I REESE LIBRARY or THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA. Received.- BIOL09Y Accessions lVo....%... Shelf No Rhesu.s,M(>iikev. DUN, CHATTO & WINDUS PICCADILLY ((UJV-.n' •••••' ^ VcJ, ry RNIA. THE NATURALIST'S LIBRARY. EDITED BY SIR WILLIAM JARDINE, BART. F.R.S.E., F.L.S., ETC. ETC. VOL. XXVII. MONKEYS. B YJtS-fi— EJI T O R. CHATTO & WINDUS, PICCADILLY. BIOLOGY LIBRARY CONTENTS. PAGE MEMOIR OF BUFFON . » . .17 ELOGE ON BUFFON ... 37 Natural History of Mfcnkeys . . .67 Monkeys of Asia and Africa, or those of the Old World .... 98 The Black Orang. ^ Troglodites niger. Plate I. 99 The Red or Asiatic Orang-Outang. Pithecus satyrus. Plate II. (Side View) . 109 Plate II * (Front View) . 109 The Hoolock. Hylobates hoolock. Plate III. . . 137 The Siamang. Hylobates syndactyla. Plate IV. . , . 145 The Active Gibbon. Hylobates ayilis. Plate V. . . 151 The Capped Monkey . . . .153 The Guenons . . s • 155 The Kahau or Proboscis Monkey. Nasalis larvatus. Plate VI. . . .157 CONTENTS. PAGE The Done or Cochin-China Monkey. Lasiopyga nemea. Plate VII. . 160 The Semnopitheci ... 161 The Sitnpai. Semnopithecus melalophos. Plate VIII. . c 163 The Entellus Monkey. SemnopitJiecus entellus. Plate IX. . .164 The Negro Monkey ... 166 Cercopithecus and Cercocebus . . .172 The Varied Monkey. Cercopithecus mona. Plate X. . 173 The Diana Monkey . . . .175 The Red Monkey. Cercopithecus ruber. Plate XI. . . 177 The Mangabey or White Eyelid Monkey. Cercocebus fuliginosus. Plate XII. . . 178 The Green Monkey. Cercocebus sabceus. Plate XIII. . 182 TheMalbrouk . . . .184 The Baboons .... 186 Dog-faced Baboons . . . .187 The Wanderoo Monkey. Macacus silenus. Plate~XIV. . . 189 The Pig-tailed Baboon. Macacus rhcesus. Vignette . . . 190 The Barbary Ape. Inuus sylvanus. Plate XV. . . 191 The Black Ape . .192 The Cynocephali .... 194 The Chacma. Papio comatus. Plate XVI. . . 197 CONTENTS. i-Atfi The Mandril or Rib-nose Baboon. Papio mormon. Plate XVII. . 200 The Drill. Papio leucophceus. Plate XVIII. . . 203 3 The Monkeys of South America, or those of the New World . . . . a«4 The Howlers . . . . . 2d5 The Araguato. Mycetits ursinus. Plate XIX. . . 208 The Sapajous . . . . .211 The Coaita. Ateles paniscus. Plate XX. . . 212 The Marimonda . . . .213 Humboldt's Lagothrix . . . 215 The Horned Sapajou. Cebus fatuellus. Plate XXI. . .217 The Large-headed Sapajou. Cebus monachus. Plate XXII. . 220 The Siamiri. . Callithrix stiurem. Plate XXIII. . . 222 The Douroucouli. Aotes trivirgatus. Plate XXIV. . 225 The Couxio. Pithecia satanas. Plate XXV. . . 230 The Cacajao. Pithecia melanocephala. Plate XXVI. . iS3 The Striated Monkey. Hapalus jacchus. Plate XXVII. . , .£6 The Silky Tamarin. Midas rosaiia. Plate XXVIII. 239 CONTENTS. PAGf The Leonine Tamarin. Midas leonina. Plate XXIX. . . 241 SYNOPSIS. .... 245 ORDER I. QUADRUMANA . . .245 Synopsis of the Simiadse. Two Sub-families 245 I. SUB-FAMILY CATARRHINI. Orangs. Genus I. Troglodites ... 246 Genus II. Pithecus . . .246 Genus III. Hylobates. Seven Varieties . 247 Guenons. Genus IV. Presbytis . . .248 Genus V. Colubus. Three Varieties . 248 Genus VI. Nasalis. Two Varieties . 249 Genus VII. Lasiopyga . . 249 Genus VIII. Semnopithecus. Six Varieties . 250 Genus IX. Cercopithecus. Twelve Varieties 251 Genus XII. Cercocebus. Six Varieties . 253 Genus XIII. Macacus. Seven Varieties . . 254 Genus XIV. Inuus ^ . .256 Baboons. Genus XV. Cynoccphalus. Four Varieties . 256 Genus XVI. Papio. Two Varieties . . 257 JJ, SUB-FAMILY PLATYRRHINI. Howlers. Genus XVII. Alycetes. Seven Varieties , 258 Sapajous. Genus XVIII. Ateks. Seven Varieties , 260 CONTENTS. PAOE Genus XIX. Lagothrix. Two Varieties . 261 Genus XX. Cebus. Sixteen Varieties . 261 Genus XXL Callithnx. Eight Varieties . 265 Genus XXII. Aotes . . .267 Genus XXIII. Pithecia. Nine Varieties . 267 Genus XXIV. Hapales. Eight Varieties 269 Genus XXV. Midas. Seven Varieties . 270 APPENDIX. The Entellus Monkey . . 275 The Varied Monkey . . . 276 The Mangabey or White Eyelid Monkey . 278 The Green Monkey . . 280 The Wanderoo Monkey . . . 281 The Coaita . . . .283 The Large-headed Sapajou . « . 285 The Siamiri . . . .286 The Striated Monkey . . .288 MEMOIR OF BUFFON. MEMOIR OF BUFFON. IT is a remarkable circumstance, that among the many naturalists whose names at this period are re- membered from the high reputation of their works, comparatively few, had their minds early directed by tueir parents or guardians to the study of this science, and by many, it was not commenced before a somevhat advanced age. The illustrious naturalist whom we have chosen for the subject of the present memoir, is an instance among many others ; and although he wag fortunate in procuring an education of the most liberal kind, which embraced in its range polite literature and the sciences, and was extended by means of foreign travel and the companionship of polished minds, he had passed his thirtieth year before designing the plan of his extensive works on nature, and the first branches of the animal kingdom. George Louis le Clerc Buffon was born at Mont- bard* in Burgundy, in September 1707, and his father, * Buffon's house seemed the large hahitation of a tradesman rather than the residence of a man of rank. It is in the Higb 18 MEMOIB OF BFFFOK. Bonjamin le Clerc Buffon, being a counsellor of Parlia- ment in the district, naturally wished that his son should study his own profession, and if possible assist and succeed him in the discharge of its duties. There are few existing records of the early life of Buffon ; and except that he pursued the studies which he undertook with great ardour and perseverance, we know little of his youthful habits and propensities. His first public tuition was at the Jesuit's College of Dijon, where he was placed to study the profession of the law ; but his dislike for this employment, and the zeal with which he followed the more abstruse sciences, prevented his father from insisting upon a continua- tion of his legal studies, and gradually permitted him to pursue those of his own selecting. Astronomy and mathematics seem to have been the branches which chiefly interested him ; and he perused, with per- severance, the most esteemed works on these subjects. Euclid was a great favourite ; and he is said to have been so much engrossed with this author, that he Street, and the court is behind. You ascend a staircase to go into the garden, \vhich is raised on the ruins of the ancient man- sion, of which the walls make the ten-aces. On the top there still remains an octagon tower, where Buffon made his observations on the reverberations of air. The elevation of this tower is 140 feet above the level of the little river Braine, which crosses the town. This singular and picturesque garden is well worthy the notice of the curious ; and the numerous foreign trees which the illustrious pro- prietor had collected, form agreeable arbours, — MILLIN'S Travel** MEMOIR oi1 BtrrFOff. 19 always carried a copy in his pocket, and was often observed to retire from his companions at play, and to attempt, in some solitary corner, the resolution of any problem with which he had been perplexed. This constant study and perseverance, at a period 80 early, and when youthful minds are generally most idly inclined, was attended with very brilliant results. He is even said to have anticipated Newton in some of his most remarkable discoveries, and in after life withheld the circumstances, upon a principle of some singularity, and at variance with his failing of vanity : he said, " that nobody was obliged to believe it." At the college of Dijon he became acquainted with Lord Kingston, a young nobleman who was tra- velling, accompanied by a tutor. Buffon fortunately became acquainted with both ; and the latter, being a man of considerable attainments, and devoted to the sciences, found a ready access to the mind of a youth endowed with such temper and abilities. It was agreed that he should accompany them in the prose- cution of their travels, and he became equally accept- able to his friends, and pleased with their society; afterwards remarking, that while the one became his companion in pleasure and amusements, the other gained his esteem by his more solid qualifications. They travelled onwards to Italy ; and here, amidst all that is placid and sublime in nature, or lovely in the arts, he continued to pursue the more abstracted departments of science, almost neglecting the artificial 20 MEMOIE OF BTJFFOff. productions ; and at this same period seems to have imbibed many of the theories and ideas, which fanci- fully, but eloquently, adorn the chapters of the first volumes of his great work. During the period of these travels Buffon lost his mother ;* and by her death, before he had attained his majority, succeeded to an income of nearly twelve thousand pounds yearly. An accession of such amount to his fortune, enabled him to follow out every design which his studies had suggested ; but it also allowed him to pursue, with almost unlimited control, every indulgence which his inclinations prompted. His European travels still appear to have been continued, and after his return to Montbard, being embroiled in some affair of honour which required his absence until matters were arranged, he visited Paris and Eng- land, and did not finally settle at his paternal resi- dence, till about the age of twenty-five, when he de- termined quietly to pursue the studies in which he had so much delighted. He seems to have laid down for himself, even at this early period, a decided and rigor- ous division of his time, and to have attended generally to the Sciences, Natural History, and Polite Literature. The division of his time and labour is thus detailed by a modern biographer : " After he was dressed, he dictated letters, and regulated his domestic affairs ; • The maiden name of his mother was Mademoiselle de Merliu. MEMOIR OF BUFFOS 21 and at six o'clock he regulated his studies at the pavi- lion called the Tower of St Louis. This pavilion was situated at the extremity of the garden, about a fur- long from the house ; and the only furniture which it contained was a large wooden secretary and an arm- chair. No books or pictures relieved the naked ap- pearance of the apartment, or distracted the thoughts of the learned possessor. The entrance was by green folding-doors, the walls were painted green, and the interior had the appearance of a chapel, on account of the elevation of the roof. Within this was another cabinet, where Buffon resided the greater part of the year, on account of the coldness of the other apart- ment, and where he composed the greater number of his works. It was a small square building, situated 'on the side of a terrace, and was ornamented with drawings of birds and beasts. Prince Henry of Prussia called it the cradle of natural history ; and Rousseau, before he entered it, used to fall on his knees and kiss the threshold. At nine o'clock, Buffon usually took an hour's rest ; and his breakfast, which consisted of a piece of bread and two glasses of wine, was brought to the pavilion. When he had written two hours after breakfast, he returned to the house. At dinner he spent a considerable portion of time, and indulged in all the gayeties and trifles which occurred at table. After dinner, he slept an hour in his room, took a solitary walk, and during the rest of the evening, he either conversed with his family or guests, or sat at 22 MEMOIB OP BTJFIW. his desk examining the papers which were submitted to his judgment. At nine o'clock he went to bed, to prepare himself for the same routine of judgment and pleasure. In this manner were spent no fewer than fifty years of his life." During the whole period of Buffon's career, we find him particular and anxious, regarding the purity and elegance of his style ; and he translated many standard works in various languages with the view of improving it. The first of these which he published, was "Hales's Vegetable Statics," and (from the Latin) an edition of Newton's Fluxions ; both were accompanied with appropriate prefaces of considerable length and ability. The latter work coincided with the turn of mind which he exhibited in his early studies, and the first was most likely commenced, with the double purpose of improving his knowledge in the English language, and of increasing his acquaintance with the extensive woods which occupied a great part of his property, and were of much importance in his annual revenue. At this time he also instituted and carried through experi- ments, to prove the relative strength of the different woods which were used in France for purposes of public utility, and the best season for cutting the timber. The next subject with which he became interested, was the manner in which the Roman fleet under com- mand of Marcellus, was set on fire by Archimedes and which was supposed, could not be accomplished MEMOIE OF BUFFOff. 23 by means of burning mirrors, as has been recorded.* Buffon commenced his researches with his usual ardour and perseverance, and his experiments were eminently successful. They are the most import- ant which he performed, in those branches uncon- nected with natural histoiy , and it is probable that, had he not been appointed Intendant of the Royal Garden and Cabinet, the various branches of mathematics, optics, &c., would have received the greatest part of his attention, and might have been attended with the most splendid results. We consider therefore that a short sketch of the progress of these experiments may be interesting. Buffon commenced his researches, with the view of constructing a burning mirror, which would be cap- able of performing, what had been thought Archimedes could not have executed j but, before commencing the plan, it was necessary to perform many preliminary experiments, relating to the loss of light by reflection, and the best materials which could be used for the con- * When the fleet of Marcellus was within bow-shot, the old man (Archimedes) brought out a hexagonal mirror which he had made : he placed at proper distances from this mirror other smaller mirrors, which were of the same kind, and which were moved by means of their hinges, and certain square plates of metal. He Afterwards placed his mirrors in the midst of the solar rays, pre- cisely at noonday. The rays of the sun being reflected by this mirror, he kindled a dreadful fire in the ships, which were reduced to ashes, at a distance equal to that of a bow-shot — Tzetzet, Chiliad, II. 119. 24 MEMOIE OF BUFFON. etruction of the lenses. These accomplished, he com- menced'to build his great mirror. It was composed of 168 pieces.of plain silvered glass, six inches by eight in size, and he requited to examine above 500 pieces before the most perfect could be obtained. Between each was an interval of four lines, to allow a free motion, and to permit the observer to see the place, to which the images were to be thrown. The whole were mounted in an iron frame, so fitted with screws and springs, that a motion could be given to them in any direction, and the images reflected from all the mirrors easily thrown upon the same spot. In eight experiments, he obtain- ed the following results, which clearly show the possibility of setting fire to the Roman fleet : — On March 23d, a plank of tarred beech was set on fire at sixty-six feet, with only forty mirrors, and without the mirror being put upon its stand. On the same day, a plank tarred and sulphured, and having the mirror more disadvantageously placed, was fired, at the distance of 126 feet, with 98 mirrors. On the 3d of April, at four o'clock in the evening, a slight in- flammation was made upon a plank covered with wool cut into small pieces, distant 138 feet, with 112 mirrors. The next day, at eleven o'clock forenoon, 154 mirrors, at the distance of 150 feet, made a tarred plank smoke to such a degree in two minutes, that it would have been inflamed had not the sun disappeared. On the 5th April, a dull day, at three o'clock afternoon, 154 MEMOIR OF BUFFON. 25 mirrors, at a distance of 250 feet, inflamed in two mi- nutes and a half, minute chips of deal, sulphured and mixed with charcoal. When the sun was vivid, the in- flammation took place in a few seconds. On the 1 Oth April, after mid-day, with a clear sun, 128 mirrors, at the distance of 150 feet, set fire to a tarred plank of fir ; the inflammation being very sudden. Same day, at half-past two, 148 mirrors, at 150 feet, fired a plank of beech sulphured in some parts, and in others cover- ed with wool cut into small pieces ; the inflammation was so sudden and violent that it was necessary to plunge the plank into water in order to extinguish it. April 11, twelve mirrors, at twenty feet, inflamed small combustible matters ; forty- five, at twenty feet, melted a large pewter flask that weighed six pounds ; and 117 made some thin pieces of silver and iron red- hot. Having satisfied himself upon this point, he fol- lowed out the subject, and constructed mirrors upon various plans. Perhaps the most remarkable were those formed by bending glass upon moulds of a sphe- rical form by means of a furrow ; he was thus able to make them of very considerable size, but they re- quired great caution in the cooling and grinding after- wards ; and, out of twenty-four which he made, only three were able to be preserved. One of these, forty- six inches in diameter, was presented to the King of France, and was regarded as the most powerful burn- ing mirror in Europe. A few years before the commencement of these ex- 26 MEMOIR OF BUFFON. periments, Buffon succeeded to M. Du Fay in the office of Intendant to the Royal Garden and Cabinet, and, as before hinted, this appointment ultimately fixed his mind to the pursuits of natural history. He was only thirty-two years of age; and when he saw such a mass of materials at his command, a great part of which was unnoticed by any naturalist, we may easily conceive that a mind possessed of such enthusiasm, would be led again to a science which it had previously studied ; and he entered eagerly into its details, calling to his assistance, in some departments where he was deficient, the talents of men who were capable and worthy of the association. The great work now contemplated, was intended to embrace every branch of the animal kingdom ; but he thought that it Would be incomplete, unless the composition of the globe which sustained such a multitude of living creatures, should itself be first elucidated, and it was accordingly commenced by a history or theory of the earth, which he afterwards augmented -by what he termed the " Epochas of Nature." The first volume of the Natural History of Quadrupeds did not appear till 174-9, ten years after his appointment as Intendant of the Gardens; and the first edition of the whole work was not completed till 176*7, occupying its author during a period of sixteen years. Year after year he also wished to render it more complete; he endeavoured to keep pace with the science and its discoveries, and we find an additional supplementary volume published MEMOIR OF BUFFOS. 27 in 1782, only six years before his death, and when he began to feel very severely the tortures of a pain- ful malady. During the progress of the work,, he appears also to have kept up that unremitting perseve- rance which characterises the pursuits of his earlier yeafsTand he is said to have employed fourteen hours daily in writing and study, until compelled by pain to limit his exertions. Previous to the publication of the first volume of his Natural History, Buffon was enabled to increase his domestic felicity, by a marriage with a lady with whom he had been for some time acquainted. In 1752, he married Mademoiselle Saint Belin, who, though without fortune, possessed qualifications which render- ed the happiness of her husband undoubted. She eagerly followed the train of honours which was now brightly expanding upon him, and watched every step which he gained with fresh anxiety; many years seem thus to have been passed in great tran- quillity, and present an unvaried routine of research and addition to the works which were advancing. During the height of this bright career, he was honour- ed with marks of approbation by many of the sove- reigns of Europe, and by the learned societies of his country. In 1771, Louis XIV. conferred upon him the distinction of erecting his estate into a Compte ; and, inviting him to Fontainbleau, wished him to accept the office of Administrator of the Forests in his dominions, which Buifon however refused. 23 MEMOIE OF BUFFON. During his whole life he enjoyed a singular portion of good health, notwithstanding the irregularities which all his biographers allow that he frequently indulged in. He was afflicted late in life with the stone, which, about his seventy-second or seventy- third year, became extremely annoying and painful. He would not submit to an operation, and certainly accelerated his death by his obstinacy, as his medical attendants, on an after examination, affirmed, that he would have been safely relieved by an easy operation. Under all the sufferings of this painful disease, he is said to have assiduously continued his studies ; and it may be remarked, as confirming this assertion, that with all men who have studied long and perseve- ringly, the act becomes confirmed to a habit, and instead of being irksome, in their greater pains and imbecilities, becomes an amusement to the mind, and a solace to their bodily frailties. We are accustomed too often to couple study with what is disagreeable. Buffon continued for nearly eight years in severe affliction : he retained his reason till within a few hours of his death, but sunk under excruciating tor- ture, on the l6th April 1788, in the eighty-first year of his age. Upon dissection, fifty stones were found in his bladder. His body was embalmed and con- veyed to Montbard, to be placed, according to his direc- tions, in the same vault with that of his wife. Every earthly honour was paid to his memory: a concourse of academicians, and of persons of rank and distinction, at- MEMOIE OF BUFFON. 29 tended the funeral: above 20,000 people were assembled to see it pass: a monument was erected to his memory ; and though there is much to blame in the private character of Buffon, his name as a naturalist will long continue to be remembered. ~1Buffon left one son who inherited considerable abi- lities, and appears to have been fondly attached to his parent. He entered the army, and rose to the rank of major in the regiment of Angoumois. He was des- tined, however, to live in a more unsettled period, and during the Revolution was condemned to death, and perished on the scaffold. The abilities of the father were no safeguard for the son ; nor was the utility of his own works, or his kindness during life to his retainers, a greater protection afterwards to his own remains, against the ruthless hands of popular fury. The hatred to the noblesse and aristocracy of France was borne by so violent a tide, that the remains of this illustrious naturalist were torn up and left un- buried, the leaden coffin carried off, his monument razed to the ground, and this, by part of the same 20,000 spectators who had formerly attended the mournful procession to the grave !* * A citizen who loved the sciences, and who, indignant at the profanation of genius, went to Paris to complain of it, and proposed to the Committee of Public Instruction to place Buffon in the Pantheon. This attempt, however, was unavailing, and the Com- mittee were unanimously of opinion, that the place would be profaned by the presence of a man who was connected, Jil\e 30 ME3IOIB, OF BUFFOtf. The personal appearance of Buffon is said to have been commanding, while his countenance was intelli- gent. The engravings which we have seen, represent his forehead high and ample, but we should scarcely say that his countenance was very prepossessing. His gait was erect, but perhaps leaned a little more to the strut of foppery, than to a mem of dignity. In his dis- position he seems to have been zealous and perseve- ring, and to have followed out all his undertakings with great ardour. The study of a subject, so as to acquire its mastery, must however have cost him considerable labour -, and he was always inclined to be led away by beauties or defects, which a lively power of imagination presented. This we can every where trace in his writings ; by the best judges they have been pronounced elegant, but more attention is always given to the style and detail as it were, of the story, than to that rigid adherence to truth which is so essentially required by the naturalist. This may be preserved without dry ajid weary detail, and at the same time without wandering theoretically from the subject. Nature presents innumerable instances, where there is no need of any embellishment, beyond the garb in which she has already dressed them, and where the gaudy trickery of language is unnecessary, to give addi- tional lustre to her beautiful but chaste productions. Notwithstanding the high reputation of his works. Buffon, with the aristocracy of the country. — Brewst. Encyclop* Art. Buffon. MEMOIR OF BUFFOff. 31 and the very large proportion of time which was de- voted to study, Buffon appeared to little advantage in company. His conversation did not reach beyond mediocrity, 'and the time at table was spent in light talk, exceeding even the licensed freedoms of the French. The power of communicating information was either wanting, or reserved for his particular friends in private, and he considered that a discussion upon the Sciences should be confined to books alone. These opinions may have influenced his wish for com- parative privacy, and it is certain that he did not mingle with his contemporaries in literary and scientific fame. Vanity has been generally allowed to be the great, est failing in the mind of Buffon, and the pains which he took to work up his writings, and his severe study, have perhaps been too often invidiously re- ferred " to the consideration of what after generations would think regarding him." He delighted in read- ing aloud his own works to his visitors, and chiefly those which he considered his finest pieces. Parts of the Natural History of Man, the description of the Deserts of Arabia in the History of the Camel, that of the Swan, &c.,* were his favourites. It is but justice to say, however, that a more laudable induce- ment to recite them, than the mere love of hearing them praised, has been assigned by some of his biographers. * Buffon read the last article to Prince Henry of Prussia, when he visited him at Montbard ; and, as a mark of his delight, the Prince sent Buffon a service of porcelain, on which swans were represented in every attitude— Brewst. Ettcy clop. Art. Euffcn. C 32 MEMOIE OP BUFFOIT. " They were read with the view of hearing opinions and receiving corrections ;" he willingly received any hint of improprieties of style, and was open to imper- fections when pointed out to him. It is not so cer- tain that an opinion of pieces recited in this way was always given with that candour which would allow correction. He delighted also in what was luxurious or magni- ficent, and was devoted to his dress almost to the ex- treme of foppery. He spent much time at his toilet, and even in his latest years had his hair dressed and powdered twice, or three times daily. Every Sunday he exhibited himself after service to the peasantry of Montbarcl, dressed in a rich lace garment, and attended by his son and principal retainers. In the private character of Buffon, we regret there is not much to praise ; his disposition was kind and bene- •\ lent, and he was generally beloved by his inferiors, followers, and dependents, which were numerous over his extensive property ; he was strictly honourable, and was an affectionate parent. In early youth he had entered into the pleasures and dissipations of life, and licentious habits seem to have been retained to the last. But the great blemish in such a mind was hi? declared infidelity ; it presents one of those exceptions Xiong the persons who have been devoted to the study of Nature ; and it is not easy to imagine a mind ap- parently with such powers, scarcely acknowledging a Creator, and when noticed, only by an arraignment for MEMOIR OP BUFPOK. 33 tvnat appeared wanting or defective in his great works openly, indeed, was the freedom of his religious opi- nions expressed/ that the indignation of the Sorbonne was provoked. He had to enter into an explanation which he in some way rendered satisfactory; and while he afterwards attended to the outward ordinances of religion, he considered them as a system of faith for the multitude, and regarded those most impolitic who openly opposed them. Painful as a detail of such opinions must be, it is the duty of every biographer to mention them ; and our readers may compare the splendid talents and humble piety of the subject of our first memoir, with the highly cultivated mind, the bright abilities of the present, but where they were coupled with the disavowment of the Being from whom all these pre-. cious gifts were derived. The works by which Buffon is now best known, are those upon Natural History. The first of these, " Natural History, General and Particular," was com- pleted in 1767, and amounted to fifteen volumes quarto, thirty-one octavo ; in the anatomical depart- ment he was assisted by M. D'Aubenton, and a sup- plementary volume afterwards appeared. This con- tained only the Natural History of Quadrupeds. On account of his illness, the first volumes of the History of Birds did not appear till 1771 ; in which he was assisted by M. Gueneau de Montbeillard, and in the three last he received help from the Abbe Beron. 34 MEMOIE OP BUITOff. They form nine volumes. He afterwards published a volume containing the'f Natural History of Minerals," and several supplementary additions', and he intended to have added the History of Vegetables. The whole of these have been published in thirty -eight volumes 4to., or sixty-two 12mo. ; of which several translated editions have appeared in this country. His other works, some of which we mentioned before, were the translation of " Hales's Vegetable Statics," "New- ton's Fluxions," a ff Treatise on Accidental Colours," with various papers in the " Memoirs of the Royal Academy of Sciences at Paris, from the year 1737 to 1742." ELOGE O:N BUFFON. ELOGE ON BlIFFON, BY P. L. COUEIEE, (ADDRESSED TO HIS FELLOW CITIZENS). I AM apprehensive lest the name of a soldier, at the head of such a subject as this, should surprise you, and appear out of its proper place ; for, it may not meet your approbation, that at the very time when a new war demands all the energies of the army, of which I form a part, I should apply myself to studies which usually presuppose leisure, and which always require considerable reflection. You may blame me, called as T am to other duties, and ill fitted either to give or to jonceive hopes of success, for engaging in attempts which you encourage in those young literary aspirants whom the public distinguishes among your disciples, and whom they expect to preserve the arts which you have transmitted to them. Perhaps you may even think that a man appointed, by the state, to serve his country, 38 ELOGE ON BUFFOtf. not by the pen "but by the sword, not in its councils but in the field of battle, not by persuasion but by force, has no other employments to attend to than such as secure for our armies a superiority over other nations ; that, in a word, all the knowledge a warrior needs, is how to obey, to fight, and to die. You might, therefore, dissuade me from an art in which, I flatter myself, my earliest attempts would ob- tain from you a favourable consideration. Far from being indifferent to my embarrassment, it a department where you both give instructions as masters, and award prizes as judges, you will scarcely pardon me for having presumed to enter upon it ; and what I believed to be an additional claim to your indulgence, may draw upon me your censure. However severe that may be, I sub- mit to it without murmuring ; but do not condemn me without a hearing, that I may at least endeavour to mitigate a judgment the severity of which I dread. From the period of life when I began to exercise my faculties, I had a desire for instruction, and a passion for study. I may appeal to all the superiors under whom I have served ; to all the soldiers whom I have commanded ; to all those whom I have either followed or accompanied, or guided in the toils of war, to testify to the fact, that these peaceable occupations never for an instant interfered with my obedience, or diverted my attention from the most trifling orders I had occa- sion either to receive or to give. , But without insisting more on my own conduct, you ELOGE OIT BTJFFO^. 