
The wolf is at war with the ass, the bull,
and the fox, for as being a carnivore, he
attacks these other animals; and so for the
same reason with the fox and the circus,
for the circus, being carnivorous and furnished
with crooked talons, attacks and maims the
animal. And so the raven is at war with the
bull and the ass, for it flies at them, and
strikes them, and pecks at their eyes; and
so with the eagle and the heron, for the
former, having crooked talons, attacks the
latter, and the latter usually succumbs to
the attack; and so the merlin with the vulture;
and the crex with the eleus-owl, the blackbird,
and the oriole (of this latter bird, by the
way, the story goes that he was originally
born out of a funeral pyre): the cause of
warfare is that the crex injures both them
and their young. The nuthatch and the wren
are at war with the eagle; the nuthatch breaks
the eagle's eggs, so the eagle is at war
with it on special grounds, though, as a
bird of prey, it carries on a general war
all round. The horse and the anthus are enemies,
and the horse will drive the bird out of
the field where he is grazing: the bird feeds
on grass, and sees too dimly to foresee an
attack; it mimics the whinnying of the horse,
flies at him, and tries to frighten him away;
but the horse drives the bird away, and whenever
he catches it he kills it: this bird lives
beside rivers or on marsh ground; it has
pretty plumage, and finds its without trouble.
The ass is at enmity with the lizard, for
the lizard sleeps in his manger, gets into
his nostril, and prevents his eating.
Of herons there are three kinds: the ash
coloured, the white, and the starry heron
(or bittern). Of these the first mentioned
submits with reluctance to the duties of
incubation, or to union of the sexes; in
fact, it screams during the union, and it
is said drips blood from its eyes; it lays
its eggs also in an awkward manner, not unattended
with pain. It is at war with certain creatures
that do it injury: with the eagle for robbing
it, with the fox for worrying it at night,
and with the lark for stealing its eggs.
The snake is at war with the weasel and the
pig; with the weasel when they are both at
home, for they live on the same food; with
the pig for preying on her kind. The merlin
is at war with the fox; it strikes and claws
it, and, as it has crooked talons, it kills
the animal's young. The raven and the fox
are good friends, for the raven is at enmity
with the merlin; and so when the merlin assails
the fox the raven comes and helps the animal.
The vulture and the merlin are mutual enemies,
as being both furnished with crooked talons.
The vulture fights with the eagle, and so,
by the way, does does swan; and the swan
is often victorious: moreover, of all birds
swans are most prone to the killing of one
another.
In regard to wild creatures, some sets are
at enmity with other sets at all times and
under all circumstances; others, as in the
case of man and man, at special times and
under incidental circumstances. The ass and
the acanthis are enemies; for the bird lives
on thistles, and the ass browses on thistles
when they are young and tender. The anthus,
the acanthis, and the aegithus are at enmity
with one another; it is said that the blood
of the anthus will not intercommingle with
the blood of the aegithus. The crow and the
heron are friends, as also are the sedge-bird
and lark, the laedus and the celeus or green
woodpecker; the woodpecker lives on the banks
of rivers and beside brakes, the laedus lives
on rocks and bills, and is greatly attached
to its nesting-place. The piphinx, the harpe,
and the kite are friends; as are the fox
and the snake, for both burrow underground;
so also are the blackbird and the turtle-dove.
The lion and the thos or civet are enemies,
for both are carnivorous and live on the
same food. Elephants fight fiercely with
one another, and stab one another with their
tusks; of two combatants the beaten one gets
completely cowed, and dreads the sound of
his conqueror's voice. These animals differ
from one another an extraordinary extent
in the way of courage. Indians employ these
animals for war purposes, irrespective of
sex; the females, however, are less in size
and much inferior in point of spirit. An
elephant by pushing with his big tusks can
batter down a wall, and will butt with his
forehead at a palm until he brings it down,
when he stamps on it and lays it in orderly
fashion on the ground. Men hunt the elephant
in the following way: they mount tame elephants
of approved spirit and proceed in quest of
wild animals; when they come up with these
they bid the tame brutes to beat the wild
ones until they tire the latter completely.
Hereupon the driver mounts a wild brute and
guides him with the application of his metal
prong; after this the creature soon becomes
tame, and obeys guidance. Now when the driver
is on their back they are all tractable,
but after he has dismounted, some are tame
and others vicious; in the case of these
latter, they tie their front-legs with ropes
to keep them quiet. The animal is hunted
whether young or full grown.
Thus we see that in the case of the creatures
above mentioned their mutual friendship or
the is due to the food they feed on and the
life they lead.
Part 2
Of fishes, such as swim in shoals together
are friendly to one another; such as do not
so swim are enemies. Some fishes swarm during
the spawning season; others after they have
spawned. To state the matter comprehensively,
we may say that the following are shoaling
fish: the tunny, the maenis, the sea-gudgeon,
the bogue, the horse-mackerel, the coracine,
the synodon or dentex, the red mullet, the
sphyraena, the anthias, the eleginus, the
atherine, the sarginus, the gar-fish, (the
squid,) the rainbow-wrasse, the pelamyd,
the mackerel, the coly-mackerel. Of these
some not only swim in shoals, but go in pairs
inside the shoal; the rest without exception
swim in pairs, and only swim in shoals at
certain periods: that is, as has been said,
when they are heavy with spawn or after they
have spawned.
The basse and the grey mullet are bitter
enemies, but they swarm together at certain
times; for at times not only do fishes of
the same species swarm together, but also
those whose feeding-grounds are identical
or adjacent, if the food-supply be abundant.
The grey mullet is often found alive with
its tail lopped off, and the conger with
all that part of its body removed that lies
to the rear of the vent; in the case of the
mullet the injury is wrought by the basse,
in that of the conger-eel by the muraena.
There is war between the larger and the lesser
fishes: for the big fishes prey on the little
ones. So much on the subject of marine animals.
Part 3
The characters of animals, as has been observed,
differ in respect to timidity, to gentleness,
to courage, to tameness, to intelligence,
and to stupidity.
The sheep is said to be naturally dull and
stupid. Of all quadrupeds it is the most
foolish: it will saunter away to lonely places
with no object in view; oftentimes in stormy
weather it will stray from shelter; if it
be overtaken by a snowstorm, it will stand
still unless the shepherd sets it in motion;
it will stay behind and perish unless the
shepherd brings up the rams; it will then
follow home.
If you catch hold of a goat's beard at the
extremity-the beard is of a substance resembling
hair-all the companion goats will stand stock
still, staring at this particular goat in
a kind of dumbfounderment.
You will have a warmer bed in amongst the
goats than among the sheep, because the goats
will be quieter and will creep up towards
you; for the goat is more impatient of cold
than the sheep.
Shepherds train sheep to close in together
at a clap of their hands, for if, when a
thunderstorm comes on, a ewe stays behind
without closing in, the storm will kill it
if it be with young; consequently if a sudden
clap or noise is made, they close in together
within the sheepfold by reason of their training.
Even bulls, when they are roaming by themselves
apart from the herd, are killed by wild animals.
Sheep and goats lie crowded together, kin
by kin. When the sun turns early towards
its setting, the goats are said to lie no
longer face to face, but back to back.
