Among the varied races of living beings which inhabit this
world, none perhaps have excited so much speculation and general
interest, as those to which we have devoted our present little
volume. From the shy and retired manners of the animals in a wild
state, their habits are of difficult investigation, and would
require much patience, and a greater allowance of time, than it is
often possible for those individuals who possess the enviable
opportunities, to devote to them. The greater portion of the
information we possess, is therefore derived from the accounts of
travellers, too often collected from hearsay evidence, exaggerated
as the fears and superstitions of the natives have been
influenced, and which have appeared as "dreamy forms"
"That the soul sees--and, we suppose, the eyes."
We are mostly aware how easily the minds of many native tribes
are wrought upon; and it can scarcely be a matter of surprise, that
traditions* (* Such as those of the Fesse and Goolock), should
exist, with accounts of the prowess, sagacity, or cruelty of these
creatures. Occasional glimpses of an animal clothed in shaggy hair,
of gigantic size, with tusks rivaling those of the largest and most
ferocious beasts of prey;-possessing a hideous resemblance of
countenance and general proportions to man, and assuming positions
somewhat human, would present to an untutored mind, a chaos of
sensations, whose impressions scarcely could be afterwards
detailed; while one of higher cultivation might combine doubts of
their animal or human nature, and add to either the brutal or
malignant qualities of both. And it is under such inflences, fear
predominating, that the accounts of their concerted attacks, their
carrying off negroes for slaves, distribution of the different
sexes, and of their cruelty and carnivorous propensities, have been
handed down with embellishments by the older historians.
In other countries, superstition exercises her influence.
India, so horribly celebrated by the sacrifices of its infatuated
devotees, is in some districts no less so for its weak and
extravagant idolatry. In Ahmenadab, hospitals have been erected
for the benefit of apes, where thousands are kept in fancied ease
and indulgence; and another city, which was taken by General
Geddart in 1780, upon its surrender contained forty thousand
inhabitants, and as many monkeys. They are even worshipped by the
Brahmins, and are raised to the rank of gods. Gorgeous temples
are erected,
"With pious care a monkey to enshrine!"
Mofleus, in his History of India, describes one of great
magnificence-it was fronted by a portico for receiving victims
sacrificed to it, which was supported by no less than 700 columns;
and Linschotten relates, that when the Portuguese plundered one of
these monkey palaces, in the island of Ceylon, they found, in a
little gold casket, the tooth of an ape; a relic held by the
natives in such veneration, that they offered seven hundred
thousand ducats to redeem it.-It was, however, burnt by the
Viceroy, to stop the progress of idolatry. Among the ancient
Egyptians, they also seem to have been held in more than ordinary
reverence, or at least to have borne a rank equal to that of the
sacred ibis. They were like them represented in the sculptures,
and their bodies were preserved as mummies.
We cannot, however, class under such infatuation, the idea
which, even in comparatively modern times, prevailed among men who
possessed great learning, and minds at once comprehensive and
penetrating; "that men and monkeys belonged to the same species,
and were no otherwise distinguished from each other, than by
circumstances which can be accounted for by the different physical
or moral agencies to which, they have been exposed."* (* Monboddo,
Rousseau, Lamark). And we can only consider them in the words of
an eminent anatomist, as "equally unacquainted with the structure
and functions of men and monkeys, not conversant with zoology and
physiology, and therefore entirely destitute of the principles on
which alone a sound judgment can be formed, concerning the natural
capabilities and destiny of animals, as well as the laws according
to which certain changes of character, certain departures from the
original stock, may take place.
Seeing, then, that the information handed down to us regarding
this singular family, has been in many instances exaggerated and
misrepresented, we shall endeavour, in the following pages, to
detail what can be depended upon, making use of the discoveries and
researches of the modern naturalists who have travelled aware of
the doubtful points, and were competent by their previous studies,
for the task of unraveling them; while the anatomy of these
animals, which approach nearest in their structure to that of man
will be taken from the able examinations which have been made by
Geoffroy Saint Hilaire, Fred. Cuvier, Dr. Trail, and last year by
Messrs Owen and Yarrel.
Modern zoologists have applied to this family, consisting of
two great divisions, the title of Quadrumanous, or four-handed,
from their generally possessing thumbs, or members opposable to the
fingers of both the fore and hind limbs, which enables them to
grasp any object firmly with either, and renders them expert
climbers. The most casual stroller through a menagerie, must be
immediately struck with the surprising agility, the powerful leaps
and swings, and the complete gliding ease, with which all these
motions are performed; and an observer in their natural abodes
will soon arrive at the conclusion, that their habits are strictly
arboreal, and that their economy is intimately connected with the
boundless forests of the tropics. They are in fact seldom seen at
any distance from woods, and the species which inhabit craggy
precipices, such as those in the neighbourhood of the Cape of Good
Hope, in Barbary, and about Gibraltar, deviate from the type,
become more quadruped in their form and actions, and have therefore
always been placed last in our systems.