89 jurely do not suppose that the arts, literature — in a word, philosophy, run contrary to the obligations which society imposes, or render one of those who cultivate them less fit or1 ready to serve his country, since the knowledge which they teach, above all others, is atten- tion to duties. But you may imagine, that tastes of this kind are fitted only for those whose public and private duties leave them sufficient time to devote to the culti- vation of them. What profession affords more leisure than that of arms ? All others occupy, without inter- mission, those employed in them. The public are en- gaged in disputes with the lawyer every hour of his life. The speculations of commerce leave to the mer- chant neither pleasures free from anxiety, nor peace- able sleep ; and the labourer never interrupts the circle of his toils. The soldier is not always engaged in fighting. His action, being most violent, is most fre- quently suspended. His times of rest, moreover, leave him exempt from the thousand cares which other men never lay aside, and the most laborious of all occupa- tions then becomes the most idle. Is it supposed, that in these intervals of valuable liberty, when the soldier can follow such occupations as suit his fancy, study would prove more dangerous and hurtful to his duties than the pleasures in which he is every where permitted to indulge ? How many could I name, who, unknown to all those whose habits differ so widely from theirs, owe to such an employment of their time and leisure, a aorreotruws in the service, a steadiness in their labours, 40 EIOGE ON BUFFOK. a stability of heart which nature does not give ; confi- dence in their chiefs, the love of their companions, and regard for each other ! Their studies are pursued in silence, and the source of their judicious1 conduct escapes less attentive eyes ; for they love science, not for parade but for usefulness. Satisfied with being learned rather than appearing so, some learn from history how to judge of men and events ; others, in calculation and the abstractions of the higher departments of geometry, rise to the most sublime efforts of the human mind. Others still (for many different routes lead to wisdom) take the works of nature for their study, and conceive a taste, or rather a passion for this pursuit, which never becomes extinct in the heart where it has once been kindled by the eloquence of Buffon. The mention of this name reminds me of all the difficulties of my under- taking. I apprehend, however, that if you consent to throw a glance at these sketches of a hand which cannot be much exercised, you will not think me inex- cusable, for having selected, from among the subjects you proposed to the meeting, that least suited to my powers. And why ? Because I intend to praise only what appears to me most deserving of praise. I shall be silent as to the rest. To speak of my inability would be to suppose, either that you cannot perceive it, or that you do not hold me accountable for it. When the works of Newton appeared, they were re- ceived in Europe with a kind of distrust ; for, whether it was that he disdained to make himself intelligible to ELOQE Off BUFFOK. 41 minds less elevated than his own, or that, forgetting too much his own superiority, he fancied he was suffi- ciently explicit when he understood himself; no one at first comprehended him, and some of his countrymen scarcely guessed at his meaning. But his discoveries were discussed by the learned, and each day they were made clearer, even by the objections of those who com- bated them ; accordingly, they soon produced a great revolution in the sciences, which England and Germany recognised, while France still hesitated to submit to it, and blushed to receive instruction from a rival. The correct sciences do not readily tolerate these discussions. The severity of their methods, and the clearness of the principles on which they are founded, seem to render it necessary that every proposition should be admitted without difficulty, or rejected without hesitation ; but the kind of obscurity which Newton had either thrown over his writings, or at least left upon them, indicating his proofs rapidly, or disdaining to give them at all, dissatisfied those who held to the old laws, and, by authorizing doubts, served at least as a pretext for the contradictions which these new ideas at first encoun- tered. Few people were anxious to understand an author who appeared to have no wish to be understood. This resistance, however, could not be long continued. People soon passed from one extreme to the other. The greater part of those theories which Newton had given without demonstration, having had the requisite evidence supplied by other hands, what was not proved 42 ELOGE ON BUFFON. became probable, ana from that time admiration neld all in subjection ; his name alone was a sufficient de- monstration ; every thing seemed proved by the words, He has said it f It was, if I am not deceived, in these circumstances, when this kind of deviation, which Newton at first in- spired us with was converted into enthusiasm, that Buffon translated the Treatise on Fluxions. And here I cannot avoid making a reflection, which has often occurred to me when reading his other works ; and which, according to the idea I have retained of them, does not at the present time appear to me far from the truth. In these somewhat severe studies, by which, unquestionably, the first fire of ardent genius should have been tamed, may it not have happened that the form in which these new calculations were then pre- sented, offering to his mind ideas of infinity in every order, may have easily seduced his imagination, for which, afterwards, a world scarcely afforded sufficient materials for description *t and which, even although sobered by age, and corrected by observation, too often still overleaped the bounds of truth and even of possi- bility ? If other more solid reasons contributed, as we must suppose, to fix his attention on this branch of mathematics, we may imagine that these deceptive, but, at the same time, new and grand images, flattered his mind and decided his choice; the more especially as another individual, in the same age, was attracting admiration by the brilliancy and graces of his mind, ELOGE ON BTJFF04 V X I V K I 43 seduced* and abused by these illusions, JjaY&g; devoted^ to this matter a lost work, running astray in tesimal metaphysics, without being able to confine him- self to the exactitude of these sciences, or to impart to them the charms of his imagination. But Fontenelle wished to make a book, Buffon merely to make known that of Newton. The kind of reputation for which he seemed destined, not being to enrich the sciences by discoveries, but to render them attractive by his elo- . quence ; I regret that I am unable to speak here, in any detail, respecting the works of his youth, and to show by what labours he amassed the profuse wealth he afterwards showed in his writings. Not that I think his eloge incomplete without these details, which per- haps would have been sufficient of themselves to render any other name famous, but which will scarcely be missed in the life of Buffon. But however useless as regards his reputation, they are by no means so in reference to general instruction ; and if it be only by following the example of celebrated men we can hope to come up to them, or even surpass them (a necessary ambition to enable us to attain to what is great) ; it is not to be doubted, that the only torch which can en- lighten and sustain so noble an emulation, is the atten- tive observation of the progress by which they reached an elevation which separates them from other men. Fortunate are those who can thus follow, and meditate on all the steps of Buffon's progress, and who, finding in his attempts important lessons for themselves, show ELOGE OK BUFFOIT. us how his pen learned the art of painting nature in a style equal to the subject. As for myself, I cannot enter upon these useful researches, because I am sepa- rated from all the monuments of literature, as well as from the small number of individuals, who having lived with these heroes of a past age, yet retain some recol- lection of them. In what I have to say of Buffon, I can only consult my memory, full, as it is, of his great works, but silent as to his life. The extent of his repu- tation is scarcely known to me ; and such, in a word, is the disadvantage of my position, that having to cele- brate a man whose name is already too great for a voice like mine, I am reduced to the necessity of being unable to praise in him any thing but what is expressly above all praise. I must, however, speak to you of his im- mortal work. The further I advance with my subject, the more does my courage fail me ; and notwithstand- ing the law I imposed on myself when commencing A task, the importance of which alarmed me, I cannot avoid to remind you again of my incompetency, and to solicit your indulgence. If I were referring to this magnificent work under the different aspects in which it may be regarded, and holding up to admiration a genius which showed its superiority in every department where it was called upon to excel, in order to succeed in my attempt, this discourse would not only exceed the limits you have prescribed to me, but would form a work of consider- able extent ; for there is no In'n.d of knowledge which ELOGE ON BUTTON. 45 the human mind is capable of cultivating ; no science, art, or even trade or profession, having to do with the wants or conveniences of life, which has not either an intimate connection with, or an obvious relation to the vast science named Natural History ; and the study of vvhich. consequently, more or less attentively, is not in- dispensable to any one who pretends to give a complete eystem. Now, in each of these departments, a detailed examination of one of Buffon's books, would enable us every where to perceive, in its author, the man of genius or the man of taste ; or rather, by this kind of analysis, we would discover many great men in Buffon alone. But even though I were permitted, in a mere essay like this, to make use of such divisions, or others less multi- plied, I should venture to avoid them ; for such exten- sive and varied kinds of knowledge, the union of which in one individual was almost inconceivable, but yet necessary to explain and describe the whole of nature, are every where found in this work so closely connected, that they can scarcely be separated even in thought ; to distinguish them in this manner would prevent us feeling all the admiration which Buffon ought to in- spire, as it is their assemblage that is the most admir- able mark of the sublimity of his genius ; but in other respects his own example teaches us how to regard him. It is from himself that we must learn to measure objects so great as his genius. Let us avoid, then, while praising him, the methods which he himself de- spised. Let us attempt to look on him as he looked o* 46 ELOGE Off BUFFOff. nature, not in the hope of painting it with his own colours ; but as impossible to seize in any other man- ner ; and without wishing to decompose all the rays of his glory ; without separating the writer from the na- turalist, the orator, and, if you please, the poet from the philosophical observer. Let us endeavour to take a glance at his work, which will give an idea, not of each part, but of the whole. Let us examine, in ge- neral, what must have been the object of the author, and how he fulfilled that object ; what he wished to do and what he really did. If his design had been only to give us a book where all the known productions of nature should be deli- neated, the greatness of this undertaking, of itself, would astonish us, and make us admire the boldness of a mind capable of such an idea ; for in each class of the objects which natural history considers, a small number of species has sometimes been sufficient to occupy the whole life of laborious observers. Many observers have acquired a just celebrity, by confining their investigations to a single branch of the sciences which are all here treated of; and rarely is an indivi- dual found, whose mind could embrace all the parts of study to which he devoted himself. It is a boldness, therefore, well worthy of admiration, to regard at once all the beings composing the universe, and to con- ceive the plan, by observing their infinite varieties, of becoming acquainted with and describing them all. Buffon desired to do even more than this. The bodily ELOGE ON BTTFFON. 47 powers of man are estimated by what he performs ; those of the mind by what he undertakes. In order to form an idea of the immensity of the work in which Buffon engaged, it is sufficient to consider, that the first objects to which men would direct attention (as soon as the establishment of societies and laws, securing the means of easy subsistence, permitted them to entertain other ideas than such as related to the wants of life), must necessarily have been the works of nature, with whose magnificence they were surrounded, and which presented themselves to their view on every side. Those who were disposed to contemplation, having readily remarked the principal phenomena of universal har- mony, and the most obvious properties of organised matter ; this first glance, though without reflection, on the picture of nature, immediatedly inspired, by the surprise it excited, curiosity to penetrate deeper, and become acquainted with details ; and hence men began to observe, to travel, and to write ; but travellers and writers could not all be enlightened men. If it some- times happened, that an individual of sense and judg- ment travelled, for the sake of acquiring knowledge, how many others, ill instructed, credulous, superstitious, untruthful, whom accident, necessity, or cupidity, car- ried far from their native country, brought back from unknown regions a thousand fables for one fact, and whose faithless and inaccurate narrations were compiled without the least discernment ! Accordingly, in propor- tion as useful remarks became multiplied, confounded, 48 ELOGE OK BUFFOF. and buried in the mass of compilations and narratives which multiplied still more ; the difficulty of collecting them continually increased along with the distaste which always accompanies work of this kind ; for, as may have been noticed in these writings, whatever may be the style, the curiosity natural to man for all that treats of remote objects, often holds the place of that interest which art alone can impart to other works ; and it was easy, therefore, for people to persuade themselves, that in order to be an observer, naturalist, author, and at the same time secure readers, nothing was henceforth necessary but to run and to write. No one went away, for however short a distance, from his birth-place, without thinking that he was called upon to publish at least letters to a friend ; and, even such as undertook more important tasks, abused the indulgence of the public, anxious as they were for instruction, by de- scribing, in detail, the most trifling events of their pro- gress, life, conversations, and sometimes even their love intrigues. All this increased the labour of the savant ; who, reading not so much for himself as for others, and fearing to overlook some circumstance worthy of being noted, saw himself condemned to follow throughout a narrative encumbered with so much useless matter. The existing knowledge respecting Natural History, when Buffon took up his pen, was scattered in the man- ner described, throughout a multitude of books, or rather, it may be said, in every book, since there is scarcely any one which does not owe some tribute to ELOGE ON BTTFFON. this science, and that of nature became intelligible by means of commentaries. So many ill-digested writings, which men of science themselves perused with difficulty, had not only to be read, but studied, by Buffon ; and he required to mate himself acquainted with all that men had thought up to his time, in order to mark, on the same plan, the whole series of truths and errors. But he was by no means one of those authors, whose merit, confined to giving a faithful account of the ideas or discoveries of their predecessors, obtains rather the gratitude than the admiration of the public. Could a genius such as his undertake the troublesome task of collecting all that others knew, if it had not been for the purpose of adding to it all of which they were ignorant ? It is in this respect, that we may say his ambition was without bounds. He wished to be- come acquainted with all that the earth encloses in its bowels, to search the depths of the sea, to penetrate to places where light never comes ; he wished to describe all that the surface of the earth lays open to the sun ; and, ascending in imagination to the celestial spaces, to obtain a glimpse of the designs of the Supreme In- telligence. But what do I say ? He was not content- ed to unveil to men the secrets of the earth, the beauties of nature, and the order of the universe; he even aspired to the power of teaching us how these wonders were produced ; how they will one day perish ; when they were created, and what will still be their dura- tion ; in a word every thing which the «nmensity of 50 ELOGE ON BUFF05. time and space removes even from our conjectures. His work, finished on the plan in which it was con- ceived, would have been the history of the world and the plan of creation ; and it would not have been his fault, if human curiosity, so vague in its desires, had not been satisfied. " But if this undertaking was, as cannot be doubted, the greatest which even Buffon could conceive ; on the other hand, the means he had to execute it were such that no past time could have been more favourable to success ; and never could one who exerted himself to extend the empire of human knowledge enjoy an op- portunity of using such vast and multiplied resources. The world was then at peace, and this allowed obser- vers, however distantly separated, to carry on their labours conjointly ; or the wars that did arise, of little importance in themselves, and interesting only to kings, did not prevent nations from favouring, by common consent, useful and learned investigations, interesting to the whole human race. The commerce of knowledge was always free ; and protected sometimes by the ene- mies of all commerce and of all relation between states. Did not an instance occur, of cases addressed to Buffon, remaining untouched in a vessel plundered by pirates, and, in the disorder of general pillage, the seal of phi- losophy being held sacred even by those who profess to have a respect for nothing ? Universal oppression left no other mode of employing their understandings free to men, save the study of the arts and sciences; no ELOQE ON BUFFON. 51 other object of curiosity than their productions and their discoveries ; no other hope of distinction, than that which cannot be arrested from talents acquired by long continued labours. But what do I say ? Even tyranny itself, as blind as it is inconstant, thought to conceal from the people its weakness and injustice, by turning their attention to another object, even to that philo- sophy which ought to have overthrown it ; and the sciences derived this advantage from the common servi- tude, that no division among the nations, united under the same chain, brought any opposition to their pro- gress. To these advantages, which Buffon owed to the times in which he wrote, were joined others even more im- portant, which were peculiar to himself; for that happy facility which men of science enjoyed for bringing their observations and discoveries to a common centre, might have been rendered unavailing for the perfection of his work, if the pretensions, jealousy, and hatred, of too frequent occurrence among them, had been opposed to the union of their knowledge and talents. But Buffon knew well how to subdue these passions, so fatal to every kind of success in great undertakings. The ascen- dency of his genius subjected all other minds to his, and brought, so to speak, under his direction, all those who had cultivated any one department of knowledge relating to his subject. His name, alone, was enough to check the factious in literature ; and those who, as philosophers, sometimes refused to acknowledge him as 52 ELOGE ON BUFFOS'. their master, seduced and attracted by his eloquence, soon brought, of their own accord, all that they were able to furnish him. The materials thus coming into him on all sides, he seemed to employ nothing more than his voice in the construction of his edifice. In fact, throughout the whole of Europe, it may even be said throughout the whole world, all philosophers and men of observation, travellers going to a distance to interrogate nature, and observers more limited in their scope ; and also, on their side, all people in office, ministers, and kings themselves; all those, in short, who were in a condition, either by knowledge or power, to second such a work, devoted themselves to Buffon. Some of them lent the assistance of their talents, others of their authority. Hence, without ever leaving his cabinet, he had the means of collecting a greater num- ber of observations, and acquiring a greater amount of knowledge, than the longest journeys would have fur- nished him with. All parts of the globe, accessible to the industry or curiosity of Europeans, became, as it were, present to his eyes. All he wished to know was described or painted by the most skilful hands ; every thing he wished to see was transported across moun- tains and seas. Any fact which might appear new, an interesting remark or discovery, in whatsoever part of the earth accident or research had given rise to it, was instantly treasured up and communicated to Buffon by a multitude of individuals, jealous to deserve what would distinguish them, and whose names a stroke of ON BTJFFON. 53 his pen would preserve from oblivion ; for it was never doubted that every thing he wrote would be immortal ! And is it to be wondered at, that when such finished pictures were seen growing under his hand, it should have been conceived, that they were destined to endure and be admired, as long as men were alive to the charms of eloquence and the beauties of nature ? The most valuable productions of another kind have their course and allotted destiny. Whatever may be the degree of perfection which poetry can attain, its pro- ductions require to be renewed ; that which, in one age, moved rocks, in another is scarcely listened to by men. History becomes old still more rapidly ; every day new facts efface those of the preceding day. In a word, we may expect to see every composition, whose merit or conception belongs to the things which time alters or destroys, become gradually more obscure, and at last fall into oblivion. But, before the writings of Buffon can undergo such a fate, or the value of his pictures be misunderstood, it is necessary that Nature herself should change ; that the lion should lose his fierceness of cha- racter, the dog his intelligence and fidelity, the eagle the empire of the air, the Arab his independence, or that Man should forget Nature ; for, so long as his eyes are directed to it, the grandeur and variety of the spectacle it presents, will never fail to recall the only genius whose view could take in the whole extent of it, and who had the art to describe the details of it.' ' I am not unaware, at the same time, of what has *>» ELOGE ON BUFFON". been said on this subject, and what enlightened men still allege, that there can be nothing truly estimable in a work on the sciences but what is useful to the learned ; that this utility consists in discovering new truth ; or at least in presenting, in a new order, and such as is fitted to facilitate their study, truths already known ; that the didactic style, that is to say, the style peculiar to the sciences, is from its nature the simplest %id humblest of all, never having any other object but to offer a clear sense to the mind, nor any greater merit than not to be remarked ; that, in such cases, all emphasis in expression only annoys a reader who is in search of truth, and by giving false and confused ideas to such individuals as are less correctly instructed, in- jures the progress of the sciences ; that far from being able to derive from oratorical ornament and parade of language, any real utility, the greater part of them owe their existence to the invention of certain signs, which supply entire phrases, and are brought to perfection only in proportion as they have learned to dispense with words ; that eloquence, the enemy of accuracy, in- tended to move or to seduce, accustomed to hurry the passions impetuously forward, and even in its calmest moments, less occupied with truth than with verisimili- tudes, is a stranger to every work whose object is not to persuade but to convince ; that philosophy instructs but does not harangue ! But what are we to infer from all this ? Is it meant to lay an interdict on all that can make instruction ELOGE ON BUFFON. 55 agreeable, and render it, by the allurements of a polish- ed language, not more useful, but more attractive ? Since, in addressing men, it is necessary to employ the words and expressions in use among men, why not choose what is best fitted to secure their attention and favourable regard ? Truth, you say, needs no ornament ; every thing which adorns conceals it. Paint her then naked but beautiful ; let her strike our attention and please our taste at the same time. Is it enough to make her known, if we do not make her loved ? Those sciences, even, which profess the severest exactitude, presenting only irresistible evidence, and which would blush to sacrifice to the graces, are not without their degree of elegance. In subjecting the mind to the force of its proofs, it does not disdain to flatter it by a certain address. If, indeed, there are studies which no charm embellishes, and departments of knowledge which no thing can reconcile with taste, those who cultivate them are much to be pitied. But we find more to delight us when occupied with nature. Like herself, mother of all the arts, there is no art foreign to the sciences, of which she is the object. Eloquence owes to her its life and attractions ; and such is the unchangeable relation subsisting between them, that we can say nothing eloquent which is not found in Nature, nor make a true image of Nature which is not eloquent. The beauties of the one are those of the other ; all their treasures are common. Accordingly, to attempt to separate them, is to contradict the essence of things ; and to pretend to 56 ELOGE ON BUFFON. exclude eloquence from the descriptions of **ature, is to deprive the painter of the use of colours. But every one judges by what he feels ; and the same objects do not make the same impressions on all. Ac- cordingly, among men who study to acquire a knowledge of Nature, all have not the same manner of regarding it nor of delineating it. Those who contemplate it with- i>w! enthusiasm describe it methodically, measuring every thing scrupulously, halting at every point, and exerting all their attention to seize even the smallest traits. Whatever beauty is presented to them, their heart remains untouched! The greatest magnificence in the adornments of the universe affords them nothing but names to be classified, tables to be drawn up, cold enumerations to deduce and compare. Their view, unceasingly occupied in these toilsome labours, never reposes on smiling images, and they find, every where in Nature, the same details to draw out, the same task to fulfil. But as soon as a mind of some elevation ap- plies itself to contemplate it, the multitude of sublime ideas to which it gives rise, transport it out of itself ; and without thinking of being a poet, it becomes so by expressing what it sees and feels ! Which of the two represent Nature best ? The one employs the eye and the pencil, the other the rule and the compass. The one gives a grand and picturesque view, the other a dry and minute plan. Is, then, the most faithful pic- ture that which offers to the eye the dimensions of objects, measured exactly, but without perspective and EIOGE ON BUFFON. 57 without colour ; or that which produces in the spectator the same ideas, the same sensations, the same emotions as its model ? And who does not experience, in reading Buffon, that the heart, seduced by the illusions of an enchanting style, imagines that it sees Nature herself in his descriptions, and feels, in effect, all the impres- sions which its actual presence would produce ? Those who study them with taste, never open, without a cer- tain degree of veneration, the book where Nature is represented in all its magnificence ; and the more the mind is accustomed to meditate on these master-pieces, the more is it gratified to find it again represented, so majestic and sublime, in the pictures of Buffon. But however strange one may be to knowledge of this de- scription, it is sufficient to have some share of that intelligence and sensibility of which few are destitute, joined to the most common notions of all that the least attentive eye remarks in Nature ; it is enough to see and to feel, to recognise in Buffon all that Nature offers of what is grandest and most majestic. Where is the man, so indifferent to every kind of beauty, as not sometimes to have experienced, while traversing forests, pausing on the slope of a mountain, or viewing the ex- panse of the sea from an elevated beach, this inexpres- sible feeling of admiration, and the idea which then springs up in the mind of the variety of beings and the immensity of the universe ? Is there any one whom the view of the beautiful nights of summer does not delight, and throw into a state of tranquil meditation, or who 58 ELOGE ON BUFFOS. can prevent himself sinking into a silent revery, when the darkening sky and the hollow sound of the waves announce the approach of a tempest ? And can it be otherwise, than that so many wonders, the view of which throws a contemplative heart into admiration ; and which, when spread over nature, make such deep impressions on the coarsest senses, should strike and dazzle, when assembled in a work where the enthusiasm inseparable from the subject is joined to the charm of illusion ? Buffon brings before his readers the objects which are known to them, as if they were present to their view, and familiarises them even with those whose entire nation is strange to them. Every thing he speaks of is present. We transport ourselves along with him to every place he describes. If he represents to us the life and manners of the wild animals of our continent, we follow him into the forests, we admire rude nature, the silence which reigns in these solitudes, and so many dumb objects which speak to the heart. We lament the victim of a cruel sport, deceived by the ground, which, in his rapid career, he scarcely touches ; and we become interested in the faithful, but not very peace- able love of a couple of Roes, which birth unites, and death alone separates. If he paints another aspect of nature in other climates, under the burning zones of Africa and Asia, we fancy ourselves to be transported to t**s heart of the deserts of Arabia, and distinguish, among the hissings of reptiles, the voice of the Ono- crotalus and the cries of the Jabiru ; or we tremble at ELOQE ON BUFFOtf. 59 seeing, on the banks of the Senegal, the timid Gazelle descend to the brink of the stream where the Tiger lies in ambush. The view of the universe, when we observe it with less indifference than the majority of men, pre- sents no agreeable image which Buffon does not bring before the mind ; no sombre perspective which does not reappear in his work, where we every where perceive, as in Nature herself, order, harmony, fertility ; the re- medy by the side of the evil ; the earth prodigal of every blessing ; but, at the same time, war prevailing, strength triumphant, and innocence sacrificed. It is by the harmony of his eloquence, and the sweet- ness he infuses into his expressions, that Buffon de- lights the senses, and fixes the regard of his auditors, even when he is speaking of animals and natural pro- ductions, the least noble in our eyes. But when a vaster field offers itself to the flight of his genius ; if he in- terrupts the enumeration of the species which inhabit the earth, in order to do homage to the principles of being and of life ; or, if he begins to describe the struc- ture of the universe, and the equilibrium of worlds weighing the one against the other ; a superior power then raises us above the sphere of human view 1 It is no longer a mortal we listen to, but Nature herself which opens her sanctuary, and at whose voice we are obliged to bow. Eternal Wisdom ! sole object worthy of the exertions and curiosity of man, how powerful is your attraction over the mind that seeks to know thee ; and how happy the individual, who can devote his life to the contemplation of thee ! THE NATURAL HISTORY or MONKEYS. MAMMALIA. NATURAL iHS^aft^P-CrF MONKEYS. 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 inves- tigation, and would require much patience, and a greater allowance of time, than it is often possible for those individuals who possess the enviable op- portunities 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" u That the soul sees — and, we suppose, the eyes." £ 68 NATURAL HISTOEY OP 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* 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 rivalling 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 malig- nant qualities of both. And it is under such influ- ences, 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 influ- ence. 