Part 4
Cattle at pasture keep together in their
accustomed herds, and if one animal strays
away the rest will follow; consequently if
the herdsmen lose one particular animal,
they keep close watch on all the rest.
When mares with their colts pasture together
in the same field, if one dam dies the others
will take up the rearing of the colt. In
point of fact, the mare appears to be singularly
prone by nature to maternal fondness; in
proof whereof a barren mare will steal the
foal from its dam, will tend it with all
the solicitude of a mother, but, as it will
be unprovided with mother's milk, its solicitude
will prove fatal to its charge.
Part 5
Among wild quadrupeds the hind appears to
be pre-eminently intelligent; for example,
in its habit of bringing forth its young
on the sides of public roads, where the fear
of man forbids the approach of wild animals.
Again, after parturition, it first swallows
the afterbirth, then goes in quest of the
seseli shrub, and after eating of it returns
to its young. The mother takes its young
betimes to her lair, so leading it to know
its place of refuge in time of danger; this
lair is a precipitous rock, with only one
approach, and there it is said to hold its
own against all comers. The male when it
gets fat, which it does in a high degree
in autumn, disappears, abandoning its usual
resorts, apparently under an idea that its
fatness facilitates its capture. They shed
their horns in places difficult of access
or discovery, whence the proverbial expression
of 'the place where the stag sheds his horns';
the fact being that, as having parted with
their weapons, they take care not to be seen.
The saying is that no man has ever seen the
animal's left horn; that the creature keeps
it out of sight because it possesses some
medicinal property.
In their first year stags grow no horns,
but only an excrescence indicating where
horns will be, this excrescence being short
and thick. In their second year they grow
their horns for the first time, straight
in shape, like pegs for hanging clothes on;
and on this account they have an appropriate
nickname. In the third year the antlers are
bifurcate; in the fourth year they grow trifurcate;
and so they go on increasing in complexity
until the creature is six years old: after
this they grow their horns without any specific
differentiation, so that you cannot by observation
of them tell the animal's age. But the patriarchs
of the herd may be told chiefly by two signs;
in the first place they have few teeth or
none at all, and, in the second place, they
have ceased to grow the pointed tips to their
antlers. The forward-pointing tips of the
growing horns (that is to say the brow antlers),
with which the animal meets attack, are technically
termed its 'defenders'; with these the patriarchs
are unprovided, and their antlers merely
grow straight upwards. Stags shed their horns
annually, in or about the month of May; after
shedding, they conceal themselves, it is
said, during the daytime, and, to avoid the
flies, hide in thick copses; during this
time, until they have grown their horns,
they feed at night-time. The horns at first
grow in a kind of skin envelope, and get
rough by degrees; when they reach their full
size the animal basks in the sun, to mature
and dry them. When they need no longer rub
them against tree-trunks they quit their
hiding places, from a sense of security based
upon the possession of arms defensive and
offensive. An Achaeine stag has been caught
with a quantity of green ivy grown over its
horns, it having grown apparently, as on
fresh green wood, when the horns were young
and tender. When a stag is stung by a venom-spider
or similar insect, it gathers crabs and eats
them; it is said to be a good thing for man
to drink the juice, but the taste is disagreeable.
The hinds after parturition at once swallow
the afterbirth, and it is impossible to secure
it, for the hind catches it before it falls
to the ground: now this substance is supposed
to have medicinal properties. When hunted
the creatures are caught by singing or pipe-playing
on the part of the hunters; they are so pleased
with the music that they lie down on the
grass. If there be two hunters, one before
their eyes sings or plays the pipe, the other
keeps out of sight and shoots, at a signal
given by the confederate. If the animal has
its ears cocked, it can hear well and you
cannot escape its ken; if its ears are down,
you can.
Part 6
When bears are running away from their pursuers
they push their cubs in front of them, or
take them up and carry them; when they are
being overtaken they climb up a tree. When
emerging from their winter-den, they at once
take to eating cuckoo-pint, as has been said,
and chew sticks of wood as though they were
cutting teeth.
Many other quadrupeds help themselves in
clever ways. Wild goats in Crete are said,
when wounded by arrows, to go in search of
dittany, which is supposed to have the property
of ejecting arrows in the body. Dogs, when
they are ill, eat some kind of grass and
produce vomiting. The panther, after eating
panther's-bane, tries to find some human
excrement, which is said to heal its pain.
This panther's-bane kills lions as well.
Hunters hang up human excrement in a vessel
attached to the boughs of a tree, to keep
the animal from straying to any distance;
the animal meets its end in leaping up to
the branch and trying to get at the medicine.
They say that the panther has found out that
wild animals are fond of the scent it emits;
that, when it goes a-hunting, it hides itself;
that the other animals come nearer and nearer,
and that by this stratagem it can catch even
animals as swift of foot as stags.
The Egyptian ichneumon, when it sees the
serpent called the asp, does not attack it
until it has called in other ichneumons to
help; to meet the blows and bites of their
enemy the assailants beplaster themselves
with mud, by first soaking in the river and
then rolling on the ground.
When the crocodile yawns, the trochilus flies
into his mouth and cleans his teeth. The
trochilus gets his food thereby, and the
crocodile gets ease and comfort; it makes
no attempt to injure its little friend, but,
when it wants it to go, it shakes its neck
in warning, lest it should accidentally bite
the bird.
The tortoise, when it has partaken of a snake,
eats marjoram; this action has been actually
observed. A man saw a tortoise perform this
operation over and over again, and every
time it plucked up some marjoram go back
to partake of its prey; he thereupon pulled
the marjoram up by the roots, and the consequence
was the tortoise died. The weasel, when it
fights with a snake, first eats wild rue,
the smell of which is noxious to the snake.
The dragon, when it eats fruit, swallows
endive-juice; it has been seen in the act.
Dogs, when they suffer from worms, eat the
standing corn. Storks, and all other birds,
when they get a wound fighting, apply marjoram
to the place injured.
Many have seen the locust, when fighting
with the snake get a tight hold of the snake
by the neck. The weasel has a clever way
of getting the better of birds; it tears
their throats open, as wolves do with sheep.
Weasels fight desperately with mice-catching
snakes, as they both prey on the same animal.
In regard to the instinct of hedgehogs, it
has been observed in many places that, when
the wind is shifting from north to south,
and from south to north, they shift the outlook
of their earth-holes, and those that are
kept in domestication shift over from one
wall to the other. The story goes that a
man in Byzantium got into high repute for
foretelling a change of weather, all owing
to his having noticed this habit of the hedgehog.
The polecat or marten is about as large as
the smaller breed of Maltese dogs. In the
thickness of its fur, in its look, in the
white of its belly, and in its love of mischief,
it resembles the weasel; it is easily tamed;
from its liking for honey it is a plague
to bee-hives; it preys on birds like the
cat. Its genital organ, as has been said,
consists of bone: the organ of the male is
supposed to be a cure for strangury; doctors
scrape it into powder, and administer it
in that form.
Part 7
In a general way in the lives of animals
many resemblances to human life may be observed.