Their true and natural abodes are the trackless forests, which
so richly clothe the countries under the tropics, and which alike
supply them with food, and protect them from the heat of those
scorching climes. During the middle period of the day, these
forests are filled with the animal world, courting their grateful
shades, silent and resting; and it is only in some deep deep glade,
"afraid to glitter in the noontide beams," that the screams of an
awakened parrot, or gambols of a monkey, disturb the universal
solitude. So soon, however, as a declining sun and the evening
breezes reduce the overpowering feelings, do the inhabitants of
those vast nurseries resume the exercise of their daily routine,
and none among them occupy a more conspicuous place than this
family. The more timorous attract the observer's attention by their
endeavours of concealment; and the protrusion of numerous little
heads, with bright and searching eyes, from behind the thick
boughs and foliage, plainly tells that curiosity almost
overbalances the fear of self-preservation. The more forward again,
force attention by the shower of rotten branches, fruit, flowers,
and nuts, and sometimes materials of a less agreeable kind, that
are either directed against, or unintentionally fall near, the
object which thus attracts the attention of this prying assembly;
while the annoyed feelings of the spectator soon give way to
admiration, at the light and airy gambols of those which think
themselves beyond the reach of danger, or are amused at the
grimaces, and grotesque attitudes, and half threats of those in
the immediate vicinity. This interval of activity in the
tropical forest, lasts for a comparatively short period; a few
morning and evening hours of milder heat, are sufficient to satisfy
all their wants; the blaze of a vertical sun, or a short twilight,
again obliges them to seek a covering from its beams, or a place
of rest and security from depredators, whose turn it now is to
satisfy the cravings of nature.
But there are some tribes inhabiting South America, which
reverse this order, and are nocturnal in their habits. Some of the
larger species remaining in complete inactivity during daylight,
come forth at night, and make the forest resound with their yells
and howling. Speaking of the Red Howler, an eccentric writer
observes,-"Nothing can sound more dreadful than its nocturnal
howlings. While lying in your hammock in those gloomy and
immeasurable wilds, you hear him howling at intervals from eleven
o'clock at night till daybreak. You would suppose that half the
wild beasts of the forest were collecting for the work of carnage.
Now it is the tremendous roar of the jaguar, as he springs on his
prey; now it changes to his terrible deep-toned growlings, as he
is pressed on all sides by superior force; and now you hear his
last dying moan beneath a mortal wound."* (*Waterton's Wanderings,
8vo. edit. 305).
A deep and dark evergreen, or the hollow of some decaying tree,
like the "shrouded owls," are the abodes during the day of other
small species; and, when removed from their dormitory, a dreamy
motion and piteous wailing, are the only exertions which announce
that their rest has been disturbed, or their feelings incommoded.
During the night, on the contrary, they are all energy.
The food of this family may be called almost entirely
vegetable. The accounts of their love for animal food, and relish
for that of human beings, as related by Neiuhoff,* (*"The province
of Fohier hath an animal perfectly resembling man, but longer
armed, and hairy all over, called Fesse, most swift and greedy
after human flesh, which, that he may better take his prey, he
feigneth laughter, and suddenly while the person stands listening,
seizeth upon him.") can only be traced to the same sources with
the other unsubstantiated reports concerning them, and become
naturally associated, in the minds of the inhabitants, with the
hideous forms and immense tusks of the larger species. The forest
will supply them with nourishment, in the endless variety of fruits
and nuts, roots and juicy shrubs. Insects are also greedily
devoured by all, and as expertly caught.* (* A curious manner of
feeding, is thus related by Ludolf in his History of Ethiopia:-"Of
apes there are infinite flocks up and down in the mountains, a
thousand and more together. There they leave no stone unturned. If
they meet with one that two or three cannot lift, they call for
more aid, and all for the sake of the worms that lie under--a sort
of diet which they relish exceedingly. They are very greedy after
emmets. So that having found an emmet hill, they presently surround
it, and laying their fore paws, with the hollow downwards, upon the
ant heap, as fast as the emmets creep into their treacherous palms,
they lick them off with great comfort to their stomachs; and there
they will lie till there is not an emmet left.") The stores of the
wild bees furnish another repast, and the eggs, and occasionally
the young of birds, is the only approach which can be traced to a
carnivorous propensity.
