Observe to what extent there exists in animals conformity to nature in regard to their marriages. In the first place, they do not wait for laws against celibacy or late wedlock, as did the citizens of Lycurgus Cf. Life of Lysander , xxx. (451 a-b); Life of Lycurgus , xv. 1 (48 c); Moralia , 227 f; Ariston in Stobaeus, vol. iv. p. 497 ed. Hense (or von Arnim. Stoic. Vet. Frag. , i. p. 89); Clement of Alexandria, Stromateis , ii. 141 (vol. ii. p. 191 ed. Stählin). and Solon, This is not true of Solon: cf. Stobaeus, vol. iv. p. 521 ed. Hense. nor fear loss of civil rights because of childlessness, nor pursue the honours of the ius trium liberorum , See, for example, Hardy’s notes on Pliny, Epistulae , right of inheritance and the privileges of those who had less than three children. as many Romans do when they marry and beget children, not that they may have heirs, but that they may inherit. In the next place, the male does not consort with the female during all seasons, for the end and aim is not pleasure, but procreation and the begetting of offspring; therefore it is in the season of spring, which has procreative breezes cf. Lucretius, i. 10-20: reserata viget genitabilis aura favoni , and the whole passage. and a temperature suitable to intercourse, cf. Aristotle, Historia Animalium , vi. 18 (573 a 27). that the female, rendered submissive and desirable, comes to consort with the male, exulting, as she does, in the pleasing odour of her flesh and the peculiar adornment cf. Clement of Alexandria, Paedagogus , iii. 11. 1 (vol. i. p. 242 ed. Stählin). of her body, and filled with dew and clean grass cf. Moralia , 990 c ff. ; but when she perceives that she is pregnant and sated, she modestly retires and takes thought for the birth and safety of her offspring. But it is impossible to recount the procedure in a manner worthy of the subject, except to say that each of the pair is as one in their affection for their offspring, in their forethought, their endurance, and their self-control. Further, though we call the bee wise and believe that it Makes the yellow honey its care, Simonides: Frag. 47 ed. Bergk; 43 ed. Diehl; 57 ed. Edmonds. Cf. Moralia , 41 f, 79 c. flattering the saccharine quality of its sweetness which tickles our palates, yet we overlook the wisdom and artifice of the other creatures which is manifested in the bearing and the nurture of offspring. As, for example, the king-fisher cf. Moralia , 983 c-d; Aelian, De Natura Animalium , ix. 17. after conception makes her nest by gathering the thorns of the sea-needle and interweaving and joining them together, and makes it round and oblong in form, like a fisherman’s creel; and, packing the thorns closely together with the most exact jointure and density, submits it to the dashing of the waves so that, being gradually beaten upon and riveted together, the hard-packed surface may become water-proof; and it does become hard to divide with iron or stone. And what is more wonderful, the mouth of the nest is so exactly fitted to the size and measure of the king-fisher that no other creature, either larger or smaller, may enter, and, so they say, that it will not admit even the most minute drops of sea-water. In Moralia , 983 c ( De sollertia animalium ), Plutarch adds a few details to this description. And sea-dogs Aelian, op. cit. , ii. 55; Moralia , 982 a; for the kinds of γαλεοί (a species of shark), see Mair’s note on Oppian, Halieutica , i. 379 (L.C.L.). are a very good example, for they bring forth their young alive within their bodies, That is, they are viviparous. but permit their offspring to emerge and forage, and then take them back again and enfold them in their vitals and let them sleep there. And the she-bear, cf. Aelian, op. cit. , ii. 19; Aristotle, op. cit. , 579 a 24: ἀδιάρθρωτα τὰ σκὲλη καὶ τὰ πλεῖστα τῶν μορίοων . the most savage and sullen of beasts, brings forth her young formless and without visible joints, and with her tongue, as with a tool, she moulds into shape their skin cf. Aulus Gellius, xvii. 10. 3. ; and thus she is thought, not only to bear, but to fashion her cub. And in Homer Il. , xvii. 134-136. the lion - Whom hunters meet leading his young within A wood; he glares with valour and draws down His eye-lids till they hide his eyes - does he look like a beast that has any notion of making terms with the hunters for his children’s lives? For, in general, the love of animals for their children makes the timid bold, the lazy energetic, the voracious sparing; like the bird in Homer Il. , ix. 324; cf. Moralia , 80 a. which brings to her nestlings Whatever morsels she can catch, though she Fares ill herself, for she feeds her young at the cost of her own hunger, and, though she has laid hold of food for her belly, she withholds it and presses it tightly with her beak, lest she gulp it down unawares; or As a bitch bestrides her tender pups, and barks At one she does not know, and longs to fight, Homer, Od. , xx. 14-15; cf. De Vita et Poesi Homeri , 86 (Bernardakis, vol. vii. p. 375). acquiring, as it were, a second courage in her fear for her young. And partridges, cf. Moralia , 971 c-d; Aelian, op. cit. , iii. 16; Aristotle, Historia Animalium , ix. 8 (613 b 17); scholia on Aristophanes, Birds , 768. when, accompanied by their young, they are being pursued, allow the fledglings to fly ahead and attempt to escape, and contrive to fix the hunter’s attention on themselves by wheeling close and, when they are almost captured, fly off and away, then again remain at rest and place themselves within the reach of the hunter’s hope, until, by so exposing themselves to danger for their nestlings’ safety, they have led on the hunters to a considerable distance. And we have before our eyes every day the manner in which hens cf. Aristotle, op. cit. , ix. 8 (613 b 15); Anthologia Palatina , ix. 95. care for their brood, drooping their wings for some to creep under, and receiving with joyous and affectionate clucks others that mount upon their backs or run up to them from every direction; and though they flee from dogs and snakes if they are frightened only for themselves, if their fright is for their children, they stand their ground and fight it out beyond their strength. Are we, then, to believe that Nature has implanted these emotions in these creatures because she is solicitous for the offspring of hens and dogs and bears, and not, rather, because she is striving to make us ashamed and to wound us, when we reflect that these instances are examples to those of us who would follow the lead of Nature, but to those who are callous, as rebukes for their insensibility, by citing which they i.e. the philosophers whose views Plutarch is criticizing. disparage human nature as being the only kind that has no disinterested affection and that does not know how to love without prospect of gain? In our theatres, indeed, people applaud the verse of the poet who said, Kock, Com. Att. Frag. , iii. p. 450, ades. 218. What man will love his fellow-man for pay? And yet, according to Epicurus, Usener, Epicurea , p. 320, Frag. 527. it is for pay that a father loves his son, a mother her child, children their parents; but if beasts could come to understand speech and someone should bring together to a common theatre horses and cows and dogs and birds and should revise this speech and say, Dogs do not love their pups, nor horses their colts, nor birds their nestlings, for pay, but gratuitously and naturally, it would be recognized by the emotions of them all that this was well and truly spoken. For it is shameful - great Heaven! - that the begetting and the pains of travail and the nurture of beas ts should be Nature and a free gift, but that those of men should be loans and wages and caution-money, all given on condition of a return! cf. 496 c, infra .