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The life of the bee- Maurice Maeterlinck |
8. The progress of the race
Before
closing this book -- as we have closed the hive on the torpid silence of winter
-- I am anxious to meet the objection invariably urged by those to whom we
reveal the astounding industry and policy of the bees. Yes, they will say, that
is all very wonderful; but then, it has never been otherwise. The bees have for
thousands of years dwelt under remarkable laws, but during those thousands of
years the laws have not varied. For thousands of years they have constructed
their marvellous combs, whereto we can add nothing, wherefrom we can take
nothing,--combs that unite in equal perfection the science of the chemist, the
geometrician, the architect, and the engineer; but on the sarcophagi, on
Egyptian stones and papyri, we find drawings of combs that are identical in
every particular. Name a single fact that will show the least progress, a single
instance of their having contrived some new feature or modified their habitual
routine, and we will cheerfully yield, and admit that they not only possess an
admirable instinct, but have also an intellect worthy to approach that of man,
worthy to share in one knows not what higher destiny than awaits unconscious and
submissive matter.
This language is not even confined to the profane; it is made use of by
entomologists of the rank of Kirby and Spence, in order to deny the bees the
possession of intellect other than may vaguely stir within the narrow prison of
an extraordinary but unchanging instinct. "Show us," they say, "a single case
where the pressure of events has inspired them with the idea, for instance, of
substituting clay or mortar for wax or propolis; show us this, and we will admit
their capacity for reasoning."
This argument, that Romanes refers to as the "question-begging argument," and
that might also be termed the "insatiable argument," is exceedingly dangerous,
and, if applied to man, would take us very far. Examine it closely, and you find
that it emanates from the "mere commonsense," which is often so harmful; the "common-sense"
that replied to Galileo: "The earth does not turn, for I can see the sun move in
the sky, rise in the morning and sink in the evening; and nothing can prevail
over the testimony of my eyes." Common-sense makes an admirable, and necessary,
background for the mind; but unless it be watched by a lofty disquiet ever ready
to remind it, when occasion demand, of the infinity of its ignorance, it
dwindles into the mere routine of the baser side of our intellect. But the bees
have themselves answered the objection Messrs. Kirby and Spence advanced.
Scarcely had it been formulated when another naturalist, Andrew Knight, having
covered the bark of some diseased trees with a kind of cement made of turpentine
and wax, discovered that his bees were entirely renouncing the collection of
propolis, and exclusively using this unknown matter, which they had quickly
tested and adopted, and found in abundant quantities, ready prepared, in the
vicinity of their dwelling.
And indeed, one-half of the science and practice of apiculture consists in
giving free rein to the spirit of initiative possessed by the bees, and in
providing their enterprising intellect with opportunities for veritable
discoveries and veritable inventions. Thus, for instance, to aid in the rearing
of the larvae and nymphs, the bee-keeper will scatter a certain quantity of
flour close to the hive when the pollen is scarce of which these consume an
enormous quantity. In a state of nature, in the heart of their native forests in
the Asiatic valleys, where they existed probably long before the tertiary epoch,
the bees can evidently never have met with a substance of this kind. And yet, if
care be taken to "bait" some of them with it, by placing them on the flour, they
will touch it and test it, they will perceive that its properties more or less
resemble those possessed by the dust of the anthers; they will spread the news
among their sisters, and we shall soon find every forager hastening to this
unexpected, incomprehensible food, which, in their hereditary memory, must be
inseparable from the calyx of flowers where their flight, for so many centuries
past, has been sumptuously and voluptuously welcomed.
It is a little more than a hundred years ago that Huber's researches gave the
first serious impetus to our study of the bees, and revealed the elementary
important truths that allowed us to observe them with fruitful result. Barely
fifty years have passed since the foundation of rational, practical apiculture
was rendered possible by means of the movable combs and frames devised by
Dzierzon and Langstroth, and the hive ceased to be the inviolable abode wherein
all came to pass in a mystery from which death alone stripped the veil. And
lastly, less than fifty years have elapsed since the improvements of the
microscope, of the entomologist's laboratory, revealed the precise secret of the
principal organs of the workers, of the mother, and the males. Need we wonder if
our knowledge be as scanty as our experience? The bees have existed many
thousands of years; we have watched them for ten or twelve lustres. And if it
could even be proved that no change has occurred in the hive since we first
opened it, should we have the right to conclude that nothing had changed before
our first questioning glance? Do we not know that in the evolution of species a
century is but as a drop of rain that is caught in the whirl of the river, and
that millenaries glide as swiftly over the life of universal matter as single
years over the history of a people?