There are some accounts of the orangs feeding on crabs and
shellfish; but we are not sure of the authority whence they have
been obtained. Gemelli Carreri tells us, that the orangs descend
from the mountains when the fruits are exhausted, where they feed
on various shellfish, but particularly on a large species of
oyster. "Fearful of putting in their paws, lest the oyster should
close and crush them, they insert a stone within the shell, which
prevents it from closing, and then drag out their prey and devour
it at leisure!"
In those districts where cultivation has advanced, they become
exceedingly troublesome, and from their numbers do no
inconsiderable injury to the foreign husbandman; an amiable poet
thus mentions their depredations among the sugar groves:-
"Destructive, on the upland sugar groves
In like manner, when a remission of watchfulness occurs, do
they plunder the maize fields, and rob the orchards of their
choicest fruits; "they are so impudent, that they will come into
the gardens and eat such sorts of fruit as grow there," says
Knox;* (*Knox's Ceylon) and Thunberg relates, that such is the
superstitious respect in which the Entellus monkey is held by the
natives, that whatever ravages they may commit, they dare not
venture to destroy them. Emboldened by this impunity, they come
down from the woods in large herds, and take possession of the
husbandman's toil, with as little ceremony, as though it had been
collected for their use.
In a state of confinement, vegetable diet continues their
favourite and most nourishing support; but they will eat almost
anything that the luxury of man has introduced, and some even
become remarkable for their peculiarities. Among the greater part
of them, the love of wine or diluted spirits becomes almost a
passion; they are often offered as a bribe to the performance of
various tricks, and they will always be greedily drunk when left
within reach. Vosmaer's orang, one day when loose, commenced its
exploits by finishing a bottle of Malaga wine. Happy Jerry, the
ribbed nose baboon in Exeter Change, performed all his tricks
upon the anticipation of a glass of gin and water; and the relish
and expression with which it was taken, would have done honour to
the most accomplished taster.
Nearly the whole family are gregarious,* (*Pithecia chiropotes,
Humb., and a few other species, live in pairs) and troops of many
hundreds together may be seen in the forest glades and openings,
or upon the banks of the noble rivers, which,
"Shaded and rolling on through sunless solitudes,"
form almost the only passages in those vast countries.
Wherever we peruse the journeys of travellers, who have
explored the interior of the tropics, we find accounts of almost
innumerable bands which crowd the wooded banks, doubtless
astonished at such visiters, and exhibiting every attitude and
grimace, that the impulses of fear and caution can supply. In
general, they live together in harmony, unless when slightly
disturbed by rivalry after some favourite supply of food, in which
cases, the love and knowledge of power is fully shown and exercised
by the strong over their weaker companions. Intruders of any other
species are either expelled, or, if too powerful, are chattered at
with all their natural petulance, and stolen opportunities are
watched, to pilfer the attracting store, or annoy the unwelcome
aggressor.
Their breeding-places are various-cloven trees, perhaps a
forsaken nest which has already reared a feathered progeny-rocks,
thickets of brush, and rank grassy herbage, all afford sheltered
nursing places. The young, seldom more than two, are attended with
the greatest care and anxiety by the female; and long after they
are able to follow their troop, on the approach of danger, will
attach themselves to the parent, who will encounter almost anything
in their defence, and who, from the utmost timidity, becomes fierce
and reckless of every opponent. It is singular, however, that in
confinement the very reverse most frequently takes place; and when
these animals have, with great care and attention, been productive,
the offspring was immediately left, and the greatest apathy
exhibited. Under every advantage Frederic Cuvier was unsuccessful
twice, and found it impossible to preserve the young beyond a few
hours.* (*The Ouistiti produced three in confinement, and nursed
them with great attention. See our description of that species.)
In geographical distribution, the quadrumanous order presents
some curious examples. That part of them to which this volume is
devoted, is found in three divisions of the world, and is entirely
confined to the warmer parts. Europe, with one exception, which
merely skirts its southern border, and North America, are without
them, from the unsuitable nature of the climate; and among the
various anomalous forms peculiar to New Holland, and the vast
archipelago of the Southern Ocean, scarcely one approaches to any
resemblance. The smaller formed long tailed monkeys (which
constitute the numerous family of Guenons in the systems,) of mild
disposition and playful manner and generally clothed with a fur of
considerable beauty, are in a general way distributed over Africa
and India; among these, however, the genus Semnopithecus of F.
