<h2 id="chapter-4"><ANTIMG src="images/i_049.jpg" alt="" /><br/> CHAPTER IV<br/> <span class="chapter-title">BEES, CATS AND RED ANTS</span></h2>
<p><span class="upper">I wished</span> to know something more about my
Mason-bees. I had heard that they knew how
to find their nests even if carried away from them.
One day I managed to capture forty Bees from a
nest under the eaves of my shed, and to put them
one by one in screws of paper. I asked my daughter
Aglaé to stay near the nest and watch for the return
of the Bees. Things being thus arranged, I carried
off my forty captives to a spot two and a half miles
from home.</p>
<p>I had to mark each captive with a mixture of chalk
and gum arabic before I set her free. It was no easy
business. I was stung many times, and sometimes I
forgot myself and squeezed the Bee harder than I
should have. As a result, about twenty out of my
forty Bees were injured. The rest started off, in different
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directions at first; but most of them seemed to
me to be making for their home.</p>
<p>Meanwhile a stiff breeze sprang up, making
things still harder for the Bees. They must have had
to fly close to the ground; they could not possibly go
up high and get a view of the country.</p>
<p>Under the circumstances, I hardly thought, when
I reached home, that the Bees would be there. But
Aglaé greeted me at once, her cheeks flushed with
excitement:</p>
<p>“Two!” she cried. “Two arrived at twenty minutes
to three, with a load of pollen under their bellies!”
I had released my insects at about two o’clock;
these first arrivals had therefore flown two miles and
a half in less than three quarters of an hour, and
lingered to forage on the way.</p>
<p>As it was growing late, we had to stop our observations.
Next day, however, I took another count
of my Mason-bees and found fifteen with a white
spot as I had marked them. At least fifteen out of
the twenty then had returned, in spite of having the
wind against them, and in spite of having been taken
to a place where they had almost certainly never been
before. These Bees do not go far afield, for they
have all the food and building material they want
near home. Then how did my exiles return? What
guided them? It was certainly not memory, but
some special faculty which we cannot explain, it is
so different from anything we ourselves possess.</p>
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<h3>MY CATS</h3>
<p>The Cat is supposed to have the same power as
the Bee to find its way home. I never believed this
till I saw what some Cats of my own could do. Let
me tell you the story.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/i_051.jpg" alt="A wretched-looking Cat" /></div>
<p>One day there appeared upon my garden wall a
wretched-looking Cat, with matted coat and protruding
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ribs; so thin that his back was a jagged ridge.
My children, at that time very young, took pity on
his misery. Bread soaked in milk was offered him
at the end of a reed. He took it. And the mouthfuls
succeeded one another to such good purpose that
at last he had had enough and went, paying no attention
to the “Puss! Puss!” of his compassionate
friends. But after a while he grew hungry again,
and reappeared on top of the wall. He received the
same fare of bread soaked in milk, the same soft
words. He allowed himself to be tempted. He
came down from the wall. The children were able
to stroke his back. Goodness, how thin he was!</p>
<p>It was the great topic of conversation. We discussed
it at table: we would tame the tramp, we
would keep him, we would make him a bed of hay.
It was a most important matter: I can see to this day,
I shall always see, the council of rattleheads deliberating
on the Cat’s fate. They were not satisfied
until the savage animal remained. Soon he grew
into a magnificent Tom. His large, round head, his
muscular legs, his reddish fur, flecked with darker
patches, reminded one of a little jaguar. He was
christened Ginger because of his tawny hue. A mate
joined him later, picked up in almost similar circumstances.
Such was the beginning of my series of
Gingers, which I have kept for almost twenty years,
in spite of various movings.</p>
<p>The first time we moved we were anxious about
our Cats. We were all of us attached to them and
should have thought it nothing short of criminal to
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abandon the poor creatures, whom we had so often
petted, to distress and probably to thoughtless persecution.
The shes and the kittens would travel without
any trouble: all you have to do is to put them in
a basket; they will keep quiet on the journey. But
the old Tom-cats were a serious problem. I had two,
the head of the family and one of his descendants,
quite as strong as himself. We decided to take the
grandfather, if he consented to come, and to leave
the grandson behind, after finding him a home.</p>
<p>My friend Dr. Loriol offered to take the younger
cat. The animal was carried to him at nightfall in
a closed hamper. Hardly were we seated at the
evening meal, talking of the good fortune of our
Tom-cat, when we saw a dripping mass jump through
the window. The shapeless bundle came and rubbed
itself against our legs, purring with happiness. It
was the Cat.</p>
<p>I heard his story next day. On arriving at Dr.