Pre-eminent intelligence will be seen more
in small creatures than in large ones, as
is exemplified in the case of birds by the
nest building of the swallow. In the same
way as men do, the bird mixes mud and chaff
together; if it runs short of mud, it souses
its body in water and rolls about in the
dry dust with wet feathers; furthermore,
just as man does, it makes a bed of straw,
putting hard material below for a foundation,
and adapting all to suit its own size. Both
parents co-operate in the rearing of the
young; each of the parents will detect, with
practised eye, the young one that has had
a helping, and will take care it is not helped
twice over; at first the parents will rid
the nest of excrement, but, when the young
are grown, they will teach their young to
shift their position and let their excrement
fall over the side of the nest.
Pigeons exhibit other phenomena with a similar
likeness to the ways of humankind. In pairing
the same male and the same female keep together;
and the union is only broken by the death
of one of the two parties. At the time of
parturition in the female the sympathetic
attentions of the male are extraordinary;
if the female is afraid on account of the
impending parturition to enter the nest,
the male will beat her and force her to come
in. When the young are born, he will take
and masticate pieces of suitable food, will
open the beaks of the fledglings, and inject
these pieces, thus preparing them betimes
to take food. (When the male bird is about
to expel the the young ones from the nest
he cohabits with them all.) As a general
rule these birds show this conjugal fidelity,
but occasionally a female will cohabit with
other than her mate. These birds are combative,
and quarrel with one another, and enter each
other's nests, though this occurs but seldom;
at a distance from their nests this quarrelsomeness
is less marked, but in the close neighbourhood
of their nests they will fight desperately.
A peculiarity common to the tame pigeon,
the ring-dove and the turtle-dove is that
they do not lean the head back when they
are in the act of drinking, but only when
they have fully quenched their thirst. The
turtle-dove and the ring-dove both have but
one mate, and let no other come nigh; both
sexes co-operate in the process of incubation.
It is difficult to distinguish between the
sexes except by an examination of their interiors.
Ring-doves are long-lived; cases have been
known where such birds were twenty-five years
old, thirty years old, and in some cases
forty. As they grow old their claws increase
in size, and pigeon- fanciers cut the claws;
as far as one can see, the birds suffer no
other perceptible disfigurement by their
increase in age. Turtle-doves and pigeons
that are blinded by fanciers for use as decoys,
live for eight years. Partridges live for
about fifteen years. Ring-doves and turtle-doves
always build their nests in the same place
year after year. The male, as a general rule,
is more long-lived than the female; but in
the case of pigeons some assert that the
male dies before the female, taking their
inference from the statements of persons
who keep decoy-birds in captivity. Some declare
that the male sparrow lives only a year,
pointing to the fact that early in spring
the male sparrow has no black beard, but
has one later on, as though the blackbearded
birds of the last year had all died out;
they also say that the females are the longer
lived, on the grounds that they are caught
in amongst the young birds and that their
age is rendered manifest by the hardness
about their beaks. Turtle-doves in summer
live in cold places, (and in warm places
during the winter); chaffinches affect warm
habitations in summer and cold ones in winter.
Part 8
Birds of a heavy build, such as quails, partridges,
and the like, build no nests; indeed, where
they are incapable of flight, it would be
of no use if they could do so. After scraping
a hole on a level piece of ground-and it
is only in such a place that they lay their
eggs-they cover it over with thorns and sticks
for security against hawks and eagles, and
there lay their eggs and hatch them; after
the hatching is over, they at once lead the
young out from the nest, as they are not
able to fly afield for food for them. Quails
and partridges, like barn-door hens, when
they go to rest, gather their brood under
their wings. Not to be discovered, as might
be the case if they stayed long in one spot,
they do not hatch the eggs where they laid
them. When a man comes by chance upon a young
brood, and tries to catch them, the hen-bird
rolls in front of the hunter, pretending
to be lame: the man every moment thinks he
is on the point of catching her, and so she
draws him on and on, until every one of her
brood has had time to escape; hereupon she
returns to the nest and calls the young back.
The partridge lays not less than ten eggs,
and often lays as many as sixteen. As has
been observed, the bird has mischievous and
deceitful habits. In the spring-time, a noisy
scrimmage takes place, out of which the male-birds
emerge each with a hen. Owing to the lecherous
nature of the bird, and from a dislike to
the hen sitting, the males, if they find
any eggs, roll them over and over until they
break them in pieces; to provide against
this the female goes to a distance and lays
the eggs, and often, under the stress of
parturition, lays them in any chance spot
that offers; if the male be near at hand,
then to keep the eggs intact she refrains
from visiting them. If she be seen by a man,
then, just as with her fledged brood, she
entices him off by showing herself close
at his feet until she has drawn him to a
distance. When the females have run away
and taken to sitting, the males in a pack
take to screaming and fighting; when thus
engaged, they have the nickname of 'widowers'.
The bird who is beaten follows his victor,
and submits to be covered by him only; and
the beaten bird is covered by a second one
or by any other, only clandestinely without
the victor's knowledge; this is so, not at
all times, but at a particular season of
the year, and with quails as well as with
partridges. A similar proceeding takes place
occasionally with barn-door cocks: for in
temples, where cocks are set apart as dedicate
without hens, they all as a matter of course
tread any new-comer. Tame partridges tread
wild birds, pecket their heads, and treat
them with every possible outrage. The leader
of the wild birds, with a counter-note of
challenge, pushes forward to attack the decoy-bird,
and after he has been netted, another advances
with a similar note. This is what is done
if the decoy be a male; but if it be a female
that is the decoy and gives the note, and
the leader of the wild birds give a counter
one, the rest of the males set upon him and
chase him away from the female for making
advances to her instead of to them; in consequence
of this the male often advances without uttering
any cry, so that no other may hear him and
come and give him battle; and experienced
fowlers assert that sometimes the male bird,
when he approaches the female, makes her
keep silence, to avoid having to give battle
to other males who might have heard him.
The partridge has not only the note here
referred to, but also a thin shrill cry and
other notes. Oftentimes the hen-bird rises
from off her brood when she sees the male
showing attentions to the female decoy; she
will give the counter note and remain still,
so as to be trodden by him and divert him
from the decoy. The quail and the partridge
are so intent upon sexual union that they
often come right in the way of the decoy-birds,
and not seldom alight upon their heads. So
much for the sexual proclivities of the partridge,
for the way in which it is hunted, and the
general nasty habits of the bird.
As has been said, quails and partridges build
their nests upon the ground, and so also
do some of the birds that are capable of
sustained flight. Further, for instance,
of such birds, the lark and the woodcock,
as well as the quail, do not perch on a branch,
but squat upon the ground.
Part 9
The woodpecker does not squat on the ground,
but pecks at the bark of trees to drive out
from under it maggots and gnats; when they
emerge, it licks them up with its tongue,
which is large and flat. It can run up and
down a tree in any way, even with the head
downwards, like the gecko-lizard. For secure
hold upon a tree, its claws are better adapted
than those of the daw; it makes its way by
sticking these claws into the bark. One species
of woodpecker is smaller than a blackbird,
and has small reddish speckles; a second
species is larger than the blackbird, and
a third is not much smaller than a barn-door
hen. It builds a nest on trees, as has been
said, on olive trees amongst others. It feeds
on the maggots and ants that are under the
bark: it is so eager in the search for maggots
that it is said sometimes to hollow a tree
out to its downfall. A woodpecker once, in
course of domestication, was seen to insert
an almond into a hole in a piece of timber,
so that it might remain steady under its
pecking; at the third peck it split the shell
of the fruit, and then ate the kernel.