Cuvier, seems exclusively Indian, while, with few exceptions, the
Cercopitheci of the same naturalist, and Cercocebi of
Geoffroy, inhabit Africa. The most typical forms in the zoology of
these countries, are, in the last; the baboons, or Cynocephali,
more bestial in all their forms and habits, and deviating from
the quadrumanous type. In one or two aberrant instances they reach
India, and the Barbary ape passes the European boundary, and may
be looked on as the extreme limit of the family in that direction.
The form again most typical to India, is seen in the long armed
apes or Gibbons, (Hylobates, Illiger,) approaching the orangs
somewhat in structure, found exclusively in the islands and
continent, stretching northward in the Chinese dominions, but not
existing in any land that can be allied to the continent of Africa.
The Indian islands possess another very singular animal in the
proboscis monkey, (Nasalis, Geoffroy,) which, to the form of the
orangs, joins a considerable length of tail; but the greatest
peculiarity is the shape of the nose, which is prolonged to an
extraordinary degree, and can be compared to nothing so justly, as
some of the pasteboard masks, which may be daily seen at the
windows of our fancy toyshops. Extending our researches farther in
the Asiatic continent, we find, in the western district of China,
another curious form, furnished with long arms and tail, but of
rather graceful proportions, with a fur of rich colouring,
destitute of the bare callosities, and possessing somewhat the
flattened face of the American monkeys. It is the Chinese monkey,
and constitutes Illiger's genus Lasiopaga. Some zoologists ascribe
the Island of Madagascar as another abode of this animal, but we
strongly suspect, that, however allied in resemblance, it will
prove distinct. But the most interesting form to these continents,
is the orangs, common to both, but in indifferent individuals; and
these, as far as our knowledge extends, confined to a very limited
space: that of India inhabits almost exclusively the Island of
Borneo, while the African representative is found only on the
eastern coast, and particularly in Angola and Congo.
These are the principal forms inhabiting the old world; South
America possesses others of great peculiarity, and it is
remarkable, that none of them can be placed in any of the African
or Asiatic groups. The nostrils are always divided by a broader
separation, the size and strength is much less; in some, the
proportions are very diminutive, and in a few, the habits become
completely nocturnal. The inhabitants of this region, also exhibit
the most perfect adaptation of structure for climbing and a silvan
life, and the formation of the tail in the greater part, is a most
efficient assistant in grasping and supporting themselves among
the branches, and some can even introduce the extremity in the
narrow parts of the bark, and withdraw from thence any small
substance.* (* Humboldt, Zool. Observations, page 329.-Description
of Marimonda in present volume). Among the Howlers, we see somewhat
of the form and appearance of the baboons, which they also resemble
in their larger size, their strength, and fiercer dispositions,
and in the structure of the laryngeal sacks, which are connected
with the os hyoides. We find, in the genus Hapales, an approach to
the insectivorous mammaliae, in the hooked claws of the fore
extremities, instead of nails; and in several of the other forms,
a departure from the quadrumanous types, and a joining with the
Lemuridae.
As the quadrumanous races approach nearest to man in structure,
and consequently in actions, it will be proper to point out some
of the principal distinctions which corporeally separate them; and
for this purpose, we shall confine ourselves to the two orangs,
which have been universally allowed to bear the strongest
resemblance. We do not intend to institute a strict comparison
between the monkey and human organization, and to adduce proof from
the comparison, that they are distinct as well in structure as in
nature; we consider this quite unnecessary, and think that in
all our systems, man should be kept entirely distinct. As he is
infinitely pre-eminent by the high and peculiar character and power
of his mind, and the future destination of his immaterial part, so
has he been stamped with a bearing lofty and dignified, with--
"Far nobler shape, erect and tall,
We wish chiefly to illustrate, by their difference, that the parts
allotted for locomotion in the most man-like monkey, are unfitted
for sustaining an upright attitude, while they are beautifully
adapted to perform all the requisites of a silvan life.
The first distinction that would undoubtedly strike an observer
of an orang and human being placed in the same enclosure, would be
the positions and attitude; and a closer attention would soon
convince, that the corresponding members in each, while beautifully
formed for their proper uses, could not be employed to perform
similar actions, with an equal degree of strength, firmness, or
ease.