But there is no warrant for the statement that the habits of the bees are
unchanged. If we examine them with an unbiased eye, and without emerging from
the small area lit by our actual experience, we shall, on the contrary, discover
marked variations. And who shall tell how many escape us? Were an observer of a
hundred and fifty times our height and about seven hundred and fifty thousand
times our importance (these being the relations of stature and weight in which
we stand to the humble honeyfly), one who knew not our language, and was endowed
with senses totally different from our own; were such an one to have been
studying us, he would recognise certain curious material transformations in the
course of the last two thirds of the century, but would be totally unable to
form any conception of our moral, social, political, economic or religious
evolution.
The most likely of all the scientific hypotheses will presently permit us to
connect our domestic bee with the great tribe of the "Apiens," which embraces
all wild bees, and where its ancestors are probably to be found. We shall then
perceive physiological, social, economic, industrial, and architectural
transformations more extraordinary than those of our human evolution. But for
the moment we will limit ourselves to our domestic bee properly so called. Of
these, sixteen fairly distinct species are known; but, essentially, whether we
consider the Apis Dorsata, the largest known to us, or the Apis Florea, which is
the smallest, the insect is always exactly the same, except for the slight
modifications induced by the climate and by the conditions whereto it has had to
conform.(1) The difference between these various
species is scarcely greater than that between an Englishman and a Russian, a
Japanese and a European. In these preliminary remarks, therefore, we will
confine ourselves to what actually lies within the range of our eyes, refusing
the aid of hypothesis, be this never so probable or so imperious. We shall
mention no facts that are not susceptible of immediate proof; and of such facts
we will only rapidly refer to some of the more significant.
Let us consider first of all the most important and most radical improvement,
one that in the case of man would have called for prodigious labour: the
external protection of the community.
The bees do not, like ourselves, dwell in towns free to the sky, and exposed to
the caprice of rain and storm, but in cities entirely covered with a protecting
envelope. In a state of nature, however, in an ideal climate, this is not the
case. If they listened only to their essential instinct, they would construct
their combs in the open air. In the Indies, the Apis Dorsam will not eagerly
seek hollow trees, or a hole in the rocks. The swarm will hang from the crook of
a branch; and the comb will be lengthened, the queen lay her eggs, provisions be
stored, with no shelter other than that which the workers' own bodies provide.
Our Northern bees have at times been known to revert to this instinct, under the
deceptive influence of a too gentle sky; and swarms have been found living in
the heart of a bush.
But even in the Indies, the result of this habit, which would seem innate, is by
no means favourable. So considerable a number of the workers are compelled to
remain on one spot, occupied solely with the maintenance of the heat required by
those who are moulding the wax and rearing the brood, that the Apis Dorsata,
hanging thus from the branches, will construct but a single comb; whereas if she
have the least shelter she will erect four or five, or more, and will
proportionately increase the prosperity and the population of the colony. And
indeed we find that all species of bees existing in cold and temperate regions
have abandoned this primitive method. The intelligent initiative of the insect
has evidently received the sanction of natural selection, which has allowed only
the most numerous and best protected tribes to survive our winters. What had
been merely an idea, therefore, and opposed to instinct, has thus by slow
degrees become an instinctive habit. But it is none the less true that in
forsaking the vast light of nature that was so dear to them and seeking shelter
in the obscure hollow of a tree or a cavern, the bees have followed what at
first was an audacious idea, based on observation, probably, on experience and
reasoning. And this idea might be almost declared to have been as important to
the destinies of the domestic bee as was the invention of fire to the destinies
of man.
This great progress, not the less actual for being hereditary and ancient, was
followed by an infinite variety of details which prove that the industry, and
even the policy, of the hive have not crystallised into infrangible formulæ We
have already mentioned the intelligent substitution of flour for pollen, and of
an artificial cement for propolis. We have seen with what skill the bees are
able to adapt to their needs the occasionally disconcerting dwellings into which
they are introduced, and the surprising adroitness wherewith they turn combs of
foundation-wax to good account. They display extraordinary ingenuity in their
manner of handling these marvellous combs, which are so strangely useful, and
yet incomplete. In point of fact, they meet man half-way. Let us imagine that we
had for centuries past been erecting cities, not with stones, bricks, and lime,
but with some pliable substance painfully secreted by special organs of our
body. One day an all-powerful being places us in the midst of a fabulous city.
We recognise that it is made of a substance similar to the one that we secrete,
but, as regards the rest, it is a dream, whereof what is logical is so distorted,
so reduced, and as it were concentrated, as to be more disconcerting almost than
had it been incoherent. Our habitual plan is there; in fact, we find everything
that we had expected; but all has been put together by some antecedent force
that would seem to have crushed it, arrested it in the mould, and to have
hindered its completion. The houses whose height must attain some four or five
yards are the merest protuberances, that our two hands can cover. Thousands of
walls are indicated by signs that hint at once of their plan and material.