Part 10
Many indications of high intelligence are
given by cranes. They will fly to a great
distance and up in the air, to command an
extensive view; if they see clouds and signs
of bad weather they fly down again and remain
still. They, furthermore, have a leader in
their flight, and patrols that scream on
the confines of the flock so as to be heard
by all. When they settle down, the main body
go to sleep with their heads under their
wing, standing first on one leg and then
on the other, while their leader, with his
head uncovered, keeps a sharp look out, and
when he sees anything of importance signals
it with a cry.
Pelicans that live beside rivers swallow
the large smooth mussel-shells: after cooking
them inside the crop that precedes the stomach,
they spit them out, so that, now when their
shells are open, they may pick the flesh
out and eat it.
Part 11
Of wild birds, the nests are fashioned to
meet the exigencies of existence and ensure
the security of the young. Some of these
birds are fond of their young and take great
care of them, others are quite the reverse;
some are clever in procuring subsistence,
others are not so. Some of these birds build
in ravines and clefts, and on cliffs, as,
for instance, the so-called charadrius, or
stone-curlew; this bird is in no way noteworthy
for plumage or voice; it makes an appearance
at night, but in the daytime keeps out of
sight.
The hawk also builds in inaccessible places.
Although a ravenous bird, it will never eat
the heart of any bird it catches; this has
been observed in the case of the quail, the
thrush, and other birds. They modify betimes
their method of hunting, for in summer they
do not grab their prey as they do at other
seasons.
Of the vulture, it is said that no one has
ever seen either its young or its nest; on
this account and on the ground that all of
a sudden great numbers of them will appear
without any one being able to tell from whence
they come, Herodorus, the father of Bryson
the sophist, says that it belongs to some
distant and elevated land. The reason is
that the bird has its nest on inaccessible
crags, and is found only in a few localities.
The female lays one egg as a rule, and two
at the most.
Some birds live on mountains or in forests,
as the hoopoe and the brenthus; this latter
bird finds his food with ease and has a musical
voice. The wren lives in brakes and crevices;
it is difficult of capture, keeps out of
sight, is gentle of disposition, finds its
food with ease, and is something of a mechanic.
It goes by the nickname of 'old man' or 'king';
and the story goes that for this reason the
eagle is at war with him.
Part 12
Some birds live on the sea-shore, as the
wagtail; the bird is of a mischievous nature,
hard to capture, but when caught capable
of complete domestication; it is a cripple,
as being weak in its hinder quarters.
Web-footed birds without exception live near
the sea or rivers or pools, as they naturally
resort to places adapted to their structure.
Several birds, however, with cloven toes
live near pools or marshes, as, for instance,
the anthus lives by the side of rivers; the
plumage of this bird is pretty, and it finds
its food with ease. The catarrhactes lives
near the sea; when it makes a dive, it will
keep under water for as long as it would
take a man to walk a furlong; it is less
than the common hawk. Swans are web-footed,
and live near pools and marshes; they find
their food with ease, are good-tempered,
are fond of their young, and live to a green
old age. If the eagle attacks them they will
repel the attack and get the better of their
assailant, but they are never the first to
attack. They are musical, and sing chiefly
at the approach of death; at this time they
fly out to sea, and men, when sailing past
the coast of Libya, have fallen in with many
of them out at sea singing in mournful strains,
and have actually seen some of them dying.
The cymindis is seldom seen, as it lives
on mountains; it is black in colour, and
about the size of the hawk called the 'dove-killer';
it is long and slender in form. The Ionians
call the bird by this name; Homer in the
Iliad mentions it in the line:
Chalcis its name with those of heavenly birth,
But called Cymindis by the sons of earth.
The hybris, said by some to be the same as
the eagle-owl, is never seen by daylight,
as it is dim-sighted, but during the night
it hunts like the eagle; it will fight the
eagle with such desperation that the two
combatants are often captured alive by shepherds;
it lays two eggs, and, like others we have
mentioned, it builds on rocks and in caverns.
Cranes also fight so desperately among themselves
as to be caught when fighting, for they will
not leave off; the crane lays two eggs.
Part 13
The jay has a great variety of notes: indeed,
might almost say it had a different note
for every day in the year. It lays about
nine eggs; builds its nest on trees, out
of hair and tags of wool; when acorns are
getting scarce, it lays up a store of them
in hiding.
It is a common story of the stork that the
old birds are fed by their grateful progeny.
Some tell a similar story of the bee-eater,
and declare that the parents are fed by their
young not only when growing old, but at an
early period, as soon as the young are capable
of feeding them; and the parent-birds stay
inside the nest. The under part of the bird's
wing is pale yellow; the upper part is dark
blue, like that of the halcyon; the tips
of the wings are About autumn-time it lays
six or seven eggs, in overhanging banks where
the soil is soft; there it burrows into the
ground to a depth of six feet.
The greenfinch, so called from the colour
of its belly, is as large as a lark; it lays
four or five eggs, builds its nest out of
the plant called comfrey, pulling it up by
the roots, and makes an under-mattress to
lie on of hair and wool. The blackbird and
the jay build their nests after the same
fashion. The nest of the penduline tit shows
great mechanical skill; it has the appearance
of a ball of flax, and the hole for entry
is very small.
People who live where the bird comes from
say that there exists a cinnamon bird which
brings the cinnamon from some unknown localities,
and builds its nest out of it; it builds
on high trees on the slender top branches.
They say that the inhabitants attach leaden
weights to the tips of their arrows and therewith
bring down the nests, and from the intertexture
collect the cinnamon sticks.
Part 14
The halcyon is not much larger than the sparrow.
Its colour is dark blue, green, and light
purple; the whole body and wings, and especially
parts about the neck, show these colours
in a mixed way, without any colour being
sharply defined; the beak is light green,
long and slender: such, then, is the look
of the bird. Its nest is like sea-balls,
i. e. the things that by the name of halosachne
or seafoam, only the colour is not the same.
The colour of the nest is light red, and
the shape is that of the long-necked gourd.
The nests are larger than the largest sponge,
though they vary in size; they are roofed
over, and great part of them is solid and
great part hollow. If you use a sharp knife
it is not easy to cut the nest through; but
if you cut it, and at the same time bruise
it with your hand, it will soon crumble to
pieces, like the halosachne. The opening
is small, just enough for a tiny entrance,
so that even if the nest upset the sea does
not enter in; the hollow channels are like
those in sponges. It is not known for certain
of what material the nest is constructed;
it is possibly made of the backbones of the
gar-fish; for, by the way, the bird lives
on fish. Besides living on the shore, it
ascends fresh-water streams. It lays generally
about five eggs, and lays eggs all its life
long, beginning to do so at the age of four
months.
