<p class="gutsumm">The author's great love of his native
country. His master’s observations upon the
constitution and administration of England, as described by the
author, with parallel cases and comparisons. His
master’s observations upon human nature.</p>
<p>The reader may be disposed to wonder how I could prevail on
myself to give so free a representation of my own species, among
a race of mortals who are already too apt to conceive the vilest
opinion of humankind, from that entire congruity between me and
their <i>Yahoos</i>. But I must freely confess, that the
many virtues of those excellent quadrupeds, placed in opposite
view to human corruptions, had so far opened my eyes and enlarged
my understanding, that I began to view the actions and passions
of man in a very different light, and to think the honour of my
own kind not worth managing; which, besides, it was impossible
for me to do, before a person of so acute a judgment as my
master, who daily convinced me of a thousand faults in myself,
whereof I had not the least perception before, and which, with
us, would never be numbered even among human infirmities. I
had likewise learned, from his example, an utter detestation of
all falsehood or disguise; and truth appeared so amiable to me,
that I determined upon sacrificing every thing to it.</p>
<p>Let me deal so candidly with the reader as to confess that
there was yet a much stronger motive for the freedom I took in my
representation of things. I had not yet been a year in this
country before I contracted such a love and veneration for the
inhabitants, that I entered on a firm resolution never to return
to humankind, but to pass the rest of my life among these
admirable <i>Houyhnhnms</i>, in the contemplation and practice of
every virtue, where I could have no example or incitement to
vice. But it was decreed by fortune, my perpetual enemy,
that so great a felicity should not fall to my share.
However, it is now some comfort to reflect, that in what I said
of my countrymen, I extenuated their faults as much as I durst
before so strict an examiner; and upon every article gave as
favourable a turn as the matter would bear. For, indeed,
who is there alive that will not be swayed by his bias and
partiality to the place of his birth?</p>
<p>I have related the substance of several conversations I had
with my master during the greatest part of the time I had the
honour to be in his service; but have, indeed, for brevity sake,
omitted much more than is here set down.</p>
<p>When I had answered all his questions, and his curiosity
seemed to be fully satisfied, he sent for me one morning early,
and commanded me to sit down at some distance (an honour which he
had never before conferred upon me). He said, “he had
been very seriously considering my whole story, as far as it
related both to myself and my country; that he looked upon us as
a sort of animals, to whose share, by what accident he could not
conjecture, some small pittance of reason had fallen, whereof we
made no other use, than by its assistance, to aggravate our
natural corruptions, and to acquire new ones, which nature had
not given us; that we disarmed ourselves of the few abilities she
had bestowed; had been very successful in multiplying our
original wants, and seemed to spend our whole lives in vain
endeavours to supply them by our own inventions; that, as to
myself, it was manifest I had neither the strength nor agility of
a common <i>Yahoo</i>; that I walked infirmly on my hinder feet;
had found out a contrivance to make my claws of no use or
defence, and to remove the hair from my chin, which was intended
as a shelter from the sun and the weather: lastly, that I could
neither run with speed, nor climb trees like my brethren,”
as he called them, “the <i>Yahoos</i> in his country.</p>
<p>“That our institutions of government and law were
plainly owing to our gross defects in reason, and by consequence
in virtue; because reason alone is sufficient to govern a
rational creature; which was, therefore, a character we had no
pretence to challenge, even from the account I had given of my
own people; although he manifestly perceived, that, in order to
favour them, I had concealed many particulars, and often said the
thing which was not.</p>
<p>“He was the more confirmed in this opinion, because, he
observed, that as I agreed in every feature of my body with other
<i>Yahoos</i>, except where it was to my real disadvantage in
point of strength, speed, and activity, the shortness of my
claws, and some other particulars where nature had no part; so
from the representation I had given him of our lives, our
manners, and our actions, he found as near a resemblance in the
disposition of our minds.” He said, “the
<i>Yahoos</i> were known to hate one another, more than they did
any different species of animals; and the reason usually assigned
was, the odiousness of their own shapes, which all could see in
the rest, but not in themselves. He had therefore begun to
think it not unwise in us to cover our bodies, and by that
invention conceal many of our deformities from each other, which
would else be hardly supportable. But he now found he had
been mistaken, and that the dissensions of those brutes in his