Elsewhere there are marked deviations, which must be corrected; gaps to be
filled and harmoniously joined to the rest, vast surfaces that are unstable and
will need support. The enterprise is hopeful, but full of hardship and danger.
It would seem to have been conceived by some sovereign intelligence, that was
able to divine most of our desires, but has executed them clumsily, being
hampered by its very vastness. We must disentangle, therefore, what now is
obscure, we must develop the least intentions of the supernatural donor; we must
build in a few days what would ordinarily take us years; we must renounce
organic habits, and fundamentally alter our methods of labour. It is certain
that all the attention man could devote would not be excessive for the solution
of the problems that would arise, or for the turning to fullest account the help
thus offered by a magnificent providence. Yet that is, more or less, what the
bees are doing in our modern hives.(2)
I have said that even the policy of the bees is probably subject to change. This
point is the obscurest of all, and the most difficult to verify. I shall not
dwell on their various methods of treating the queens, or the laws as to
swarming that are peculiar to the inhabitants of every hive, and apparently
transmitted from generation to generation, etc.; but by the side of these facts
which are not sufficiently established are others so precise and unvarying as to
prove that the same degree of political civilisation has not been attained by
all races of the domestic bee, and that, among some of them, the public spirit
still is groping its way, seeking perhaps another solution of the royal problem.
The Syrian bee, for instance, habitually rears 120 queens and often more,
whereas our Apis Mellifica will rear ten or twelve at most. Cheshire tells of a
Syrian hive, in no way abnormal, where 120 dead queen-mothers were found, and 90
living, unmolested queens. This may be the point of departure, or the point of
arrival, of a strange social evolution, which it would be interesting to study
more thoroughly. We may add that as far as the rearing of queens is concerned,
the Cyprian bee approximates to the Syrian. And finally, there is yet another
fact which establishes still more clearly that the customs and prudent
organisation of the hive are not the results of a primitive impulse,
mechanically followed through different ages and climates, but that the spirit
which governs the little republic is fully as capable of taking note of new
conditions and turning these to the best advantage, as in times long past it was
capable of meeting the dangers that hemmed it around. Transport our black bee to
California or Australia, and her habits will completely alter. Finding that
summer is perpetual and flowers forever abundant, she will after one or two
years be content to live from day to day, and gather sufficient honey and pollen
for the day's consumption; and, her thoughtful observation of these new features
triumphing over hereditary experience, she will cease to make provision for the
winter.(3) In fact it becomes necessary, in order to
stimulate her activity, to deprive her systematically of the fruits of her
labour.
So much for what our own eyes can see. It will be admitted that we have
mentioned some curious facts, which by no means support the theory that every
intelligence is arrested, every future clearly defined, save only the
intelligence and future of man.
But if we choose to accept for one moment the hypothesis of evolution, the
spectacle widens, and its uncertain, grandiose light soon attains our own
destinies. Whoever brings careful attention to bear will scarcely deny, even
though it be not evident, the presence in nature of a will that tends to raise a
portion of matter to a subtler and perhaps better condition, and to penetrate
its substance little by little with a mystery-laden fluid that we at first term
life, then instinct, and finally intelligence; a will that, for an end we know
not, organises, strengthens, and facilitates the existence of all that is. There
can be no certainty, and yet many instances invite us to believe that, were an
actual estimate possible, the quantity of matter that has raised itself from its
beginnings would be found to be ever increasing. A fragile remark, I admit, but
the only one we can make on the hidden force. that leads us; and it stands for
much in a world where confidence in life, until certitude to the contrary reach
us, must remain the first of all our duties, at times even when life itself
conveys no encouraging clearness to us.
I know all that may be urged against the theory of evolution. In its favour are
numerous proofs and most powerful arguments, which yet do not carry irresistible
conviction. We must beware of abandoning ourselves unreservedly to the
prevailing truths of our time. A hundred years hence, many chapters of a book
instinct to-day with this truth, will appear as ancient as the philosophical
writings of the eighteenth century seem to us now, full as they are of a too
perfect and nonexisting man, or as so many works of the seventeenth century,
whose value is lessened by their conception of a harsh and narrow god.
