The Two Rats, The Fox, And The Egg (prose Fable) Poem Rhyme Scheme and Analysis

Rhyme Scheme: A B C D E F G H I J K K L M N N O P Q R S

Do not take it ill if in these fables I mingle a little of the bold daring and fine spun philosophy that is called newA
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They say that the lower animals are mere machines that everything they do is prompted not by choice but by mechanism coming about as it were by springs There is they say neither feeling nor soul nothing but a mechanical body It goes just as a watch or clock goes plodding on with even motion blindly and aimlesslyB
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Open such a machine and examine it what do we find Wheels take the place of intelligence The first wheel moves the second and that in turn moves a third with the result that in due time it strikes the hourC
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According to these new philosophers that is exactly the case with an animal It receives a blow in a certain spot this spot conveys the sensation to another spot and so the message goes on from place to place until the brain receives it and the impression is made That is all very well but how is the impression madeD
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It is necessarily made without passion without will say these philosophers They tell us that the common idea is that an animal is actuated by emotions which we know as sorrow joy love pleasure pain cruelty or some other of these states but that it is not so Do not deceive yourself they sayE
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What is it then I ask A watch indeed And pray what of ourselvesF
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Ah well that is perhaps another thing altogether This is the way Descartes expounds the theory Descartes that mortal who if he had lived in pagan times would have been made a god and who holds a place between man and the higher spirits just as some I could name beasts of burden with long ears hold a place between man and the oysters Thus I say reasons this author I have a gift beyond any possessed by others of God's creatures and that is the gift of thought I know of what I thinkG
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But from positive science we know that although animals may think they cannot reflect upon what they think Descartes goes further and boldly states that they do not think at all That is a statement which need not worry usH
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Nevertheless when in the woods the blast of a horn and the baying of hounds agitates the fleeing quarry when he vainly endeavours with all his skill to confuse and muddle the scent which betrays him to his pursuers when an aged beast with full grown antlers he puts in his place a younger stag and forces it to carry on the chase with its fresher bait of the scent of its younger body and thus carry off the hounds and preserve his days then surely this beast has reasoned All the twisting and turning all the malice deception and the hundred stratagems to save his life are worthy of the greatest chiefs of war and worthy of a better fate than death by being torn to pieces for that is the supreme honour of the stagI
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Again when the partridge sees its young in danger before their wings have strength enough to bear them away from death she makes a pretence of being wounded and flutters along with a trailing wing enticing the huntsman and his dogs to follow her and thus by turning away the danger saves her little ones And when the huntsman believes that his dog has seized her lo she rises laughs at the sportsman wishes him farewell and leaves him confused and watching her flight with his eyesJ
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Not far from the northern regions there is a country where life goes on as in the early ages the inhabitants being profoundly ignorant I speak now of the human creatures The animals are indeed surprisingly enlightened for they can construct works which stop the ravages of swollen torrents and make communication possible from bank to bank The structures are safe and lasting being founded upon wood over which is laid a bed of mortar The beavers are the engineers Each one works The task is common to all and the old ones see that the young ones do not shirk their labour There are many taskmasters directing and urgingK
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To such a colony of cunning amphibians the republic of Plato itself would be but an apprentice affair The beavers erect their houses for the winter time and make bridges of marvellous construction for passing over the ponds whilst the human folk who live there though this wonderful work is always before their eyes can but cross the water by swimmingK
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That these beavers are nothing but bodies without minds nothing will make me believe But here is something better still Listen to this recital which I had from a king great in fame and glory This king defender of the northern world whom I now cite is my guarantee a prince beloved of the goddess of Victory His name alone is a bulwark against the empire of the Turks I speak of the Polish king A king it is understood can never lieL
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He says then that upon the frontiers of his kingdom there are animals that have always been at war among themselves their passion for fighting having been handed down from father to son These animals he explains are allied to the fox Never has the science of war been more skilfully pursued among men than it is pursued by these beasts not even in our present century They have their advanced out posts their sentinels and spies their ambuscades their expedients and a thousand other inventions of the pernicious and accursed science Warfare a hag born herself of Styx but giving birth to heroesM
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Properly to sing of the battles of these four footed warriors Homer should return from beyond the shores of Acheron Ah could he but do so and bring with him too the rival of old Epicurus what would the latter say as to the examples I have narrated He would say only what I have already said namely that in the lower animals natural instinct is sufficient to explain all the wonders I have told that memory leads the animal to repeat over and over again the actions it has made before and found successfulN
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We as human beings do differently Our wills decide for us not the bestial aim nor the instinct I walk I speak I feel in me a certain force an intelligent principle which all my bodily mechanism obeys This force is distinct from anything connected with my body It is indeed more easily conceived than is the body itself and of all our movements it is the supreme controller But how does the body conceive and understand this intelligent force That is the point I see the tool obeying the hand but what guides the hand Who guides the planets in their rapid courses It may be some angel guide controls the whirling planets and in like manner some spirit dwells in us and controls all our machinery The impulse is given the impression made but how I do not know We shall only learn it in the bosom of God and to speak frankly Descartes himself was no wiser On that point we all are equals All that I know is that this intelligent controlling spirit does not exist in the lower animals Man alone is its templeN
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Nevertheless we must allow to the beasts a higher plane than that of plants notwithstanding the fact that plants breatheO
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Is there any explanation to what I shall now relate Two rats who were seeking their living had the good fortune to find an egg Such a dinner was amply sufficient for folks of their species they had no need to look for an ox With keen delight and an appetite to match they were just about to eat up the egg between them when an unbidden guest appeared in the shape of Master Reynard the fox This was a most awkward and vexatious visitation How was the egg to be saved from the jaws of him To wrap it up carefully and carry it away by the fore paws or to roll it or to drag it were methods as impossible as they were hazardous But Necessity that ingenious mother furnished the never failing invention The sponger being as yet far enough away to give the rats time to reach their home one of them lay upon his back and took the egg safely between his arms whilst the other in spite of sundry shocks and a few slips dragged him home by the tailP
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After this recital let any one who dare maintain that animals have no powers of reasonQ
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For my part if I had the portioning of these faculties I would allow as much reasoning power in animals as in infants who evidently think from their earliest years from which fact we may conclude that one can think without knowing oneself I would similarly grant the animals a reason not such as we possess but far above a blind instinct I would refine a speck of matter a tiny atom extract of light something more vivid and lively than fire for since wood can turn to flame cannot flame being further purified teach us something of the rarity of the soul And is not gold extracted from lead My creatures should be capable of feeling and judgment but nothing more There should be no argument from apesR
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As to mankind I would have their lot infinitely better We men should possess a double treasure firstly the soul common to us all just as we happen to be sages or fools children idiots or our dumb companions the animals secondly another soul in common in a certain degree with the angels and this soul independent of us though belonging to us should be able to reach to heavenly heights whilst it could also dwell within a point's space Having a beginning it should be without end Things incredible but true During infancy this soul itself a child of heaven should appear to us only as a gentle and feeble light but as the faculties grew the stronger reason would pierce the darkness of matter enveloping our other imperfect and grosser soulS

Jean De La Fontaine



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