Few persons, in the present era, will assert,--
While the fact, that no nation in the world assumes any except the
erect attitude, will be sufficiently conclusise, without making
use of the many arguments which might be drawn from the adaptation
of structure. Let us now see how this agrees with the natural gait
of the orangs. In man, the limbs, the principal organs of
progression, and of maintaining the upright position, are equal in
length to the head and trunk together, while the upper extremities
are comparatively short. The glutei muscles are the largest in the
human body, and the gastronemi, or calf, are of immense power, and
terminate in a powerful cord, inserted in the extremity of the
bone, forming the heel or os calcis. These however, would be
insufficient, without a surface or base on which the trunk itself
could rest; and we find this supplied by a broad and capacious
pelvis with which the thigh-bones form a right angle, by means of
the length of the cervix femoris, or neck of the thigh bone. In the
orangs, on the contrary, and indeed in all the monkeys, the lower
extremities are comparatively short, while the upper, or arms,
are very long, so as to allow the knuckles to be applied to the
ground when the animal is nearly erect, and which is, in fact, the
mode of progression always adopted when necessity requires this
position. The black orang noticed by Dr. Tyson advanced in this
manner, and that dissected by Dr. Trail was observed never to place
"the palms of the hands on the ground." Dr. Abel's red orang
performed "the progressive motion by placing his bent fists upon
the ground, and drawing his body between his arms." The narrowness
of the pelvis, and the short neck of the femur, forming an acute
angle with the spine, also renders the erect position impossible
for any time, and always irksome, which is farther confirmed by the
weakness of the muscles. The glutei are scarcely visible, and the
calves are very weak.* (*"Les fesses etoient presque nulles, ainsi
que les mollets."-F. Cuvier.)
The extensors of the knee are much stronger in the human
subject than in other mammalia, as their operation of extending
the thigh forwards on the leg, forms a very essential part in the
human mode of progression. The flexors of the knee are, on the
contrary, stronger in animals, and are inserted so much lower down,
even in the monkeys, that the cord which they form keeps the knee
habitually bent, and almost prevents the perfect extension of the
leg on the thigh.* (*Dr. Trail.) "The motion of the knee-joint in
the black orang was free backwards, but the animal does not seem
capable of perfect extension of this joint, from the contraction
of the posterior muscles of the limb.* (*"The most remarkable
muscle about the top of the thigh, has not been noticed by Tyson,
Camper, Cuvier, or the older anatomists. It is a flat triangular
muscle, arising from the whole anterior edge of the ileum to within
half an inch of the acetabulum, and is inserted just below the fore
part of the great trochanter, between the head of the cruralis and
vastus externus, a little below the origin of the former. It is
thin and fleshy through its whole extent, except where it is
inserted by a very short flattened tendon. At its upper part it is
united by cellular substance to the iliacus internus. The action
of this muscle appears to be intended to assist in climbing. On
this account, we propose to name it the scandens, or musculus
scansorius; and we are disposed to regard it as one of the
principal peculiarities in Simia satyrus."--Dr. Trail. Account of
Black Ornag. Wern. Soc. Trans. Vol. iii, p.29.)
Continuing the organization of the lower extremity, we shall
now examine the foot. In man, the whole surface of the tarsus,
metatarsus, and toes, rests upon the ground, and the os calcis
forms a right angle with the leg. In the orangs, this bone begins
to form an acute angle with the limb, and consequently does not
rest upon the ground. The sole of the foot becomes narrower; and
in all the attempts at erect progression, exhibited by the orangs
which have been shown in this country, the foot was observed to
rest on its outer edge. The plantaris muscle also, which is very
fleshy among quadrumanous animals, instead of terminating, as it
does in man, by insertion in the os calcis, passes over that bone
into the sole, and is there connected with the planter aponeurosis,
an arrangement incompatible with the erect attitude, as the tendon
would be compressed, and its action impeded, if the heel rested on
the ground.* (*Lawrence, Nat. Hist. of Man.) But the most marked
peculiarity in the foot, and one which is instantly perceived, is
the great length of the phalanges or toes, and the position of
the great toe, which is placed nearly in a line with the ankle,
and does not reach, at the nail, within an inch of the first
metatarsal joint, having the appearance of a thumb and hand, whose
office it in reality performs. Nor is the internal conformation
less remarkable; the whole arrangement of muscles is much nearer
to that of a hand; but the thumbs of both the fore and hind
extremities have no separate flexor longus, (long flexor,) but
receive tendons from the flexors of the fingers. "Hence, the thumbs
in these animals will generally be bent together with the other
fingers; and they are less capable of those actions in which the
motion of the thumb is combined with that of the fore and middle
finger-a combination so important in numerous delicate
operations."* (*Ibid. page 162.)
The upper extremity approaches much nearer to the human form,
and in its similarity points out the unfitness of these animals
for a constant quadruped motion. The inferior structure of the
hands, and particularly the thumbs, show them fitted for grasping
alone, and incapable of performing any nice mechanical operation,
while the great comparative length indicates their utility in
climbing, and therefore their fitness for an arboreal life.