Nevertheless, when it is impossible to know what the truth of a thing may be, it
is well to accept the hypothesis that appeals the most urgently to the reason of
men at the period when we happen to have come into the world. The chances are
that it will be false; but so long as we believe it to be true it will serve a
useful purpose by restoring our courage and stimulating research in a new
direction. It might at the first glance seem wiser, perhaps, instead of
advancing these ingenious suppositions, simply to say the profound truth, which
is that we do not know. But this truth could only be helpful were it written
that we never shall know. In the meanwhile it would induce a state of stagnation
within us more pernicious than the most vexatious illusions. We are so
constituted that nothing takes us further or leads us higher than the leaps made
by our errors. In point of fact we owe the little we have learned to hypotheses
that were always hazardous and often absurd, and, as a general rule, less
discreet than they are to-day. They were unwise, perhaps, but they kept alive
the ardour for research. To the traveller, shivering with cold, who reaches the
human Hostelry, it matters little whether he by whose side he seats himself, he
who has guarded the hearth, be blind or very old. So long as the fire still burn
that he has been watching, he has done as much as the best could have done. Well
for us if we can transmit this ardour, not as we received it, but added to by
ourselves; and nothing will add to it more than this hypothesis of evolution,
which goads us to question with an ever severer method and ever increasing zeal
all that exists on the earth's surface and in its entrails, in the depths of the
sea and expanse of the sky. Reject it, and what can we set up against it, what
can we put in its place? There is but the grand confession of scientific
ignorance, aware of its knowing nothing --but this is habitually sluggish, and
calculated to discourage the curiosity more needful to man than wisdom--or the
hypothesis of the fixity of the species and of divine creation, which is less
demonstrable than the other, banishes for all time the living elements of the
problem, and explains nothing.
Of wild bees approximately 4500 varieties are known. It need scarcely be said
that we shall not go through the list. Some day, perhaps, a profound study, and
searching experiments and observations of a kind hitherto unknown, that would
demand more than one lifetime, will throw a decisive light upon the history of
the bee's evolution. All that we can do now is to enter this veiled region of
supposition, and, discarding all positive statement, attempt to follow a tribe
of hymenoptera in their progress towards a more intelligent existence, towards a
little more security and comfort, lightly indicating the salient features of
this ascension that is spread over many thousands of years. The tribe in
question is already known to us; it is that of the "Apiens," whose essential
characteristics are so distinct and well-marked that one is inclined to credit
all its members with one common ancestor.(4)
The disciples of Darwin, Hermann Müller among others, consider a little wild
bee, the Prosopis, which is to be found all over the universe, as the actual
representative of the primitive bee whence all have issued that are known to us
to-day.
The unfortunate Prosopis stands more or less in the same relation to the
inhabitants of our hives as the cave-dwellers to the fortunate who live in our
great cities. You will probably more than once have seen her fluttering about
the bushes, in a deserted corner of your garden, without realising that you were
carelessly watching the venerable ancestor to whom we probably owe most of our
flowers and fruits (for it is actually estimated that more than a hundred
thousand varieties of plants would disappear if the bees did not visit them) and
possibly even our civilisation, for in these mysteries all things intertwine.
She is nimble and attractive, the variety most common in France being elegantly
marked with white on a black background. But this elegance hides an
inconceivable poverty. She leads a life of starvation. She is almost naked,
whereas her sisters are clad in a warm and sumptuous fleece. She has not, like
the Apidæ, baskets to gather the pollen, nor, in their default, the tuft of the
Andrenæ, nor the ventral brush of the Gastrilegidæ. Her tiny claws must
laboriously gather the powder from the calices, which powder she needs must
swallow in order to take it back to her lair. She has no implements other than
her tongue, her mouth and her claws; but her tongue is too short, her legs are
feeble, and her mandibles without strength. Unable to produce wax, bore holes
through wood, or dig in the earth, she contrives clumsy galleries in the tender
pith of dry berries; erects a few awkward cells, stores these with a little food
for the offspring she never will see; and then, having accomplished this poor
task of hers, that tends she knows not whither and of' whose aim we are no less
ignorant, she goes off and dies in a corner, as solitarily as she had lived.
We shall pass over many intermediary species, wherein we may see the gradual
lengthening of the tongue, enabling more nectar to be extracted from the cups of
corollas, and the dawning formation and subsequent development of the apparatus
for collecting pollen,--hairs, tufts, brushes on the tibia, on the tarsus, and
abdomen,--as also claws and mandibles becoming stronger, useful secretions being
formed, and the genius that presides over the construction of dwellings seeking
and finding extraordinary improvement in every direction. Such a study would
need a whole volume. I will merely outline a chapter of it, less than a chapter,
a page, which shall show how the hesitating endeavours of the will to live and
be happier result in the birth, development, and affirmation of social
intelligence.
We have seen the unfortunate Prosopis silently bearing her solitary little
destiny in the midst of this vast universe charged with terrible forces. A
certain number of her sisters, belonging to species already more skilful and
better supplied with utensils, such as the well-clad Colletes, or the marvellous
cutter of rose-leaves, the Megachile Centuncularis, live in an isolation no less
profound; and if by chance some creature attach itself to them, and share their
dwelling, it will either be an enemy, or, more often, a parasite.