Part 15
The hoopoe usually constructs its nest out
of human excrement. It changes its appearance
in summer and in winter, as in fact do the
great majority of wild birds. (The titmouse
is said to lay a very large quantity of eggs:
next to the ostrich the blackheaded tit is
said by some to lay the largest number of
eggs; seventeen eggs have been seen; it lays,
however, more than twenty; it is said always
to lay an odd number. Like others we have
mentioned, it builds in trees; it feeds on
caterpillars.) A peculiarity of this bird
and of the nightingale is that the outer
extremity of the tongue is not sharp-pointed.
The aegithus finds its food with ease, has
many young, and walks with a limp. The golden
oriole is apt at learning, is clever at making
a living, but is awkward in flight and has
an ugly plumage.
Part 16
The reed-warbler makes its living as easily
as any other bird, sits in summer in a shady
spot facing the wind, in winter in a sunny
and sheltered place among reeds in a marsh;
it is small in size, with a pleasant note.
The so-called chatterer has a pleasant note,
beautiful plumage, makes a living cleverly,
and is graceful in form; it appears to be
alien to our country; at all events it is
seldom seen at a distance from its own immediate
home.
Part 17
The crake is quarrelsome, clever at making
a living, but in other ways an unlucky bird.
The bird called sitta is quarrelsome, but
clever and tidy, makes its living with ease,
and for its knowingness is regarded as uncanny;
it has a numerous brood, of which it is fond,
and lives by pecking the bark of trees. The
aegolius-owl flies by night, is seldom seen
by day; like others we have mentioned, it
lives on cliffs or in caverns; it feeds on
two kinds of food; it has a strong hold on
life and is full of resource. The tree-creeper
is a little bird, of fearless disposition;
it lives among trees, feeds on caterpillars,
makes a living with ease, and has a loud
clear note. The acanthis finds its food with
difficulty; its plumage is poor, but its
note is musical.
Part 18
Of the herons, the ashen-coloured one, as
has been said, unites with the female not
without pain; it is full of resource, carries
its food with it, is eager in the quest of
it, and works by day; its plumage is poor,
and its excrement is always wet. Of the other
two species-for there are three in all-the
white heron has handsome plumage, unites
without harm to itself with the female, builds
a nest and lays its eggs neatly in trees;
it frequents marshes and lakes and Plains
and meadow land. The speckled heron, which
is nicknamed 'the skulker', is said in folklore
stories to be of servile origin, and, as
its nickname implies, it is the laziest bird
of the three species. Such are the habits
of herons. The bird that is called the poynx
has this peculiarity, that it is more prone
than any other bird to peck at the eyes of
an assailant or its prey; it is at war with
the harpy, as the two birds live on the same
food.
Part 19
There are two kinds of owsels; the one is
black, and is found everywhere, the other
is quite white, about the same size as the
other, and with the same pipe. This latter
is found on Cyllene in Arcadia, and is found
nowhere else. The laius, or blue-thrush,
is like the black owsel, only a little smaller;
it lives on cliffs or on tile roofings; it
has not a red beak as the black owsel has.
Part 20
Of thrushes there are three species. One
is the misselthrush; it feeds only on mistletoe
and resin; it is about the size of the jay.
A second is the song-thrush; it has a sharp
pipe, and is about the size of the owsel.
There is another species called the Illas;
it is the smallest species of the three,
and is less variegated in plumage than the
others.
Part 21
There is a bird that lives on rocks, called
the blue-bird from its colour. It is comparatively
common in Nisyros, and is somewhat less than
the owsel and a little bigger than the chaffinch.
It has large claws, and climbs on the face
of the rocks. It is steel-blue all over;
its beak is long and slender; its legs are
short, like those of the woodpecker.
Part 22
The oriole is yellow all over; it is not
visible during winter, but puts in an appearance
about the time of the summer solstice, and
departs again at the rising of Arcturus;
it is the size of the turtle-dove. The so-called
soft- head (or shrike) always settles on
one and the same branch, where it falls a
prey to the birdcatcher. Its head is big,
and composed of gristle; it is a little smaller
than the thrush; its beak is strong, small,
and round; it is ashen-coloured all over;
is fleet of foot, but slow of wing. The bird-catcher
usually catches it by help of the owl.
Part 23
There is also the pardalus. As a rule, it
is seen in flocks and not singly; it is ashen-coloured
all over, and about the size of the birds
last described; it is fleet of foot and strong
of wing, and its pipe is loud and high- pitched.
The collyrion (or fieldfare) feeds on the
same food as the owsel; is of the same size
as the above mentioned birds; and is trapped
usually in the winter. All these birds are
found at all times. Further, there are the
birds that live as a rule in towns, the raven
and the crow. These also are visible at all
seasons, never shift their place of abode,
and never go into winter quarters.
Part 24
Of daws there are three species. One is the
chough; it is as large as the crow, but has
a red beak. There is another, called the
'wolf'; and further there is the little daw,
called the 'railer'. There is another kind
of daw found in Lybia and Phrygia, which
is web-footed.
Part 25
Of larks there are two kinds. One lives on
the ground and has a crest on its head; the
other is gregarious, and not sporadic like
the first; it is, however, of the same coloured
plumage, but is smaller, and has no crest;
it is an article of human food.
Part 26
The woodcock is caught with nets in gardens.
It is about the size of a barn-door hen;
it has a long beak, and in plumage is like
the francolin-partridge. It runs quickly,
and is pretty easily domesticated. The starling
is speckled; it is of the same size as the
owsel.
Part 27
Of the Egyptian ibis there are two kinds,
the white and the black. The white ones are
found over Egypt, excepting in Pelusium;
the black ones are found in Pelusium, and
nowhere else in Egypt.
Part 28
Of the little horned owls there are two kinds,
and one is visible at all seasons, and for
that reason has the nickname of 'all-the-year-round
owl'; it is not sufficiently palatable to
come to table; another species makes its
appearance sometimes in the autumn, is seen
for a single day or at the most for two days,
and is regarded as a table delicacy; it scarcely
differs from the first species save only
in being fatter; it has no note, but the
other species has. With regard to their origin,
nothing is known from ocular observation;
the only fact known for certain is that they
are first seen when a west wind is blowing.
Part 29
The cuckoo, as has been said elsewhere, makes
no nest, but deposits its eggs in an alien
nest, generally in the nest of the ring-dove,
or on the ground in the nest of the hypolais
or lark, or on a tree in the nest of the
green linnet. it lays only one egg and does
not hatch it itself, but the mother-bird
in whose nest it has deposited it hatches
and rears it; and, as they say, this mother
bird, when the young cuckoo has grown big,
thrusts her own brood out of the nest and
lets them perish; others say that this mother-bird
kills her own brood and gives them to the
alien to devour, despising her own young
owing to the beauty of the cuckoo. Personal
observers agree in telling most of these
stories, but are not in agreement as to the
instruction of the young. Some say that the
mother-cuckoo comes and devours the brood
of the rearing mother; others say that the
young cuckoo from its superior size snaps
up the food brought before the smaller brood
have a chance, and that in consequence the
smaller brood die of hunger; others say that,
by its superior strength, it actually kills
the other ones whilst it is being reared
up with them. The cuckoo shows great sagacity
in the disposal of its progeny; the fact
is, the mother cuckoo is quite conscious
of her own cowardice and of the fact that
she could never help her young one in an
emergency, and so, for the security of the
young one, she makes of him a supposititious
child in an alien nest. The truth is, this
bird is pre-eminent among birds in the way
of cowardice; it allows itself to be pecked
at by little birds, and flies away from their
attacks.