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 Ahme- nadab, hospitals have been erected for the benefit of apes, where thousands are kept in fancied ease and indulgence ; and another city, which was taken * Such as those of 4he Fesse and Gooiock. MONKEYS. 69 by General Goddart in 11 80, upon its surrender con- tained forty thousand inhabitants, and as many mon- keys. They are even worshipped by the Brahmins, and are raised to the rank of gods. Gorgeous temples are erected, " With pious care a mcmkey 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 thi natives in such veneration, that they offered seven nundred thousand ducats to redeem it. — It was, how- ever, 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 reve- rence, 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, 70 NATUBAL HISTOET OF than by circumstances which can be accounted for, by the different physical or moral agencies to which they have been exposed." * And we can only con- sider them in the words of an eminent anatomist, as " equally unacquainted with the structure and func- tions of men and monkeys, not conversant with zoology and physiology, and therefore entirely desti- tute of the principles on which alone a sound judg- ment can be formed, concerning the natural capabilities and destiny of animals, as well as the laws according to which certain changes of character, certain de- partures from the original stock, may take place."t 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 travel- led aware of the doubtful points, and were competent, by their previous studies, for the task of unravelling 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 Messrs Owen and Yarrel. Modern zoologists have applied to this family, con- sisting of two great divisions, the title of Quadru- manous, or four-handed, from their generally possess- * Monboddo, Rousseau, Lamark. -p Lawrence. MONKEYS. 71 • ing 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 alf 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 in- timately 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 pre- cipices, 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 fhe 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, how- ever, as a declining sun and the evening breezes reduce 72 K-ATUKAL HISTORY or 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 con- cealment ; and the protrusion of numerous little heads, •with bright arid 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 as. sembly; 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 MONKEYS. 73 habits. Some of the larger species remaining in com- plete inactivity during daylight, come forth at night, and make the forest resound with their yells and howl- ing. Speaking of the Red Howler, an eccentric writer observes, — " Nothing can sound more dreadful than its nocturnal bowlings. 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 car- nage. 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 j and now you hear his last dying moan beneath a mortal wound."* 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 an- nounce that their rest has been disturbed, or their feelings incommoded. During the night, on the con- trary, 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 • \Vaterton*8 Wanderings, 8vo edit. 305. 74 NATURAL HISTOEY OF Neiuhoff,* 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 im- mense 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.t 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 autho- * " The province of Fohier hath an animal perfectly resembling man, but longer armed, and hairy all over, called Fesse, most swift and greedy aftei human flesh, which, that he may better take his pr«y, he feigneth laughter, and suddenly, while the person stands listening, seizeth upon him." •f- 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 exceed- ingly. They are very greedy after emmets. So that having found qn 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 rhere is not an emmet left." MONKEYS. 75 rity whence they have been obtained. Gemelli Car, reri tells us, that the orangs descend from the moun- tains 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 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 !" In like manner, when a remission of watchfulness occurs, do they plunder the maize fields, and rob the orchards of their choicest fruits ; ce they are so impu- dent, that they will come into the gardens and eat such sorts of fruit as grow there," says Knox;* andThunberg relates, that such is the superstitious respect in which the Entellus monkey is held by the natives, that what- ever ravages they may commit, they dare not venture * Knox's Ceylon. 70 NATUEAL HISTOKY OP 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 pas- sion ; they are often offered as a bribe to the perform- ance 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,* 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. * Pithed a chiropotes* Humb., and a few other species, live in pairs. MONKEYS. 77 "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 exhi- biting 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 com- panions. 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 un- welcome 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 them- selves to the parent, who will encounter almost any- thing 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 reveise most frequently takes place ; and when these animali have, with great care and attention, been 78 NATUEAL HISTOKY OF 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.* In geographical distribution, the quadrumanous order presents some curious examples. That part ot 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 pecu- liar to New Holland, and the vast archipelago of the Southern Ocean, scarcely one approaches to any resem.' blance. The smaller formed long-tailed monkey^ (which constitute the numerous family of Guenons in the systems,) of mild disposition and playful manners 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 a few exceptions, the Cercopitheci of the same naturalist, and Cercocebi of Geoffrey, inhabit Africa. The most typical forms in the zoology ^of these countries, are, in the last ; the baboons, or Cynoceph&li, more bestial in all their forms and habits, and deviating from the quadrumanous type. In one or two aberrant * The Ouistiti produced three in confinement, and nursed them with great attention. — See our description of that species. MONKET3. 79 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, (Hylobateti Illiger,) approach- ing 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, Geoftroy,) 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. Extend- ing 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 some- what 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, 80 NATURAL HISTOBY OF 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 Ameiica possesses others of great pecu- liarity, 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 pro- portions are very diminutive, and in a few, the habits become completely nocturnal. The inhabitants of this region, also ey^ibi; the most perfect adaptation of struc- ture 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.* 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 mammalise, in the hooked * Humboldt, Zool. Observations, page 329.— Description of Marimonda in present volume. MONKEYS. 81 claws of the fore extremities, instead of nails ; and in several of the other forms, a departure from the quad- rumanous types, and a joining with the Lemuridce. 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 organiza- tion, and to adduce proof from the comparison, that tney 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 pecu- liar 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, Godlike erect, with native honour clad." 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 02 NATURAL HISTORY OF the same enclosure, would be the positions and atti- tude ; 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, " Men have four legs by nature, And that 'tis custom makes them go Erroneously upon but two/' While the fact, that no nation in the world assumes any except the erect attitude, will be sufficiently conclusive, 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 ter- minate 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 MONKETS. 83 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.* 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 o progression. The flexors of the knee are, on the con- trary, stronger in animals, and are inserted so much tower down, even in the monkeys, that the cord which they form keeps the knee habitually bent, " " Les fesses etoient presque aulles, ainsi que les mollcts "— F. CUVIER. 84 NATURAL HISTORY OF and almost prevents the perfect extension of the leg on the thigh.* " The motion of the knee-joint in the black orang was free backwards, but the annual does not seem capable of perfect extension of this joint, from the contraction of the posterior muscles of the limb." t 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 caleis 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 «Dr Trail. •J- " The most remarkable muscle about the top of the thigh, has not been noticed by Tyson, Camper, Cuvier, or the older anato- mists. 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 tlie 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 aeiyist in climbing. On this account, we propose to name it the scaadens, or musculus scansorius ; and we are disposed to regard it as one of the principal peculiarities in Simla satyrus." — DR TKAIL. Account of Slack Orang. Worn. Soc. Traaa. Vol. iii. p,29. MONKEYS. 85 Uiis 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 plantar aponeurosis, an arrangement incompatible with the erect attitude, as the tendon would be com- pressed, and its action impeded, if the heel rested on the ground.* 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. Sor 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 flex- or,) 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 deli- cate operations." t The upper extremity approaches much nearer to the * Lawrence, Nat. Hist, of Man. f Ibid, page 162, &6 1TATUEAL HISTOET OF 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 mecha- nical 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 pro- portions, 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 MONKEYS. 67 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 mammalise, they are separated by a third bone of a wedge shape, which contains the incisor teeth. Blumenbach named this the os inter- MaxilZare. 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 chim- panzee, 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 and forehead, are either 8S NATURAL HISTOET OF removed, or reduced to a size and form simply neces- sary for animal purposes j 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 for- wards, and it is incapable of being supported by the vertebral column, without some very powerful assist- ing machinery. Hence, we find the spinous processes of the cervical vertebrae long, and assisted by a very strong ligament, called the ligamentum nuchee, 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 exer- tion 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 sus- MOXKETS. 89 penscry ligament, which is also used as an argument tnat 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 con- nected 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 pro- minent 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 dis- sected 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 90 NATURAL HIST011T OF 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 claviculce is found in both. In the black orang the size of the olfactory nerve is great, and the surface of the turbi- nated 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 dis. section, I discovered a large sack on the right side, run ing 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 lain 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, by 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 quad- rupeds, with this difference, nevertheless, that the 91 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 for- merly 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 ex- pansion 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 out- wards, 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 92 NATUBAL HISTOBY OF more prominent and dilated, and by containing in its body a cavity capable of holding a large pea. On lay- ing open the posterior part of the larynx, the -two apertures at the base of the epiglottis, and leading to 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 power- ful 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 struc- ture 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 pro- minently to outward view. They prevent the ut- terance of systematic sounds which the other organs might produce, by preventing a power of control over the air. ff Every time that the animal would uttei his cry, these sacks swell, then empty themselves, sc that he is not able, at will, to supply to the differert parts of his mouth the sounds they might articulate.* 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. * Bicherand, Physiology, p. 424. MONKEYS. 93 But among the many anecdotes related of the under- standing 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 pro- cess, 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 Cops, and figured on our second plate. Mr Cops 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 Cops 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 mount- ing 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 Cops,, 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 NATURAL HISTORY OF mind, he was incapable of extending the power farther, or of reasoning upon that action, during the perfor- mance 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 charac- ters 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 prin- cipally 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 imita- tion 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 drink- ing it as he had observed some sick sailor do. How far these are true we shall not attempt to decide; MONKEYS. 95 certain it is, that tnese animals most ludicrously pos- sess 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 de- scriptive 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 objec- tion 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 Geoffrey Saint Hilaire,* 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 ad- vocates and disparagers of the circular or progres- sive 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 * Journal de Physique. 96 NATURAL HISTORY Of 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 Pitheda 01 Desmarets, to the small species with nookeu 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 Lemuridce, 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 Licha- notus of Illiger, or the Indri of Sonnerat and Audibert. This view of their arrangement would doubtless re- quire alterations to perfect \t ; 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 respec- tive 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 Cops, 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 re- MONKEYS. 97 ceived in the Edinburgh Museum ; and for the re- mainder we are indebted to the beautiful but expen- sive works of the continental naturalists. We have made free use of Humboldt's Zoological Observa- tions, and his History of the Monkeys of the Ori- nooko j of Frederic Cuvier's great work on the Mam- maliae ; 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 th« description of the animals themselves. 98 THE NATUBAL HISTORY OF MONKEYS OF ASIA AND AFRICA, OR THOSE OF THE OLD WORLD. THE ORANGS. THE animals which have generally been placed in this division are those, which of all creation, ap- proach nearest to man in their structure. They have generally been placed first in our systems, and we have now to point out those characters important in arrangement, and the distinctions which will separate the species. They have been divided into three genera, the first of which is named Troglodytes by Geoffroy Saint Hilaire, and is characterised by a facial angle of 50° ; distinct superciliary ridges ; the canine teeth slightly elongated, and placed close to the cutting teeth, as in man ; the head rounded ; the muzzle short ; no tail, cheek pouches, or callosities ; the ears resembling those of man, but large and pro- jecting. It contains only one species. TROGLODYTES NIGER. (The Black Oran£.l THE BIACK OUANG. 09 THE BLACK ORANG. Troglodytes niger — GEOFFROY. PLATE I. Great Ape, Pennant. — Troglodytes chimpanzee, Geoffroy Saint Hilaire, Annales du Museum, xix. p. 87 Troglodytes niger, Desmarets Mammalogie, page 49 Black Orang of Africa, Illustrations of Zoology by James Wilson* plate v. fig. 2 — Dr Trail, Transactions of Wernerian Society, vol. in. p. 1. THIS singular animal has been mentioned by various travellers under the names of Baris, Smitten, Quim- pere, and Quojas-moras ; but the adult state remains in even greater obscurity than that of its Asiatic re- presentative, which we shall next endeavour to describe. The relations of all travellers agree in the large and powerful stature which this animal attains, and we have every reason to believe that this is the fact, though they are always so mixed up with the mar- vellous, and with accounts of their habits and sagacity, so different from the attributes of an animal, that we must certainly consider them undecided without some more direct testimony; and, from their apparent incor- 100 THE NATUEAL HISTOEY OF reetness, the other pans of the relations have ahxaya been received with a doubt. The black orang is a native of Africa, and parti, cularly the Guinea Coast and Angola ; they are said to live in vast troops, and to be dangerous in their attacks upon persons travelling alone in the forests where they are found. They are covered with shi- ning black hair, longest on the back and shoulders ; our description of the adult state is, however, im- perfect, and we refer to the minute detail given by Dr Trail of a young specimen. Previous to men- tioning it, we may relate an account from Bingley's Animal Biography of a large specimen of this creature, which seems to have been given upon some better authority than most of the others : — " Allemand, the Dutch professor of natural history, had received many vague and unsatisfactory accounts respecting an ani- mal of this kind, and was induced to write to Mr May, a captain in the Dutch naval service stationed at Surinam. This gentleman found him exactly similar to one which he had brought from Guinea, except in size. He was nearly five feet and a half high, and very strong and powerful. Mr May had seen him take up his master, a stout man, by the middle, and fling him from him for a pace or two ; and one day he seized a soldier, who happened to pass carelessly near the tree to which he was chained, and, if his master had not been present, he would actually have carried the man into the tree." THE BLACK OEANG. 101 The age of this animal, when Mr May first saw it, was about twenty, one years. It died in the following year, but had evidently increased in height dining the interval. If we may depend on this account, we may thence conclude that the height will reach six feet at least, while the age attained by them will naturally be considerable. Young animals have only been exhibited in this country, and we shall now give the account of Dr Trail of one shown in Liverpool. We have extracted it from the Transactions of the Wemerian Society : — " It was a female, and was procured in the Isle of Princes in the Gulf of Guinea, from a native trader, who had carried it thither from the banks of the Gaboon. It was represented as a young animal, far inferior in size to the specimens often seen in the re- cesses of its native forests; and Captain Payne observed, that it was at least eight or ten inches lower in stature than another which he had seen in the Isle of Princes. " The natives of Gaboon informed him, that this species attains the height of five or six feet, that it is a formidable antagonist to the elephant, and that several of them will not scruple to attack the lion, and other beasts of prey, with clubs and stones. It is dangerous for solitary individuals to travel through the woods haunted by the orang outang ; and instances were related to Captain Payne of negro girls being earned of by this animal, who have sometimes escaped to human society, after having been for years detain 102 THE NATtJEAL HISTOET OF "by their ravishers in a frightful captivity. These reports confirm the narratives of the early voyagers, who have often been suspected of exaggeration, and similar facts have been recently stated, very circumstantially, by gentlemen who have lived in Western Africa. ( When first our animal came on board/ says Captain Payne, e it shook hands with some of the sailors, but refused its hand, with marks of anger, to others, with- out any apparent cause. It speedily, however, became familiar with the crew, except one boy, to whom it never was reconciled. When the seamen's mess was brought on deck, it was a constant attendant ; would go round and embrace each person, while it uttered loud yells, and then seat itself among them to share the repast.' When angry, it sometimes made a barking noise like a dog ; at other times it would cry like a pettish child, and scratch itself with great vehemence. It expressed satisfaction, especially on receiving sweetmeats, f by a sound like hem, in a grave tone ;' but it seems to have little variety in its voice. In warm latitudes, it was active and cheerful, but became languid as it receded from the torrid zone ; and on approaching our shores, it showed a desire to have a warm covering, and would roll itself carefully up in a blanket when it retired to rest. It generally walked on all fours ; and Captain Payne particularly remarked, that it never placed the palm of the hands of its fore extre- mities to the ground, but, closing its fists, rested on the knuckles ; a circumstance also noticed by Tyscn, THE BLACK OBAffO. 108 which was confirmed to me by a young navy officer, who had been for a considerable time employed in the rivers of Western Africa, and had opportunities of observing the habits of this species. This animal did not seem fond of the erect posture, which it rarely affected, though it could run nimbly on two feet for a short distance. In this case, it appeared to aid the motion of its legs by grasping the thighs with its hands. It had great strength in the four fingers of its superior extremity ; for it would often swing by them on a rope upwards of an hour, without intermission. When first procured, it was so thickly covered with haif that the skin of the trunk and limbs was scarcely visible, until the long black hair was blown aside. It ate readily every sort of vegetable food ; but at first did not appear to relish flesh, though it seemed to have pleasure in sucking the leg-bone of a fowl. At that time it did not relish wine, but afterwards seemed to like it, though it never could endure ardent spirits. It once stole a bottle of wine, which it un- corked with its teeth, and began to drink. It showed a predilection for coffee ; and was immoderately fond of sweet articles of food. It learned to feed itself with a spoon, to drink out of a glass, and showed a general disposition to imitate the actions of men. It was at- tracted by bright metals, seemed to take pride in clothing, and often put a cocked hat on its head. It was dirty in its habits, and never was known to wash 104 THE NATURAL BISTORT OF itself. It was afraid of fire-arms ; and, on the whole, appeared a timid animal. ' ' It lived with Captain Payne seventeen weeks, two of which were spent in Cork and Liverpool. At the former place it was exhibited for the benefit of the &oup Kitchen for a few days, but wems to have been there neglected. On coming to Liverpool, it languish- ed a few days, moaned heavily, was oppressed in its breathing, and died with convulsive motions of the limbs. " When erect this animal is about thirty inches high. The skin appears of a yellowish-white colour, and is thinly covered with long black hair on the front ; but it is considerably more hairy behind. The hair on the head is rather thin, and is thickest on the forehead, where it divides about an inch above the orbiter pro- cess of the frontal bone, and, running a little back- wards, falls down before the ears, forming whiskers on the cheeks. Here the hair measures nearly two inches long ; but that on the occiput is not above an inch in length. There are a few stiff black hairs on the eye- prows, and a scanty eyelash. A few whitish hairs are scattered on the lips, especially on the under one. The rest of the face is naked, and has whitish and wrinkled skin. There is scarcely any hair on the neck ; but, commencing at the nape, it becomes somewhat bushy on the back. The abdomen is nearly naked. The hair on the back of the head, and the \i hole trunk, THE BLACK ORANG. 105 front ot the lower extremities, back of the legs, and upper part of the superior extremities, is directed downwards, while that on the back of the thigh and fore arms is pointed upwards ; appearances well repre- sented in Tyson's figure. The longest hair is just at the elbows. There is none on the fingers or palms of either extremity. The ears are remarkably prominent, thin, and naked, bearing a considerable resemblance in shape to the human, though broader at the top. The pro- jection of the process above the eyes is very conspicu- ous, but has not been sufficiently marked in any engraving or drawing which has fallen under my ob- servation. The nose is quite flat, or rather appears only as a wrinkle of the skin, with a slight depression along its centre. The nostrils are patulous, and open upwards, which would be inconvenient did the ani- mal usually assume the erect posture. The projection of the jaws is excessive, and though much less so than in the babbon, yet the profile of the face is concave. It may be remarked, however, that the projection of the lower jaw is 'caricatured in the first and second figures of Camper's second plate. The mouth is wide, the lips rather thin, and destitute of that recurvation of the edges which add so much to the expression of the human countenance. The whole contour of the head bears no inconsiderable resemblance to some Egyptian figures of the god Anubis. " The spread of the shoulders is distinctly marked, but the width of the lower part of the chest is proper 106 THE NATURAL HISTORY OF tionally greater, when compared to the upper, than in man. " From the lower ribs, the diameter of the abdomen decreases rapidly to the loins, where the animal is peculiarly slender; a circumstance in which it ap- proaches the other Simice. The pelvis appears long and narrow^ another approximation to the rest of the genus. ff With regard to the limbs, the chief difference between our specimen and Dr Tyson's figure, consists in the excessive length of the arms, which in this animal descend below the knees, by the whole length of the phalanges of the fingers, which are above three inches in length. The same observation applies to almost every figure of this animal which I have seen. The proportions in the work of Camper approach nearest, in the present instance, in this particular. The hand differs from the human, in having the thumb by far the smallest of the fingers. The foot is more properly a hand appended to a tarsus. The thumb of this extremity is very long, powerful, and capable of great extension. The legs are certainly furnished with calves ; but they scarcely resemble the human in form, because they are continued of equal thickness 'nearly to the heel. When this animal is erect, the knees appear considerably bent, as is the case with the other Simice, and it stands with the limbs more apart than man/' Such is the minute description by Dr Trail. An^ •>ther specimen of this animal, and one of the Asiatic THE BLACK ORANO. 107 species, were exhibited together in the Egyptian Hall, Piccadilly, in 1831, and afforded a treat to the lovers of zoology. They were both very young ; the black orang had been procured by a trading vessel on the river Gambia, and was much the most pleasing of the two. He was compared to a black child, but with a head of overgrown proportions. He was very docile, and generally playful and gentle ; like all his tribe, he was fond of wine and water, or diluted spirits; and they were used as an incentive for him to perform his part before strangers. Neither of these animals survived long, but fell victims to cold, which seems invariably to affect the orangs, generally before the expiry of the first winter. Our plate is taken from a stuffed specimen in the Edinburgh Museum, which, though not in a very good or entire state of preservation, agrees generally with the above descriptions. The second form among the orangs is described by Geoffroy under the title of Piihecus. The young state of this animal may be said to be well known, and at an age of from thpee to five years, may be characterized by a facial angle of 65° ; by the canine teeth exceeding the others in length,* and the molar teeth being nearly square on the upper surface; the head rounded, no cheek pouches or callosities ; * In the adult, the canine teeth will far exceed the others in length, as much nearly as among the strong carnivora. 108 THE NATURAL HIST03JY OP rfie ears resembling those of man, but small, and applied close to the head; the arms of consider- able length. In the adult state, from what we im- perfectly know, these characters will vary widely, and still more so if the Pongo shall ultimately prove iden- tical with it, which the high authority of Cuvier would now warrant us to consider decided, did there not exist so very wide a difference between the characters given by him and Lacepede, and those which so many in the young state have exhibited. We have added the den- tition of the Pongo from Frederic Cuvier, reduced two- thirds, and the resemblance between it and the teeth of the large Sumatran orang, will be immediately seen. FITHECTJS SATYRUS. Ctic OL-;in.q-ciii;i PITHECUS SATYRUS. I The Ked or Asiatic Drang-out THE BED OR ASIATIC OEANG-OUTANG. 109 THE RED OR ASIATIC ORANG-OUTANG. Pithecus satyrus — GEOFFROY. PLATES II. and II». Simla satyrus, Hnnceus.— Jocko, Audibert, Histoire Nafarette des Singes Pithecas satyrus, Desmarets Mammologie, p. 50 ; Geoffroy Saint Hilaire, Annales du Museum, xbc. p. 88 — The Red or Asiatic Orang-Outang, James Wilson's Illustrations of Zoology r, pi. v. figs. 1 and 3. — Orang-Outang, Abel, Embassy to China, pages 319 and 365. WE are fortunately possessed of more ample mate- rials to illustrate the history of this singular animal, than of the black orang of Africa ; but it is to be regretted that what we have, also relate to indivi- duals in a comparatively young state. One instance only of the capture of what may be considered an adult specimen is authentically recorded ; and the fragments of that specimen, with the skull of a supposed adult in the collection at Paris, are all from which we can draw the true characters of this creature. Of the existence of a most gigantic animal there can be no doubt ; but it must either be an inhabitant of the in- terior only, or must flee most rapidly fi^m the en- 110 THE NA.TUHAL HISTORY OP croachments of civilization. The first is the most probable ; for it is scarcely possible, if ever an inhabi- tant of the coasts, that a solitary individual only should have been observed, during the very long period that this country has been possessed by Europeans, among whom were men most zealous in the pursuit of natural history, and to whom this had been long held up as one of the greatest acquisitions that could be procured. This will appear the less singular when we consider the immense extent of unknown territory^ occupied by forests almost boundless, and of the most impenetrable description, and we may easily conceive that they will possess many tenants, hitherto unseen even to the piercing eyes of their native hunters. The most unaccountable circumstance is, that the young are so frequently met with, while the gigantic parent* have scarcely been perceived ; and, except in the in- stance we have mentioned, exist only in the accounts handed down from family to family. We have seen the black orang of Africa to be very local in the extent of its distribution, inhabiting but a small portion of a vast continent. The red orang pos- sesses the same peculiarity in its range, and seems confined to the Islands of Borneo and Sumatra, and to the peninsula of Malacca, inhabiting the immense forests, and rarely appearing on their outskirts. Since the arrival, in 1818, of the red orang, figured and so admirably described by Dr Abel, several young BED OR ASIATIC ORA^G-OUTANG. Ill specimens have been exhibited in England, and notes of their manners while alive, with accounts of their dissections, have generally been made and published. None of these are equal, however, in minuteness or interest to that of the assiduous naturalist we have now mentioned; and though it has been frequently copied into works treating of this subject, and is very generally known, we should not consider the present description complete without it. Dr Abel had a long opportunity of observing the animal, and under less constraint than any of those which have since reached Britain. He was interested in, and well qualified for the task, and his whole account bears the stamp of truth, and close unbiased observation. We give the description in his words, and unabridged.