238 THE STRUGGLE FOR THE LIFE OF OTHERS. 



Co-operation everywhere once more confronts us. It 

 is singular that, with few exceptions, science should 

 still know so little of the daily life of even the com- 

 mon animals. A few favorite mammals, some birds, 

 three or four of the more picturesque and clever of the 

 insects these almost exhaust the list of those whose 

 ways are thoroughly known. But, looking broadly at 

 Nature, one general fact is striking the more social 

 animals are in overwhelming preponderance over the 

 unsocial. Mr. Darwin s dictum, that &quot; those commu 

 nities which included the greatest number of the most 

 sympathetic members would nourish best,&quot; is wholly 

 proved. Run over the names of the commoner or 

 more dominant mammals, and it will be found that 

 they are those which have at least a measure of socia 

 bility. The cat-tribe excepted, nearly all live together 

 in herds or troops the elephant, for instance, the 

 buffalo, deer, antelope, wild-goat, sheep, wolf, jackal, 

 reindeer, hippopotamus, zebra, hyena, and seal. 

 These are mammals, observe an association of socia 

 bility in its highest developments with reproductive 

 specialization. Cases undoubtedly exist where the 

 sociability may not be referable primarily to this func 

 tion ; but in most the chief Co-operations are centred 

 in Love, So advantageous are all forms of mutual 

 service that the question may be fairly asked whether 

 after all Co-operation and Sympathy at first instinc 

 tive, afterwards reasoned are not the greatest fact* 

 even in organic Nature ? To quote the words ot 

 Prince Kropotkin : &quot;As soon as we study animals 

 not in laboratories and museums only, but in the for 

 est and the prairie, in the steppes and the mountains 

 we at once perceive that though there is an im- 