Part 30
It has already been stated that the footless
bird, which some term the cypselus, resembles
the swallow; indeed, it is not easy to distinguish
between the two birds, excepting in the fact
that the cypselus has feathers on the shank.
These birds rear their young in long cells
made of mud, and furnished with a hole just
big enough for entry and exit; they build
under cover of some roofing-under a rock
or in a cavern-for protection against animals
and men.
The so-called goat-sucker lives on mountains;
it is a little larger than the owsel, and
less than the cuckoo; it lays two eggs, or
three at the most, and is of a sluggish disposition.
It flies up to the she-goat and sucks its
milk, from which habit it derives its name;
it is said that, after it has sucked the
teat of the animal, the teat dries up and
the animal goes blind. It is dim-sighted
in the day-time, but sees well enough by
night.
Part 31
In narrow circumscribed districts where the
food would be insufficient for more birds
than two, ravens are only found in isolated
pairs; when their young are old enough to
fly, the parent couple first eject them from
the nest, and by and by chase them from the
neighbourhood. The raven lays four or five
eggs. About the time when the mercenaries
under Medius were slaughtered at Pharsalus,
the districts about Athens and the Peloponnese
were left destitute of ravens, from which
it would appear that these birds have some
means of intercommunicating with one another.
Part 32
Of eagles there are several species. One
of them, called 'the white-tailed eagle',
is found on low lands, in groves, and in
the neighbourhood of cities; some call it
the 'heron-killer'. It is bold enough to
fly to mountains and the interior of forests.
The other eagles seldom visit groves or low-lying
land. There is another species called the
'plangus'; it ranks second in point of size
and strength; it lives in mountain combes
and glens, and by marshy lakes, and goes
by the name of 'duck-killer' and 'swart-eagle.'
It is mentioned by Homer in his account of
the visit made by Priam to the tent of Achilles.
There is another species with black Plumage,
the smallest but boldest of all the kinds.
It dwells on mountains or in forests, and
is called 'the black-eagle' or 'the hare-killer';
it is the only eagle that rears its young
and thoroughly takes them out with it. It
is swift of flight, is neat and tidy in its
habits, too proud for jealousy, fearless,
quarrelsome; it is also silent, for it neither
whimpers nor screams. There is another species,
the percnopterus, very large, with white
head, very short wings, long tail-feathers,
in appearance like a vulture. It goes by
the name of 'mountain-stork' or 'half-eagle'.
It lives in groves; has all the bad qualities
of the other species, and none of the good
ones; for it lets itself be chased and caught
by the raven and the other birds. It is clumsy
in its movements, has difficulty in procuring
its food, preys on dead animals, is always
hungry, and at all times whining and screaming.
There is another species, called the 'sea-eagle'
or 'osprey'. This bird has a large thick
neck, curved wings, and broad tailfeathers;
it lives near the sea, grasps its prey with
its talons, and often, from inability to
carry it, tumbles down into the water. There
is another species called the 'true-bred';
people say that these are the only true-bred
birds to be found, that all other birds-eagles,
hawks, and the smallest birds-are all spoilt
by the interbreeding of different species.
The true-bred eagle is the largest of all
eagles; it is larger than the phene; is half
as large again as the ordinary eagle, and
has yellow plumage; it is seldom seen, as
is the case with the so-called cymindis.
The time for an eagle to be on the wing in
search of prey is from midday to evening;
in the morning until the market-hour it remains
on the nest. In old age the upper beak of
the eagle grows gradually longer and more
crooked, and the bird dies eventually of
starvation; there is a folklore story that
the eagle is thus punished because it once
was a man and refused entertainment to a
stranger. The eagle puts aside its superfluous
food for its young; for owing to the difficulty
in procuring food day by day, it at times
may come back to the nest with nothing. If
it catch a man prowling about in the neighbourhood
of its nest, it will strike him with its
wings and scratch him with its talons. The
nest is built not on low ground but on an
elevated spot, generally on an inaccessible
ledge of a cliff; it does, however, build
upon a tree. The young are fed until they
can fly; hereupon the parent-birds topple
them out of the nest, and chase them completely
out of the locality. The fact is that a pair
of eagles demands an extensive space for
its maintenance, and consequently cannot
allow other birds to quarter themselves in
close neighbourhood. They do not hunt in
the vicinity of their nest, but go to a great
distance to find their prey. When the eagle
has captured a beast, it puts it down without
attempting to carry it off at once; if on
trial it finds the burden too heavy, it will
leave it. When it has spied a hare, it does
not swoop on it at once, but lets it go on
into the open ground; neither does it descend
to the ground at one swoop, but goes gradually
down from higher flights to lower and lower:
these devices it adopts by way of security
against the stratagem of the hunter. It alights
on high places by reason of the difficulty
it experiences in soaring up from the level
ground; it flies high in the air to have
the more extensive view; from its high flight
it is said to be the only bird that resembles
the gods. Birds of prey, as a rule, seldom
alight upon rock, as the crookedness of their
talons prevents a stable footing on hard
stone. The eagle hunts hares, fawns, foxes,
and in general all such animals as he can
master with ease. It is a long-lived bird,
and this fact might be inferred from the
length of time during which the same nest
is maintained in its place.
Part 33
In Scythia there is found a bird as large
as the great bustard. The female lays two
eggs, but does not hatch them, but hides
them in the skin of a hare or fox and leaves
them there, and, when it is not in quest
of prey, it keeps a watch on them on a high
tree; if any man tries to climb the tree,
it fights and strikes him with its wing,
just as eagles do.
Part 34
The owl and the night-raven and all the birds
see poorly in the daytime seek their prey
in the night, but not all the night through,
but at evening and dawn. Their food consists
of mice, lizards, chafers and the like little
creatures. The so-called phene, or lammergeier,
is fond of its young, provides its food with
ease, fetches food to its nest, and is of
a kindly disposition. It rears its own young
and those of the eagle as well; for when
the eagle ejects its young from the nest,
this bird catches them up as they fall and
feeds them. For the eagle, by the way, ejects
the young birds prematurely, before they
are able to feed themselves, or to fly. It
appears to do so from jealousy; for it is
by nature jealous, and is so ravenous as
to grab furiously at its food; and when it
does grab at its food, it grabs it in large
morsels. It is accordingly jealous of the
young birds as they approach maturity, since
they are getting good appetites, and so it
scratches them with its talons. The young
birds fight also with one another, to secure
a morsel of food or a comfortable position,
whereupon the mother-bird beats them and
ejects them from the nest; the young ones
scream at this treatment, and the phene hearing
them catches them as they fall. The phene
has a film over its eyes and sees badly,
but the sea-eagle is very keen-sighted, and
before its young are fledged tries to make
them stare at the sun, and beats the one
that refuses to do so, and twists him back
in the sun's direction; and if one of them
gets watery eyes in the process, it kills
him, and rears the other. It lives near the
sea, and feeds, as has been said, on sea-birds;
when in pursuit of them it catches them one
by one, watching the moment when the bird
rises to the surface from its dive. When
a sea-bird, emerging from the water, sees
the sea-eagle, he in terror dives under,
intending to rise again elsewhere; the eagle,
however, owing to its keenness of vision,
keeps flying after him until he either drowns
the bird or catches him on the surface. The
eagle never attacks these birds when they
are in a swarm, for they keep him off by
raising a shower of water-drops with their
wings.