* " This interesting animal was procured by Captain Methuen, who brought him from Banjarmassing, on the south coast of Borneo. He was informed by the natives that he had been brought from the highlands of the interior : that he was very rare and difficult to take ; and they evidently considered him a great curiosity, as they flocked in crowds to see him. tf The height of the animal, judging from his length * It was from this animal that the accurate figures in Mr James Wilson's " Illustrations of Zoology" were taken. The drawings were made by the celebrated Howit, and were furnished to the author by Dr Trail, Professor of Medical Jurisprudence it the Edinburgh Um'versity. 112 THE NATURAL HISTORY OP when laid on a flat surface, and measured from his heel to the crown of his head, is two feet seven inches. The hair is of a brownish-red colour, and covers his back, arms, legs, and outside of his hands and feet. On the back it is in some places six inches long, and on his arms five. It is thinly scattered over the back of his hands and feet, and is very short. It is directed downwards on the back, upper arm, and legs, and up- wards on the fore arm. It is directed from behind forwards on the head, and inwards on the inside of the thighs. The face has no hair, except on its sides, somewhat in the manner of whiskers, and a very thin beard. The middle of the breast and belly was naked on his arrival in England, but has since become hairy. The shoulders, elbows, and knees, have fewer hairs than other parts of the arms and legs. The palms of the hands and feet are quite naked. " The prevailing colour of the animal's skin, when naked, or seen through the hair, is a bluish-grey. The eyelids and margin of the mouth are of a light copper colour. The inside of his hands and feet are of a deep copper colour. Two copper-coloured stripes pass from the armpits down eacji side of the body, as low as the navel. " The head viewed in front, is pear-shaped, expand- ing from the chin upwards, the cranium being much the larger end. The eyes are close together, of an oval form, and dark brown colour. The eyelids are fringed THE BED OB ASIATIC OBAffG-OTJTANG. 113 vrlth lashes, and the lower ones are saccular and wrinkled. The nose is confluent with the face, except at the nostrils, which are but little elevated ; their openings are narrow and oblique. The mouth is very projecting, and of a roundish mammillary form. Its opening is large, but when closed is marked by little more than a narrow seam. The lips are very narrow, and scarcely perceptible when the mouth is shut. The chin projects less than the mouth ; below it, a pendulous membrane gives the appearance of a double chin, and swells out when the animal is angry or much pleased. Each of the jaws contains twelve teeth, namely, four incisive teeth, the two middle ones of the upper jaw being twice the width of the lateral ; two canine, and six double teeth. The ears are small, closely resemble the human ear, and have their lower margins in the same line with the external angles of the eyes. " The chest is wide compared with the pelvis ; the belly is very protuberant. The arms are long in pro- portion to the height of the animal, their span measu- ring full four feet seven inches and a half. The legs are short compared with the arms. '• The hands are long, compared with their width, and with the -human hand. The fingers are small and tapering ; the thumb is very short, scarcely reach- ing the first joint of the forefinger. All the fingers have very perfect nails, of a blackish colour and oval form, and exactly terminating with the extremities of THE NATURAL HISTORY OF the fingers. The feet are long, resemble hands in the palms, and in having fingers rather than toes, but have heels resembling the human. The great toes are very short, are set on at right angles to the feet close to the heel, and are entirely without nails. " The orang-outang of Borneo is utterly incapable of walking in a perfectly erect posture. He betrays this in his whole exterior conformation, and never wilfully attempts to counteract its tendency. His head leaning forward, and forming a considerable angle with the back, throws the centre of gravity so far be- yond the perpendicular, that his arms, like the fore- legs of other animals, are required to support the body. So difficult indeed is it for him to keep the upright posi- tion for a few seconds, under the direction of his keeper, that he is obliged, in the performance of his task, to raise his arms above his head, and throw them behind him to keep his balance. His progressive motion on a flat surface is accomplished by placing his bent fists upon the ground, and drawing his body between his arms ; moving in this manner, he strongly resembles a person decrepid in the legs, supported on stilts. In a state of nature, he probably seldom moves along the ground ; his whole external configuration showing his fitness for climbing trees and clinging to their branches. The length and pliability of his fingers and toes enable him to grasp with facility and steadiness ; and the force of his muscles empowers him to support his body for a great length of time by one hand or foot. He THE BED OR ASIATIC OEANG-OUTAtfG. 115 can thus pass from one fixed object to another, at the distance of his span from each other, and can obviously pass from one branch of a tree to another, through a much greater interval. In sitting on a flat surface, this animal turns his legs under him. In sitting on the branch of a tree, or on a rope, he rests on his heels, his body leaning forward against his thighs. This animal uses his hands like others of the monkey tribe. " The orang-outang, on his arrival in Java from Ba- tavia, was allowed to be entirely at liberty till within a day or two of being put on board the Caesar, to be conveyed to England ; and whilst at large, made no attempt to escape, but became violent when put into a large railed bamboo cage for the purpose of being conveyed from the island. As soon as he felt himself in confinement, he took the rails of the cage into his hands, and shaking them violently, endeavoured to break them in pieces ; but finding that they did not yield generally, he tried them separately, and having discovered one weaker than the rest, worked at it constantly till he had broken it, and made his escape. On board ship, an attempt being made to secure him by a chain tied to a strong staple, he instantly un- fastened it, and ran off with the chain dragging be- hind ; but finding himself embarrassed by its length, he coiled it once or twice, and threw it over his shoui- aer, This feat he often repeated, and when he found 116 THE 2TATTJEAL HISTOEY OP that it would not remain on his shoulder, he took it into his mouth. " After several abortive attempts to secure him more effectually, he was allowed to wander freely about the ship, and soon became familiar with the sailors, and surpassed them in agility. " They often chased him about the rigging, and gave him frequent opportunities of displaying his adroitness in managing an escape. On first starting, he would endeavour to outstrip his pursuers by mere speed, but when much pressed, elude them by seizing a loose rope, and swinging out of their reach. At other times he would patiently wait on the shrouds, or at the mast- head, till his pursuers almost touched him, and then suddenly lower himself to the deck by any rope that was near him, or bound along the mainstay from one mast to the other, swinging by his hands, and moving them one over the other. The men would often shake the ropes by which he clung with so much violence, as to make me fear his falling, but I soon found that the power of his muscles could not be easily overcome. When in a playful humour, he would often swing within arms-length of his pursuer, and having struck him with his hand, throw himself from him. ' ' Whilst in Java, he lodged in a large tamarind tree near my dwelling, and formed a bed by intertwining the small branches and covering them with leaves. During the day, he would lie with his head projecting THE BED OK ASIATIC ORANG-OUTANG. 117 beyond his nest, watching whoever might pass under, and when he saw any one with fruit, would descend to obtain a share of it. He always retired for the night at sunset, or sooner if he had been well fed ; and rose with the sun, and visited those from whom he habitually received food. " On board ship, he commonly slept at the mast- head, after wrapping himself in a sail. In making his bed, he used the greatest pains to remove every thing out of his way that might render the surface on which he intended to lie uneven ; and having satisfied himself with this part of his arrangement, spread out the sail, and lying down upon it on his back, drew it over his body. Sometimes I preoccupied his bed, and teased him by refusing to give it up. On these occa- sions he would endeavour to pull the sail from under me, or to force me from it, and would not rest till I had resigned it ; if it was large enough for both, he would quietly lie by my side. If all the sails happen- ed to be set, he would hunt about for some other covering, and either steal one of the sailors' jackets or shirts that happened to be drying, or empty a ham- mock of its blankets. Off the Cape of Good Hope, he suffered much from a low temperature, especially early in the morning, when he would descend from the mast, shuddering with cold, and running up to any one of his friends, climb into their arms, and clasping them closely, derive warmth from their llS THE KATUEAL" niSTOHY OP persons, screaming violently at any attempt to re- move him. ef His food in Java was chiefly fruit, especially man- gostans, of which he was excessively fond. He also sucked eggs with voracity, and often employed him- self in seeking them. On board ship, his diet was of no definite kind. He ate readily of all kinds of meat, and especially raw meat ; was very fond of bread, but always preferred fruits when he could obtain them. " His beverage in Java was water ; on board ship it was as diversified as his food. He preferred coffee and tea, but would readily take wine, and exemplified his attachment to spirits, by stealing the captain's brandy bottle. Since his arrival in London, he has preferred beer and milk to anything else, but drinks wine and other liquors. " In his attempts to obtain food, he afforded us many opportunities of judging of his sagacity and dis- position. He was always very impatient to seize it when held out to him, and became passionate when it was not soon given up, and would chase a person all over the ship to obtain it. I seldom came on deck without sweetmeats or fruit in my pocket, and could never escape his vigilant eye. Sometimes I endea- voured to evade him by ascending to the mast-head, but was always overtaken or intercepted in my pro- gress. When he came up with me on the shrouds, he would secure himself by one foot to the rattling, and confine my legs with the other and one of hia TIIE BED OR ASIATIC OBANG-OUTANG. 119 hands, whilst he rifled my pockets. If he found it impossible to overtake me, he would climb to a con- siderable height on the loose rigging, and then drop suddenly upon me. Or if, perceiving his intention, I attempted to descend, he would slide down a rope and meet me at the bottom of the shrouds. Sometimes I fastened an orange to the end of a rope, and lowered it to the deck from the mast-head ; and as soon as he attempted to seize it, drew it rapidly up. After be- ing several times foiled in endeavouring to obtain it by direct means, he altered his plan. Appearing to care little about it, he would remove to some distance, and ascend the rigging very leisurely for some time, and then, by a sudden spring, catch the rope which held it. If defeated again, by my suddenly jerking the rope, he would at first seem quite in desca^, re- linquish his effort, and rush about the rigging scream- ing violently. But he would always return, and again seizing the rope, disregard the jerk, and allow it to run through his hand till within reach of the orange ; but if again foiled, would come to my side, and taking me by the arm, confine it whilst he hauled the orange up. or 500 feet elevation. Their food, in the wild state, consists, for the most part, of fruits common only to the jungle in this district of country ; and they are particularly fond of the seeds and fruits of that sacred tree of India, called the Peopul-tree, and which, on the Garrow Hills, attains a very large size. They likewise take of some species of grass, and also the tender twigs and leaves of the Peopul and other trees, which they chew, swallow the juice thereof, and reject the indigestible part. They are easily tamed ; and when first taken show no disposition to bite unless provoked to anger, and even then manifest a reluctance to defend them- selves, preferring to retreat into some corner rather than attack their enemy. TheiT walk erect; and. THE HOOLOCK. 141 when placed upon a floor or in an open field, balance themselves very prettily, by raising their hands over their head, and slightly bending their arm at the wrist and elbow, and then run tolerably fast, rocking from side to side ; and if urged to greater speed, they let fall their hands to the ground, and assist themselves forward, rather jumping than running, still keeping the body, however, nearly erect ; if they succeed in making their way to a grove of trees, they then swing with such astonishing rapidity from branch to branch, and from tree to tree, that they are soon lost in the jungle or forest. " The individual in question became so tame and manageable in less than a month, that he would take hold of my hand and walk with me, helping himself along at the same time with the other hand applied to the ground, as described above. He would come at my call, and seat himself in a chair by my side at the breakfast-table, and help himself to an egg, or the wing of a chicken from my plate, without endangering any of my table furniture. He would partake of coffee, chocolate, milk, tea, &c. ; and although his usual mode of taking liquids was by dipping his knuckles into the cup and licking his fingers, still, when apparently more thirsty, he would take up the vessel from which I fed him with both hands, and drink like a man from a spring. His principal food consisted of boiled rice, boiled bread and milk, with sugar, plantains, bananas, oranges, &c., all of which 142 THE NATUBAL HISTOEY OP he ate, but seemed best pleased with bananas. He was fond of insects ; would search in the crevices of my house for spiders, and if a fly chanced to come in his reach, he would dexterously catch him in one hand, generally using his right hand. Like many of the different religious castes of this country, he seemed to entertain an antipathy to an indiscriminate use of animal food, and would not eat of either the flesh of the cow or hog ; would sometimes taste a little piece of beef, but never eat of it. I have seen him take fried fish, which he seemed to relish better than almost any other description of animal food, with the excep- tion of chicken, and even this he would eat but very sparingly of, preferring his common diet, bread and milk, with sugar, fruit, &c. In temper he was re- markably pacific, and seemed, as I thought, often glad to have an opportunity of testifying his affection and attachment for me. When I visited him in the morning, he would commence a loud and shrill whoo — whoo — whoo — whoo, which he would keep up often from five to ten minutes, with an occasional intermis- sion for the purpose of taking a full respiration ; until finally, apparently quite exhausted, he would lie down and allow me to comb his head, and brush the k>ng hair on his arms, and seem delighted with the tickling sensation produced by the brush on his belly and legs. He would turn from side to side, first hold out one arm and then the other, and when I attempted to go away, he would catch hold of my arm or coat- THE HOOLOCK. 143 tail, and pull me back again to renew my little atten- tions to him, daily bestowed. If I called to him from a distance, and he could recognise my voice, he would at once set up his usual cry which he sometimes gradually brought down to a kind of moan, but gene- rally resumed his louder tone when I approached him. This animal was a male, but showed no particular marks of the sex; and by a casual glance, might readily, if not examined more closely, have passed for a female. I have no idea of his age ; but, judging from the size and length of his canine teeth, suppose him to have been advanced in life. " The other large ' Hooloek,' of which you have the cranium, was also a male, and full grown. He was likewise obtained from the Garrow Hills, in Assam, presented to me by my friend Captain A. Davidson of Goalpara. He came into my possession in the month of April, and died at sea in July, just before getting up with the Cape of Good Hope, of a catarrhal affection. His death probably might have been hastened from want of proper food ; such as is not procurable on long voyages. This animal was similar, in habit and general characters to the one already described ; and may have been eight or ten years of age, or perhaps older; as I am informed by the natives of Assam they live to the age of twenty-five or thirty years. " The young specimen was also alive in my posses- sion. This is a female, and was brought to me by a THE NATURAL 1IISTOET OP Garrow Indian at the same time the first was received ; but died on the way from Goalpara to Calcutta, of a pulmonary disease following catarrh. This poor little creature, when first taken sick, suffered great pain and oppression at the chest, for which I prescribed a cath- artic of castor oil and calomel, and a warm bath, which seemed to afford it some temporary relief, but she died after ten days' illness. The animal appeared delighted with the bath ; and when I removed her from the vessel, she would run back again to the water, and lie down again until again removed. She was like the others I had in my possession, gentle and pacific in disposition, very timid and shy of strangers ; but in less than a week from the time she was taken, would, if put down in an open place, quickly run to me, jump in my arms, and hug me round the neck. I supposed her to have been from nine months to a year old. I fed her on boiled milk, goat's milk diluted with water and sweetened with sugar-candy. She also would sometimes partake of a little bread and milk, with the older one. She soon learned to suck the milk from a small bottle, through a quill covered with a piece of rag." We shall next describe a" very singular species from the East Indian Islands. HYLOBATES SYNDACTYLA. 1 The Siamang. ) THE STAMAKCJ. 145 THE SIAMANG. Hylobates syndactyla — RAFFLES. PLATE IV. Siir.ia syndactyia, the Siamang, Sir Stamford Raffles, actions of Linncean Society, vol. xiii. page 241 ; Horsfald. Zoological Researches in Java. — Le Siamang, Frederic Cnvier, Hiatoire Naturelle des Mammiferes.—Le Siamang, Cuvier, Regne Animal, vol. i. page 90. THE Siamang, by some naturalists, has been sepa- rated from the other long-armed apes on account of the curious formation of the feet. They have the first and second toes closely united, as far as the middle of the second phalanx. THE NATURAL HISTORY OP It was discovered by Sir Stamford Raffles in Sumatra, and is particularly abundant in the vicinity of Bencoolen. It is about three feet in height, and is entirely of a jet black colour, with a few scattered grayish hairs on the cheeks and chin. The hair upon the body is shining, long, soft, and thick. The face is black, the muzzle short, and the facial angle from 60° to 65°. The nose is flat and depressed above, but rises below abruptly, with a cartilaginous eminence, in which the large, nearly circular nostrils, are pierced from the sides in an oblique direction ; at its extremity this eminence is obtuse, and united to the upper lip by a narrow gradually attenuated apex, which, forming a cartila- ginous arch, gives a peculiar character to the Siamang. The orbital margin is very prominent ; and the frontal bone rises above the eyes obliquely, with a very gra- dual inclination backward. This part is covered with hairs, which have a different character from those on other parts of the body ; they are regular and straight, and, being closely applied to the surface of the head, form a gradually rising plain, on which the hair ap- pears as if dressed or rendered smooth by art. The ears are closely applied to the head, are margined, and have externally the same structure as in man. They are in a great measure concealed by the hairy covering of the lateral parts of the head, which, with that of the extremities, affords a very peculiar cha- racter, and its thickness considerably increases the bulk of these parts. It consists of hairs close and THE SIAMAKCK 147 woolly near the skin, united in small tufts, which diverge irregularly, and form a shaggy fleece. The separate hairs are above two inches long, and on every part except the head are slightly curved, so as to cause a somewhat frizzled appearance. The mouth is large, extending almost from cheek to cheek. The throat appears very broad, and has the outward ap- pearance of a swoln goitre destitute of hair ; this is the large guttural sack, which has been thought to assist the production of the wild continued howling of some monkeys, and which appears inflated when the ani- mal cries. In the females the breast is destitute of hair ; but the species appears to be subject to little of the variation incident to so many of this tribe from age or sex. The fingers of the hands are very slender, and of uncommon length ; and the formation of the feet, as we have previously mentioned, is the most remarkable variation from the other Gibbons.* The active time of the Siamang is at daybreak and twilight, when they are found assembled in large bands, and make the forests resound with their howl, in a manner concerted, which is often heard at an immense distance. During the day they remain quiet and inactive, and utter no cries unless disturbed. By the Malays they are supposed to be conducted by a head or chief, which is always the strongest, and which is also supposed to be invulnerable. He is • We are indebted to Dr Horsfield's Researches in Jara foi much of this information. THE NATTTBAL HISTOEY OP thought to direct their motions and to preside at their morning and evening howlings. In their general habits they are said to be more sluggish and inactive than some which we shall presently describe; and they neither swing from the branches, or leap with that surprising agility, which characterise some of the others. They seem, however, sensible of their imperfections ; and being endowed with an acute sense of hearing, fly to their retreats upon the least noise which is not familiar to them. If any members of .a band are wounded, they are immediately left be- hind ; a mother only will remain with the young one if hurt, and will allow herself to be taken rather than fly alone. MM. Diard and Duvaneel relate, that this maternal affection is at all times remarkably strong, and not exercised only in a time of danger. The young are tended with the greatest care ; and these gentlemen mention having seen the females carry their young to the banks of a stream, wash them notwith- standing their cries, and wipe and dry them in th« most careful manner. These gentlemen also describe their habits when confined, as characterised by stupidity, dulness, and inactivity, in a few days becoming mild, and deprived of all ferocity, but always timid, and without that familiarity and impudence which so many of this tribe very soon acquire ; nor does either good or bad treatment seem to have much effect on their disposi- tions. The most common position is sitting squatted, THE SIAMANG, 149 Burrounded by their long arms, and having the head concealed between their limbs. Dr Horsfield mentions, on the contrary, that a Siamang in the possession of Sir Stamford Raffles, was remarkably tame and tract- able, and was never happy but when allowed to be in company with some one ; and another described by Mr George Bennet, from observations made during a voyage from India to this country, snowed a lively affection towards himself and those who behaved kindly to it.* Sir Stamford Raffles mentions having seen a specimen entirely white. The other animals contained in this group n&ve naked callosities on the buttocks, like the baboons, and in their dispositions are more active. One of the first known, though till lately involved in obscurity, is the Simla lar of Linnaeus; the long-armed ape of Pennant. This was thought to be subject to a varia- tion in the colour of the wrists and hands to white ; but the distinction has turned out to be that of different species, and for that with white hands M. Geoffroy Saint Hilaire has retained the old name of lar, while the totally black species has been dedica- ted by the same gentleman to Sir Stamford Raffles, under the name ofHylobates Rafflesii. Another ani- mal allied to these, and generally described as a variety under the title of Lesser Gibbon, seems yet to be held * See that gentleman's interesting description in Loudoa'a Magazine of Natural History, vol. v. JK 131. 150 THE NATURAL HISTOBY OF as a subject for doubt by our most modern zoologists 5 it is much less in size, and has generally been pro- cured from Malacca. There is a sixth species, some- what allied except in colour, which, by older writers, was also confounded with the long-armed gibbon ; it is the Moloch or Wow-wow, the Hylobates leuciscus of moderns. It inhabits the Moluccas, is entirely of a grayish white, except the face, which is black, but does not differ in general habit from its congeners. The only remaining animal we have to mention, as embraced in this group, is also known under the name of Wow-wow, but which is indiscriminately applied by the natives of the Indian islands to several species though they are distinguished from one another by additional names. It is remarkably contrasted from the others by its more pleasing shades of colouring and surprising agility. We give a plate of the female and young of H Y J. O BAT K S A&ILI S . Feiu al < i Tli, -Active Gibbou.i 151 THE ACTIVE GIBBON. Hykbates agilis. — F. CUVIER. PSATB V. L« Wov-wow, Frederic Cuvier, Histoire Naturette dei Mammiferes. — Hylobates agilis, the Active Gibbon, Griffith, Animal Kingdom, vol. v.— Le Gibbon Brun, Cuvier, Regne Animal, vol. L p. 90. THIS very active animal inhabits the forests of Sumatra, where it is known under the name of Ungaputi, It appears to have been first noticed by Sir Stamford Raffles, to whom specimens were brought by MM. Diard and Duvancel, who were for many years in the pay and employment of this most assiduous naturalist. These gentlemen also sent specimens to the Paris Collections, which served as copies for Fre- deric Cuvier, in his great and elegant work upon the ' Mammalise, and which we have freely used in the progress of our present little volume. M. Duvancel also sent to Paris descriptions, which were used for the above-mentioned work, and which are now .united with what information- we have been able to procure elsewhere. 152 THE NATURAL HISTOET OF The face is naked, and of a bluish-black. In the male, the cheeks and a superciliary band are of a yellowish-white, beautifully contrasting with the clear chocolate-brown of the upper half of the body ; these marks are wanting in the female represented on our plate. The lower extremities are of the same dark colour, and the lower part of the back, and fore part of the thighs, are of a yellowish-brown. The shade of the colour, of both the dark and light parts, however, vary considerably according to age, and the light parts above, sometimes occupy a greater or lesser space. The hair in healthy animals is clear and fine, except upoix the neck, where it becomes lengthened, and some- what woolly or curled. The young are always much paler in colour than the adults, or those at an advanced age, and the very young animals are of a uniform yellowish-white. The general height scarcely exceeds two feet seven or eight inches, and the arms reach the ground when the animal stands erect. They are endowed with surprising agility,, and their light form and slender-looking extremities hardly give an idea of the great muscularity which they must possess. If the extreme tree on the borders of a forest can be reached by them, it will be in vain to pursue farther; they swing, leap, and, as it were, throw themselves from one tree to another, clearing at tunes a space of forty feet, with a rapidity which defies any pedestrian pursuer. When a slender branch can be grasped, the body is swung1 THE ACTIVE GIBBON. 153 several times, until sufficient impetus is gaineu, and they then dart off with the utmost apparent ease and grace. In a state of domestication, they are not so lively as many other monkeys, though susceptible of some cul- tivation; they are easily frightened, and as easily again reassured, fond of ,?eing caressed, inquisitive and familiar, and sometimes playful. In the internal anatomy, they differ from the preceding species in the absence of the guttural sack ; nevertheless, the cry is nearly similar, which must show that this formation is not necessary to produce the howl of this and some other monkeys, or that soma M;her structure mast fill up the deficiency. We have now mentioned all the known species of long-armed apes or Gibbons, and there are two forms which by most zoologists have been placed immediately following them, of which we have been unable to see specimens. We shall therefore shortly notice them from the works of highest reputation, before proceed- ing to the Guenons or long-tailed monkeys of the Old World. The first has been characterised by Esch- sholtz, under the name of Prebytis;* possesses no cheek-pouches; has naked callosities; the arms reach to the knees, and the tail is of considerable length. The facial angle 60°. Only one species has been discovered in Sumatra, P. mitrula, or capped mon- * Ilpfrdt, an old -woman. So called from the resemblance of wi old woman with a cap. 154 THE tf ATUBAL HISTORY OF key ; of small size, above of a bluish-green, beneath grayish-white. The second is named Colobus by Illiger,* remark- able for having only four fingers upon the upper ex- tremities, and in this respect representing Ateles^ of the New World, to which it also comes near in the shortness of the muzzle, and comparative shortness of the face. In other respects it resembles the Guenons. Three species are described. They are natives of Africa, but little is known of their habits or locality. The type of this genus may be seen in the Simia pdycomos, Schreber, the full-bottomed monkey of Pennant, black, with longer hair covering the neck, in the form of a mane. It inhabits the forests of Guinea and Sierra Leone. The next is the bay monkey, Colobus ferruginosus, which has been thought by some to be merely a variety of the pre- ceding ; and the third \v, an unfigured species, dedi- c^ted by M. Kuhl to M. Temminfk (Colobus Tern- i+inckii, Kuhl.) It formed part ol the collection of Mr Bullock, and, at the dispersion of that valuable museum, passed to that of Temminck. The upper parts of the head, ne<'k, back, and shoulders, black, the limbs clear reddish, and the under parts having a tinge of tawny yellow. The native country unknown. It may be remarked that this genus is placed by I]liger after the Cynocephali, and next that of Atele», * KoXo/?9f , maimed, imperfect •J- Arffciif, imperfect. THE GUENON3. 155 with which the monkeys of the New World are com. menced. THE GUENONS. Following for our guidance the arrangement of the quadrumanous animals proposed by Cuvier, whose ex- tensive experience and varied research, entitle him to every confidence, we shall proceed next with his brother's sub-family of the Guenons, or long-tailed monkeys of the Old World. Most zoologists place them after the orangs and gibbons, and reach the ba- boons by those species where the muzzle becomes more lengthened, (Cercocebus sabeus, &c.,) by the Rhesus monkey* and Barbary ape, and thus reach the Cynocephali, which have the largest facial angle, the nostrils placed at the extremity of the muzzle, possess a less degree of intelligence, and have dispositions akin to the fiercest and most brutal. With these they con- clude the forms of the Old World. The large assortment of animals which have been placed in this group, may be termed the most agree- able of the " monkey race." They embrace con- siderable variety of shape and size, but often exhibit furs of the greatest bnghtness and beauty, with forms at once light and graceful ; while their dispositions are in general mild, peaceful, and affectionate, or, if ocww • See vignette titlepage. 