For the world of bees is peopled with phantoms stranger than our own; and many a
species will thus have a kind of mysterious and inactive double, exactly similar
to the victim it has selected, save only that its immemorial idleness has caused
it to lose one by one its implements of labour, and that it exists solely at the
expense of the working type of its race.(5)
Among the bees, however, which are somewhat too arbitrarily termed the "solitary
Apidæ," the social instinct already is smouldering, like a flame crushed beneath
the overwhelming weight of matter that stifles all primitive life. And here and
there, in unexpected directions, as though reconnoitering, with timid and
sometimes fantastic outbursts, it will succeed in piercing the mass that
oppresses it, the pyre that some day shall feed its triumph.
If in this world all things be matter, this is surely its most immaterial
movement. Transition is called for from a precarious, egotistic and incomplete
life to a life that shall be fraternal, a little more certain, a little more
happy. The spirit must ideally unite that which in the body is actually separate;
the individual must sacrifice himself for the race, and substitute for visible
things the things that cannot be seen. Need we wonder that the bees do not at
the first glance realise what we have not yet disentangled, we who find
ourselves at the privileged spot whence instinct radiates from all sides into
our consciousness? And it is curious too, almost touching, to see how the new
idea gropes its way, at first, in the darkness that enfolds all things that come
to life on this earth. It emerges from matter, it is still quite material. It is
cold, hunger, fear, transformed into something that as yet has no shape. It
crawls vaguely around great dangers, around the long nights, the approach of
winter, of an equivocal sleep which almost is death ....
The Xylocoptæ are powerful bees which worm their nest in dry wood. Their life is
solitary always. Towards the end of summer, however, some individuals of a
particular species, the Xylocopa Cyanescens, may be found huddled together in a
shivering group, on a stalk of asphodel, to spend the winter in common. Among
the Xylocopæ this tardy fraternity is exceptional, but among the Ceratime, which
are of their nearest kindred, it has become a constant habit. The idea is
germinating. It halts immediately; and hitherto this preliminary work be not
executed in common, by relays of females, relieving each other in turn."
However this may be, the fraternal idea has pierced the wall that divided two
worlds. It is no longer wild and unrecognisable, wrested from instinct by cold
and hunger, or by the fear of death; it is prompted by active life. But it halts
once more; and in this instance arrives no further. No matter, it does not lose
courage; it will seek other channels. It enters the humble-bee, and, maturing
there, becomes embodied in a different atmosphere, and works its first decisive
miracles.
The humble-bees, the great hairy, noisy creatures that all of us know so well,
so harmless for all their apparent fierceness, lead a solitary life at first. At
the beginning of March the impregnated female who has survived the winter starts
to construct her nest, either underground or in a bush, according to the species
to which she belongs. She is alone in the world, in the midst of awakening
spring. She chooses a spot, clears it, digs it and carpets it. Then she erects
her somewhat shapeless waxen cells, stores these with honey and pollen, lays and
hatches the eggs, tends and nourishes the larvae that spring to life, and soon
is surrounded by a troop of daughters who aid her in all her labours, within the
nest and without, while some of them soon begin to lay in their turn. The
construction of the cells improves; the colony grows, the comfort increases. The
foundress is still its soul, its principal mother, and finds herself now at the
head of a kingdom which might be the model of that of our honeybee. But the
model is still in the rough. The prosperity of the humble-bees never exceeds a
certain limit, their laws are ill-defined and ill-obeyed, primitive cannibalism
and infanticide reappear at intervals, the architecture is shapeless and entails
much waste of material; but the cardinal difference between the two cities is
that the one is permanent, and the other ephemeral. For, indeed, that of the
humble-bee will perish in the autumn; its three or four hundred inhabitants will
die, leaving no trace of their passage or their endeavours; and but a single
female will survive, who, the next spring, in the same solitude and poverty as
her mother before her, will recommence the same useless work. The idea, however,
has now grown aware of its strength. Among the humble-bees it goes no further
than we have stated, but, faithful to its habits and pursuing its usual routine,
it will immediately undergo a sort of unwearying metempsychosis, and
re-incarnate itself, trembling with its last triumph, rendered all-powerful now
and nearly perfect, in another group, the last but one of the race, that which
immediately precedes our domestic bee wherein it attains its crown; the group of
the Meliponitæ, which comprises the tropical Meliponæ and Trigonæ.
Here the organisation is as complete as in our hives. There is an unique mother,
there are sterile workers and males. Certain details even seem better devised.
