INTELLIGENCE OF CEBITS. 491 



able thing was that, however often he was disappointed in the 

 beginning, he never was induced to try turning the handle the 

 wrong way ; he always screwed it from right to left. As soon 

 as he had accomplished his wish, he unscrewed it again, and 

 then screwed it in again the second time rather more easily than 

 the first, and so on many times. When he had become by 

 practice tolerably perfect in screwing and unscrewing, he gave 

 it up and took to some other amusement. One remarkable 

 thing is that he should take so much trouble to do that which 

 is no material benefit to him. The desire to accomplish a 

 chosen task seems a sufficient inducement to lead him to take 

 any amount of trouble. This seems a very human feeling, 

 such as is not shown, I believe, by any other animal. It is not 

 the desire of praise, as he never notices people looking on ; it is 

 simply the desire to achieve an object for the sake of achieving 

 an object, and he never rests not 1 allows his attention to be dis- 

 tracted until it is done. 



16th. When he is angry, and has at hand only those things 

 which he wishes to keep, he makes a great show of throwing the.H 

 at people, but always retains a hold. Thus if he has had a play- 

 thing a long time and is tired of it, he throws it right at a 

 person without the least hesitation ; but if he has a new thing 

 which he values, he goes through all the appropriate motions for 

 throwing, but only brings the object down with a noise upon 

 the ground, taking care not to let -go his hold. He beats people 

 with a long cane he has, and when he cannot reach people he 

 strikes it with all his strength upon the ground to show what he 

 would do if he had the chance. There is no more comical sight 

 than to see him hurriedly climbing his screen in fiirce anger, 

 taking (not without great difficulty) his long and awkward 

 stick up with him in order to be high enough to give a good 

 blow to a person. The dog is quite afraid of the stick in the 

 monkey's hands, although he is too petted to be afraid of it in a 

 person's. The monkey is jealous of the dog lying in the arm- 

 chair in which he sometimes seats himself with my mother, so he 

 pokes the stick at the dog (as the chair is beyond the reach ot 

 his chain) and makes him get off. 



18th. He was very angry to-day at a servant girl sweeping 

 out his place with a long brush, and he seized the brush every 

 time the servant attempted to sweep. My mother then took 

 it, and he at once became not only quite good-tempered, but 

 assisted her in sweeping, by gathering the rubbish in the cor- 

 ners of his place into little heaps with his hands, and putting 

 the heaps into the way of the brush. 



20th. To-dav he broke his chain, and flew at a servant 