country were owing to the same cause with ours, as I had
described them. For if,” said he, “you throw
among five <i>Yahoos</i> as much food as would be sufficient for
fifty, they will, instead of eating peaceably, fall together by
the ears, each single one impatient to have all to itself; and
therefore a servant was usually employed to stand by while they
were feeding abroad, and those kept at home were tied at a
distance from each other: that if a cow died of age or accident,
before a <i>Houyhnhnm</i> could secure it for his own
<i>Yahoos</i>, those in the neighbourhood would come in herds to
seize it, and then would ensue such a battle as I had described,
with terrible wounds made by their claws on both sides, although
they seldom were able to kill one another, for want of such
convenient instruments of death as we had invented. At
other times, the like battles have been fought between the
<i>Yahoos</i> of several neighbourhoods, without any visible
cause; those of one district watching all opportunities to
surprise the next, before they are prepared. But if they
find their project has miscarried, they return home, and, for
want of enemies, engage in what I call a civil war among
themselves.</p>
<p>“That in some fields of his country there are certain
shining stones of several colours, whereof the <i>Yahoos</i> are
violently fond: and when part of these stones is fixed in the
earth, as it sometimes happens, they will dig with their claws
for whole days to get them out; then carry them away, and hide
them by heaps in their kennels; but still looking round with
great caution, for fear their comrades should find out their
treasure.” My master said, “he could never
discover the reason of this unnatural appetite, or how these
stones could be of any use to a <i>Yahoo</i>; but now he believed
it might proceed from the same principle of avarice which I had
ascribed to mankind. That he had once, by way of
experiment, privately removed a heap of these stones from the
place where one of his <i>Yahoos</i> had buried it; whereupon the
sordid animal, missing his treasure, by his loud lamenting
brought the whole herd to the place, there miserably howled, then
fell to biting and tearing the rest, began to pine away, would
neither eat, nor sleep, nor work, till he ordered a servant
privately to convey the stones into the same hole, and hide them
as before; which, when his <i>Yahoo</i> had found, he presently
recovered his spirits and good humour, but took good care to
remove them to a better hiding place, and has ever since been a
very serviceable brute.”</p>
<p>My master further assured me, which I also observed myself,
“that in the fields where the shining stones abound, the
fiercest and most frequent battles are fought, occasioned by
perpetual inroads of the neighbouring <i>Yahoos</i>.”</p>
<p>He said, “it was common, when two <i>Yahoos</i>
discovered such a stone in a field, and were contending which of
them should be the proprietor, a third would take the advantage,
and carry it away from them both;” which my master would
needs contend to have some kind of resemblance with our suits at
law; wherein I thought it for our credit not to undeceive him;
since the decision he mentioned was much more equitable than many
decrees among us; because the plaintiff and defendant there lost
nothing beside the stone they contended for: whereas our courts
of equity would never have dismissed the cause, while either of
them had any thing left.</p>
<p>My master, continuing his discourse, said, “there was
nothing that rendered the <i>Yahoos</i> more odious, than their
undistinguishing appetite to devour every thing that came in
their way, whether herbs, roots, berries, the corrupted flesh of
animals, or all mingled together: and it was peculiar in their
temper, that they were fonder of what they could get by rapine or
stealth, at a greater distance, than much better food provided
for them at home. If their prey held out, they would eat
till they were ready to burst; after which, nature had pointed
out to them a certain root that gave them a general
evacuation.</p>
<p>“There was also another kind of root, very juicy, but
somewhat rare and difficult to be found, which the <i>Yahoos</i>
sought for with much eagerness, and would suck it with great
delight; it produced in them the same effects that wine has upon
us. It would make them sometimes hug, and sometimes tear
one another; they would howl, and grin, and chatter, and reel,
and tumble, and then fall asleep in the mud.”</p>
<p>I did indeed observe that the <i>Yahoos</i> were the only
animals in this country subject to any diseases; which, however,
were much fewer than horses have among us, and contracted, not by
any ill-treatment they meet with, but by the nastiness and
greediness of that sordid brute. Neither has their language
any more than a general appellation for those maladies, which is
borrowed from the name of the beast, and called
<i>hnea-yahoo</i>, or <i>Yahoo’s evil</i>; and the cure
prescribed is a mixture of their own dung and urine, forcibly put
down the <i>Yahoo’s</i> throat. This I have since
often known to have been taken with success, and do here freely
recommend it to my countrymen for the public good, as an
admirable specific against all diseases produced by