The males, for instance, are not wholly idle; they secrete wax. The entrance to
the hive is more carefully guarded; it has a door that can be closed when nights
are cold, and when these are warm a kind of curtain will admit the air.
But the republic is less strong, general life less assured, prosperity more
limited, than with our bees; and wherever these are introduced, the Meliponitæ
tend to disappear before them. In both races the fraternal idea has undergone
equal and magnificent development, save in one point alone, wherein it achieves
no further advance among the Meliponitæ than among the limited offspring of the
humble-bees. In the mechanical organisation of distributed labour, in the
precise economy of effort; briefly, in the architecture of the city, they
display manifest inferiority. As to this I need only refer to what I said in
section 42 of this book, while adding that, whereas in the hives of our Apitæ
all the cells are equally available for the rearing of the brood and the storage
of provisions, and endure as long as the city itself, they serve only one of
these purposes among the Meliponitæ, and the cells employed as cradles for the
nymphs are destroyed after these have been hatched.(6)
It is in our domestic bees, therefore, that the idea, of whose movements we have
given a cursory and incomplete picture, attains its most perfect form. Are these
movements definitely, and for all time, arrested in each one of these species,
and does the connecting-line exist in our imagination alone? Let us not be too
eager to establish a system in this ill-explored region. Let our conclusions be
only provisional, and preferentially such as convey the utmost hope; for, were a
choice forced upon us, occasional gleams would appear to declare that the
inferences we are most desirous to draw will prove to be truest. Besides, let us
not forget that our ignorance still is profound. We are only learning to open
our eyes. A thousand experiments that could be made have as yet not even been
tried. If the Prosopes, for instance, were imprisoned, and forced to cohabit
with their kind, would they, in course of time, overstep the iron barrier of
total solitude, and be satisfied to live the common life of the Dasypoda:, or to
put forth the fraternal effort of the Panurgi? And if we imposed abnormal
conditions upon the Panurgi, would these, in their turn, progress from a general
corridor to general cells? If the mothers of the humble-bees were compelled to
hibernate together, would they arrive at a mutual understanding, a mutual
division of labour? Have combs of foundation-wax been offered to the Meliponitæ?
Would they accept them, would they make use of them, would they conform their
habits to this unwonted architecture? Questions, these, that we put to very tiny
creatures; and yet they contain the great word of our greatest secrets. We
cannot answer them, for our experience dates but from yesterday. Starting with
Réaumur, about a hundred and fifty years have elapsed since the habits of wild
bees first received attention. Réaumur was acquainted with only a few of them;
we have since then observed a few more; but hundreds, thousands perhaps, have
hitherto been noticed only by hasty and ignorant travellers. The habits of those
that are known to us have undergone no change since the author of the" Memoirs"
published his valuable work; and the humble-bees, all powdered with gold, and
vibrant as the sun's delectable murmur, that in the year 1730 gorged themselves
with honey in the gardens of Charenton, were absolutely identical with those
that to-morrow, when April returns, will be humming in the woods of Vincennes,
but a few yards away. From Reaumur's day to our own, however, is but as the
twinkling of an eye; and many lives of men, placed end to end, form but a second
in the history of Nature's thought.
Although the idea that our eyes have followed attains its supreme expression in
our domestic bees, it must not be inferred therefrom that the hive reveals no
faults. There is one masterpiece, the hexagonal cell, that touches absolute
perfection,--a perfection that all the geniuses in the world, were they to meet
in conclave, could in no way enhance. No living creature, not even man, has
achieved(in the centre of his sphere, what the bee has achieved in her own; and
were some one from another world to descend and ask of the earth the most
perfect creation of the logic of life, we should needs have to offer the humble
comb of honey.
But the level of this perfection is not maintained throughout. We have already
dealt with a few faults and shortcomings, evident sometimes and sometimes
mysterious, such as the ruinous superabundance and idleness of the males,
parthenogenesis, the perils of the nuptial flight, excessive swarming, the
absence of pity, and the almost monstrous sacrifice of the individual to
society. To these must be added a strange inclination to store enormous masses
of pollen, far in excess of their needs; for the pollen, soon turning rancid,
and hardening, encumbers the surface of the comb; and further, the long sterile
interregnum between the date of the first swarm and the impregnation of the
second queen, etc., etc.
Of these faults the gravest, the only one which in our climates is invariably
fatal, is the repeated swarming. But here we must bear in mind that the natural
selection of the domestic bee has for thousands of years been thwarted by man.
