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take a period of ten years to teach some animals the
caution which is necessary for the preservation of their
lives. It happened that I lived in the country at a time
when the farmers of a certain parish vacillated in their
policy towards sparrows. At one time they were assured
that the sparrows were their best friends ; at other times
they yielded to the popular prejudice in the opposite
direction. The sparrows knew as well as the farmers what
was going on. In the Reign of Terror they were always
on the qui vive, and flew away at the slightest noise ; while
at other times they were as bold as brass and as tame
as barn-door fowls.
The ease with which the seals were captured at first
arose from the fact of the novelty of the attack ; and
it seems reasonable to suppose that as soon as the animals
understood their danger, they were intelligent enough
to avoid it. If we once grant this, we can well believe
that in the case of the seals, as well as other animals,
the young would inherit shyness in face of danger as
an instinctive tendency.
On the other hand, the explanation that this shyness
may have been due to Natural Selection is beset with
difficulties. If Natural Selection be the sole cause, then
we must assume that intelligence played no part in the
matter. There were degrees of congenital shyness in
the case of the seals, just as there are degrees of boldness
or shyness in human beings. Now this shyness must have
been either altogether unintelligent—a mere matter of
nerves—or it must have been intelligent. In either case it
could not fail to be influenced by the intelligence of
the race. The conditions of the family are such that
discipline prevails, and no mere congenital shyness would
be allowed to develop itself. On the other hand, grant
that the shyness was permitted to develop itself, and was