Loriol’s, he was locked up in a bedroom. The moment
he saw himself a prisoner in the unfamiliar
room, he began to jump about wildly on the furniture,
against the window panes, among the ornaments
on the mantelpiece, threatening to make short
work of everything. Mrs. Loriol was frightened by
the little lunatic; she hastened to open the window;
and the Cat leapt out among the passers-by. A few
minutes later, he was back at home. And it was no
easy matter: he had to cross the town almost from
end to end; he had to make his way through a long
labyrinth of crowded streets, among a thousand
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dangers, including boys and dogs; lastly—and this
perhaps was even harder—he had to pass over a
river which ran through the town. There were
bridges at hand, many, in fact; but the animal, taking
the shortest cut, had used none of them, bravely
jumping into the water, as the streaming fur showed.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/i_054.jpg" alt="he had to cross the town almost from end to end" /></div>
<p>I had pity on the poor Cat, so faithful to his home.
We agreed to take him with us. We were spared
the worry: a few days later, he was found lying stiff
and stark under a shrub in the garden. Some one
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had poisoned him for me. Who? It was not likely
that it was a friend!</p>
<p>There was still the old Cat. He could not be
found when we left our home, so the carter was
promised an extra two dollars if he would bring the
Cat to us at our new home with one of his loads.
On his last journey with our goods he brought him,
stowed away under the driver’s seat. I scarcely knew
my old Tom when we opened the moving prison in
which he had been kept since the day before. He
came out looking a most alarming beast, scratching
and spitting, with bristling hair, bloodshot eyes, lips
white with foam. I thought him mad and watched
him closely for a time. I was wrong: he was merely
bewildered and frightened. Had there been trouble
with the carter when he was caught? Did he have a
bad time on the journey? I do not know. What I
do know is that the very nature of the Cat seemed
changed: there was no more friendly purring, no
more rubbing against our legs; nothing but a wild
expression and the deepest gloom. Kind treatment
could not soothe him. One day I found him lying
dead in the ashes on the hearth. Grief, with the help
of old age, had killed him. Would he have gone
back to our old home, if he had had the strength? I
would not venture to say so. But, at least, I think
it very remarkable that an animal should let itself die
of homesickness because the weakness of old age
prevented it from returning to its former haunts.</p>
<p>The next time we move, the family of Gingers
have been renewed: the old ones have passed away,
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new ones have come, including a full-grown Tom,
worthy in every way of his ancestors. He alone will
give us some trouble in moving; the others, the
babies and the mothers, can be removed easily. We
put them into baskets. The Tom has one to himself,
so that the peace may be kept. The journey is made
by carriage. Nothing striking happens before our
arrival. When we let the mother Cats out of their
hampers, they inspect the new home, explore the
rooms one by one; with their pink noses they recognize
the furniture: they find their own seats, their
own tables, their own armchairs; but the surroundings
are different. They give little surprised miaows
and questioning glances. We pet them and give them
saucers of milk, and by the next day they feel quite
at home.</p>
<p>It is a different matter with the Tom. We put
him in the attic, where he will find plenty of room for
his capers; we take turns keeping him company; we
give him a double portion of plates to lick; from time
to time we bring some of the other Cats to him, to
show him that he is not alone in the house; we do
everything we can to make him forget the old home.
He seems, in fact, to forget it: he is gentle under the
hand that pets him, he comes when called, purrs,
arches his back. We have kept him shut up for a
week, and now we think it is time to give him back
his liberty. He goes down to the kitchen, stands by
the table like the others, goes out into the garden,
under the watchful eye of my daughter Aglaé, who
does not lose sight of him; he prowls all around with
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the most innocent air. He comes back. Victory!
The Tom-cat will not run away.</p>
<p>Next morning:</p>
<p>“Puss! Puss!”</p>
<p>Not a sign of him! We hunt, we call. Nothing.
Oh, the hypocrite, the hypocrite! How he has
tricked us! He has gone, he is at our old home. So
I declare, but the family will not believe it.</p>
<p>My two daughters went back to the old home.
They found the Cat, as I said they would, and
brought him back in a hamper. His paws and belly
were covered with red clay; and yet the weather was
dry, there was no mud. The Cat, therefore, must
have swum the river, and the moist fur had kept the
red earth of the fields through which he had passed.