From the Egyptian of the time of Pharaoh to the peasant of our own day, the
bee-keeper has always acted in opposition to the desires and advantages of the
race. The most prosperous hives are those which throw only one swarm after the
beginning of summer. They have fulfilled their maternal duties, assured the
maintenance of the stock and the necessary renewal of queens; they have
guaranteed the future of the swarm, which, being precocious and ample in numbers,
has time to erect solid and well-stored dwellings before the arrival of autumn.
If left to themselves, it is clear that these hives and their offshoots would
have been the only ones to survive the rigours of winter, which would almost
invariably have destroyed colonies animated by different instincts; and the law
of restricted swarming would therefore by slow degrees have established itself
in our northern races. But it is precisely these prudent, opulent, acclimatised
hives that man has always destroyed in order to possess himself of their
treasure. He has permitted only--he does so to this day in ordinary
practice--the feeblest colonies to survive; degenerate stock, secondary or
tertiary swarms, which have just barely sufficient food to subsist through the
winter, or whose miserable store he will supplement perhaps with a few droppings
of honey. The result is, probably, that the race has grown feebler, that the
tendency to excessive swarming has been hereditarily developed, and that to-day
almost all our bees, particularly the black ones, swarm too often. For some
years now the new methods of "movable" apiculture have gone some way towards
correcting this dangerous habit; and when we reflect how rapidly artificial
selection acts on most of our domestic animals, such as oxen, dogs, pigeons,
sheep and horses, it is permissible to believe that we shall before long have a
race of bees that will entirely renounce natural swarming and devote all their
activity to the collection of honey and pollen.
But for the other faults: might not an intelligence that possessed a clearer
consciousness of the aim of common life emancipate itself from them? Much might
be said concerning these faults, which emanate now from what is unknown to us in
the hive, now from swarming and its resultant errors, for which we are partly to
blame. But let every man judge for himself, and, having seen what has gone
before, let him grant or deny intelligence to the bees, as he may think proper.
I am not eager to defend them. It seems to me that in many circumstances they
give proof of understanding, but my curiosity would not be less were all that
they do done blindly. It is interesting to watch a brain possessed of
extraordinary resources within itself wherewith it may combat cold and hunger,
death, time, space, and solitude, all the enemies of matter that is springing to
life; but should a creature succeed in maintaining its little profound and
complicated existence without overstepping the boundaries of instinct, without
doing anything but what is ordinary, that would be very interesting too, and
very extraordinary. Restore the ordinary and the marvellous to their veritable
place in the bosom of nature, and their values shift; one equals the other. We
find that their names are usurped; and that it is not they, but the things we
cannot understand or explain that should arrest our attention, refresh our
activity, and give a new and juster form to our thoughts and feelings and words.
There is wisdom in attaching oneself to nought beside.
And further, our intellect is not the proper tribunal before which to summon the
bees, and pass their faults in review. Do we not find, among ourselves, that
consciousness and intellect long will dwell in the midst of errors and faults
without perceiving them, longer still without effecting a remedy? If a being
exist whom his destiny calls upon most specially, almost organically, to live
and to organise common life in accordance with pure reason, that being is man.
And yet see what he makes of it, compare the mistakes of the hive with those of
our own society. How should we marvel, for instance, were we bees observing men,
as we noted the unjust, illogical distribution of work among a race of creatures
that in other directions appear to manifest eminent reason! We should find the
earth's surface, unique source of all common life, insufficiently, painfully
cultivated by two or three tenths of the whole population; we should find
another tenth absolutely idle, usurping the larger share of the products of this
first labour; and the remaining seven-tenths condemned to a life of perpetual
half-hunger, ceaselessly exhausting themselves in strange and sterile efforts
whereby they never shall profit, but only shall render more complex and more
inexplicable still the life of the idle. We should conclude that the reason and
moral sense of these beings must belong to a world entirely different from our
own, and that they must obey principles hopelessly beyond our comprehension. But
let us carry this review of our faults no further. They are always present in
our thoughts, though their presence achieves but little. From century to century
only will one of them for a moment shake off its slumber, and send forth a
bewildered cry; stretch the aching arm that supported its head, shift its
position, and then lie down and fall asleep once more, until a new pain, born of
the dreary fatigue of repose, awaken it afresh.