repletion.</p>
<p>“As to learning, government, arts, manufactures, and the
like,” my master confessed, “he could find little or
no resemblance between the <i>Yahoos</i> of that country and
those in ours; for he only meant to observe what parity there was
in our natures. He had heard, indeed, some curious
<i>Houyhnhnms</i> observe, that in most herds there was a sort of
ruling <i>Yahoo</i> (as among us there is generally some leading
or principal stag in a park), who was always more deformed in
body, and mischievous in disposition, than any of the rest; that
this leader had usually a favourite as like himself as he could
get, whose employment was to lick his master’s feet and
posteriors, and drive the female <i>Yahoos</i> to his kennel; for
which he was now and then rewarded with a piece of ass’s
flesh. This favourite is hated by the whole herd, and
therefore, to protect himself, keeps always near the person of
his leader. He usually continues in office till a worse can
be found; but the very moment he is discarded, his successor, at
the head of all the <i>Yahoos</i> in that district, young and
old, male and female, come in a body, and discharge their
excrements upon him from head to foot. But how far this
might be applicable to our courts, and favourites, and ministers
of state, my master said I could best determine.”</p>
<p>I durst make no return to this malicious insinuation, which
debased human understanding below the sagacity of a common hound,
who has judgment enough to distinguish and follow the cry of the
ablest dog in the pack, without being ever mistaken.</p>
<p>My master told me, “there were some qualities remarkable
in the <i>Yahoos</i>, which he had not observed me to mention, or
at least very slightly, in the accounts I had given of
humankind.” He said, “those animals, like other
brutes, had their females in common; but in this they differed,
that the she <i>Yahoo</i> would admit the males while she was
pregnant; and that the hes would quarrel and fight with the
females, as fiercely as with each other; both which practices
were such degrees of infamous brutality, as no other sensitive
creature ever arrived at.</p>
<p>“Another thing he wondered at in the <i>Yahoos</i>, was
their strange disposition to nastiness and dirt; whereas there
appears to be a natural love of cleanliness in all other
animals.” As to the two former accusations, I was
glad to let them pass without any reply, because I had not a word
to offer upon them in defence of my species, which otherwise I
certainly had done from my own inclinations. But I could
have easily vindicated humankind from the imputation of
singularity upon the last article, if there had been any swine in
that country (as unluckily for me there were not), which,
although it may be a sweeter quadruped than a <i>Yahoo</i>,
cannot, I humbly conceive, in justice, pretend to more
cleanliness; and so his honour himself must have owned, if he had
seen their filthy way of feeding, and their custom of wallowing
and sleeping in the mud.</p>
<p>My master likewise mentioned another quality which his
servants had discovered in several Yahoos, and to him was wholly
unaccountable. He said, “a fancy would sometimes take
a <i>Yahoo</i> to retire into a corner, to lie down, and howl,
and groan, and spurn away all that came near him, although he
were young and fat, wanted neither food nor water, nor did the
servant imagine what could possibly ail him. And the only
remedy they found was, to set him to hard work, after which he
would infallibly come to himself.” To this I was
silent out of partiality to my own kind; yet here I could plainly
discover the true seeds of spleen, which only seizes on the lazy,
the luxurious, and the rich; who, if they were forced to undergo
the same regimen, I would undertake for the cure.</p>
<p>His honour had further observed, “that a female
<i>Yahoo</i> would often stand behind a bank or a bush, to gaze
on the young males passing by, and then appear, and hide, using
many antic gestures and grimaces, at which time it was observed
that she had a most offensive smell; and when any of the males
advanced, would slowly retire, looking often back, and with a
counterfeit show of fear, run off into some convenient place,
where she knew the male would follow her.</p>
<p>“At other times, if a female stranger came among them,
three or four of her own sex would get about her, and stare, and
chatter, and grin, and smell her all over; and then turn off with
gestures, that seemed to express contempt and disdain.”</p>
<p>Perhaps my master might refine a little in these speculations,
which he had drawn from what he observed himself, or had been
told him by others; however, I could not reflect without some
amazement, and much sorrow, that the rudiments of lewdness,
coquetry, censure, and scandal, should have place by instinct in
womankind.</p>
<p>I expected every moment that my master would accuse the
<i>Yahoos</i> of those unnatural appetites in both sexes, so
common among us. But nature, it seems, has not been so
expert a school-mistress; and these politer pleasures are
entirely the productions of art and reason on our side of the
globe.</p>
<h3>IV - CHAPTER VIII.</h3>
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