259
Some cats take to mousing, and others can never be
taught. The difficulty here is only with the animal which
neglects the Common practice of the race. But there is no
mystery in this case. Petted and overfed, the parent cats
may have communicated to their offspring that lazy de
pendence upon others, which is the natural result of their
own position. Nor is there any mystery in the fact that
some members of a species retain the ancestral habits of
their race with their accompanying instincts; and that
others adopt new modes of life and lose the old ancestral
aptitude in consequence.
In the cases which have been just cited, we venture to
say that the actions are not non-intelligent and not non-
adaptive. We have now to consider actions which were
once intelligent and adaptive, but which have been modi
fied by circumstances. But these cases do not afford any
illustration of the origin of new, unintelligent and unadaptive
instincts, but rather the survival of old instincts which
have lost some of their usefulness through the change of
conditions, which is a very different thing. Mr. Romanes
quotes a letter from Mr. Thwaits to Mr. Darwin, in which
Mr. Thwaits says that in Ceylon,—
“ His domestic ducks quite lost their natural instincts with regard
to water, which they never enter unless driven. The young birds,
w'hen forcibly placed in a tub of water, are quite alarmed and have to
be quickly taken out again or they would drown in their struggling.”
This peculiarity is confined to one particular breed or strain. Mr.
Romanes characterises this as the commencement of a racial and
useless deviation from a strong ancestral instinct.—{MentalEvolution
in Animals, p. 188.)
Now, if all the tame ducks had exhibited a change of
instinct, there would have been no wonder in this matter,
for, living under different conditions, it is very easy to
suppose that new habits may have arisen and become