The evolution of the Apiens, or at least of the Apitæ, being admitted, or
regarded as more probable than that they should have remained stationary, let us
now consider the general, constant direction that this evolution takes. It seems
to follow the same roads as with ourselves. It tends palpably to lessen the
struggle, insecurity, and wretchedness of the race, to augment authority and
comfort, and stimulate favourable chances. To this end it will unhesitatingly
sacrifice the individual, bestowing general strength and happiness in exchange
for the illusory and mournful independence of solitude. It is as though Nature
were of the opinion with which Thucydides credits Pericles: viz., that
individuals are happier in the bosom of a prosperous city, even though they
suffer themselves, than when individually prospering in the midst of a
languishing state. It protects the hardworking slave in the powerful city, while
those who have no duties, whose association is only precarious, are abandoned to
the nameless, formless enemies who dwell in the minutes of time, in the
movements of the universe, and in the recesses of space. This is not the moment
to discuss the scheme of nature, or to ask ourselves whether it would be well
for man to follow it; but it is certain that wherever the infinite mass allows
us to seize the appearance of an idea, the appearance takes this road whereof we
know not the end. Let it be enough that we note the persistent care with which
nature preserves, and fixes in the evolving race, all that has been won from the
hostile inertia of matter. She records each happy effort, and contrives we know
not what special and benevolent laws to counteract the inevitable recoil. This
progress, whose existence among the most intelligent species can scarcely be
denied, has perhaps no aim beyond its initial impetus, and knows not whither it
goes. gut at least, in a world where nothing save a few facts of this kind
indicates a precise will, it is significant enough that we should see certain
creatures rising thus, slowly and continuously; and should the been have
revealed to us only this mysterious spiral of light in the overpowering darkness,
that were enough to induce us not to regret the time we have given to their
little gestures and humble habits, which seem so far away and are yet so nearly
akin to our grand passions and arrogant destinies.
It may be that these things are all vain; and that our own spiral of light, no
less than that of the bees, has been kindled for no other purpose save that of
amusing the darkness. So, too, is it possible that some stupendous incident may
suddenly surge from without, from another world, from a new phenomenon, and
either inform this effort with definitive meaning, or definitively destroy it.
But we must proceed on our way as though nothing abnormal could ever befall us.
Did we know that to-morrow some revelation, a message, for instance, from a more
ancient, more luminous planet than ours, were to root up our nature, to suppress
the laws, the passions, and radical truths of our being, our wisest plan still
would be to devote the whole of to-day to the study of these passions, these
laws, and these truths, which must blend and accord in our mind; and to remain
faithful to the destiny imposed on us, which is to subdue, and to some extent
raise within and around us the obscure forces of life. None of these, perhaps,
will survive the new revelation; but the soul of those who shall up to the end
have fulfilled the mission that is pre-eminently the mission of man, must
inevitably be in the front rank of all to welcome this revelation; and should
they learn therefrom that indifference, or resignation to the unknown, is the
veritable duty, they will be better equipped than the others for the
comprehension of this final resignation and indifference, better able to turn
these to account.
But such speculations may well be avoided. Let not the possibility of general
annihilation blur our perception of the task before us; above all, let us not
count on the miraculous aid of chance. Hitherto, the promises of our imagination
notwithstanding, we have always been left to ourselves, to our own resources. It
is to our humblest efforts that every useful, enduring achievement of this earth
is due. It is open to us, if we choose, to await the better or worse that may
follow some alien accident, but on condition that such expectation shall not
hinder our human task. Here again do the bees, as Nature always, provide a most
excellent lesson. In the hive there has truly been prodigious intervention. The
bees are in the hands of a power capable of annihilating or modifying their
race, of transforming their destinies; the bees' thraldom is far more definite
than our own. Therefore none the less do they perform their profound and
primitive duty. And, among them, it is precisely those whose obedience to duty
is most complete who are able most fully to profit by the supernatural
intervention that to-day has raised the destiny of their species. And indeed, to
discover? the unconquerable duty of a being is less difficult than one imagines.
It is ever to be read in the distinguishing organs, whereto the others are all
subordinate. And just as it is written in the tongue, the stomach, and mouth of
the bee that it must make honey, so is it written in our eyes, our ears, our
nerves, our marrow, in every lobe of our head, that we must make cerebral
substance; nor is there need that we should divine the purpose this substance
shall serve. The bees know not whether they will eat the honey they harvest, as
we know not who it is shall reap the profit of the cerebral substance we shall
have formed, or of the intelligent fluid that issues therefrom and spreads over
the universe, perishing when our life ceases or persisting after our death. As
they go from flower to flower collecting more honey than themselves and their
offspring can need, let us go from reality to reality seeking food for the
incomprehensible flame, and thus, certain of having fulfilled our organic duty,
preparing ourselves for whatever befall. Let us nourish this flame on our
feelings and passions, on all that we see and think, that we hear and touch, on
its own essence, which is the idea it derives from the discoveries, experience
and observation that result from its every movement. A time then will come when
all things will turn so naturally to good in a spirit that has given itself to
the loyal desire of this simple human duty, that the very suspicion of the
possible aimlessness of its exhausting effort will only render the duty the
clearer, will only add more purity, power, disinterestedness, and freedom to the
ardour wherewith it still seeks.
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