Part 35
The cepphus is caught by means of sea-foam;
the bird snaps at the foam, and consequently
fishermen catch it by sluicing with showers
of sea-water. These birds grow to be plump
and fat; their flesh has a good odour, excepting
the hinder quarters, which smell of shoreweed.
Part 36
Of hawks, the strongest is the buzzard; the
next in point of courage is the merlin; and
the circus ranks third; other diverse kinds
are the asterias, the pigeon-hawk, and the
pternis; the broaded-winged hawk is called
the half-buzzard; others go by the name of
hobby-hawk, or sparrow-hawk, or 'smooth-feathered',
or 'toad-catcher'. Birds of this latter species
find their food with very little difficulty,
and flutter along the ground. Some say that
there are ten species of hawks, all differing
from one another. One hawk, they say, will
strike and grab the pigeon as it rests on
the ground, but never touch it while it is
in flight; another hawk attacks the pigeon
when it is perched upon a tree or any elevation,
but never touches it when it is on the ground
or on the wing; other hawks attack their
prey only when it is on the wing. They say
that pigeons can distinguish the various
species: so that, when a hawk is an assailant,
if it be one that attacks its prey when the
prey is on the wing, the pigeon will sit
still; if it be one that attacks sitting
prey, the pigeon will rise up and fly away.
In Thrace, in the district sometimes called
that of Cedripolis, men hunt for little birds
in the marshes with the aid of hawks. The
men with sticks in their hands go beating
at the reeds and brushwood to frighten the
birds out, and the hawks show themselves
overhead and frighten them down. The men
then strike them with their sticks and capture
them. They give a portion of their booty
to the hawks; that is, they throw some of
the birds up in the air, and the hawks catch
them.
In the neighbourhood of Lake Maeotis, it
is said, wolves act in concert with the fishermen,
and if the fishermen decline to share with
them, they tear their nets in pieces as they
lie drying on the shore of the lake.
Part 37
So much for the habits of birds. In marine
creatures, also, one In marine creatures,
also, one may observe many ingenious devices
adapted to the circumstances of their lives.
For the accounts commonly given of the so-called
fishing-frog are quite true; as are also
those given of the torpedo. The fishing-frog
has a set of filaments that project in front
of its eyes; they are long and thin like
hairs, and are round at the tips; they lie
on either side, and are used as baits. Accordingly,
when the animal stirs up a place full of
sand and mud and conceals itself therein,
it raises the filaments, and, when the little
fish strike against them, it draws them in
underneath into its mouth. The torpedo narcotizes
the creatures that it wants to catch, overpowering
them by the power of shock that is resident
in its body, and feeds upon them; it also
hides in the sand and mud, and catches all
the creatures that swim in its way and come
under its narcotizing influence. This phenomenon
has been actually observed in operation.
The sting-ray also conceals itself, but not
exactly in the same way. That the creatures
get their living by this means is obvious
from the fact that, whereas they are peculiarly
inactive, they are often caught with mullets
in their interior, the swiftest of fishes.
Furthermore, the fishing-frog is unusually
thin when he is caught after losing the tips
of his filaments, and the torpedo is known
to cause a numbness even in human beings.
Again, the hake, the ray, the flat-fish,
and the angelfish burrow in the sand, and
after concealing themselves angle with the
filaments on their mouths, that fishermen
call their fishing-rods, and the little creatures
on which they feed swim up to the filaments
taking them for bits of sea-weed, such as
they feed upon.
Wherever an anthias-fish is seen, there will
be no dangerous creatures in the vicinity,
and sponge-divers will dive in security,
and they call these signal-fishes 'holy-fish'.
It is a sort of perpetual coincidence, like
the fact that wherever snails are present
you may be sure there is neither pig nor
partridge in the neighbourhood; for both
pig and partridge eat up the snails.
The sea-serpent resembles the conger in colour
and shape, but is of lesser bulk and more
rapid in its movements. If it be caught and
thrown away, it will bore a hole with its
snout and burrow rapidly in the sand; its
snout, by the way, is sharper than that of
ordinary serpents. The so-called sea-scolopendra,
after swallowing the hook, turns itself inside
out until it ejects it, and then it again
turns itself outside in. The sea- scolopendra,
like the land-scolopendra, will come to a
savoury bait; the creature does not bite
with its teeth, but stings by contact with
its entire body, like the so-called sea-nettle.
The so-called fox-shark, when it finds it
has swallowed the hook, tries to get rid
of it as the scolopendra does, but not in
the same way; in other words, it runs up
the fishing-line, and bites it off short;
it is caught in some districts in deep and
rapid waters, with night-lines.
The bonitos swarm together when they espy
a dangerous creature, and the largest of
them swim round it, and if it touches one
of the shoal they try to repel it; they have
strong teeth. Amongst other large fish, a
lamia- shark, after falling in amongst a
shoal, has been seen to be covered with wounds.
Of river-fish, the male of the sheat-fish
is remarkably attentive to the young. The
female after parturition goes away; the male
stays and keeps on guard where the spawn
is most abundant, contenting himself with
keeping off all other little fishes that
might steal the spawn or fry, and this he
does for forty or fifty days, until the young
are sufficiently grown to make away from
the other fishes for themselves. The fishermen
can tell where he is on guard: for, in warding
off the little fishes, he makes a rush in
the water and gives utterance to a kind of
muttering noise. He is so earnest in the
performance of his parental duties that the
fishermen at times, if the eggs be attached
to the roots of water-plants deep in the
water, drag them into as shallow a place
as possible; the male fish will still keep
by the young, and, if it so happen, will
be caught by the hook when snapping at the
little fish that come by; if, however, he
be sensible by experience of the danger of
the hook, he will still keep by his charge,
and with his extremely strong teeth will
bite the hook in pieces.
All fishes, both those that wander about
and those that are stationary, occupy the
districts where they were born or very similar
places, for their natural food is found there.
Carnivorous fish wander most; and all fish
are carnivorous with the exception of a few,
such as the mullet, the saupe, the red mullet,
and the chalcis. The so-called pholis gives
out a mucous discharge, which envelops the
creature in a kind of nest. Of shell-fish,
and fish that are finless, the scallop moves
with greatest force and to the greatest distance,
impelled along by some internal energy; the
murex or purple-fish, and others that resemble
it, move hardly at all. Out of the lagoon
of Pyrrha all the fishes swim in winter-time,
except the sea-gudgeon; they swim out owing
to the cold, for the narrow waters are colder
than the outer sea, and on the return of
the early summer they all swim back again.