156 THE NATURAL HISTORY OF ly riotous, are confined to displays of playfulness and mischief, and are entirely free from the fierce and malignant tempers displayed in a greater or less degree among all the baboons. When taken at an early age they are readily tamed, and become playful and familiar ; they are extremely agile, though generally calm and circumspect in their motions, and learn a variety of tricks, which they perform with much cunning and address. In a wild state they are gre- garious, and, bird-like, inhabit the rich forests of Africa and Asia. The divisions which Frederic Cuvier has proposed, are entitled by him Semnopitheques and Guenons. The former he places next to the Gibbons, which some of the species so much resemble in different parts of the skeleton, as to be with difficulty recog- nised, and designates them Semnoptihecus, from the* grave and serious character of the animals contained in it. But before proceeding with these, we shall describe two monkeys, which, though generally admitted into the Guenon group, are so imperfectly known as to render any classification, however near we may come in our analogical reasonings, to be uncertain. The first of these is N A S ALI S LARVAT U S . Tbe Kaliau or Proboscis Mrmkev. i THE KAHAT7 OR PBOBOSCIS MONKET. 157 THE KAHAU OR PROBOSCIS MONKEY. Ifasalis larvatus. — GEOFFROY. PLATE VI. Proboscis Monkey, Pennant's Quadrupeds, append, p. 322. — Le KaLau, Audibert, HistoireNaturelle des Singes — Nasalig larvatus, Geoffrey Saint Hilaire, Annales du Museum, vol. xix. p. 91 . — Guenon nasique, Desmarefs Mammalogie, p. 55. THIS singular monkey is at once distinguished by the extraordinary elongation of the nose, which is nearly four inches in length, and gives a grotesque appearance to the animal, at the same time far 'rom pleasing. In other respects it presents a form of considerable interest to the zoologist ; the body is un- shapely, protruding in front like the Orangs, and wants the lightness possessed by so many of the Guenons. The arms are of very considerable proportional length, like the Gibbons; and, like the howling monkeys, it possesses a large guttural sack — while the presence of a lengthened tail, and of naked callosities, present altogether a very curious combination. The kahau is about three feet in height when placed in an erect position, and, with the exception 158 THE NATUBAL HISTOBY OP of the tail and lower part of the back, is of a reddish, brown colour. The female is said, by Audibert, to want the light-coloured markings on the back, and to be rather less in size ; the nose and face are of a blackish-brown colour, the nostrils are placed at the extremity, and they can be blown up or swelled Nose seen from beneath, from Audibert to a considerable size. Messrs Vigors and Horsfield have given the profile of another monkey, brought from the Island of Borneo, in which the nose is scarcely one-third of the length, and is somewhat turned up.* They suspect that this is the young of the proboscis monkey, which, if correct, will show that the elongation is much dependent upon the age • Zoological Journal, No. XIII. p. 110. THE KAHAU OB PBOBOSOIS MONKEY. 159 of the individuals ; wmie, siiuttttt farthei t,xammatioR prove that it is really distinct, they propose to designate it as a second species, under the title of N. recurvus, or turned-up proboscis monkey. The kahau is a native of the Island of Borneo, and is still rare in collections. It is^a gregarious animal, and is said to assemble in large troops, at sunrise and sunset, upon the trees bordering rivers. They are possessed of great activity, and dart from tree to tree, springing to a distance of fifteen or twenty feet. They utter continued cries, somewhat similar to the expres- sion of the common name which has been applied to them. Our plate is taken from that of Audibert. The other animal we alluded to, which appears to possess all the characteristics of the first division of the Guenons, is, 160 THE NATTTBA.L HISTOBY OP THE DOUG OR COCHIN.CHINA MONKEY. Lasiopyga* nemea,— -!LLIGEB. PLATE VII. Simia ncmseus, Linnaus. — Pygathrix nemaeus, Geoffroy Saint Hilaire, Annales du Museum, vol. xix. p. 90. — Lex Douc, Audibert, Histoire Naturelle des Singes. — Guenon Douo, Desmarets1 Mammalogie, p. 54. THIS singularly but beautifully marked species has been the subject of discussion among many naturalists, and its great rarity prevents, even to the present period, a satisfactory examination of its form and structure ; by some it is placed at the commencement of this division, while by others it is stationed at the conclusion, to be followed by the lesser baboons. Illiger gives the characters of his genus, so as, in fact, to include some of the latter, but by GeofFroy it is placed as the solitary representative of his genus above mentioned. It is a native of Cochin-China, and as very few spe- cimens have yet reached Europe, little or nothing i* Known regarding it. The height is about two feet, * Lasiopyga— x« maurus, from Frederic Cuvier's work, but which exhibits the canine teeth of less size 1G2 THE NATURAL HISTOET OF than the specimen figured by Dr Horsfield. T'ie canine tooth is there exhibited, standing nearly one- half longer than the others, and grooved on the inner surface. The chief difference in the molar teeth is in the posterior grinder of the lower jaw having distinctly five points, which distinguishes it from Cercopithecus, and which will be better understood by comparing the cuts now introduced with those accompanying the true Guenons. Dr Horsfield had taken the Negro monkey as the type of this form, whereas F. Cuvier selects another animal as more characteristic ; and we are the more inclined to follow this arrangement, as the Doctor him- self observes that S. maurus is more robust in make than its congeners, and the slender proportions are one of the first characters which strike the attention. Th« animal we allude to is, SEMTSTOPITHECUS MELALOPHAS. (The Simpia.) THE SIMPAI. 163 THE SIMPAI. Semnopithecus melalophos — F. CUVIER. PLATE VIII. Sirupai of Javanese ;— Simla melalophos, Sir Stamford Raffles, Transactions Linnaan Society, vol. xiii. ; — Frederic Cuvier, Histoire Naturelle des Mammiferes. THIS monkey, a native of Java and Sumatra, was ,first noticed by Sir Stamford Raffles, and afterwards figured and described by F. Cuvier, from specimens procured from the same sources. According to the latter naturalist, the flatness of the face is very remarkable ; and if the facial angle and size of the brow can be depended on as charac- teristics of intelligence, that of this animal .ought to be capable of greater developement than the orang- outang. There are, however, few records of its habits or dispositions; and we refer to the accompanying plate for an idea of the form and colours. The length of the adult animal to the insertion of the tail, is about *ne foot six inches ; the tail alone is between two and fiiree feet. Another monkey very characteristic of this group is, THE NA.TUEAL HTSTOET OF THE ENTELLUS MONKEY. Semnopithecus entellus. — F. CUVIER. PLATE IX. Semnopithecus entellus, Frederic Cuvier, Histoire Naturette des Mammiferes ;— Gardens and Menagerie of Zoological Society, vol. i. p. 80. — L'Entelle, Audibert, Histoire Natu- relle des Singe*. THE Entellus monkey, still of very rare occurrence in the European collections, presents a very remarkable form in its slender proportions, and the light colour of its fur, contrasted with the black skin of the face and extremities. It is a native generally of the Indian archipelago and some parts of the continent ; and, upon comparison of the relations of travellers, must abound in many parts of these countries, where they are venerated, or at least looked upon with a kind of superstitious awe, which prevents the natives from destroying them, and makes them often suffer from their depredations. They seem particularly suscep- tible of cold, which may account for their being seldom seen in our British menageries. Specimens which have been sent to Paris, and that in the Zoological \ SEMNOPITECUS EKTELLUS. /TheEiiteThisMonkey.l THE ENTELLUS MONKEY. 1G5 Gardens, only survived a short period after their aimal in Europe ; and one mentioned by Thunberg soon died of cold in the comparatively warm climate of the Cape of Good Hope. The height of the Entellus described by F. Cuvier, is about one foot five inches ; the length of the tail about two feet. The description of the specimen which died in the Zoological Gardens, by Mr Bennet, is as follows ; and it may be remarked, that the only mriaticn which seems incident to them is a yellow or redder tinge of the whitish fur. " When taken at an early age they are readily tamed, become playful and familiar, are extremely agile, although generally calm and circumspect in their motions, and learn to perform a variety of tricks, which they execute with no little cunning and address. After a time, however, their playfulness wears off; their confidence is succeeded by mistrust ; their agility settles down into a listless apathy; and, instead of resorting as before to the resources of their ingenuity for carrying any particular point, they have recourse to the brute force which they have acquired in its stead. At length they become as mischievous, and sometimes even as dangerous, as any of those monkeys which in their young state offer no such indications of good temper and intelligence. " It is of a uniform ashy-gray on the upper parts, "becoming darker on the tail, which is grayish-brown, of equal thickness throughout, and terminated by a 166 THE ffATUEAL HISTOHT OF few long hairs running out into a kind of point, but not forming a tuft. The under surface of the body is of a dingy yellowish- white ; and the fore-arms, hands, and feet, are of a dusky black. The fingers of both extre- mities are very long, and the thumbs comparatively short. The face, which is black, with somewhat of a violet tinge, is surmounted, above the eyebrows, by a line of long stiff black hairs, which project forwds, and slightly upwards. On the sides of the cheeks and beneath the chin, it is margined by a beard of grayish-white passing along the line of the jaws, and extending upwards in front of the ears, which are large and prominent, and of the same colour as the face. The hairs of the fore part of the breast appear to diverge from a f ommon centre. The height of our specimen. v*s:cn was not yet adult, when in a sitting posture exceeded two feet ; and his tail, which he rarely dis- played at its full length, but more usually kept curled up in a single coil, measured nearly three." The foregoing details will point out the characters oi this group. Three other species are introduced into Desmarets' work, and in Griffith's Synopsis, under the names of S. comatus, somewhat allied to that now described, S. pruinores, approaching to the Semno- pithecus maurus of Dr Horsfield, which we shall now notice. The Negro monkey, like its congeners, is a native of Java and Sumatra. The length of the body is about two feet three inches, that of the tail nearly THE NEGBO MONKEY. 167 the same, and the form and proportions are more robust than in those we have mentioned for our type. From the want of a figure of this curious animal, Dr Ilorsfield's minute description may not be unaccept- able. ' ' The covering of the Negro monkey, in adult sub- jects, is intensely black on every part, except the breast, the abdomen, the inner side of the extremities, and the root of the tail ; these parts are gray. On the crown of the head, the black hairs are slightly tipped with gray ; and as age advances, the gray portion becomes more extensive, and also shows itself on the upper parts of the body, but the extremities exteriorly, and the tail, even in the oldest subjects, retain their black- ness. The hairs are remarkably long, delicate, soft and silky. On the sides of the head, they are disposed backwards with a slight inclination outward, and they completely conceal the ears. They rise with a gradual slope on the forehead, but on the crown of the head they are suddenly deflected, so as to form a dependent crest. On the back, and on the extremities, the^ lie smooth and close. They are greatly elongate* :- on the sides of the body, between the shoulders, so a. to hang down to a considerable length when the animal walks on all fouVs. On the breast anteriorly, and on the abdomen, they are short, lax, and strag, gling. " In its young state it exhibits a great contrast to that in the adult. Immediately after birth, our ani- 168 THE NATURAL HISTORY OF mal has a fulvous or reddish-yellow colour; as it advances in age, the colour gradually changes. A gray discoloration first shows itself on the hands, the forehead, and the tip of the tail ; from these parts it gradually extends to the neck, the shoulders, and the flanks, and assumes from time to time a darker hue, until the coat of the animal is jet black above, and gray underneath. " The face is regularly circumscribed by hairs, •which are long, and closely applied to the head; the forehead, which is gradually sloping, is entirety concealed by them. The orbits of the eye are rather prominent ; and the bones of the nose short. The nose consists of an angular ridge, which is con- siderably elevated between the eyes, and terminates without any fleshy protuberance, by a membrane which is gradually attenuated below, and on each side of which the nostrils are placed. These are large, oblong, slightly curved, and pass backward into the cranium in a horizontal direction. From the termi- nation of the nose to the mouth a considerable space intervenes ; but the lips are small and thin, so as to exhibit, when slightly retracted, the interior of the mouth. The chin is short and small ; a circle of gray hairs encloses the mouth in the adult animal ; and on the chin the hairs have a disposition down- ward, so as to exhibit the appearance of a beard. The upper part of the face is nearly naked ; a few strag- gling stiff hairs are scattered on the cheeks and the THE NEGEO MONKEY. 169 upper lip, and on the more prominent part of the nose an interrupted series is observed. The irides of the eyes are of a dark brown colour. The ears are con- cealed from view by the long hairs which cover the lateral parts of the head; they are margined, and both in form and disposition of external parts closely resemble these organs in man. The neck is short, and considerably contracted. The trunk is of great length, broad and robust about the shoulders and the breast, and gradually of smaller dimensions towards the loins. The buttocks are marked with very large rough cal- losities. The mamnise, in the adult female, are lengthened and cylindrical. The tail is as long as the body and head taken together ; in some individuals, and particularly in young subjects, it exceeds these parts in length ; it is cylindrical during the greater part of its length ; the base is gradually tapering, and the tip is thickened, and terminated by a close tuft of long hairs of an ovate form. " The Semnopitkecus maurus is distinguished -among the Javanese by the name of Budeng, from another species which has the same form and habit, but a dif- ferent external covering. The name of the latter is Lutung; but the Malays and Europeans apply this name to both species, and distinguish them by the epithet of black and red ; the Budeng being denomi- nated Lutung itamy and the Lutung of the Javanese, Lutung mera. In Sumatra the name of the ' Maure' is Lotong. 170 THE NATUEAL HISTOET OP " The Budeng, or the black species, is much more abundant than the Lutung, or the red species ; and the latter, both on account of its variety and com- parative beauty, is a favourite among the natives. Whenever an individual is obtained, care is taken to domesticate it, and it is treated with kindness and attention. The Budeng, on the contrary, is neglected and despised ; it requires much patience in any degree to improve the natural sullenness of its temper. In confinement it remains during many months grave and morose; and as it contributes nothing to the amusement of the natives, it is rarely found in vil- lages, or about the dwellings. This does not arise from any aversion on the part of the Javanese to the monkey race j the most common species of the island, the Cercocebus aygula of Geoffroy, the Egret of Pen- nant, is very generally domesticated ; and a favourite custom of the natives is to associate it with the horse. In every stable, from that of a prince to that of a mantry, or chief of a village, one of these monkeys is found ; but I never observed the Budeng thus distin- guished. t€ The Semnopithecus maurus is found in* abun- dance in the extensive forests of Java ; it forms its dwelling on trees, and associates in numerous societies. Troops, consisting of more than fifty individuals, are often found together. In meeting them in the forests, it is prudent to observe them at a distance. They emit loud screams on the approach of man ; and by THE NEQEO MONKEY. 171 the violent bustle and commotion excite* by their movements, branches of decaying trees are r.ot unfre- quently detached, and precipitated on the spectators. They are often chased by the natives for the purpose of obtaining their fur. In these pursuits, which are generally ordered and attended by the chiefs, the ani- mals are attacked with cudgels and stones, and cruelly destroyed in great numbers. The skins are prepared by a simple process, which the natives have acquired from the Europeans, and they conduct it at present with great skill. It affords a fur of a jet black colour, covered with long silky hairs, which is usefully em- ployed both by the natives and the Europeans in pre- paring riding equipages and military decorations. " The Budeng, during its young state, feeds on tender leaves of plants and trees ; and when adult on wild fruits of every description, which are found in great abundance in the forests which it inhabits." The last animal to be introduced here is one also figured in Dr Horsfield's Java, under the name of Semnopithecus pyrrhus. It is closely allied to the preceding in form and size, but differs in being of a clear reddish-brown, and is given by this distinguished zoologist with some doubt as distinct ; but the differ- ent name by which it is known among the natives, and the permanency of its shades, he thinks, will entitle it to separation. We now -ATOC to Frederic Cuvier's second great 172 THE NATUEAL HISTOET OF division of the true Guenons, comprising the genera Cercopithecus and Cercocebus of GeofFroy. The man- ners are very nearly similar; but the graduation ol the facial angle, the large cheek-pouches, and shorter tail of the latter, seem to lead gradually to the baboons. The system of dentition also allies them by the length of the canine teeth ; and the annexed cut may be com- pared with those illustrating the preceding genus Sem- nopithecus. Guenons. We shall first notice Cercopithecus. — In form it is very closely allied to the last ; but differs from both it and the following by the large facial angle of from 50" to 55°, rounded heads, flat noses, and long posterior extremities. The manners are also similar ; but the CERCOPITHECUS MONA. ( TheVariedMonkey.) THE CEBCOPITHECTTS, ETC. 173 animals comprised under it are more remarkable for grace of form, and beauty of colouring, and its type has been eulogized as elegant in the highest degree, mild of disposition, affectionate, and penetrating ; and possessing every quality that could adorn the disposi- tion of an animal. The species we allude to is, THE VARIED MONKEY. Cercopithecus mono. — GEOFFROV. PLATB X. The Varied Monkey, Pennant's Quadrupeds, page 210 — La Mone, Audibert, Histoire Naturelle des Singes Frederic Cuvier, Histoire Naturelle des Mammiferes. — Guenon Mone, Desmarets"1 Mammologie, p. 58. THE Mona, says Frederic Cuvier, is superior to all the Guenons in the elegance of its form, and grace of its movements, the mildness of its disposition, the delicacy of understanding, and sagacity of counte- nance ; and its outward adornments vie with its in- ternal acquirements in the beauty and variety of their tints. It has generally been thought to be a native of Barbary, although no proof can be adduced. They certainly are brought from Africa; and from the facility with which they bear a European climate, we may suppose the northern or mountainous districts are their native abodes. 174) THE NATTJBAL HISTORY OP The individual represented by F. Cuvier, and which has served for our copy, was procured to the Parisian Menagerie while very young, and on account of its mild and retiring manners was allowed to go at large. Age did not alter these traits of its character, and its gambols are performed with a sedate activity, which is not intrusive or disagreeable. Notwithstanding, its cunning and activity are very great, and particularly its adroitness in performing any little theft without the slightest noise. It will open a chest or drawer by turning the key in the lock, will untie knots, undo the rings of a chain, and will search one's pockets with a delicacy of touch which will not be felt until the theft has Been discovered; the latter was its most favourite amusement, and a stranger seldom escaped without being rifled. It is playful when caressed, and will return them with gentleness, uttering at the time a low cry, as if an expression of pleasure, and in every way is free from the disgusting manners possessed by most other monkeys. Of their habits in a wild state, nothing whatever is known, and the account of those who have mentioned them can be reduced to no proof, and seem to be more the result of conjecture than of reality. The colouring of a specimen in the Zoological Gar- dens is thus described by Mr Bennet, and appears the most correct we are acquainted with: — " The top of the head is of a greenish-yellow, mingled with a slight tinge of black, and the neck, back, and sides, are of THE YAEIED MONKEY. 175 a deep chestnut brown, passing downwards as far as the shoulders and haunches, where it changes into a dusky slate colour, which is continued on the limbs and tail. The latter organ is considerably longer than the body, and has, on each side of its base, a very remarkable white spot. The under surface of the body, and the inside of the limbs, are of a pure and delicate white, separated from the neighbouring colours by an abrupt line of demarcation. " The naked upper part of the face, comprehending the orbits and the cheeks, is of a bluish purple ; the lips, and so much of the chin as is without hair, flesh- coloured; on the sides of the face, large bushy whiskers, of a light straw colour, mixed with a few blackish rings, advance forwards, and cover a considerable portion of the cheeks. Above the eyebrows is a trans- verse black band, extending on each side as far as the ears, and surmounted by a narrow crescent-shaped stripe of gray, which is sometimes scarcely Tisible. The ears and the hands are of a livid flesh colour." Another very beautiful allied species is the Diana or Palatine monkey, (Cercopitkecus Diana, Geoff.,) so named by Linnaeus from the white crescent-shaped band, the emblem of the Virgin Huntress, which adorns its brow. It is a native of the eastern coast of Africa, prin- cipally in Guinea, is about eighteen inches in length, with a tail exceeding two feet. Its colouring. Mr 176 THE NATURAL HISTOET OP Bennet observes, is peculiarly varied and graceful. The head, neck, sides, and middle of the body beneath, are of a deep ash colour, gradually becoming darker on the outside of the limbs, and finally changing into a deep black upon the hands. The tail also exhibits a dark shade, and terminates with a point entirely black. The general colour may be described as consisting of a mixture of black and white, the former predominating, and the whole having a grisly appearance. But the most conspicuous feature, is a straight line of long white hairs, surmounting a less obvious one of black, which runs in a crescent form across the forehead, above the eyes, and extends nearly to the ears. The specimen in the Zoological Society was playful and familiar. By Linnaeus the Diana monkey is said to be fond of all kinds of vegetables, but particularly to delight in fruits, raisins, nuts, and almonds ; and would willingly also eat eggs and bread, but animal food was not en- joyed; it drank often, and before taking anything would always smell it. It was remarkably fond of heat ; and, when the cold season commenced, gave vent to its uneasiness in shrill complaints. Every thing that is set before the animal is turned over, even the vessel which is put down with its food. When a stranger is introduced it shows its teeth, and bows repeatedly with the head • and, if enraged, en- deavours to bite its enemy. This genus will contain seven or eight species in addition; for a brief notice of which we refer out CERCOPITHECUS RUBER. (The Red Monkey.) THE RED MONKEr. 177 readers to the note of species given at the conclusion. We shall here only mention another animal, remark- able among its congeners for the uniformity of iti» colouring, it is, THE RED MONKEY. Cercopithecus ruler. — GEOFFROY. PlATE XL Simla rubra, Linnceus — Cercopithecus ruber, Geoffrey, An. nales du Museum, vol. xix. p. 96 Guenon patas, Des- maresfs Mammalogie, p. 59 — Le Patas, Frederic Burner, Histoire Naturelle des Mammiferes. IT is a species long known, recorded so far back as Prosper Alpinus, who has given both a figure and description. The length of the body is about one foot four or five inches, and that of the tail is nearly equal. All the upper parts are of a brilliant reddish fawn colour, which is shaded into a pale grayish tinge on the arms and legs, and the face, cheeks, breast, and belly, are pure white ; a band of black hair crosses above the eyebrows, and there are two lines of the same colour upon the upper lip, in the shape of mus- taches, which give the countenance a peculiar phy- siognomy. It is a native of Senegal. Mr. Bennet mentions that a young individual in the Zoological Museum, Bruton Street, "is lively and active, but 178 THE KATTTBAL HISTORY OP somewhat irascible when handled. When pleased, it dances on all-fours in a peculiar and measured step, which is far from being ungraceful, although after a time it becomes ludicrous from its regular monotony." Two young specimens kept by F. Cuvier were mis- chievous at a very early age; and though not defi- cient in the penetration of their race, showed all the impatience and caprice which characterise the true Guenons. In Geoffroy's second subdivision of the Guenons having the more elongated muzzle, and to which he has applied the title of Cercocebus, will be seen, THE MANGABEY OR WHITE EYELID MONKEY. Cercocebus fuliginosus — GEOFFROY. PLATE XII. Simla ethiops, Linnaeus.— -White Eyelid Monkey, Pennant'* Quadrupeds, 204.— Mangabey, Buffon*— Guenon enfumfe, Desmaresfs Mammalogie, p. 62 ; Frederic Cuvier, Histoire Naturelle des Mammiferes.^ — Cercocebus fuliginosus, Geof- frey, Annales du Museum, vol. xix. p. 97« WE have placed this curiously-marked monkey first in this subdivision, as possessing considerable alliance in form to the preceding ; so much so, as to be by some zoologists placed with it. We prefer Geoffroy's CERCOCEBUS FULIGINOSVS. TheMangabev or"WMte eyelid Moukev.| THE MANGABET OE WHITE EYELID MONKEY. 179 arrangement, and look upon it as one of those con- necting forms which can be so constantly traced. Excepting the plate in Frederic Cuvier's Mam- miferes, there is no good coloured representation of this animal, and we were so fortunate as to procure a drawing from a living female lately exhibited by Mr Wombwell in Edinburgh.* This animal is generally described to be mild and good-tempered, but very restless and active ; and the female we have alluded to fully confirmed these accounts. She was certainly a most lively animal, never for a moment at rest, and particularly active when observed, as if conscious of the notice she excited, and anxious to display her talents. She performed many of the attitudes of the most experienced Harlequins. When the sketch was taken, she was particularly troublesome in her display, and is represented in the attitude in which she most frequently placed herself; sometimes extending the one hand and sometimes the other. She was extremely gentle, and never resented any of the troublesome usage to which animals in a menagerie are so frequent- ly subjected by their various visitors ; on the con- trary, she was delighted to see strangers, and seemed flattered by their attentions. She was remarkably cleanly and careful not to soil her person. When * Mr Wombwell allowed Mr Lizars to make drawings from several of the interesting animals in his collection, and the pro, prietor of the Naturalist's Library takes this opportunity to offer his acknowledgments for Mr W/s attentions. 180 THE NATURAL HISTOET (XF feeding she seldom put her head to the food or dish, but lifted and conveyed it to her mouth. Her food was chiefly bread and milk, and occasionally vegetables, of which a carrot was a very favourite luxury. This monkey is most appropriately named from the white colour of the eyelids, a most conspicuous feature in its physiognomy, and assisting the expres- sion often thrown into the ridiculous grimaces, which, Mr Bennet remarks, (e it continues in a state of con- finement with laudable perseverance and unwearied zeal." • In both this species and another, " the collared white eyelid monkey," (Cercocebus eihiops, GeofFroy,) the eyelids are of a very peculiar colour, a sort of clear grayish-white, but with a dead or chalky hue. In the female above alluded to, this colour was remarkably apparent, contrasting with the naked parts of the face, which resembled Indian rubber, and its transparent shade of dark brownish purple. The .hair is fine and soft to the touch, and on the upper parts is of a dull sooty black (expressively named enfumee by the French natura- lists,) darker upon the hands, gradually shading into a yellowish tint on the breasts, belly, and inside of the thighs. On these parts the thin coating of hair plainly showed the skin, which is very pure flesh-colour. The extremities are of the same colour and texture with the face j and it has been remarked 'that they resembled a lady's hand covered with a very fine black kid glove. THE MANGABEY OB WHITE EYELID MONKEY. 181 The native country of the white eyelid moriKej seems to be yet somewhat uncertain. The west toast of Africa is generally assigned to it ; and the specimen which formed the subject of our plate, was said to be procured from that country. The collared white eyelid monkey which we have mentioned, appears to inhabit the opposite or eastern side of the same continent, and is an animal of greater beauty. The upper part of the head is deep chestnut- brown, and the back of the neck is crossed by a collar of the purest white, which reaches forward upon the cheeks, and forcibly contrasts with the deep shade of the body. Another animal placed in this division, and with what F. Cuvier terms the Malbrouks, may be almost said to join in a small group among the Guenons; they have a peculiarity of carrying the tail arched over the back, in the manner of a cur dog ; and in parts of their form and physiognomy come much nearer to thfr baboons. The first we shall mention is 182 THE NATURAL HISTOBY OF THE GREEN MONKEY. Cercocebus sabaeus — GEOFFROT. PLATE XIII. £t Jago monkey, Edwards1 Gleanings, Plate 215 The Green monkey, Pennant's Quadrupeds, 203 — Guenon callitriche, Desmaresfs Mammalogie, page 61. — Cercocebus saboeus, Geoffroy, Annales du Museum, vol. xix. p. 99. — Le Calli- triche, Frederic Cuvier, Histoire Naturelle des Mam- miferes. THE green monkey is one of the most abundant of this group, and is perhaps oftener seen in a captive state than any of the others. It is a native of the Cape Verd Islands and the continent of Africa, and in its disposition seems to possess part of the bad traits of the baboons, though it is at the same time lively and playful. That described by M. Cuvier, in the Menagerie du Museum, became very fierce and irascible, and even bit the keepers who happened to get within his reach. The description given by Mr Bennet of the speci- mens in the Zoological Gardens, may be considered accurate ; in some specimens, the shade of colouring varies, but there is no other variation of consequence. THE GBEEN MONKEY. 