The distance between our two homes was four and
a half miles.</p>
<p>We kept the deserter in our attic for two weeks,
and then we let him out again. Before twenty-four
hours had passed he was back at his old home. We
had to leave him to his fate. A neighbor out that
way told me that he saw him one day hiding behind
a hedge with a rabbit in his mouth. He was no
longer provided with food; he had to hunt for it as
best he could. I heard no more of him. He came
to a bad end, no doubt; he had become a robber and
must have met with a robber’s fate.</p>
<p>These true stories prove that Cats have in their
fashion the instinct of my Mason-bees. So, too,
have Pigeons, who, transported for hundreds of
miles, are able to find their way back to their own
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dove-cot; so have the Swallows and many other
birds. But to go back to the insects. I wished to
find out if Ants, who are insects closely related to
the Bees, have the same sense of direction that they
have.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/i_058.jpg" alt="the celebrated Red Ants" /></div>
<h3>THE RED ANTS</h3>
<p>Among the treasures of my piece of waste ground
is an ant-hill belonging to the celebrated Red Ants,
the slave-hunting Amazons. If you have never heard
about these Ants, their practices seem almost too
wonderful to believe. They are unable to bring up
their own families, to look for their food, to take it
even when it is within their reach. Therefore they
need servants to feed them and keep house for them.
They make a practice of stealing children to wait on
the community. They raid the neighboring ant-hills,
the home of a different species; they carry away the
Ant-babies, who are in the nymph or swaddling-clothes
stage, that is, wrapped in the cocoons. These
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grow up in the Red Ants’ house and become willing
and industrious servants.</p>
<p>When the hot weather of June and July sets in, I
often see the Amazons leave their barracks of an
afternoon and start on an expedition. The column
is five or six yards long. At the first suspicion of an
ant-hill, the front ones halt and spread out in a
swarming throng, which is increased by the others as
they come up hurriedly. Scouts are sent out; the
Amazons recognize that they are on a wrong track;
and the column forms again. It resumes its march,
crosses the garden paths, disappears from sight in
the grass, reappears farther on, threads its way
through the heap of dead leaves, comes out again
and continues its search.</p>
<p>At last, a nest of Black Ants is discovered. The
Red Ants hasten down to the dormitories, enter the
burrows where the Ant-grubs lie and soon come out
with their booty. Then we have, at the gates of the
underground city, a bewildering scrimmage between
the defending Blacks and the attacking Reds. The
struggle is too unequal to remain in doubt. Victory
falls to the Reds, who race back home, each with her
prize, a swaddled baby, dangling from her jaws.</p>
<p>I should like to go on with the story of the Amazons,
but I have no time at present. Their return to
the nest is what I am interested in. Do they know
their way as the Bees do?</p>
<p>Apparently not; for I find that the Ants always
take exactly the same path home that they did coming,
no matter how difficult it was or how many
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short cuts might be taken. I came upon them one
day when they were advancing on a raid by the side
of a garden pond. The wind was blowing hard and
blew whole rows of the Ants into the water, where
the Fish gobbled them up. I thought that on the
way back they would avoid this dangerous bit. Not
at all: they came back the same way, and the Fish
received a double windfall, the Ants and their prizes.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/i_060.jpg" alt="The wind ... blew whole rows of the Ants into the water, where the Fish gobbled them up." /></div>
<p>As I had not time to watch the Ants for whole
afternoons, I asked my granddaughter Lucie, a little
rogue who likes to hear my stories of the Ants, to
help me. She had been present at the great battle
between the Reds and the Blacks and was much impressed
by the stealing of the long-clothes babies,
and she was willing to wander about the garden when
the weather was fine, keeping an eye on the Red Ants
for me.</p>
<p>One day, while I was working in my study, there
came a banging at my door.</p>
<p>“It’s I, Lucie! Come quick: the Reds have gone
into the Blacks’ house. Come quick!”</p>
<p><SPAN name="page-61" class="pagenum" href="#page-61" title="61"></SPAN>
“And do you know the road they took?”</p>
<p>“Yes, I marked it.”</p>
<p>“What! Marked it? And how?”</p>
<p>“I did what Hop-o’-My-Thumb did: I scattered
little white stones along the road.”</p>
<p>I hurried out. Things had happened as my six-year-old
helper had said. The Ants had made their
raid and were returning along the track of telltale
pebbles. When I took some of them up on a
leaf and set them a few feet away from the path, they
were lost. The Ant relies on her sight and her memory
for places to guide her home. Even when her
raids to the same ant-hill are two or three days
apart, she follows exactly the same path each time.
The memory of an Ant! What can that be? Is it
like ours? I do not know; but I do know that,
though closely related to the Bee, she has not the
same sense of direction that the Bee possesses.</p>
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