All the orangs which have been dissected, had scarcely reached
their second year. The relative proportions, therefore, of the
skull and brain to the body, cannot be fixed or compared with those
of the adult human being. The relations of the brain, however,
as far as have been observed, are nearly similar, and the principal
differences in the skull of the nearest form, the black orang, are
thus mentioned by Dr Trail: "The top of the head is more flat, and
its union with the spine farther back. The orbital processes of the
os frontis project about half an inch beyond the general convexity
of that bone; and the orbits of the eyes are proportionally larger
and rounder than in man. The depression which receives the
cribriform plate of the ethmoid bone, is much deeper and smoother
on the sides; while the apertures in that bone, for the passage of
the olfactory nerves, are considerably larger. Instead of the well-
defined boundaries traced in the human skull by the crucial ridge,
they were marked by a flat undulation of the occipital bone.
There is no mastoid, and scarcely a vestige of a hyloid process,
(consequently the muscles which arise from these processes in man,
have a different origin.) The bones of the nose were placed
perfectly flat on the face, so as not to be visible in the profile
of the skull, and the triangular opening was circular. The supra-
maxillary bones projected considerably beyond the remarkable
orbiter process of the frontal bone, being the form of the lower
part of the bone nearer to that of quadrupeds. The lower jaw was
stronger and narrower."
The superior maxillary bones in man are united to each other,
and contain the whole of the upper teeth; but in most of the
mammaliae, they are separated by a third bone of a wedge shape,
which contains the incisor teeth. Blumenbach named this the os
inter-maxillare. According to that anatomist, and Camper, it is
found in the red orang; whereas, according to Tyson and Daubenton,
it was not seen in the chimpanzee, or black orang; nor does Dr.
Trail mention having observed it in the specimen which he
dissected. "The brute face," says Lawrence, "is merely an
instrument, adapted to procure and prepare food, and often a weapon
of offence and defence. The human countenance is an organ of
expression, an outward index of what passes in the busy world
within. In the animal, the elongated and narrow jaws with their
muscles, with their sharp cutting teeth, or strong-pointed and
formidable fangs compose the face; the chin, lips, cheeks,
eyebrows, ant forehead, are either removed, or reduced to a size
and form simply necessary for animal purposes; the nose is
confounded with the upper jaw and lip, or, if more developed, is
still applied to offices connected with procuring food." In the
whole we have the muzzle, or snout of an animal, not the
countenance of a human being.
The articulation of the head with the spine, which determines
its support, is, in the human subject, very nearly in the centre;
and the vertical line of the neck and trunk is nearly
perpendicular, and would pass through the top of the head;
consequently the whole weight is sustained by the vertebral column.
In most animals, the great occipital hole, and the articular
condyles, are placed almost at the end of the skull, throwing the
whole weight of the head forwards, and it is incapable of being
supported by the vertebral column, without some very powerful
assisting machinery. Hence, we find the spinous processes of the
cervical vertebrae long, and assisted by a very strong ligament,
called the ligamentum nuchae, or suspensorium colli. In the orang,
the occipital hole is placed twice as far from the jaws as from the
back of the head, which throws a great additional weight forwards,
and consequently requires more exertion to maintain the erect
position. But although we find, according to Camper, that the
spinous processes of the cervical vertebrae are long, and see a
greater developement of them in the Batavian pongo, there is no
mention in any author of the presence of the suspensory ligament,
which is also used as an argument that the natural gait of these
animals is not quadruped; for the immense weight of the jaws of
the adults, placed so far off the centre, could not possibly be
supported in that position, without some provision of this kind.
Additional confirmation of this argument is the absence of the
suspensorium oculi, a muscle found in quadrupeds, and evidently
intended to relieve the others, and be a greater support to the
eyes when continued in the prone position.
These are the principal peculiarities of structure connected
with progression and attitude; and it must be at once perceived,
that neither the erect or quadruped posture, is the common and
natural one of the monkeys, and that they will employ either as
occasion requires, in their silvan or rocky abodes. Every other
part of the form will present some difference; but with the
exception of the construction of the larynx, and principal organs
employed in the faculty of speech, we shall merely mention a few
of the remaining most prominent peculiarities exhibited by the
African and Asiatic orangs.
There were only four lumbar vertebrae in Dr Trail's orang, in
this respect similar to the Asiatic species dissected by Messrs
Owen and Yarrel. In the first animal, however, there were thirteen
dorsal vertebrae, and a similar number of ribs; in the latter, only
twelve of each. The lower opening of the pelvis in the black orang
is very large; the sacrum is very narrow. No occipito-frontalis
muscle was found in the black orang, while it was distinctly seen
in the red species by Messrs Owen and Yarrel. In the same animal,
three muscles were found to supply the place of the pectoralis
major; and the peculiar muscle called the levator claviculae is
found in both. In the black orang the size of the olfactory nerve
is great, and the surface of the turbinated bones extensive, which
would lead us to infer that the sense of smelling was powerful,
and of course of necessary use in its economy.