183 " The colour is greenish-yellow above, arising from the ringing of the hairs with various shades of yellow and black, but assumes more of a dark grizzled appear- ance on the sides of the body, and outer sides of the limbs, which become gradually darker towards the hands. The face, ears, and naked part of the hands, are of a jet black ; the former is of a triangular shape, bounded above the eyes by a straight line of stiff black hairs, and on the sides by spreading tufts of light hairs, with a yellowish tinge, meeting in a point beneath the chin. The neck and chest are white; the under parts of the body have a yellowish tinge; and the inside of the limbs is gray. The length of the. head and body is sixteen or eighteen inches, and that of the tail some- what more." This animal, or at least one under the title of the " Green Monkey" has been mentioned by many tra- vellers, who give accounts of the vast troops which assemble together. In Adanson's Voyage to Senegal, it is thus introduced : — " But what struck rne most, was the shooting of monkeys, which I enjoyed within six leagues this side of Podor, on the lands to the south of Donai, other- wise called Coq ; and I do not think there ever was better sport. The vessel being obliged to stay there one morning, I went on shore, to divert myself with my gun. The place was very woody, and full of green monkeys, which I did not perceive but by their breaking the boughs on the tops of the trees, from 181 THE NATUEAL HISTOEY OF whence they tumbled down upon me; for in other respects they were so silent and nimble in their tricks, that it would have been difficult to hear them. Here I stopped, and killed two or three of them, before the others seemed to be much frighted ; however, when they found themselves wounded, they began to look for shelter, some by hiding themselves among the large boughs, others by coming down upon the ground ; others, in fine, and these were the greatest number, by jumping from one tree to another. Nothing could be more entertaining, when several of them jumped together on the same bough, than to see it bend under them, and the hithermost to drop down to the ground, while the rest got further on, and others were still suspended in the air. As this game was going on, I continued still to shoot at them ; and though I killed no less than three-and-twenty in less than an hour, and within the space of twenty fathoms, yet not one of them screeched the whole time, notwithstanding that they united in companies, knit their brows gnashed their teeth, and seemed as if they intended to attack me." Another species belonging to this group is Fre- deric Cuvier's Malbrouk, Cercocebus cynosurus, de- scribed and figured by that naturalist as an animal of truly arboreal habits ; walking with difficulty on the ground, and exhibiting the greatest activity when sporting on the bars of its cage ; it could sustain itself THE MALBKOTTK, 155 by successive darts from one side of its cage to the other, performed by the force of its feet alone, and would keep up this severe motion for a considerable period. When young it was docile and mild-tempered, but age brought with it propensities more brutal. The chief characteristic of its disposition, as it is in all the congeners, is extreme caution, or, as it were, an arrangement or previous plan of the actions to be performed ; thus, in their attacks, the opportunity is watched when the person or animal is off their guard and otherwise employed, and it is always made froiu behind; wounds are inflicted with the teeth and nails, and a sudden dart places them at a distance, where they will remain, showing their anger with ex- pressive changes of countenance, and watching the time when the attack can be with safety renewed. The countenance of this animal becomes more like that of the baboons, and, with the feet and skin of the ears, is black. The cheeks, chin, and a band above the eyes, are white, as also the under parts and the insides of the legs ; all the other parts are of a yellowish-green, and the general contour is so similar to the green mon- key, that it has been mistaken for it in a young state. Another allied animal, equally remarkable for the beauty of its yellowish-green fur, is the red-vented monkey, Cercocebus pygeryihrceus — a native of the forests to the interior of the Cape, truly arboreal, and never met beyond the boundaries of the larger woody tracts. The form is somewhat different; but the 1SG THE ITATUBAL HISTOBT OF similarity of the upper covering, tne white cheeks, and frontal band, place it close to those we have just now described. We again refer to our Synopsis for an enumeration of the other Cercocebi, and will now proceed to the next forms, which will commence THE BABOONS, We have now reached these forms which conduct from monkeys of pleasing appearance and gentle man- ners, to the most disgusting of the whole tribe. They may be generally designated under the title of baboons, but naturally form themselves into two -groups — those with the muzzle still more lengthened than the Guenons, but having the nostrils placed as it were on the face ; a body of considerable size and strength, and the tail shorter ; the dispositions becoming more sulky and untraetable, furious and revengeful, when annoy- ed.* The second, comprised in the true Cynocephali of Cuvier, and which are at once characterised by the position of the nostrils at the very extremity of the muzzle. Their size is very large ; their strength enor- mous ; their dispositions possessing scarcely a good quality, and combining great fierceness and malig- nity, which, joined with their strength, renders them * The rignette will give an idea of this form. DOG-FACED BABOONS. 187 afways dangerous in confinement or when attacked in a wild state. The form and arrangement of the teeth is nearly similar, except in size, among both groups ; the principal peculiarity will be observed in the form of the canine teeth, which are of remarkable strength, and in the grinders, the last of which has an additional point, somewhat resembling that of Semnopithecus. The first genus to be mentioned is Macacus of Lacepede, into which we have also brought the Rhesus monkey, retaining the two tail-less species by them- selves. The Ouanderou has generally been taken for the type of this form ; but, before describing it, we shall mention the Macaque of Frederick Cuvier, (Simla cynocephalus, Linnaeus), which evidently forms the passage between the Guenons and Baboons. It is distinguished by a blunt and elongated muzzle, forming a facial angle of 40° to 45° ; by the promi- nency of the superciliary crests which cover the eyes, and give a peculiar expression to the physiognomy, and by the comparative shortness of the tail, which is rarely equal to the length of the body. In this species we still see the colouring of the Guenons, and the length of tail is nearly equal to that of the individuals we last described; but we want the light and agile form, and see the proportions heavily and strongly^ made. The head is large, the muzzle short, the nose flat, and the superciliary ridges ample and lowering ; the fingers are united with a 188 THE NATURAL HISTORY OP membrane for the length of the first phalanx. The general position of the animal is on all-fours, or seated on its buttocks, and it generally feeds in one of these positions, either by the assistance of its hands, or by placing the muzzle at once among the food, always, however, filling the cheek-pouches, which are ample, before any portion has been swallowed. When asleep, it either lies on one side like a dog, or sits in a bent position, with the head reclining on the breast. Monkeys have very seldom produced young in a state of confinement in this country, and they have been still more rarely brought to maturity. Frederic Cuvier gives an account of a pair of these animals which produced, though the young survived only a few days. The male and female were confined in separate cages, in sight of each other, and their de- monstrations of the softer passions, induced their keepers to allow one habitation ; nearly a year after the female proved with young, and in seven months gave birth to a female. It was well formed; the eyes were open at birth, and its nails were complete. It was however too weak to support itself, and the mother treated it with no attention, did not attempt to suckle it, and entirely left it ; the next day it died. Some time after, a second female was produced, under similar circumstances, and all attempts to rear it were equally unsuccessful. Another monkey, which ought to stand in this place, is the Toque of Frederic Cuvier, Macacus sinicus. MACACUS SILENUS. ! TheWauderooKrrnkcv. DOG-FACED BABOONS. 189 It is remarkable for the slender form of the muzzle, but approaches nearer to Cercocebus in colouring, and has a longer tail than the generality of our present group. We have now endeavoured to represent, THE WANDEROO MONKEY. Macacus silenus. — LACEPEDE. PLATE XIV. Lion-tailed baboon, Pennant's Quadrupeds, 198 — Macaque 4 criniere, Cuvier, Regne Animal, i. 95 ; Audibert, Histoirg Naturelle des Singes. — Papio silenus, Geoff roy, Annales dv Museum, vol. xix. p. 1 02 — The Wanderoo monkey, Garden* and Menagerie of the Zoological Society, p. 2L THE Wanderoo, or lion-tailed monkey of Pennant, is so well marked, that a description, in addition to the figure, is almost unnecessary. Knox describes it shortly and quaintly in his Ceylon : He says, " there are abundance in the woods, as large as English spaniel dogs, of a darkish-gray colour, and black faces, with great white beards round from ear to ear, which make them show just like old men. They do little mischief, keeping in the woods, eating only leaves and buds of trees ; but when they are catched they will eat anything. This sort they call, in their language, Wanderows" 190 THE NATURAL HISTOEf OP A specimen in the collection of the Zoological Society is extremely active, and occasionally trouble- some, but is good-tempered; he is, however, yet young, and may afterwards prove dangerous from his strength. " His favourite exercise appears to consist in throwing himself together, with tils chain over the transverse bar, which passes from pole to pole, and swinging himself backwards and forwards, while thus suspended by his loins. When a party enters the room, he usually descends his pole with rapidity, and watches a favourable opportunity for jumping upon some of them unawares, and carrying off a hat, or whatever else he may happen to seize, with which he instantly reascends his pole, and seats himself at the top, enjoying the success of his scheme." * In some of the other species the tail becomes much shorter, such as the M . rkcesus and nemestrina ; but a better idea will be formed from the vignette on the We shall proceed to the next genus, Inuus of Cuvier, and have given, as an illustration, * Gardens of Menagerie. INTJUS SYLVANUS. ( TheBarbaryApe.j THE BABBABY APE. 191 THE BARBARY APE. Inuus sylvanus. — CUVIER. PLATE XV. Simia inuus, Linnaeus. — Magot, Buffon; Frederic Cuvier, Histoire Naturelle des Mammiferes. — Macaque magot, Des- maresfs Mammalogie, p. 67 — Barbaiy ape, Pennant's Quadrupeds ; Gardens of Zoological Society — Magot Afri- cam, Inuus ecudatus, Geoffroy, Annales du Museum, xix. p. 100. THIS monkey is remarkable, both on account of its peculiar form, and as being the only quadrumanous animal found on the European continent. By Fre- deric Cuvier it is thought to be limited in its geo- graphical distribution to Barbary and Egypt, and the southern districts of Spain, and not to extend over Africa to China and India, as some naturalists allege. But the most celebrated abode of this species is the precipitous sides of the rock of Gibraltar, which is said by a historian of its celebrated siege to be re- markable for the number of apes about its summits breeding in inaccessible places, and appearing in large droves with their young on their backs, on the west- ern face of the hill. 192 THE NATURAL HISTCET OP Frederic Cuvier says, that they walk most com- monly on all-fours, while at the same time they are very active climbers. He confirms the opi. nion of them' being gregarious, filling the forests with their vast troops, and openly attacking those enemies which they think they can overcome, while they drive to a distance, by their numbers and scream- ing an intruder of whose powers they are doubtful. In a state of captivity it is capable of more than ordinary powers of comprehension ; but, to improve those abilities as far as possible, it should be procured young, as with advanced age they generally become more sullen and morose, and even sometimes danger- ous. It is very frequently seen at home, and, next to the green monkey, has the misfortune to be most frequently selected to accompany strolling bands, and owes most of its torments to the superior intelligence it is endowed with. In captivity, it agrees with fruits, bread, and boiled vegetables, particularly carrots and potatoes ; and its natural gregarious dispositions appear also to be pre- served in its delighting in the society of some little animal, which is often placed in its company. Our plate from Frederic Cuvier will give an idea of its form and appearance. The females are nearly similar, though generally less in -size. There is another tail-less animal which we would introduce in this place, as forming the real passage to the true Cynocephcdi. It is the Cynocephcdw niger THE BLACK APE. 193 of Cuvier; while the modern British zoologists place it in company with the Barbary ape and the Rhcesus monkey. The general resemblance and phy- siognomy ally it to the dog-faced baboons, which is strengthened by the swelled cheeks and flat nose; but the position of the nostrils, with habits charac- teristic of the Macaci, and the total want of any tail, join it with the preceding. Four specimens only seem yet to.be known; one in the Royal Museum in Paris ; another in the Tower of London, described by Mr Grey in his Spicefogia Zoologica; another more lately exhibited in Exeter Change, and the fourth in the London Zoological Gardens, which is thus described by Mr Bennet: — " Our animal is of a deep jet black in all its parts, with the exception of its large callosities, which are flesh-coloured. The body is covered with long woolly hair, becoming shorter on the limbs ; its ears are small ; its tail a mere tubercle, less than an inch in length ; and its cheek-pouches eeem to be capable of much distension. Its face is broad, rather prominent, slightly narrowing at the muzzle, and abruptly truncate, with the nostrils placed very obliquely on the upper sur- face. On the top of the head it has a broad tuft of long hairs, falling backwards, and forming a very re- markable crest. The expression of its physiognomy is peculiarly cunning. It seems to be rather violent in its temper, and tyrannizes not a little over the quiet 19 4 THE NATTJEAL HISTOEY OJ gray Gibbon, which is at present confined in the same cage." The native country of this monkey is yet somewhat uncertain ; but the best authorities record it as the islands of the Indian Archipelago. With this species we close what was mentioned as the first division of the Baboons, and enter upon the second — the Cynocephali of Cuvier. These, according to the researches of the brother of this great naturalist, consist of only six species, which are again subdivided into two very natural sections. The one, with a con - siderable length of tail ; the other, with the muzzle swollen upon the sides, and in the adults raised into coloured ridges, while the tail is a tubercle finished by a tuft of hairs, and stands erect, appearing, from the position of the coccyx, as if placed upon the lower part of the back itself. The Cynocephali are all of large size, and indeed exceed that of any of the quadrumanae, if we except the adult orang-outang; their proportions combine strength and activity, and their physiognomy fierceness with intelligence ; while their dispositions are so fickle, or so easily affected — the transition from one passion to another is so rapid, that they are never to be trusted — and the paroxysms of their rage are described by F. Cuvier to be so great, that some have fallen vic- tims to the consequences. That zoologist thinks that in this group the active animal passions are developed THE CYNOCEPHALT. 195 to their utmost extent. In a wild state, they possess an intuitive knowledge of what will harm them, and combining with it great cunning, they most frequently disappoint their enemies. They attack at a distance, and threaten with their cries, but only use their powerful strength, and formidable tusks, when compelled by danger. The naturalist we have men- tioned above, would even attribute to them a power of higher intelligence — that they will destroy a planta- tion from revenge, watching their opportunity ; and he relates an anecdote of the Chacma,* which severely bit his keeper upon being threatened to be struck, though the animal had never seen a stick, and had never been beaten. In like manner, he continues, are these animals so susceptible of the instruction of circumstances in a wild state, capable of receiving it artificially from man, and they are often met with performing various feats at the command of their keepers ; but he adds, it is only when young that they thus submit. They retain a kind of docility longer than the period of their youth, but it is effected in a different way; their passions or their likings must be administered to. Such was the case with the speci- men of the Mandril so long exhibited in Exeter Change, under the name of " Happy Jerry." He would have done anything for gin and water, and the love of drink became so strong, that he would have made any * See description, page 15G. 19G THE NATURAL HISTOnr OP eacrifice: perhaps some theorists will adduce this common vice as an argument for the common na- ture of men and monkeys. We have heard of another animal of this kind, possessed of a curious propensity, which might serve as an additional proof towards the same end ; he was kept at large by a gentleman, who kept also a pack of harriers, and to enjoy either the noise or the sport, would travel to an eminence whenever the hounds threw off. This love for field-sports had, however, nearly proved fatal. The hounds one day got upon Jerry's trail on his return home, and he was only saved by a tree occurring opportunely. Superior intelligence was, on this occasion, so far displayed, that Jerry never afterwards enjoyed hare hunting. These baboons having the general organization of the quadrumanous animals, are necessarily arboreal in their habits, though not to such an extent as the other monkeys of the Old World; and they are at greater ease when on the ground, on account of the more accurate proportion of the hind quarters, though their motions there are still awkward and constrained. Their pace is generally a kind of slow gallop, per- formed by alternate undulations of the whole fore and hinder parts. Their agility on a tree is, however, surprising when we look at their heavy bodies ; they possess all the power of grasping and swinging ; take immense leaps, and will in a manner tumble from one part of a tree to another, before the spectator can think THE CYffOCEPHALI. 197 it possible. In this way they equally possess qualifica- tions for pursuing or eluding an enemy. They feed chief- ly on fruits and roots, or the young and tender shoots of various plants. Their natural country is the warmer parts of Africa and India. They are very suscepti- ble of cold, and great care has to be taken with those kept in confinement in Europe, and, even with every precaution, a few years is generally the limit of their existence. The hair is longer than usual, and forms a sort of mane on the upper parts. For an illustration of the first form among the Cynocephalij we have selected, THE CHACMA. Papio comatiis.—- GEOFFROY. PLATE XVI. Babuin chevelu, Papio comatus, Geoffrey, Annales xix. p. 103.— Cynocephalus chacma, DesmaresCs Mammalogie^ p. 69. — Le Chacma, Frederic Cuvier's Histoire Naturelle des Mammiferes. THE animal which formed the subject of the an- nexed plate, copied from that in the Histoire Naturelle des Mammiferes, was procured very young. During his youth his frolics made him amusing, but his mis- chievous disposition soon became dangerous, and it 198 THE NATURAL HISTORY OP oecame necessary to chain him at the door of a court. There he performed the office of a watch-dog, and very soon became the terror even of his keepers. From his ferocity, his master was . obliged to get rid of him. F. Cuvier relates another instance of ferocity in a specimen kept in the Jardin du Hoi. This animal made his escape from his cage to the enclosure in which he was confined. His keeper imprudently threatened him with a stick, which so enraged the animal that he darted upon him, and before the man's release could be affected, wounded him so severely on the thigh as to put his life in danger. Nor could every endeavour prevail on the animal to return to his confinement, until his rage was again roused by the following expedient. The keeper's daughter often Supplied him with food, and seemed a great favourite. She placed herself at a door opposite that of the cage through which the animal had to pass, and a stranger appearing to caress her, the chacma darted upon him, but was secured before he could pass through his cage. The Chacma is a native of Africa, in the neigh- bourhood of the Cape of Good Hope. The colour is of a greenish or grayish-black, paler upon the fore part of the shoulders and flanks. The neck is clothed with long hair, in the form of a mane, which has fur- nished Geoffroy with a character for the name he has attached. The skin of the face and extremities are of a purplish-black, relieved around the eyes by a paler THE CHAC3IA. 199 tint, and by the upper eyelids, which are nearly white, as in the mangabey or white eyelid monkey. It is also remarkable in having the naked callosities very Email. Another animal allied in colour is the dog-faced baboon of Pennant, the Tartarin of F. Cuvier, thought originally to be a native of Arabia, but at present rare in the European collections. It is equally fierce and dangerous with the preceding ; of a greenish-gray colour; the anterior part of the body clothed with very long and shaggy hair. The next animals we shall mention are Le Babouin and Le Papion of Frederic Cuvier. The first, appa- rently, is the Simla cynocephalus of Linnaeus, and is thought by the above-mentioned author to be one of those adored in the temple of Hermopolis, and so fre • quently seen among the Egyptian hieroglyphics. The colour is of a uniform yellowish-green, paler on the under parts ; and the more remarkable deviations of form, are in the nostrils being prolonged to the length of the jaws, separated above by a very marked hollow, and by the lateral cartilages advancing as far forward as that in the centre. The tail is raised at its origin, and appears as if placed in the same posi- tion with that of the Mandril, but is of considerable length, reaching below the hams. It may be re- marked, that this baboon has been confounded with the next, which Frederic Cuvier considers perfectly distinct and has named Le Papion. This animal is 200 THE NATURAL HISTORY OP considerably larger in size ; the colour is of a ruddier hue ; the cartilages of the nose are longer than the jaws ; and the colour of the skin on the face, extremi- ties, and ears, are black, while the upper eyelids are white. It is a native of Africa, but hitherto unde- scribed by any traveller in a state of nature. To illustrate the second form of the true Cynoce- ij we have figured, THE MANDRIL OR RIB-NOSE BABOON. Papio mormon. — GEOFFROY. PLATE XVII. Ribbed-nose baboon, Pennant's Quadrupeds, p. 190. — Papio mormon, Geoffroy, Annales du Museum, xix. p. 184.— - Cynocephalus mandril, Desmaresfs Mammalogie, p. 70. — Le Mandril, Frederic Cuvier, Ifistoire Naturelle des Mam. mi feres ; Audibert, Histoire Naturelle des Singes. THIS formidable animal, the fiercest and most power- ful of its race, is a native of the Guinea Coast, and has been well known for a long period in our mena- geries. In an adult state, the colours of its fur may vie with any of the quadrumanse, and the general effect is heightened at a little distance by the rich blue and purple shades of the muzzle, lip, and other naked parts of the skin. Upon a nearer view, how- ever, these beauties do not compensate for its other- g 3 THE MANDRIL OE BIB-NOSE BABOON. 201 wise disgusting appearance. A representation has been given of this animal ;* and it may be remarked, that it is only in the adults where the brilliancy of the colouring is observed. In the young, the hair is of a uniform tawny-green, paler underneath and inside the legs, and assuming a yellowish tinge on the cheeks ; the ridges upon the muzzle commence to appear of a livid blue, and the bright red of the nose and lips is of a dull flesh colour. The females are less in size, and the colouring of the naked parts is never so vivid. " Happy Jerry," the property of Mr. Cross, and so long the prominent attraction to Exeter Change, was a ribbed-nose baboon. He is described to have been docile to his keepers, but easily exaspe- rated by strangers; and among other accomplish- ments, had been taught to drink sling and smoke tobacco. In the first he delighted; but I rather think the latter was not such a favourite, and a bribe of gin and water was generally promised be- fore his performance. His cage was furnished with a small but strong arm-chair, into which, when ordered, he would seat himself with great gravity and await further orders. All his manoeuvres were performed with great slowness and composure. His keeper having lighted the pipe, presented it to him ; he inspected it minutely, sometimes feeling it with his finger, as if to know if lighted, before in- * From the plate in Cuvier's Menagerie du Museum. 202 THE NATURAL HISTORY OF serting it in his mouth. It was then introduced almost up to the bowl, but with that part generally down- wards, and it was retained without any appear- ance of smoke for some minutes, during which time the animal completely filled his cheek-pouches and capacious mouth, and would then exhale a volume, filling his cage from mouth, nose, and sometimes even the ears. He generally finished with gin and water, which was handed to him in a goblet ; this he grasped in one hand, and was not long in discussing. He was possessed of enormous strength. Two men couid with difficulty -withdraw the end of a rope he one day seized, though they were assisted by the re- sistance of their feet upon the base of his cage. He was fed chiefly on vegetables, and preferred them cooked ; but when he visited Windsor, where he was exhibited to his late Majesty, he is said to have dined upon hashed venison with no ordinary degree of avidity. The only other animal belonging to this group which we shall mention, is one which was long involved in obscurity, and whose young state was frequently confounded with that we have now described ; it 13, THE DRILL. 203 THE DRILL. Papio leucophaeus~-$. CUVIER. PLATE XVIII. Le Drill, Frederic Cuvier, Histoire Naturelle des Mammi~ feres — Cynocephale drill, Cynocephalus leucopliseus, Des- maresfs Mammalogie^ p. 71. THE Drill is nearly as strong and powerful as the Mandril, and has a similar form. The colours of the adult are also nearly alike, generally of a duller hue ; but the principal distinguishing character is the absence of the ridges upon the muzzle, and of bright colouring except the border of the upper lip, which, by Fred. Cuvier, is represented of a bright red. The under parts are also white. The female differs in a less size and duller colouring, and by the head being of a shorter proportion. The native country seems somewhat uncertain, but it most pro- bably is also Africa. With these animals, the forms of the Old World terminate ; and we now commence the second great geographical division of the quadrumanae. 204 THE NATURAL HISTOEY OP THE MONKEYS OF SOUTH AMERICA ; THOSE OF THE NEW WORLD. THE forms contained in this division are almos4 entirely confined to the tropical regions of the Southern Continent.* They differ in a remarkable degree from all those we have described in the previous part of this volume, and in no instance can the South American species be classed with the inhabitants of the Indian or African Continents. The most striking outward differences, are the smaller size and less ferocious manners of the greater number, the prehensile tail of many, and the want in all of the cheek-pouches and naked callosities. Internally, the larynx is re- markable for its great developement, and the teeth are thirty-six instead of thirty-two, and, besides, differ considerably in their structure, as will be perceived in the woodcuts we have introduced. In the arrangement of this geographical group, we have followed that of Geoffrey Saint Hilaire, with the exception of placing the howlers (Mycetes) first, as the • Named Plafyrrhini by Geoffrey. THE HOWLERS. 205 Baron Cuvier has done, instead ofAteles, and of follow, ing them by that genus, and Cebus of Xerleben. THE HOWLERS contain a single genus, named by Illiger Mycetes* from the remarkable howling voice of the animals. It is characterised by a facial angle of about 30° ; the tail very long, naked at the extremity, and prehensile. ' The dentition, according to Frederic Cuvier, is nearly similar in this and the two next genera ; and we add the delineation which he considers typical of these forms. But the prominent character hi this group is the extraordinary developement of the larynx, which is ventricose, and appears on the outside in the form of MVXHTM howling. 206 THE NATUKAL HISTOBT OP a swelling. The internal structure of this memuer, in the Mono Colorado of Humboldt, is thus described in his Zoological Observations, and will serve as a model for the others. " The bony case of the os hyoides, measured by water, gave a size equal to four cubic inches ; the larynx was slightly attached by muscular fibres, and communicated by a membranous canal. The larynx consisted of six pouches of ten lines in length, to from three to five in depth. These pouches resemble those of the small whistling monkeys, squirrels, and some birds. They have an opening above on the same side with that of the glottis, by' which the air cannot enter without shutting the epiglottis. Above the pouches there are two others, of which the lips or borders are yellowish. These are the pyramidal sacks which enter into the bony case, and are formed by membranous partitions. The air is driven into these sacks, which are from three to four inches long, and terminate in a point, but come in contact with no part of the large hyoid bone opening below. The fifth pouch is found in the opening of the arythenoid cartilage, and is situated between the pyra- midal sacks of the same form, but shorter ; and the sixth pouch is formed by the bony drum itself, within which the voice acquires the mournful and plaintive tone which characterises these animals."* The • Humboldt, Zool. OUarr. I. p. 9. THE HOWLERS. 2C7 annexed cut, from Humboldt, will show the ftrrn of the drum of the os hyoides. The howlers are also the largest of the American monkeys ; in their disposition, and fierce manners, and decimation of the facial angle, they may be said to represent the Baboons of the Old World, while, in the nightly howlings and gregarious habits, they bear some analogy to the Gibbons. The form of this genus will be seen in 203 THE NATURAl HISIOKT OF THE ARAGUATO. Mycetea ursintts. — HUMBOLDT. PLATE XIX. Sitnia ursina, I/araguata de Caracas, Humboldt^ Observation* de Zoologie, i. p. 329 and 355 — Stentor ursinus, Geoffroy Saint Hilaire, Annales du Museum^ xix. p. 108. THIS species was discovered by Humboldt and Bonpland, who pointed out the distinctions between It and the Mono Colorado, or red howler. It is thus described in the zoological researches and personal narrative of these travellers :— " Having landed at Cumana, we saw the first troops of Araguatos in our journey to the mountains of Cocallor and cavern of Guacharo ; and although the convent of Carisse is situated at a high elevation, and the degree of cold during the night considerable,"* the surrounding forests abound with the Araguatos, whose mournful howling is heard at the distance of half a league, especially when the weather is open, or the * Centigrade Thermometer fell to 70°. MYCETES (TRSINUS. I TIi.1 THE AHAGUATO. 209 electric state of the an ioretels rain of a storm. We have met with them also in the valleys of Aragua, upon the Llanos of the Apure and Lower Oronooko, and in the missions of the Caribes in the province of New Barcelona, but in greatest abundance near the pools of stagnant water, shaded V-y the Mauritia flexuosa" They feed on fruit as well as *:ie leaves of vege- tables. The females are often seen carrying the young upon the shoulder ; but no difference in the colour be- tween the ages or sexes was ever perceived. Hum- boldt thinks, of all gregarious monkeys, none appear so numerous as this species : upon the banks of the Apure he has counted above forty upon one tree ; and he lias no doubt, that upon a square league of these wild countries, above two thousand may be found. " The eye, voice, and gait, denote melancholy. I have seen young Araguatoes brought up in the Indian huts, which never play like the Sagoins ; and their gravity was described with much simplicity by Lopez de Gomara in the beginning of the sixteenth century. ' The Araguata de los cumanenses? says this author, ' has the face of a man, the beard of a goat, and a grave behaviour.' "* The Araguato has something the appearance of a young bear; it is nearly three feet in length indepen- • Personal Narrative, lii. p. 172. 