About twenty-five centuries ago, a
voyager called Hanno is said to have sailed from Carthage, between the Pillars of Hercules—that is,
through the Straits of Gibraltar—along the shores of Africa. “Passing the Streams of Fire,” says the
narrator, “we came to a
bay called the Horn of the South. In the
recess there was an
island, like the first, having a lake, and in this there was another
island full of wild men. But much the greater part of them were women, with hairy bodies, whom the interpreters called ‘Gorillas.’ Pursuing them, we were not
able to take the men; they all escaped, being
able to climb the precipices, and defended themselves with pieces of rock. But three women, who bit and scratched those who led them, were not willing to follow. However, having killed them, we flayed them, and conveyed the skins to Carthage; for we did not
sail any further, as provisions began to fail.”
In the
opinion of many naturalists, the wild men of this story were the
anthropoid or manlike apes which are now called gorillas, rediscovered recently by Du Chaillu. The
region inhabited by the gorillas is a well-wooded country, “extending about a thousand miles from the Gulf of Guinea southward,” says Gosse; “and as the
gorilla is not found beyond these limits, so we may pretty conclusively
infer that the
extreme point of Hanno was somewhere in this
region.” I must
confess these inferences seem to me somewhat open to question, and the
account of Hanno’s
voyage only interesting in its
relation to the
gorilla, as having suggested the name now given to this race of apes. It is not
probable that Hanno sailed much further than Sierra Leone;
according to Rennell, the
island where the “wild men” were seen, was the small
island lying close to Sherbro, some seventy miles south of Sierra Leone. To have reached the
gorilla district after doubling Cape Verd—which is itself a point considerably south of the most southerly city founded by Hanno—he would have had to
voyage a
distance exceeding that of Cape Verd from Carthage. Nothing in the
account suggests that the
portion of the
voyage after the colonizing was completed, had so great a
range. The
behavior of the “wild men,” again, does not
correspond with the known habits of the
gorilla. The idea suggested is that of a
species of
anthropoid ape far
inferior to the
gorilla in
strength,
courage, and
ferocity.
The next accounts which have been regarded as relating to the
gorilla are those given by Portuguese voyagers. These narratives have been received with
considerable doubt because in some parts they seem manifestly
fabulous. Thus the pictures representing apes show also huge flying dragons with a crocodile’s head; and we have no
reason for believing that bat like creatures like the pterodactyls of the greensand existed in Africa or elsewhere so late as the time of the Portuguese voyages of
discovery. Purchas, in his history of Andrew Battell, speaks of “a kind of great apes, if they
might so bee termed, of the
height of a man, but twice as big in
feature of their limmes, with
strength proportionable, hairie all over, otherwise altogether like men and women in their whole bodily
shape, except that their legs had no calves.” This
description accords well with the peculiarities of gorillas, and may be regarded as the first
genuine account of these animals. Battell’s contemporaries called the apes so described Pongoes. It is
probable that in selecting the name Pongo for the young
gorilla lately at the Westminster Aquarium, the proprietors of this interesting
creature showed a more
accurate judgment of the
meaning of Purchas’s
narrative than Du Chaillu showed of Hanno’s
account, in calling the great
anthropoid ape of the Gulf of Guinea a
gorilla.
I
propose here briefly to
sketch the peculiarities of the four apes which
approach nearest in form to man—the
gorilla, the chimpanzee, the orang-outang, and the gibbon; and then, though not dealing generally with the question of our
relationship to these non-speaking (and, in some respects, perhaps, “unspeakable”) animals, to touch on some points connected with this question, and to point out some errors which are very commonly entertained on the
subject.
It may be well, in the first place, to point out that the terms “
ape,” “baboon,” and “monkey” are no longer used as they were by the older naturalists. Formerly the
term “
ape” was limited to tailless simians having no cheek-pouches, and the same number of teeth as man; the
term “baboon” to short-tailed simians with dog-shaped heads; and the
term “monkey,” unless used generically, to the long-tailed
species. This was the
usage suggested by Ray, and adopted
systematically thirty or forty years ago. But it is no longer followed, though no
uniform classification has been substituted for the old
arrangement. Thus Mivart divides the apes into two classes—calling the first the Simiadæ, or Old World apes; and the second the Cebidæ, or New World apes. He subdivides the Simiadæinto (1) the Siminæ, including the
gorilla, chimpanzee, orang, and gibbon; (2) the Semnopithecinæ; and (3) the Cynopithecinæ; neither of which subdivisions will
occupy much of our
attention here, save as respects the third subdivision of the Cynopithecinæ, viz., the Cynocephali, which includes the baboons. The other great
division, the Cebidæ, or New World apes, are for the most part very unlike the Old World apes. None of them
approach the
gorilla or orang-outang in size; most of them are long-tailed; and the number and
arrangement of the teeth is
different. The
feature, however, which most naturalists have selected as the
characteristic distinction between the apes of the Old World and of the New World is the position of the nostrils. The
former are called Catarhine, a word signifying that the nostrils are directed downwards; the
latter are called Platyrhine, or
broad-nosed. The nostrils of all the Old World apes are separated by a
narrow cartilaginous
plate or septum, whereas the septum of the New World apes is
broad. After the apes come,
according to Mivart’s
classification, the half-apes or lemuroids.
I ought, perhaps, to have mentioned that Mivart, in describing the lemuroids as the second sub-order of a great order of animals, the Primates, speaks of a man as (zoologically speaking) belonging to the first sub-order. So that, in point of
fact, the two sub-orders are the Anthropoids, including the Anthropos (man), and the Lemuroids, including the lemur.
The gibbon may be dismissed at once, though, as will
presently appear, there are some features in which this
ape resembles man more closely than either the
gorilla, the orang-outang, or the chimpanzee.
The
gorilla must, I fear, be summarily ejected from the position of honour to which he has been raised by many naturalists. Though the
gorilla is a much larger animal than the chimpanzee, his
brain barely equals the chimpanzee’s in
mass. It is also less fully developed in front. In
fact, Gratiolet asserts that of all the
broad-chested apes, the
gorilla is—so far as
brain character is concerned—the lowest and most degraded. He regards the
gorilla’s
brain as only a more advanced form of that of the
brutal baboons, while the orange’s
brain is the culminating form of the gibbon type, and the chimpanzee’s the culminating form of the macaque type. This does not
dispose of the
difficulty very satisfactorily, however, because it remains to be shown whether the gibbon type and the macaque type are
superior as types to the baboon types. But it may
suffice to that the baboons are all
brutal and
ferocious, whereas the gibbons are comparatively
gentle animals, and the macaques
docile and even
playful. It may be questioned whether
brutality and
ferocity should be regarded as
necessarily removing the
gorilla further from man; because it is
certain that the races of man which
approach nearest to the
anthropoid apes, with which races the
comparison should assuredly be made, are characterized by these very qualities,
brutality and
ferocity. Intelligence must be otherwise gauged. Probably the
average proportion of the
brain’s
weight to that of the
entire body, and the
complexity of the
structure of the
brain, would
afford the best means of deciding the question. But,
unfortunately, we have very unsatisfactory
evidence on these points. The naturalists, who have based opinions on such
evidence as has been obtained, seem to
overlook the
poverty of the
evidence. Knowing as we do how greatly the
human brain varies in size and
complexity, not only in
different races but in
different individuals of the same race, it appears unsatisfactory in the
extreme to regard the
average of the brains of each
simian species hitherto examined as presenting the true
average cerebral capacity for each
species.