The larynx of these animals present some curious peculiarities.
The best account, perhaps, is that given by Camper of the red
orang. After examining the tongue, that anatomist continues,
"pursuing my dissection, I discovered a large sack on the right
side, runing over the clavicular bones, and another on the left
side, but visibly smaller. The large sack tore a little on account
of its being tender, by having laid so long in spirits. I inflated
it through the opening, which I continued quickly, as I perceived
that the air went off betwixt the tongue bone and the thyroideus
cartilage. I then followed up the rent with a pair of scissors, and
cut open the sack, bv which means I discovered a transverse split.
There was now no doubt but that the left sack had a similar
orifice. In pursuance of it, I took away the whole soft palate and
oesophagus as far as below the speaking organs. The soft palate is
the same as in most quadrupeds, with this difference, nevertheless,
that the uvula on the hind side runs very evidently downwards,
but not beneath the margin of the soft palate. This palate appears,
however, more capable than in other animals of being contracted."
In other two orangs "there was merely one single sack, having
two air tubes, which united themselves with the two splits." This,
he thinks, had been formerly two, " but that the two sacks were
gone over into one."
In one of the animals, "the bottom (of the sack) rose nearly
to the end of the breast bone, and was partly covered by the breast
muscles; the sack rose upwards above the clavicular bones, and with
the appendages still more backward, so that this sack penetrated
on each side deep under the monk's-hood muscles, as far as behind
upon the shoulder blades."
Camper is of opinion, that this sack increases in size with
the age of the animal; and that the frequent expansion by the air,
is the cause of the increase.
"The orang can, in the mean time, voluntarily swell up these
sacks, or this united sack, whenever it tries or attempts to press
the strongly inhaled air outwards, and presses then the epiglottis
towards the openings of the larynx, or bends it only a little. It
can also empty them at pleasure by means of the broad muscles of
the neck, by those of the breast, and by the cuculares, or
monk's-hood muscles."
In the black orang, according to Dr. Trail, the os hyoides
differed from that of man, in being anteriorly more prominent and
dilated, and by containing in its body a cavity capable of holding
a large pea. On laying open the posterior part of the larynx, the
two apertures at the base of the epiglottis, and leading the
laryngeal pouches discovered by Camper, were visible.
The great difference in these organs from the human are the
large sacks, which evidently produce the powerful and deep sounds
uttered by so many of this tribe. In the black orang, being carried
into the body of the os hyoides, it shows the first indication of
structure so peculiarly belonging to the American howlers. In the
Siamang, remarkable for the power of voice, the simple sacks are
so extensive as to protrude prominently to outward view. They
prevent the utterance of systematic sounds which the other organs
might produce, by preventing a power of control over the air.
"Every time that the animal would utter his cry, these sacks swell,
then empty themselves, so that he is not able, at will, to supply
to the different parts of his mouth the sounds they might
articulate."* (*Richerand, Physiology, p. 424)
In intellect we consider the quadrumanous animals,
notwithstanding what has been written and recorded of many of them,
not superior, and in many cases inferior, to others of the animal
creation; it has the same constitutional distinctions, and presents
the same great differences, from a true reasoning power.
But among the many anecdotes related of the understanding of the
orang-outang, and other monkeys, some may be classed as under the
influence of a higher power of discrimination than mere instinct,
and where a process, as it were, of discussion passed in the
sensorium of the animal. As an example of what we mean, we may
mention an anecdote of the young red orang, lately exhibited in
Edinburgh by Mr. Copts, and figured on our second plate.
Mr. Copts one day gave him the half of an orange, a fruit of
which he was passionately fond, and laid the other half aside upon
the upper shelf of a press out of his reach and sight. Some time
after, Mr. Copts being reclining upon a sofa with his eyes
closed, the orang began to prowl about the room, and showed that,
notwithstanding his apparent in-attention, the position of his
favourite orange had been narrowly watched. Anxious to see the
result, he continued quiet, and feigned sleep. Jocko cautiously
approached the sofa, examined as far as he could that his guardian
was sound, and mounting quietly and expeditiously, finished the
remaining half of the orange, carefully concealed the peel in the
grate among some paper shavings, and having again examined Mr.