210 THE NATURAL HISTORY OP dent of the tail, and is entirely covered w\t^ 4 T,Aick reddish fur. It is distinguished from th* Mono Colorado by the longer hair upon the body, the less bushy beard, and by the under parts being clothed with hair of the same colour with the other parts, and not of the brownish black which the naked skin of the Red Howler exhibits. They differ also in their gait, and in the sound of their voice. The fruit, which it is represented eating, is that of the Inga vera, Wildenow. Another singular species was discovered by Hum- V)ldt — the Mycetesflavicauda, and is described by him under the name of " Le choro de lo provence a Jaen." It inhabits the banks of the river Amazon, in the pro- vinces of Jaen and Maynas. The colour is a brown, shading to black, and dullest on the lower parts ; the face yellowish-brown ; the tail, shorter than the body, is the most characteristic mark, and is greenish-black. adorned upon the sides with two yellowish stripes, an anomalous distribution of colour among this family. The hair is very long, soft and shining, and the skin ^orms an object of commerce among the natives; it is also used by them to cover seats, and for the saddle- cloths of the mules on which the periodical journey to the Cordilleras is made. The other animals which constitute this group are only seven in number, and inhabit the western pro- vinces, where abundance of vrood is essentially ne- cessary for them. They are gregarious, and generally THE SAPAJOUS. 211 very abundant, and in all the sonorous voice is con- spicuous. The next group which occurs is THE SAPAJOUS, Containing animals of a more slender form ; milder dispositions ; the face rather flat ; the tail very long, and the whole form in the general contour allied to the Guenons of the Old World. The first genus to be mentioned is Ateles of Geoffroy, so named from the imperfect structure of the fore extremities, which want the thumbs, and thus bear analogy to those of Colobus in the first geographical division. It may be charac- terised by a facial angle of about 60° ; by the extre- mities being very long and slender; the fore hands destitute of a thumb, or having that member supplied by a rudiment ; the tail very long, covered at the tip with a delicate skin, strongly prehensile ; the os hyoides large, but not apparent on the outside. By Geoifroy, two species, which have a rudimentary thumb, are generally placed at the commencement of this genus — the A. hypoxanthus and Subpentadactytus ; but the form is well represented by 212 THE NATURAL HISTOET OP THE COAITA. Ateles paniscus — GEOFTROY. PLATE XX. Simla paniscus, Linnaeus. — Coaita, Buffon. — Foui-fingered monkey, Pennant — Ateles paniscus, Geoffrey Saint Hilairey Annales du Museum^ xix. p. 105 \Desmarest, Mammalogie, p. 73 ; Humboldt, Observations de Zoologie, i. p. 352 — Le Coaita, Frederic Cuvier, Histoire Naturelle des Mammi- feres. THIS curious monkey, apparently possessing all the exterior necessaries for great activity, is nevertheless, Frederic Cuvier remarks, one of the most sluggish. It moves with slowness, and, as it were, with a dragging motion. The limbs are placed in the necessary posi- tions with deliberation, and as if every movement ' required a fresh exercise of thought to determine their position. The tail is constantly made use of, and is never relieved from one object until the feet are firmly hxea, when it is again wound round some other object of support, as if the former were not sufficiently capa- ble to maintain it. The animal described by Cuvier, and from which ' .VI EI.ES PAN IS CDS. THE COAITA. 213 our illustration is taken, was a female, at thut period young, and joined to a considerable degree of intelligence a mild and affectionate disposition. The body is covered with long soft and silky, but strong black hair, thinner oit the under parts, and without any mixture of a woolly texture. The fore extremities want the thumb ; the hinder are formed like the other quadrumanee, but with longer fingers ; and the long prehensile tail is terminated on the under side with a tender and fine skin, which seems to be endowed, like the hands, with the sense of touch. It makes use of it to grasp any object of support, suspends itself, and uses it to draw towards it any objects which are be- yond the reach of its hands. F. Cuvier says they are met with in large troops in the forests of Guiana and Brasil ; but Humboldt says, that in all his extensive travels he has never met with the true Ateles panis-t cus, and that the most common species on the Cassi- quiare and High Oronooko is the next animal we shall mention, the Ateles Belzebub of Geoffroy, and the Marimonda of Humboldt and Bonpland. These naturalists describe it as also very slow in its move- ments, mild but timid in disposition ; in the excess of terror even biting those who caress it, and venting its temporary rage in a guttural cry of ou-6. Among all the monkeys with prehensile tails, Humboldt thinks that this species possesses the most perfect use and sensibility of it ; it can even, without turning its head, introduce it into narrow chinks or rents, and 214 THE TfATUEAL HISTOET OF hook out any substance.* He has never observed the species use it, however, to convey food or any article to the mouth. They inhabit the banks of the Oronooko in immense numbers, and are often seen suspended from the trees, hanging to each other by tail and hands, in the most grotesque groups. At another time, these travellers would see them, under the most scorching sun, throw back their head, fold their arms upon their backs, and, raising their eyes to the sky, remain in this position for several hours. The hair of the Marimonda is very long and shining upon the upper parts ; on the under parts of a yellow, ish-red, shining in the sun with a golden lustre. The. direction of the hair upon the head is remarkable ; that on the hinder part and crown grows forward, while that of the forehead is directed backwards, and the meeting or opposition of the hairs forms a tuft, which does not improve the physiognomy of the animal ; the face is naked and black, the mouth surrounded with pale-coloured hairs ; the lips are capable of con- siderable extension forward, and the end of the nose is of a reddish-white—altogether, a combination irreconcilable to pleasing expression. It is a remarkable circumstance that, among the South American Indians, monkeys are much more frequently used as food than among the inhabitants of * The natives assert that it fishes also with the end of this pre- hensile organ ! THE MAEIMONDA. 215 the Old World, and on the Oronooko the broiled limbs of the Marimonda were frequently seen by Humboldt in the huts of the natives ; and at Emeralda he ex- amined roasted and dried bodies in an Indian hut, which were prepared for an annual harvest fete.* Another curious animal belonging to this group is the Chuva of Humboldt, (Ateles marginatus, Geoffrey.) inhabiting the province of Jaen de Bracamoros on the river of the Amazons, where they live also in troops, but always separate from the Marimonda. It resembles that animal in its manners, but is distinguished by the larger size and deep black colour of the upper parts, and in the breast and inner sides of the legs and arms only being white. The next form occurring, is named by Geoffrey Lagothrix ; and we regret that we have been unable to procure any illustration of it. The genus may be characterised by a facial angle of 50°. The head rounder than in the last; hands provided with thumbs; the tail long and prehensile, naked at the tip under- neath ; the os hyoides outwardly apparent ; the hair rough and curled. Two species only are yet discover- ed; the one mentioned by Geoffrey and Desmarest, buf * A French writer, speaking of monkeys as a dish, says, " The are excellent eating, and that a ' soupe aux singes' will be founft as good as any other, as soon as you have conquered the aversion to the bouilli of their heads, which look very like those of little children.'* 216 THE NATURAL HISTORY or yet imperfectly known ; said to inhabit Brasil ; of a grayish ash colour, with reddish head, hands, and tail. The other, discovered by Humboldt and described by him under the name of Caparro, has been dedi- cated by Geoffroy to that naturalist, and will stand in our systems as Lagothrix Humboldtii. It in- habits the banks of the Guaviare, one of the tributaries of the Oronooko, where it was discovered by Hum- boldt and Bonpland, in the hut of an Indian, who had taken it in an excursion to the west. It is an animal of considerable size, being about two feet two inches in length, exclusive of the tail. The head is round, and singularly large. The hair is long, strong, and uniformly of a martin gray ; having the tips black. The face is naked and black, but the mouth is surrounded by long and stiff bristles. The tail, slightly longer than 'the -body, is prehensile, and naked at the extremity. They live in numerous bands, and are frequently seen, says Humboldt, raised upon the hinder extremities. We are not aware of a specimen of this animal in any of the collections in this country. We must now describe another form, included in the genus Cebus of Xerleben. The animals contained in this genus, exhibit great activity; are excellent climbers, and in all their members show great adaptation for a sil- van life. The fore hands are very perfectly formed, more so than those of the monkeys of the Old Continent, and CEBVS FATUELLUS, 'The Horned Sapajou.; THE HORNED SAPAJOTT. 217 the thumb bears a better proportion, from its greater length ; the palms of both fore and hinder extremities are very sensible of touch. The general size is small, the dispositions mild and playful ; the food chiefly fruit and insects ; they are gregarious, and, generally speak- ing, they may be said to supply the place of the Guenons of the Old World. They embrace all the remaining monkeys of the New World, which are possessed of prehensile tails. The characters of this genus are. a facial angle of about 60° ; head round, and the muzzle short ; the tail prehensile, and entirely covered with hair. The first species we shall mention is, THE HORNED SAPAJOU. Cebus fatuellus — GEOFFROY. PLATE XXI. Simia fatuellus, Linnaeus. — Sajoucornu, Cebus fatuellus, Geoff roy Saint Hilaire,Annales du Museum, xix. p. 109 ; Desmaresf* Mammalogie, p. 84.— Le Sajou cornu male, et variete, Frederic Cuvier, Histoire Naturelle des Mammiferes. THIS Sapajou, of grotesque figure, from the un- usual direction of the hair upon the forehead, in general form, will show the proportions of this genus. Jt has been long known, and was established in the 218 THE NATURAL HISTOET OF Systema, Naturae of Linnaeus, from specimens described by Brisson. The general colour of those figured by Frederic Cuvier, is a very deep brownish-black, while the spe- cimens which Buffon and Audibert represent, are rather of a reddish-brown. We have copied the figures from Cuvier, being taken from living specimens, and they may be considered as the most correct plates of the adult state of this animal. The Horned Sapajou is one of the largest in the family ; all the upper parts are very deep purplish or brownish-black, nearly black on the head and upon the shoulders, and the dark purple of the skin, which appears on the naked parts, gives a uniformity of shade to the whole. The grotesque figure of the head is covered by the hair of the front, which stands erect, in a curved or crescent form, and, when viewed in front, has the appearance of two horns ; the tips of these hairs, and those on the cheeks, are of a paler shade. A variety which Cuvier figures has a greater portion of white about the tufts and-jaw. Geoffroy and Desmarest give French Guiana as the native country of this species. The most common species of Sapajou, and that which is most frequently seen in this country, is the Weeper monkey, Cebus appella of zoologists. It re- commends itself for confinement by its good temper, playful disposition, and hardy constitution. It is also of a small size ; and, though not clothed in a fur of THE HOBNED SAPAJOTJ. 219 rich colour, it is of a chaste and pleasing tinge, and, when the animal is healthy, of a shining, soft and silky texture. The shades are generally a sort of olive, tinged with a golden yellow on the light parts ; the face is surrounded with a circle of paler colours, which varies considerably in its shade and breadth, being in some nearly wanting. This has given rise to several species being formed from it, and to some confusion in its alliance to one or two other Sapajous; and, indeed, Humboldt seems* almost of opinion, that the animal we have just now figured is only a variety of this. Some have been known to produce young ones in confinement. Another allied species, described by the last-men- tioned naturalist, is the Ouavapavi des cataractes — • Cebus albifrons. It is about the same size, the colour of the face grayish-blue, except the orbits and front,, which are pure white ; and the contrast thus exhibited, at once distinguishes it from those above noticed. The general colour of the body is grayish-olive, lighter on the back and belly. Humboldt met with this animal in troops in the forests near the cataracts of the Oronooko, and the mission of Santa Barbara. They are ex- tremely mild in disposition, and very active ; often kept by the Indians, and one was seen by Humboldt, at Maypures, which every morning caught a pig, and continued seated on his back during the day, while feeding in the savanna round the Indian huts. An- other is mentioned, in the house of a missionary, which 220 THE NATURAL HISTORY OF would often ride upon a cat, which had been reared in its company, and which patiently suffered the ex- ploits of the Ouavapavi. Like the Guenons of the Old Continent, the Sapajous Ere the most numerous group in America ; fifteen or sixteen species seem to be well established, and are enumerated in our Synopsis. We shall only describe another in this place, which is remarkable chiefly for the great proportional size of the head. It is, THE LARGE-HEADED SAPAJOU. Cebus monachus — F. CUVIER. PLATE XXII. Le *ai a grosse tete, male ; Cebns monachus, Frederic Cuvier, Histoire Naturelle des Mammiferes. THE most striking feature in this animal is the size of the head j and the effect is heightened by the short or shorn-like white hairs which cover it ; the breast and belly, sides of the cheeks, and whole front before the arms, are yellowish-white; the fore-arms, pos- terior extremities, and tail, are black ; and a mixture of black and brown, disposed in irregular patches, covers the back and rest of the body. F. Cuvier was ignorant from what part of America his specimen was Deceived. CK1TS MO\ . . THE SIAMIEI. 221 We now come to another form, which, though joined by many zoologists with the preceding, presents very considerable differences in form and habits. We begin to enter with it those small species where the nails take the form of claws, and where the habits become more akin to the little carnivora ; raw meat, insects, and birds are relished by them, and the latter are taken with great activity. The nearest in al- liance to the Sapajous is the genus Callithrix of Geof- froy characterised by a facial angle of 60° ; ears pro- portionally very large ; the body slender ; the tail longer than the body, entirely hairy, but not prehen- sile ; the nails straight and raised ; colours of the fur bright. The type of the genus has been taken by Geoffrey in the Simia sciurea of Linnaeus, which should now stand as 222 THE NATUEAL HISTOET OP THE SIAMIRI. Callithrix sciureus — GEOFFROY. PLATE XXIII. Simia sciurea, Linnceus Siamiri, callithrix sciureus, Geoffrey Saint Hilaire, Annales du Museum, xix. p. 113 Sagoin siamiri, Desmaresfs Mammalogie, p. 87 — Le. Sainiiri, Fre- deric Cuvier, Histoire Natwrelle des Mammiferes. THIS beautiful and active little animal is scarcely more than ten inches in length, exclusive of the tail which is between thirteen and fourteen, and when seated, the height of the back was only about six. The upper parts of the body are of a greenish-yellow, which assumes a grayish tint on the thighs and arms ; the feet, legs, and fore-arms are reddish chest- nut, and the lower parts are nearly white. The muzzle is of a darker colour than the rest of the face, which, with the ears, is flesh-coloured. The tail is black at the tip. The nails, except those on the thumbs, have a somewhat claw-form. A living specimen, which Frederic Cuvier describes, from the Royal Gardens, was very playful and good tempered. It never used its tail for a support, and CALLITHRIX SCIUREUS. ( The Siamii-i.) THE SIAMIBI. 223 when at rest it was either wound round its body or limbs ; when sleepy, it kept the tail in this position, and the head between the forelegs, somewhat in the manner in which the subject of the following plate is represented. The Siamiri is a native of Brasil and Cayenne, and is very often kept by the natives in confinement. It is a common species, though we seldom meet with it in collections. * Another remarkable animal belonging to this group is mentioned by Humboldt under the name of Maca- vacahow — Simia lugens. It is extremely rare ; one specimen having only been seen by that naturalist, who met with it in the forests bordering the Cassi- quaire and Guaviare. As far as he could learn, it was one of those few species which live in pairs, and that opinion is confirmed by the fear and dislike which it exhibited when placed near even some of the most diminutive species of the same genus. It was extremely shy, and only when alone exhi- bited its activity; when persons were near, though occupied with general business, it would remain for hours in immovable attention to all that passed, re- fusing even food, though it had long fasted. But when alone, the sight of a bird at once rouses it. It darts upon it like a cat, swallows it in a second, and in its whole manner at this time, resembles a small carnivorous animal. • There are good specimens in the Edinburgh Museum. 224 THE ffATUBAL HISTOET OP The colour of the body is a shining black, In some parts with a purplish lustre, and the texture of the hair is remarkably soft and shining. The face appears as a square mask of bluish- white, which is surrounded by a narrow margin of a purer tinge, and two stripes of the same colour run from the eyes to the temples ; the throat is marked with a white band, and the hands are of the same colour on the outsides, somewhat resembling, and compared by the natives to a pair of white gloves ; the tail is not much longer than the body, and not at all used as a prehensile instrument. Eight species of this curious little group are de- scribed, which generally have the same habits, and show a beautiful gradation of both form and manners to some of the small carnivora. We are not sure that this is their proper situation, but prefer following the arrangement of Geoffroy and Desmarest. Any alter- ations which we could now make are only upon in- sufficient grounds. The next form which succeeds in the system we have presently adopted, is one of as great singularity, and is yet represented by a single individual, discovered by Humboldt ; it is, .()T|-:S TKIVIRGATIJ The Dcmroucouli. THE DOUBOTJCOTJLI. 225 THE DOUROUCOULT. Aotes trivirgatus — HUMBOLDT. PLATE XXIV. Le Douroucouli, Aotes trivirgatus, Humboldt and Bonpland, Observations de Zoologie, i. p. 306 ; Geoffroy^ Annales du Museum d'Histoire Naturelle, xix. p. 115; Desmaresd Mammalogie^ p. 88. THIS curious animal, the only type yet discovered of the above-mentioned genus, was found during Humboldt and Bonpland's arduous journey upon the Oronooko ; and, as their descriptions alone exist, we have made use of the greater part of them in the follow- ing article, and also of their beautiful plate for the accompanying illustration. It may be characterised by the head, large and round; muzzle short; no apparent external ear ; the eyes very large ; the tail long, hairy, not prehensile ; habits nocturnal. The Douroucouli of the Maravitain Indians is covered with a soft grayish-white fur, having a line of brown along the centre of the back, from the head to the tail ; the breast, belly, and inner part of the legs, 226 THE NATURAL HISTOEY OP are yellowish-brown. The head is marked with three dark stripes, very apparent in front, whence Hum- boldt takes his name, and the missionaries of the Oronooko that of " Cara rayada" The general re. semblance of the face is more like that of a cat than of a quadrumanous animal ; the eyes are very large, and of a rich yellow ; the mouth is surrounded with strong white bristly hairs. The ears are not apparent externally ; the inside of tne hands are white, ai .d the nails are flattened ; the tail is much longer tt.an the body, of the same colour, except a black tip, bushy and soft. The whole length of the body is nine inches; that of the tail about fourteen. The skin is so soft and pleasant to the touch, that it is o^ten pre- served for different purposes, and particularly for to- bacco pouches. The Douroucouli is the only monkey of the Oronooko which sleeps during the day, wherce it is often called " Mono dormillon." Humboldt kept one THE DOTJBOTJCOULI. 227 alive for five months, and observed that it slept re- gularly from nine in the morning to seven at night ; sometimes its sleep commenced even at daybreak, and light was always much disliked. When going to sleep, j* selected the most shady place, behind some wood, >r in the cleft of a tree, and, like the squirrels and weasels, had great facility in passing through very small holes or openings. When disturbed during the day, it appears almost in a state of lethargy ; it can scarcely raise its large white eyelids, and the eyes, which at night resemble those of an owl, are without lustre. In the ordinary sleeping position, it seats itself like a dog; the back K bent; the four hands brought together, an OCEPHAI-A. THE CACAJA6. 233 THE CACAJAO. Pithecia melanocephala — DESMAREST. PLATE XXVI. Le Cacajao, Simla melanocephala, Humboldt and Bonpland, Observations de Zoologie, i. pp. 317, 359 ; Geoff roy Saint ffilaire, Annales du Museum, xix. p. 117. — Saki cacajao, Desmaresfs Mammalogie, p. 91. THIS very curious and diminutive species was also discovered by Humboldt and Bonpland, and it is to their description and plate that we are indebted for all that is known regarding it. By the different native tribes it is called as above, and also Caruiri, Mono feo, Chacuto, or Mono robon. It is very rare, and a single individual was only met with by those travellers in an Indian hut at San Francisco Solano. It is scarcely more than a foot in length, and the tail is not much more than a sixth ; and its describer says " it is among the Siamiris, the Sais, and Ouistitis, what the Mayot of Barbary is among the long-tailed Maaiques." The head of the Cacajao is very round, naked, and of a dull black, in its physiognomy much resembling that of an old negro ; the hair on the head is directed forwards ; the eyes are large and sunk, and the eye- 234 THE JfATTJRAL HISTQET. OF "brows are composed of strong bristles ; the nose is flat, and the separation of the nostrils wide ; there is no beard ; the ears are bare, and very large ; the body, with the exception of the head and hands, is clothed with yellowish-brown, straight, long and shining hair ; the breast, belly, and insides of the arms, are of a clearer or lighter tint ; the hands are black, the fingers very long, the nails flattened ; the tail is thick, of the same colour with the body, and black at the end. The Cacajao is a voracious animal, and eats all kinds of fruit ; it is, however, weak ; very inactive ; of a mild temper, and easily frightened. It was very timid in the company of some small Sapajous ; and the sight of a crocodile or serpent made it tremble violently. When about to seize any object, it stretches out its arms in the manner represented on the plate, and holds it with difficulty from the great length and slenderness of the fingers. It inhabits the forests of the Cassi- quaire and Rio Negro, and lives in troops. We have now reached the group of small animals, which will conclude the first great division of the quadrumanous animals, or what generally go under the title of monkeys ; by Geoffrey they are made to form a family, which he denominates Arctopitheci, and divides into two subgenera; the great dis- tinction is their squirrel-like action, and carnivo- rous propensities, and in the nails being in the form of shaii) claws j the first genus has been denomi- THE CACAJAO. 235 nated Hapales ;* from the soft nature of the fur it may be thus characterised, and differs, as we shall see in the sequel, very slightly from that which follows. The facial angle about 50° ; the head round, most prominent at the occiput ; claws, except on the thumbs of the posterior extremities ; lower cutting teeth unequal and cylindrical. The first species we shall notice is, Dentition of H. jacchus,— considerably enlarged. — soft, delicate. 236 THE NATfffcAl, HISTOET OF THE STRIATED MONKEY. Hapales jacchus — ILLIGER. PLATE XXVII. Simla jacchus, Linnceus.—^a.-a^wa.^ Edwards' Gleanings^ i.p. I.* — Jacchus vulgaris, Geoffroy Saint Hilaire, Annales du Museum, xix. p. 119 __ Ouistiti, Audibert, Histoire Natv relle des Singes ; Frederic Cuvier, Histoire Naturelle dut Mammiferes ; Hapales jacchus, Illiger Prodrwas, p. 71 and 72. THIS beautiful and clean-looking animal is a favou- rite whenever it happens to be procured, and after a few hours restraint becomes playful and familiar. It has been long known to naturalists, and the illustra- tion taken from Audibert, which accompanies this description, will give a -tolerable idea of its general appearance. The length of the body is only about eight inches, that of the tail above eleven ; the general shade of the fur is a grayish-olive, darker, and almost approach- ing to black on the head and shoulders ; and the lower part of the back and tail are barred or ringed with circles, of a rich pale gray, which alternately shade into each other; the lower parts of the body and fore HAPALES J AC CHITS. Tlie StT.-iated>fcraliey.| THE STEIATED MONKEY. 237 parts of the extremities are brownish-gray. The face is flesh-colour, and there is a white spot on the forehead ; but the most conspicuous marking in the physiognomy of the animal, are two tufts of pale or grayish white hair, of considerable length, which spring round each ear. All the claws, except those on the hinder parts, are hooked, and very thick. It generally walks in a quadruped position, and uses the fingers in one direction. In a wild state, the food may be said to be almost every thing ; fruits, roots, and seeds, insects, and small or young birds. In con- finement, it is even more varied. Edwards, who has given us a very good figure of it in his Gleanings, in- forms us that the specimen from which he made his drawing, " fed upon biscuits, fruits, greens, insects, snails, &c. ; and that once when loosed, it suddenly snatched a Chinese gold fish from a basin of water killed, and devoured it ; after this, Mrs Kennon, to whom it belonged, gave it live eels, which frightened him at first, by twisting round his neck, but he soon mastered them and ate them." They breed occasionally in confinement ; Edwards mentions a pair which had produced young in Portugal, and Frederic Cuvier had two which bore young in 1819- The female produced three, but very soon ate off the head of one of them ; in the mean time the others began to suck, and from the period of their commencement, she was as affectionate as she was before careless. The male seemed more affectionate 238 THE HATUBAL HISTORY OP and careful of them than the mother, and assisted in the charge. The young generally keep upon the back or under the belly of the female, and Cuvier observed, that when the female was tired with carry- ing them, she would approach the male with a shrill cry, who immediately relieved her with his hands, placing the young upon his back, or under his belly, where they held themselves, and were carried about, till they became restless for milk, when they were given over to the mother, who, in her turn, would again endeavour to get rid of them. Cuvier is of opi- nion, however, that the general intelligence and pene- tration exhibited by this animal, is inferior to many of the smaller monkeys. In general, the species of this genus have a part of the body and tail barred with a lighter shade. Some are again uniform in the colours. One is entirely of a silvery white, with a black tail, and all the exposed parts of the skin being a bright red flesh-colour, give a curious appearance to the animal. It has the com- mon name of Mico, and will stand as H. argentatus. Another species without the barring is the H. mela- nurus, or black-tailed Ouistiti, and which is considered by Khul to make the passage to the next genus Midas, or the Tamarins. This is our last genus in this division, and is characterised nearly as the preceding, but differs in the dentition ; the lower incisors are equal, and cut in a sloping direction ; the forehead Ml!) AS KHS.U.l.V ''Hie -Sit!. THE SILKY TAMAEUT, 239 appears more prominent by the projection of the or . bits. One of the allying species is the Midas ursulus of Geoffroy, which is about the same size with the com- mon Ouistiti) and has the back undulated with a black and brown colour, in a somewhat similar manner to that species ; unlike it, however, this animal was very ill-natured, and showed his teeth upon the least motion near him, bit severely, or attempted it, when touched. One of the most pleasing in appearance is, THE SILKY TAMARIN. Midas rosa/ia— GEOFFROY. PLATE XXVIII. Simia rosalia, Linntsus. — The silky monkey, Shawls Zoology.— Midas rosalia, Geoffroy Saint Hilaire> Annales du Museum^ xix. p. 121. — Le marikina, Frederic Cuvier, Histoire Na- turelle des Mammiferes. — Ouistiti marikina, Desmaresf* MammalogiC) p. 95. THIS neat little animal is entirely of a clear golden yellow, palest on the back and thighs. The hair is very fine and silky, and so long upon the head and neck as to form a sort of ruffed mane, somewhat simi- lar to the same part in the lion, and which has gained 240 THE NATURAL HISTOEY OP for it the name of the lion monkey. This species is often brought to Europe, and its beauty, and mild temper, and gentleness, render it a general favou- rite. They are, however, very tender, and the least damp causes them to droop, and if continued, kill* them. Little is known of their native habiis ; but F. Cuvier thinks that they live a good deal in the manner of the squirrels, and that they remain almost constantly on the trees. He has never seen them attempt to stand upon the hinder extremities. The accompanying illustration is taken from the plate of Fred. Cuvier. The next animal we shall de- scribe is perhaps the smallest monkey known, it is MIDAS LEONIWA. THE LEONINE TAMAEIN. 241 THE LEONINE TAMARIN. Midas leonina. — GEOFFKOY. PLATE XXIX. Simla leonina, Leoncito, Humboldt, Observations de p. 14, plate 5. — -Tamarin leoncita, Midas leonina, Geqffroy. Saint Hilaire, Annales du Museum, xix. p. 121. — Ouistio leoncita, Desmaresfs Mammalogie, p. 95. THIS curious little species was discovered by Hum- boldt and Bonpland during their travels in South America, and is described in the zoological researches of these naturalists. The Leoncito is very rare ; it inhabits the plains which border the eastern slope of the Cordilleras, the fertile rivers of Putumay and Caqueta. It never ascends to the more temperate districts, while the wandering bands of the Marimonda sometimes reach heights equal to those of the Caingow and Mount Perdu; it is about seven or eight inches in length. The Leoncito inhabits only the plains of Mocoa, and the tail nearly equals the body ; it is extremely elegant; it is playful, but easily made angry. When en- 242 THE LEONINE TAMABIff. raged, or tormented, it bristles up the hair of the neck, and increases its resemblance to a little lion. Its activity was great, and when confined in a cage, it was with difficulty the sketch was made. The cry resembled the chirrup of some small bird. It was found to breed occasionally when kept in the Indian huts. This is the account, and the only one, of this curious monkey ; few specimens exist in Europe, and I be- lieve it has never been seen alive. With it we shall conclude our review of this interesting section of the quadrumanous animals, and refer to the Synopsis which accompanies this volume, for the number and characters of the species which have been authentically described. It has been compiled from the works of Geoffrey, Humboldt, Spix and Martius, and Desma- rest ; and whatever its imperfections may be, it will, at least, contain the substance of the researches of these illustrious zoologists. The remaining family of the Lemuridce, we shall endeavour to illustrate in a future volume. SYNOPSIS. SYNOPSIS. ORDER I. QUADRUMANA.* Character of Order. Teeth of three kinds, incisor, canine, and molar, -f- Four extremities furnished with long and flexible hands, having opposahle thumbs, chiefly formed for grasping. Clavicles complete. Bones of the limbs separate, and capable of pronation and supination. Pectoral mammae, two or four. The orbital and 1*4 rq oral fossae dVin x. The stomach, simple. Food, fruits, roots, and insects. Habits, chiefly arboreal, living in forests or craggy precipices. Native countries, the warm parts of Africa, India, and America.:}: Contains two great families, Simiada: and LemuridtB. SYNOPSIS OF THE I. FAM. SIMIAD&. Four incisive teeth in each jaw opposed. Nose, more or less prominent. Pectoral mammae, generally two. (Two sub-families.) 