In the lagoon no scarus is found, nor thritta,
nor any other species of the spiny fish,
no spotted dogfish, no spiny dogfish, no
sea-crawfish, no octopus either of the common
or the musky kinds, and certain other fish
are also absent; but of fish that are found
in the lagoon the white gudgeon is not a
marine fish. Of fishes the oviparous are
in their prime in the early summer until
the spawning time; the viviparous in the
autumn, as is also the case with the mullet,
the red mullet, and all such fish. In the
neighbourhood of Lesbos, the fishes of the
outer sea, or of the lagoon, bring forth
their eggs or young in the lagoon; sexual
union takes place in the autumn, and parturition
in the spring. With fishes of the cartilaginous
kind, the males and females swarm together
in the autumn for the sake of sexual union;
in the early summer they come swimming in,
and keep apart until after parturition; the
two sexes are often taken linked together
in sexual union.
Of molluscs the sepia is the most cunning,
and is the only species that employs its
dark liquid for the sake of concealment as
well as from fear: the octopus and calamary
make the discharge solely from fear. These
creatures never discharge the pigment in
its entirety; and after a discharge the pigment
accumulates again. The sepia, as has been
said, often uses its colouring pigment for
concealment; it shows itself in front of
the pigment and then retreats back into it;
it also hunts with its long tentacles not
only little fishes, but oftentimes even mullets.
The octopus is a stupid creature, for it
will approach a man's hand if it be lowered
in the water; but it is neat and thrifty
in its habits: that is, it lays up stores
in its nest, and, after eating up all that
is eatable, it ejects the shells and sheaths
of crabs and shell-fish, and the skeletons
of little fishes. It seeks its prey by so
changing its colour as to render it like
the colour of the stones adjacent to it;
it does so also when alarmed. By some the
sepia is said to perform the same trick;
that is, they say it can change its colour
so as to make it resemble the colour of its
habitat. The only fish that can do this is
the angelfish, that is, it can change its
colour like the octopus. The octopus as a
rule does not live the year out. It has a
natural tendency to run off into liquid;
for, if beaten and squeezed, it keeps losing
substance and at last disappears. The female
after parturition is peculiarly subject to
this colliquefaction; it becomes stupid;
if tossed about by waves, it submits impassively;
a man, if he dived, could catch it with the
hand; it gets covered over with slime, and
makes no effort to catch its wonted prey.
The male becomes leathery and clammy. As
a proof that they do not live into a second
year there is the fact that, after the birth
of the little octopuses in the late summer
or beginning of autumn, it is seldom that
a large-sized octopus is visible, whereas
a little before this time of year the creature
is at its largest. After the eggs are laid,
they say that both the male and the female
grow so old and feeble that they are preyed
upon by little fish, and with ease dragged
from their holes; and that this could not
have been done previously; they say also
that this is not the case with the small
and young octopus, but that the young creature
is much stronger than the grown-up one. Neither
does the sepia live into a second year. The
octopus is the only mollusc that ventures
on to dry land; it walks by preference on
rough ground; it is firm all over when you
squeeze it, excepting in the neck. So much
for the mollusca.
It is also said that they make a thin rough
shell about them like a hard sheath, and
that this is made larger and larger as the
animal grows larger, and that it comes out
of the sheath as though out of a den or dwelling
place.
The nautilus (or argonaut) is a poulpe or
octopus, but one peculiar both in its nature
and its habits. It rises up from deep water
and swims on the surface; it rises with its
shell down-turned in order that it may rise
the more easily and swim with it empty, but
after reaching the surface it shifts the
position of the shell. In between its feelers
it has a certain amount of web-growth, resembling
the substance between the toes of web-footed
birds; only that with these latter the substance
is thick, while with the nautilus it is thin
and like a spider's web. It uses this structure,
when a breeze is blowing, for a sail, and
lets down some of its feelers alongside as
rudder-oars. If it be frightened it fills
its shell with water and sinks. With regard
to the mode of generation and the growth
of the shell knowledge from observation is
not yet satisfactory; the shell, however,
does not appear to be there from the beginning,
but to grow in their cases as in that of
other shell-fish; neither is it ascertained
for certain whether the animal can live when
stripped of the shell.
Part 38
Of all insects, one may also say of all living
creatures, the most industrious are the ant,
the bee, the hornet, the wasp, and in point
of fact all creatures akin to these; of spiders
some are more skilful and more resourceful
than others. The way in which ants work is
open to ordinary observation; how they all
march one after the other when they are engaged
in putting away and storing up their food;
all this may be seen, for they carry on their
work even during bright moonlight nights.
Part 39
Of spiders and phalangia there are many species.
Of the venomous phalangia there are two;
one that resembles the so-called wolf-spider,
small, speckled, and tapering to a point;
it moves with leaps, from which habit it
is nicknamed 'the flea': the other kind is
large, black in colour, with long front legs;
it is heavy in its movements, walks slowly,
is not very strong, and never leaps. (Of
all the other species wherewith poison- vendors
supply themselves, some give a weak bite,
and others never bite at all. There is another
kind, comprising the so-called wolf-spiders.)
Of these spiders the small one weaves no
web, and the large weaves a rude and poorly
built one on the ground or on dry stone walls.
It always builds its web over hollow places
inside of which it keeps a watch on the end-threads,
until some creature gets into the web and
begins to struggle, when out the spider pounces.
The speckled kind makes a little shabby web
under trees.
There is a third species of this animal,
preeminently clever and artistic. It first
weaves a thread stretching to all the exterior
ends of the future web; then from the centre,
which it hits upon with great accuracy, it
stretches the warp; on the warp it puts what
corresponds to the woof, and then weaves
the whole together. It sleeps and stores
its food away from the centre, but it is
at the centre that it keeps watch for its
prey. Then, when any creature touches the
web and the centre is set in motion, it first
ties and wraps the creature round with threads
until it renders it helpless, then lifts
it and carries it off, and, if it happens
to be hungry, sucks out the life- juices--for
that is the way it feeds; but, if it be not
hungry, it first mends any damage done and
then hastens again to its quest of prey.
If something comes meanwhile into the net,
the spider at first makes for the centre,
and then goes back to its entangled prey
as from a fixed starting point. If any one
injures a portion of the web, it recommences
weaving at sunrise or at sunset, because
it is chiefly at these periods that creatures
are caught in the web. It is the female that
does the weaving and the hunting, but the
male takes a share of the booty captured.
Of the skilful spiders, weaving a substantial
web, there are two kinds, the larger and
the smaller. The one has long legs and keeps
watch while swinging downwards from the web:
from its large size it cannot easily conceal
itself, and so it keeps underneath, so that
its prey may not be frightened off, but may
strike upon the web's upper surface; the
less awkwardly formed one lies in wait on
the top, using a little hole for a lurking-
place. Spiders can spin webs from the time
of their birth, not from their interior as
a superfluity or excretion, as Democritus
avers, but off their body as a kind of tree-bark,
like the creatures that shoot out with their
hair, as for instance the porcupine. The
creature can attack animals larger than itself,
and enwrap them with its threads: in other
words, it will attack a small lizard, run
round and draw threads about its mouth until
it closes
The End
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