Copts, and seeing nothing doubtful in the reality of his sleep,
retired confidently to his own couch. Here there must have been a
detailed series of impressions during the progress of the action;
but in common with the construction of the brute mind, he was
incapable of extending the power farther, or of reasoning upon that
action, during the performance of which his intellect had gone
through several distinct processes. All their actions in a state
of confinement may be traced to the same source, while those in a
state of nature will be more akin to instinct, and will be
performed under the impulses of the various passions.
Cunning joined with caution, an inquisitive and prying turn,
and imitativeness, are the strong characters in the disposition of
the whole family. All these faculties and propensities become more
developed in a state of confinement, and consequently of tuition,
than in their natural wildness; and while the first, in both
states, is indispensable for their preservation, it is by the
influence of the others that they are principally indebted to
confinement, and the parts they are made to perform in the beggarly
dramas performed in the streets of our great towns. Their power of
imitation is very great, and often ludicrous in the extreme, from
the expressive face, and human Like form of the upper parts. This
talent has even been said to have been used to their own
destruction;-we have heard of monkeys cutting their throats, in
imitation of the feigned action of the person whom they annoyed,
and of one who killed himself by infusing a paper of tobacco with
milk and sugar, instead of tea, and drinking it as he had observed
some sick sailor do. How far these are true we shall not attempt
to decide; certain it is, that these animals most ludicrously
possess this propensity, and that those we have seen as pets, would
almost perform any thing once pointed out to them, and would always
make the attempt.
For the arrangement of these animals in the descriptive part
of our volume, we have followed the old practice of dividing them
into two great geographical groups, while we have introduced most
of the new genera. This plan we found to be the most convenient
during the progress, and perhaps liable to less objection in a
work of this kind, than any other or newer system, all of which
yet fall short of our own ideas of their correct classification.
The truest arrangement that has yet been proposed, is that by
Cuvier and Geoffroy Saint Hilaire,* (* Journal de Physique) and
they place the Sapajous immediately after the Orangs and Gibbons.
Another system of arrangement, which would find both its friends
and enemies in the advocates and disparagers of the circular or
progressive series, would be to descend from the Orangs, on the one
side of the circle, by the Gibbons, Nasalis, and Colobus, the
latter being the only form in the old world with four fingers to
the upper extremities, and so far in this respect representing the
genus Ateles of the new. We have then the genus Lasiopyga, which
combines a great flatness of face to the form of the Guenons which
naturally follow, and thence the passage to the Baboons and
Cynocephali is easy. On the opposite side, we would descend by the
Sapajous and Sagoins to Ateles, thence to the Howlers or Baboons
of the new world, and onwards by the Pithecia of Desmarets, to the
small species with hooked and sharp claws. We would still, in this
way, have a space between these diminutive insectivorous species,
deviating so much from the quadrumanous type and the cynocephalous
baboons; but this appears to fill itself naturally up by the
Lemuridae, the small species of which seem intimately connected
with the little monkeys above mentioned, while there will be a
natural gradation from the baboons to the genus Lichanotus of
Illiger, or the Indri of Sonnerat and Audibert. This view of their
arrangement would doubtless require alterations to perfect it; but
something of the kind seems the most natural method, and the orders
of the Carnivora and Rodentia, whichever shall be found to follow
most naturally, would touch at the various points of the circle
representing their respective families.
For the illustrations of the present volume, we have been at
considerable pains. In a few instances Mr. Lizars has been able to
draw from the living animals, and our best thanks are due to Mr.
Copts, for allowing copies to be made from his interesting specimen
of the red orang, and also to Mr. Wombwell for the sketch of the
white eyelid monkey. Professor Jameson pointed out the specimen of
the hoolack lately received in the Edinburgh Museum; and for the
remainder we are indebted to the beautiful but expensive works of
the continental naturalists. We have made free use of Humboldt's
Zoological Observations, and his History of the Monkeys of the
Orinooko; of Frederic Cuvier's great work on the Mammaliae;
Audibert, Histoire Naturelle des Singes, and of Spix and Martius's
History of the New Brazilian species.
Having thus so far endeavoured to detail the habits and economy
of this curious family, and the general plan of our volume, we
shall at once proceed to the description of the animals themselves.
The monkey nation preys; from rocky heights,
In silent parties, they descend by night,
And posting watchful sentinels, to warn
When hostile steps approach; with gambols, they
Pour o'er the cane grove. Luckless he to whom
That land pertains!"
Godlike erect, with native honour clad."
"Men have four legs by nature,
And that 'tis custom makes them go
Erroneously upon but two."
From: The Natural History of Monkeys
by Sir William Jardine, Edinburgh: W.H.Lizars, 1833.
[Note all ideas expressed are those of the author in historical context
and do not represent the views of the Wisconsin Primate Research
Center or the University of Wisconsin.]
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