1. SUB. FAM. SIMI.B CATARRHINI, Monkeys of the Old World. Number of teeth 32. Molar teeth, five on each side, crowned with blunt tubercles. Nostrils separated by a very narrow division. The tail never prehensile. "With or without cheek- pouches and callosities. Inhabit the old world only. » This is the second order of most zoologists. t The Aye-aye, (Cheiromyt, Ctovier,) alone wants the canine teeth. t Barbary ape, (Inuus, Cuvier,) alone reaches the southern border of Europe. 246 SYNOPSIS CF THE 2. SUB. FAM. SIMIJE PLATYRRHINI, Monkeys of the World. Number of teeth 36. Molar teeth on each side six. Nostrils separated by a broad division. The tail long ; often prehensile. No cheek pouches or callosities. Inhabit the warm parts of Southern America. I. SUB-FAMILY CATARRHINI. ORANGS. GENUS I — Trogfadites, GEOFFROY. Muzzle short ; facial angle 50° ; ears large, and lying close to the head ; arms comparatively short, reaching to the lower part of \he thighs ; tail, cheek-pouches, and callosities wanting. ,AATE I.-* — l.T. NIGER, Black or African Orang — Geoff. Ann. du Mus. xix. 87 ; Desm. Mamm. 49. Hair black, long and shaggy upon the back and shoulders ; height of the adults, 5 to 6 feet ; of the young seen in confinement in Europe, 2 to 3 feet. Inhabits the coasts of Angola and Congo. GENUS H.—Pithecus, GEOFFROY. Muzzle more lengthened \an in the last ; facial angle 65° ; centre upper cutting teeth double in breadth to those at each side ; canine teeth in the young not exceeding the others in length ; in the adults twice as long, straight, and very strong ; ears small ; arms long ; tail, c>eek-pouches.. and callosities wanting. PLATES II. and II* — 1. P. SATYRUS, Red or Asiatic Orang— Geoff. Ann. ?n Mus. xix. p. 33 ; Desm. Mamm. p. 50 ; Abel's EnAass. p. 319 and 365. Hair long and shaggy, shining i eddish brown ; adults very strong and . powerful ; height from 5 to 7 feet ; young seen in ment in Europe from 3 to 4 feet. Inhabits the i v Refer to plates in this volume. SYNOPSIS OF THE SIMIADJE. 247 forests of Borneo and Eastern Asia. Most probably the Pongo. GENUS III. — Hylobales, ILLIGER. Muzzle short ; head round ; facial angle 60° ; canine teeth longer than the others ; arms very long, reaching to the ground ; tail and cheek-pouches wanting ; with or without naked callosities. PLATE III. — 1. H. HOOLOCK, the Hoolock — Simia hoolock, Harl. Trans, of Am. Phil Soc. Hair deep chocolate brown ; face surrounded with a pale circle, most distinct on the forehead ; no callosities. Inhabits Goalpara. 2. H. LAR, Common Gibbon — Simia lar, Linn. Pithecus lar, Geoff. Ann. du Mus. xix. p. 88 ; Desm. Mamm. p. 50. Hair black ; the face surrounded with gray ; small callosities on the buttocks. Inhabits Eastern India, parti- cularly Coromandel, Malacca, and the Moluccas. 3. H. ALBIMANA,* White-handed Gibbon — Simia albimana, Vig. and Horsf. Zoo/. Jour. No. xiii. p. 1 07. Hair black ; the face surrounded with gray ; the four hands whitish. Inhabits Sumatra. 4. H. VARIEGATUS, Little Gibbon Pithecus variegatus, Geoff. Ann. du Mus. xix. p. 88 ; Desm. Mamm. p. 51. Hair gray, varied with brown. Inhabits Malacca. Differs from the two preceding in the colour of the hair, and its less size ; by many considered as a variety only, and not well established as a species. 6. H. LEUCISCUS. The W^w-wow — Pithecus leuciscus, Geoff Ann. duMus. xix. p. b3 ; Desm. Mamm. p. 51. Hair ash gray ; the face black, surrounded by a circle of light * In the text of this volume we have followed Geoffroy Saint Hilaire in dedicating the entirely black species to Sir Stamford Raffles. It being, however, the old Linnean, S. lar must stand under that title, and th« species with white hands has been named by Messrs Vigors and Horsefield u above. 248 SYNOPSIS or THE SIMIAD.E. gray; hands, feet, and ears, nearly black; cal.osities large. Inhabits Malacca and the Sunda-Isles. PLATE IV.— 6. H. SYNDACTYLA. The Siamang.— Simla syndactyla, Raff, Trans. Lin. Soc. xiii. p. 241; Horsf. Java. Hair black; neck and upper part of the breast naked, and prominent from the size of the laryngeal sacks; first and second finger of lower extremities united to the end of the second phalanx; callosities none. Inhabits Island of Sumatra. Pi-ATE V.— 7. H. AQILIS.— The Active Gibbon.— Fred. Cuv. Mammif. Hair clear brown, changing to a shining yellow on the back; white band above the eyes ; face bare, in the male blue, in the female yellow; callosities small. Lives in troops, and dis- plays very great agility. Inhabits Sumatra. GUENONS. GENUS IV. — Presbytis, ESCHSCHOLTZ. Facial angle 60°; cheek-pouches none; callosities distinct; tail long; arms reaching to the knees. 1. P. MITRCLA, the Capped Monkey. — Eschsch. in Kotzeb. Voy. of Discov. Hair curled, above bluish gray, beneath grayish white; B black line from the upper part of the ears aci t«s the head; length of the body about li foot, tail long. Inhabits Su- matra.* GENUS V.—Cocobus, ILLIGER. Muzzle short; nostrils approximated; tail longer than the body; limbs slender; upper extremities without thumbs. 2- C. POLYCOMUS, Full-bottomed Monkev.— Geoff. Ann. du Mus. xix. p. 92 ; Desm. Mamm. p. 53. Neck with a mane in the form of a hood, covering the upper part of the back and shoulders, variegated with black and fawn colour; body deep shininj * From Griffith's Animal Kingdom. SYNOPSIS OP THE SIMIAD2E. 249 black; tail pure white. Inhabits the forests of Guinea and Sierra Leone. 2. C- FEKRUGINOSDS, Bay Monkey. — Desm. Mamm ; p. 53. Geoff. Ann. du Mus. xix. p. 92. Bay Monkey, Penn Quad. Hair ferru- ginous; crown of the head, hands, and tail black. Inhabits Guinea. 8. C. TEMMINCKII, Temminck's Colobus. — Khul. MSS.; Desm. Mamm. p. 53. Upper parts, shoulders, and outer part of the thighs black; belly yellowish red; limbs clear red; face and tail reddish purple ; length about 2 feet 8 or nine inches, in* eluding the tail. Native country unknown. The only specimen known was purchased by M. Temminck, at the sale of Bullock's collection. GENUS VI.—Nasalis, GEOFFBOY. Muzzle short; facial angle about 50°; the nose unproportional!? lengthened; the nostrils at the extremity, on the under side; the body very thick; cheek-pouches and callosities ; thumbs of anterior extremities slender ; tail longer than the body. PLATE VI.— L N. LABVATDS, The Proboscis Monkey.— Hair reddish- brown ; patched on the lower part of the back with lighter spots ; face black. Inhabits Borneo. 2. N. BECUBVUS, Turned-up Proboscis Monkey. Nasalis recur- vus, Vig. and Horsf. Zool Journ. xiii. p. 110. Hair reddish- brown, under parts paler; middle of the back and inside of the limbs gray ; nose turned up. Inhabits Borneo. Perhaps the young of N. Larvatus. GENUS VIl.—Lasiopyga, ILLIGEK. racial angle from 503 to 60"; the muzzle only slightly elon- gated; face bare; hands longer than the fore-arm ; thumbs on the 250 SYNOPSIS OP THE SIMIAD^). anterior extremities short and slender ; cheek-pouches ; tali long ; no callosities ; the buttocks fringed with hair. PLATE VII — 1. L. NEMEA, Cochin-China Monkey Pygathrix, Geoff. Ann. du Mus. xix. p. 90. Guenon Douc, Desm. Mamm. 54. Hair of brilliant colours ; upper part of the head brown, with a frontal band of deep chestnut ; hair of the cheeks very long, dirty white ; fore-arms white, extend- ing to the thumbs and fingers, which are black •, tail white. Inhabits Cochin-China. (Madagascar, according to Har- court.) GENUS VIII. — Semnopithecus, CUVIER. Head round ; nose flat ; facial angle 45° ; limbs long ; thumbs of anterior extremities very short ; cheek-pouches and naked cal- losities ; tail very long and thin ; posterior grinder of the lower jaw with five points ; form slender. India and Indian Archipelago. PLATE VIII. — 1. S. MELALOPHOS, the Simpai. — Fred. C\iv. Mammif. Simia melalophos, Raff. Trans. Lin. Soc. xiii. The face blue ; forehead with a black band of long hairs, in the form of a tuft or crest ; the hair of the upper parts clear red-brown ; beneath, and in the inside of the limbs, tawny and whitish. Inhabits Island of Sumatra. 2. S. MAURUS, Negro Monkey.— Middle-size Black Monkey, Edw. Glean. S. maurus, Horsf. Hair soft and silky, intensely black ; the breast, belly, inner surface of extre- mities and root of the tail, gray ; in very old individuals, crown and upper parts tinged with gray. Inhabits Island of Java. PLATE IX — 3. S. ENTELLUS, the Entellus Monkey. — Entelle, Audeb. Cercopithecus entellus, Geoff. Ann. du J/tw.,xix. 95. Hair yellowish-white, paler beneath ; face and hands black.. Inhabits Bengal. 4. S. PYURHUS, the Lutung — Horsf. Java. Hair soft and •ilky ; above, shining red ; beneath, and inside the hmba, SYNOPSIS OP THE SIMIAD^. 251 fawn coloured, inhabits Java. (Allied to Cercopfthecug auratus. ) 5. S. PRUINOSCS. — Desm. Mamm. Sup. p. 533. Hair black, mixed with white, without a white spot at the origin of the tail, as in S. maurus : tail brown. Inhabits Sumatra. (Allied to S. maurus.) 6. S. COMATUS.' — Desm. Mamm. Supp. p. 533. Hair above gray, beneath whitish ; tail tipped with white ; hair of the crown black, long, forming an aigrette behind, and conceal. ing the ears. Inhabits Sumatra. GENUS IX. — Cercopithecus, GEOFFROY. The head round ; forehead receding ; facial angle 50° ; no •uperciliary ridges; nose flat; cheek-pouches and callosities ; tail longer than the body. Africa and India. 1 . C. AURATUS, Golden Guenon. — Geoff. Ann. du Mus. xix. p. 93. Desm. Mamm. p. 56. Above, golden yellow ; beneath, paler ; black spot upon the knee ; hair of the breast and cheeks long. Inhabits India and Molucca. 2. C. TALAPOIN, the Talapoin Monkey. — Penn. Quad. 206. Geoff. Ann. du Mus. xix. p. 93. Hair above, olive ; beneath, yellowish- white ; feet black. Inhabits India, ac- cording to Buffon. (Described from Buffon. Supposed by F .Cuvier to be the young of Cercocebus cynosurus.) 3. C. LATIBARBUS, Purple-faced Bearded Monkey — Desm. Mamm. p. 57. Guenon a face pourpre, Buff. Simia dentata, Shaw. Adult, hair woolly, black ; a large beard extending laterally ; tail tufted at the end. Young^ hair entirely red. Native country unknown. 4. C. CEPHDB, Mustache Monkey — Simia cephus, Linn. Guenon moustac, Desm. Mamm. p. 57. Hair greenish- brown, (according to Geoff, reddish-brown,) latter half of the tail white ; nose and lips blue. Inhabits Guinea, 252 SYNOPSIS or THE 6. C. PILEATUS, Bonneted Monkey — Simla pileata, Shaw. Guenon couronnee, Desm. Mamm. p. 57. Hair above brownish-yellow ; beneath whitish ; forehead adorned with long hairs erect in a tuft. Native country unknown. (Allied to Cercocebus sinicus.) PLATE X. — C. MONA, Varied Monkey.— Simia mona, Linn. Guenon mone, Desm. Mamm. p. 58. Upper part of the head, bright yellowish-green ; hair of the cheeks yellow : body deep chestnut, a white spot on each buttock. Native country uncertain, most probably Africa. 7. C. NICTITANS, White-nosed Monkey — Guenon hocheur, Desm. Mamm. p. 58. Le hocheur, Audeb. Body black, sprinkled with greenish-gray ; extremities black above ; lower part of the chin white ; nose more than usually long, white. Inhabits the coast of Guinea. 8. C. PETAURISTA, Vaulting Monkey. — Simia petaurista. Linn. Le blanc nez, and ascagne, Audeb. Hair above reddish, white below ; outer part of the extremities green- ish, inside gray ; lower part of the nose white. Inhabits coast of Guinea. PLATE XI — 9. C. RUBER, the Red Monkey Red monkey, Penn. Guenon patas, Desm. Mamm., p. 59. Above reddish, gray beneath ; hair of the cheeks long ; a narrow .band above the eyes black. Inhabits Senegal. 10. C. DIANA, Diana or Palatine Monkey — Simia Diana, Linn. Exquina, Margrave. Guenon Diane, Desm. Mamm. p. 60. Hair of a deep chestnut on the back, dark gray on the flanks, with an oblique light line on the thighs ; forehead adorned with a white crescent-shaped band ; chin and throat white. Inhabits Congo and the Guinea coast. 11. C. ALBOCINEREUS, Grey guenon.— Guenon grisblanc, Desm. Mamm. Supp. p. 534. Hair gray sAove, lower parts whitish ; a band of black crosses the forthead ; ex- tremities black ; tail brown. Inhabits Island of Sumatra. SYNOPSIS OF THE SIM1APJ3. 253 12. C. PYGERYTHR^US, Rcd-oreasted Monkey — F. Cuv. Mammif. Guenon Vervet., Desm. Mainm. Supp, p. 534. Above greenish-gray ; beneath white ; hair round the anus dull reddish ; tail tipped with black. Inhabits the Cape of Good Hope. GENUS XII — Cercocebui^ GEOFFROY. The muzzle lengthened ; the forehead receding : facial angle about 45° ; large cheek-pouches ; callosities large ; tail longer than the body. Africa and India. PLATE XIII 1. C. SABJEUS, the Callitrix or Green Monkey. — Si- mia sabea, Linn. Guenon callitriche, F. Cuv. Mammif. ; Desm. Mamm. p. 61. Singe vert, Geoff. Ann. du Mus. xix. p. 97. Above olive-green ; shaded beneath from yellowish-green to white ; face black, surrounded with long hair. Inhabits Cape de Verd islands, Senegal, tho Mauritius. 2. C. CYNOSURUS, the Malbrouk. — Guenon Malbrouck, F. Cuv. Mammif. • Desm. Mamm. p. 60. Cercopithe- cus cynosurus Malbrouc, Geoff. Ann. du Mus. xix. 96. Above olive-brown, shading to whitish on the under parts ; a white band above the eyes. Inhabits Bengal. 3. C. GRISEO VIRIDIS, the Grivet. — Le Grivet, F. Cuv. Mammif. Guenon grivet, Desm Mamm. p. 61. Grayish green, paler beneath ; tail gray for the whole length. In- habits Africa. (Allied to the two preceding species.) PLATE XII. — 4. C. FULIGINOSUS, Mangabey or White Eyelid Monkey. — Le Mangabey, F. Cuv. Mammif. Guenon enfumee, Geoff. Ann. du Mus. xix. 97 ; Desm. Mamm. p. 62. Entirely of a gray sooty black, paler beneath ; the upper eyelids white and conspicuous. Inhabits Ethiopia. 5. C. JETHIOPS, White Collared Mangabey. — Cercocebe man- gabey, Geoff. Ann. du Mus. xix. p. 97. Guenon mangsu bcj, Desm. Mamm. p. 62. The crown chestnut-brown, 254 SYNOPSIS OF THE SJMIAD^. tbe upper parts purplish brown ; a white band surrounding the back of the neck. Inhabits Ethiopia. 6. C. ATYS, the Atys — Simia atys, Audeb. Atys, Geoff. Ann. du Mus. xix. p. 99. Guenon atys, Desm. Mamm. p. 62. Entirely of a yellowish- white ; the naked parts of the skin flesh-coloured. (By Geoffrey it is said to be an albino variety of some unknown species, and to inhabit India.) GENUS XIII. — MacacitS) LACEPEDE. Facial angle about 40° or 45° ; muzzle elongated ; superciliary ridges distinct ; canine teeth strong and large (longer than in the preceding genus ;) the tail shorter than the third of the length of the body, or more ; the form strong and compact. PLATE XIV. — 1. M. SILENUS, the Ouanderow.— Simia canina, Penn. Macaque a criniere, Cuv. Reg. An. Papio silenus, Geoff. Ann. du Mus. xix. p. aOO. Macaque ouanderowt Desm. Mamm. p. 63. Above blaA ; the hair of the back of the neck long, and, with the beard, Arming a thick ruff, gray ; under parts gray ; tail ending witu a tuft of hairs. Inhabits the Island of Ceylon. 2. M. SINICUS, Chinese Monkey Simia sinica, Li&n. Bon- net-chinois, Audab. Cercocebe bonnet-chinois, Geoff. Ann. du Mus. xix. p. 64. Macaque bonnet-chinois, Desm. Mamm. p. 64. Chestnut-brown, paler beneath ; hair of the crown long, and spreading out from the centre to the sides. Inhabits Bengal and Ceylon. 3. M. RADIATUS, the Toque — Cercocebe toque, Geoff. Ann. du Mus. xix. p. 98. Macaque toque, Desm. Mamm p. 64. Above greenish-brown ; beneath gray ; hair of the crown long, and spreading out from the centre to the sides. In- habits India. Nos. 2 and 3 are closely allied to Cercocebus, and their station fe the System does not seem clearly established. They are In- teresting forms, and ought to be kept in view by tho "oologist. SYNOPSIS OF THE SIMIADJE. 255 *• M. CYNOMOLOGUS, Harc-llnped Monkey Cercocebe aig- rette and macaque, Geoff. Ann. du Mus. xix. p. 99. Macaque, Cuv. Hist. Nat. des Mammif. Macaque ordinaire, Desm. Mamm. p. 62. The male, above olive, beneath grayish-white ; feet black ; canine teeth strong , length, including tail, 3 feet 3 inches. The female less ; canine teeth weaker ; hair of the crown directed towards the centre, and forms a ridge or tuft to the occiput In- habits Guinea and interior of Africa, Desm. Java, Geoff. ViGNETTE.^-5. M. RHESUS, Rhesus Monkey or Pig-tailed Baboon. — Magot rhesus, Inuus rhesus, Geoff. Ann. du Mus. xix. p. 101; F. Cuv. Hist. Nat. des Mammif. Ma- caque maimon, Desm. Mamm. 66. " Upper part of the body grayish-green ; tail short, and wrinkled at the base ; buttocks golden-yellow ; extremities gray." — Detm. Inhabits Eastern India, and forests on the banks of the Ganges. 6. M. NEMESTRINA, Brown Baboon — Maimon, Inuus nemes- trinus, Geoff. Ann. du Mu*. xix. p. 101. Macaque brun, Desm. Mamm. p. 66. ** Above deep brown ; middle of the head and a dorsal band black ; tail small and slender, reaching to the middle of the thigh ; extremities and head yellowish."— Desm. Inhabits Java/and Sumataa. The Synonymy of Nos. 5 and 6 have often been confounded. Their situation is undetermined. Geoffrey places them with the Barbary Ape, so does Mr Gray, rejecting entirely Cuvier's genus Inuvs. We have followed Desmarest, as most in ac- cordance with our own opinion There are, it is probable, other ai'ried species which have not been properly characterised. Desinarest mentions one above two feet in length ; the back above brownish-black ; the shoulders olive; the outer surface of the fee', yellowish-gray ; under part of the throat grayish-white b«lly yellowish; ears small, white hairs behind each, 7. M. NIGFR. Black Baboon — Cynocephale negro, Desm. Mamm. Snpp. p. 534. Black ape, Macacus niger, Zool. 256 SYNOPSIS OF THE SIMIADJE. Gardens, i. p. 169. Entirely black ; fur woolly ; the hair on the head long, falling back, and forming a crest ; tail a tubercle. Inhabits islands of Indian Archipelago. Desm. Differs from the type in the elongation of the muzzle, and want of tail ; by the former allied to the baboons, by the latter to the next genus Inutis. GENUS XIV. — Inuus^ CUVIER. Facia, angle about 40° ; muzzle elongated ; the hands length- ened ; tail none, or a tubercle. PLATE XV. — 1. I. SYLVANUS, Barbary Ape — Simia inuus, Linn, Magot African, Geoff. Ann. du Mus. xix. p. 100. Magot, F. Cuv. Hist. Nat. des Mammif. Macaque magot, Macacus inuus, Desm. Mamm p. 67. Above greenish- gray ; paler underneath and in the inner sides of the limb*. Tail a short cutaneous tubercle. BABOONS. GENUS; XV. — Cynocephalus, BRISSON. Facial angle from 30° to 35° ; superciliary ridges prominent ; muzzle long, truncated at the end where the nostrils are placed ; tail as long as the body. 1. C. BABUIN, Little Baboon — Petit papion, Buff. Papion cynocephale, Geoff. Ann. du Mus. xix. p. 102. Ba- buin, F. Cuv. Hist. Nat. des Mammif. Cynocephale babuin, Desm. Mamm. p. 68. Male, above yellowish-green, beneath paler ; the face livid ; cartilage of the nostrils not longer than the upper jaw. Female unknown. Inhabits Northern Africa. 2, C. PAPIO, Guinea Baboon Papion, Audeb. Papio sphinx, Geoff. Ann. du Mus. xix. p. 103. Cynocephale papion, Desm. Mamm. p. 69. Above brown, paler beneath ; cheeks yellowish ; face, ears, and hands, black •, cartilage SYNOPSIS OP THE SIMIAlXffi. 257 of the nostrils longer than the jaws. In the young the muzzle is shorter. Inhabits the coast of Guinea. PLATS XVL— 3. C. PORCARIUS, the Chacma. — Simia porcaria, Linn. Papio porcarius aud comatus, Babuin pore and chevelu, Geoff. Ann. du Mus. xix. p. 102 and 103. Chacma, F. Cuv. Hist. Nat. des Mammif. Cynocephaie chacma, Desm. Mamm. p. 69. Simia ursina, Penn. Greenish-black, palest on the fore part of the shoulders ; hair long upon the neck, in the form of a mane ; face violet black ; upper eyelids white. Female without the mane. Inhabits Southern Africa, Cape of Good Hope. 4. C. HAMADRYAS, Dog-faced Baboon Simia hamadryas, Linn. Dog-faced ape, Penn. Tartarin, Geoff. Ann. du Mus. xix. p. 103 ; F. Cuv. Hist. Nat. des Mammif. Cynocephaie tartarin, Desm. Mamm. p. 69. Blackish, gray tinged with brown ; hair of the fore parts long, forming a shaggy mane ; face flesh colour. Female and young with short muzzles, coloured blue. Inhabits Moco, borders of the Persian Gulf, Arabia. GENUS XVI.— Papio, BRISSON. Proportions much stronger than Cynocephali, and distinguished from them by the tail being very short, almost a tubercle, and perpendicular to the dorsal line. Dentition very powerful. PLATE XVII. — 1. P. MORMON, the Mandril. — Simia mormon, Linn. Variegated Baboon, Penn. Mandril, Geoff. Ann, du Mus. xix. p. 104 ; F. Cuv. Hist. Nat. des Mammif. Cynocephaie mandril, Desm. Mamm. p. 70. Yellowish. olive, tinged with gray above, beneath white ; beard yellow; muzzle furrowed ; livid, but bright red and blue. In the young the furrows do not appear. Inhabits Africa, on the Gold and Guinea coast. PLATE XVIII — S. P. LEUCOPHJEUS, the Drill — Simia leucophsea, F. Cuv. Ann. du Mus. Lx. ; Hist. Nat. des Mammi/ 258 SYNOPSIS OF THE SIMIAM. Cynocephale drill, Desm. Mamtn. p. 71. Above greenish- brown tinged with gray, beneath white. Face of males, females, and young, uniform dull black. Under lip red. No furrows on the muzzle. Inhabits Africa. We have deviated from the text of the volume in dividing the Cynocephali. Though very closely allied, and by most writers united either under Cynocephalus or Papio, they are always divided into sections, and we generally prefer an entire separa- tion to divisions of that kind. One or two baboons are mentioned by Pennant upon dubious authority, which it is not necessary to introduce here, as proper characters could not be given. II. SUB-FAMILY PLATYRRHINI. HOWLERS. GENUS XVII — Mycetes, ILLIGER. Facial angle about 30° ; canine teeth strong ; tail long, prehen- sile, naked at the extremity on the under side ; os hyoides ventri- cose, apparent on the outside ; gregarious ; howling during night ; largest and fiercest of the South American group. 1. M. SENICULUS, the Mono Colorado, or Red Howler— Simia seniculus, Linn. Stentor seniculus, Geoff. Ann. du Mus. xix. p. 107. Mono Colorado, Humb. Ob*. Zool. p. 354. Alouate roux, Desm. Mamm. p. 77. Fur reddish- brown, brightest on the" tail and extremities ; under parts nearly hairless ; face naked and black. Inhabits French Guiana, banks of the rivers Madeleine and Darien. PLATE XIX — 2. M. URSINUS, the Araguato — Stentor ursiuus, Geoff. Ann. du Mus. xix. p. 108. Araguato de Caraccas, Humb. Obs. Zool. pp. 329 and 355. Alouate ourson, Desm. Mamm. p. 78. Entirely reddish-brown, and clothed with long hair on every part ; bearded ; face bluish-black. Inhabits Venezuela, New Barcelona, banks of the Oronooko. Differs from the preceding in the hair being very long, and in being clothed on the under parts. SYNOPSIS OF THE SIHIAD^. 250 3. M. STRAMINEUS, the Ambata. — Stentor stramincus, Geoff. Ann. du Mus. xix. p. 108; Humb. Obs. Zool p. 355. Alouate arabate, J)esm. Mamm. p. 78. Hair entirely straw-yellow, darker, or of a brownish colour at the roots. Inhabits Peru. 4. M. BELZEBUTH, the Guariba — Siraia Bclzebuth, Linn. Stentor fusctis, Geoff. Ann. du Mus. xix. p. 108. Stentor guariba, Humb. Obs. ZooL p. 355. Alouate guariba, Desm. Mamm. p. 78. Brownish-chestnut, pass- ing into chestnut on the head and back ; the tips of the hair golden colour. Inhabits Brasil. 5. M. FLATICAUDATUS, the Chora. — Stentor flavicaudatus, Geoff. Ann. du Mus. xix. 108. Simla flavicauda, Chora, Humb. Obs. Zool. p. 343 and 355. Alouate chora, Desm. Mamm. p. 79. Brownish-black, darker on the back ; tail blackish-olive, adorned on the si-ies with two yellow stripes. Inhabits the province of Jaen, banks of the river Amazon. 6. M. NIGER, the Caraya. — Stentor niger, Geoff. Ann. du Mus. xix. 108. Simia caraya, Humb. Obs. Zool. p. 355. Alouate caraya, Desm. Mamm. p. 79. Rich shining black ; tail rather short ; female and young with the sides and under parts yellowish-brown. Inhabits Para- guay, Bahia. 7. M. RUFIMANUS, Red-Handed Howler Mycctes rufi- manus, Khul MSS. ; Desm. Mamm. p. 79. Black; wrists and hands, and extreme half of the tail, reddish-brown ; lower parts nearly without hair. Native country unknown. The description of this species is only known from the MSS. of Khul, taken from a specimen purchased by M. Temraink at the dispersion of Bullock's Museum. 260 SYNOPSIS OF THE S1MIADJB. SAPAJOUS. GENUS XVIII Aides, GEOFFROY. Head round ; facial angle about 60° ; extremities proportionally very long and slender ; the anterior hands with four fingers, or the thumb supplied by a rudiment only ; tail very long ; powerfully prehensile, having a part without hair, covered with a very delicate and sensible skin on the under side ; os hyoides large, but not apparent from the outside ; habits and movements slow and indolent. 1. A. HYPOXANTHUS, the Miriki — Atele hypoxanthe, Desm. Mamm. p. 72. Of a yellowish-gray ; vent and babe of the tail often reddish-yellow ; face flesh-colour ; thumb a short rudiment, furnished with a nail. . Inhabits Brasil between the 13° and 23° of S. latitude. 2 A. SUBPENTADACTYLUS, the Chameck. — Atele chameck, Geoff. Ann. du Mus. xix. 105 ; vii. 267 ; Desm. Mamm. p. 73. Chameck, Humb'. Obs. Zool p. 353. Entirely black ; thumb a rudiment, without a nail. Inhabits French Guiana and Peru. PLATE XX 3. A. PANISCUS, the Coaita Simia paniscus, Linn. Atele paniscus, Geoff. Ann. du Mus. xix. p. 105 ; vii. 269. Atele coaita, Desm. Mamm. p. 73. Coaita, Humb. Obs. Zool. i. p. 352 ^ Fred. Cuv. Hist. Nat. des Mam. mif. Entirely black ; thumb wanting on the anterior ex- tremities. Inhabits Guiana, Brasil. Distinguished from the last by the less size, and want of the thumb on the anterior hands. 4. A. BELZEBUTH, the Marimonda — Geoff. Ann. du Mus. xix. p. 106 ; vii. p. 271. Atele belzebuth, Desm. Mamm. p. 74. Marimonda de 1'Oronoque, Humb. Obs. Zool. i. pp. 327, 353. Dusky black, under parts yellowish- white in the males ; white in the female and young. In- habits banks of Oronooko. 5. A. MARGINATUS, the Clmva. — Geoff. Ann du Mus. xiii. SYNOPSIS OP THE SIMIAD^!. 2G1 p. 90 ; xix. p. 106. Atele chuva, Desm. Mamm. p. 75. Chuva, Humb. Obs. Zool. p. 354. Black: face surrounded •with white or yellowish ; breast and insides of the limbs grayish-white. Inhabits province of Jaen, banks of the rivers Santiago and Amazons. 6, A. ARACHNOIDES, Spider Monkey. — Geoff1. Ann. du Mus. xiii. p. 90 ; xix. p. 109. Simia arachnoides, Humb. Obs. Zool. p. 354. Atele arachnoide, Desm. Mamm. p. 75. Grayish-yellow ; fur very soft ; eyebrows black. Inhabits Brasil. 7. A. MELANOCHIR, Black-Handed Coaita — Atele melono, chiere, Desm. Mamm. p. 76. Gray ; upper part of the head, hands, and an oblique spot upon the knees, brownish- black. Native country unknown. Described by Desmarest, from a specimen in the Collection at Paris. GENUS XIX. — Lagothrix^ HUMBOLDT. Head round ; facial angle about 50° ; hands with five fingers ; tail strongly prehensile, naked and callous on the under side of the extremity ; os hyoides slightly apparent on the outside. 1. L. HUMBOLDTII, thcCapparo. — Simia lagotricha, le capparo du Rio Guaviare, Humb. Obs. Zool. i. pp. 322, 354. Lagothrix Humboldtii, Geoff. Ann. duMus. xix. p. 107. Lagotriche capparo, Desm. Mamm. p. 76. Grayish- black; hair long and soft. Inhabits banks of the Guaviare. 2. L. CANUS, Gray Lagothrix — Geoff. Ann. du Mus. xix. p. 107. Lagotriche grison, Desm. Mamm. p. 77. Grayish- olive ; head, hands, and tail, reddish-gray ; the hair ?ery short. Inhabits Brasil. GENUS XX — Cebus, XERLEBEN. The head round ; muzzle short ; facial angle about 60° ; oa kyoides small ; hands, with a lengthened well-formed thumb ; tail 262 SYNOPSIS OP THE SIMIAB^!. long, prehensile, entirely covered \vitli hair; gregarious; habits lively, active. 1. C. APELLA, the Weeper Sapajou Simia apella, Linn. Sajou, Audeb. Sajou brun, Geoff. Ann. du Mus. xix. p. 109. Sapajou sajou, Desm. Mamm. p. 81. Deep brown above, of a clearer and lighter shade beneath ; cro wn, feet, and tail, blackish-brown ; face generally surrounded with a lighter shade. Inhabits Guiana. (Not found in Brasil, — (P. Maximilien.') This species is subject to considerable variety in the shade of the colours. 2. C. ROBUSTUS. Prince Maximilien's Sapajou Sapnjou robuste, Desm. Mamm. p. 80. Brown ; upper part of the head, neck, and a circle round the face, black ; arms clear yellowish ; fore part of the neck and belly in the male chestnut-red ; in the young and females, yellowish or fawn colour. Inhabits Brasil. (Does not pass the river Doce to the South — P. Maximilien.) 3. C. GRISEUS, Gray Sapajou. — Sapajou gris, Desm. Mamm. p. 81. Sajou, F. Cuvier, Hist. Nat. des Mammif. Above yellowish-brown, mingled with gray ; below of a clear fawn colour ; crown black ; face surrounded with black ; sometimes white upon the neck and breast. In- habits Guiana. A variety is described by Desmarest with the upper parts yellow- ish-brown, paler beneath ; crown black ; sides of the head, an- terior part of forearms, neck, and breast, white ; face flesh-colour. This is described from a single specimen, not adult, and most probably distinct, the markings being so different. 4. C. BARBATOS, Bearded Sapajou. — Cebusalbus, Geoff". Ann. du Mus. xix. p. 112. Sapajou barbu, Desm. Mamm. p. 82. Grayish-red ; under parts reddish ; beard lengthen- ed upon the cheeks, dark chestnut ; hair long and crisp. Inhabits Guiana. Varies according to age to gray and white. We have followed Desmarest in considering Geoffrey's Cebut albus as one of the above varieties. SYNOPSIS OP THE SIMIADJ). 2G3 & C. TREPIDUS, Tufted-tailed Sapajou Simia trepfda, Linn. Cebus frontatus, Kuhl. Cebus trepidus, Sajou tremblens, Geoff. Ann du Mus. xix. p. 110. Sapajou coeffe, Desm. Mamm. p. 82. Nearly of a uniform black shade ; dusky on the head and extremities ; scattered white haira around the mouth and upon the anterior hands ; hair of the forehead raised. Inhabits Dutch Guiana Geoff. 6. CEBUS NIGER, Negro sapagou — Cebus niger, Sajou negre, Geoff. Ann du Mus. xix. p. 111. Sapajou negre, Desm. Mamm. p. 83. Deep brown ; face, hands, and tail black ; forehead and cheeks mixed with yellowish hairs. Native country unknown. 7. CEBUS VARIEGATUS, the Varied Sapajou — Cebus variega- tus, Geoff. Ann. du Mus. xix. p. 111. Simia variega- tua, Humb. Obs. Zool. \. p. 356. Sapajou varie, Desm. Mamm. p. 83. Body blackish, sprinkled with golden- yellow ; hair very soft, long, and of three colours — brown at the root, red, and black. Inhabits Brasil Geoff. The hair of this monkey resembles that of the true Guenons in the variation of colour. 8. CEBUS FLAVUS, Yellow Sapajou — Simia flava, Schrceber. Sajou flave, Cebus flavus, Geoff. Ann. du Mus. xix. p. 112. Sapajou fauve, Cebus fulvus, Desm. Mamm. p. 83. General colour dull yellowish-brown, tinged with, gray and brown on the head ; the hair silky and straight ; young with the head, tail, and limbs, chestnut-red. In- habits Brasil. 9. CEBUS ALBIFRONS, the Ouavapavi — Ouavapavi, Simia albifrons, Humb. Obs. Zool. i. p. 323, 356. Cebus albi- frons, Geoff. Ann. du Mus. xix. p. 111. Sapajou oua- vapavi, Desm. Mamm. p. 83. Gray ; lighter on the under parts ; crown black ; forehead and orbits white brownish-yellow. Inhabits banks of Oronooko* flear Cataracts. 264 SYNOPSIS OF THE SIHIAIXE, 10. CEBUS LUNATUS, Luntilated Sapajou Cebus \oatus, Kuhl. Sapajou lunulc, Desm, Mamm. p. 84. Black ; a epot in the form of a crescent on each cheek, from the eyebrow to the mouth. Native country unknown. Described by Kuhl from a specimen in the Academy of Heidel- berg. 11. CEBUS XANTHOSTERNOS, Yellow-breasted Sapajou Sa- pajou a poi trine jaune, Desm. Mamm. p. 84. Chest- nut ; face and forehead yellowish-white ; breast and lower part of the neck clear yellowish-red. Inhabits Brasil, between the 15° S. and the river Belmont — Desm. PLATE XXI — 12. C. FATUELLUS, Horned Sapajou Simia fatuellus, Linn. Sajou cornu, Audeb. Hist. Nat. des Singes ; Geoff. Ann. du Mus. xix. p. 109 ; F. Cuv. Hist. Nat. des Mammif. Sapajou cornu, Desm. Mamm. p. 84. Deep blackish-brown, face surrounded with whitish ; hair of the front rising in two lengthened tufts above the eyebrows. Inhabits Guiana. Is closely allied to C. robustus, and united with it by Humboldt. Subject to considerable variety. J3. C. CIRRIFER, Crowned Sapajou — Sajou a toupet, Geoff. Ann. du Mus. xix. p. 110. Simia cirrifera, Humb. Obs. ZooL i. p. 356. Sapajou a toupet, Desm. Mamm. p. 84. Brownish-chestnut ; crown, extremities, and tail, of a deeper tint, approacning black ; a tuft of hairs on the highest part of the forehead. Inhabits Brasil. 14. C. CAPUCHINUS, Capuchin sapajou. — Simia capuchina, Linn. ; Humb. Obs. ZooL i. p. 354. Sajou sai, Geoff. Ann. du Mus. xix. p. 111. Sapajou sai, Desm. Mamm. p. 85. Varying from grayish-brown to olive ; crown and extremities black ; front, cheeks, and shoulders whitish Inhabits Guiana. Varies considerably. Hands sometimes of the same colour witfe the body. 15 C. HYPOLEUCUS, White-throated Sapajou. — Sai a gorgfr SYNOPSIS OP THE SIMIADJ3L 265 blanche, Audeb. Simla hypoleuca, Cariblanco, Humb. Obs. Zool. p. 356. Sapajou gorge blanche, Desm. Mamm. p. 85. Black ; front, sides of the head, throat, and shoulders, white. Inhabits Guiana. PLATE XXII. — 16. C. MONACHUS, Large-headed Sapajou Le sa'i a grosse tete, Cebus monachus, F. Cuv. Hist. Nat. des Mammif. A mixture of black and brown, irregularly disposed, covers the back and sides ; breast, belly, sides ot" the cheeks, and anterior part of arm, whitish-orange ; fore arms, thighs, and tail, black ; a short black beard ; head large. Native country unknown. Sometimes varied on the upper parts with white. Described by F. Cuvier from a living specimen. GENUS XXI — Cattithrix, CUVIER. The head round ; muzzle short ; facial angle about 60°. Separa- tion of the nostrils narrower than the range of the upper cutting teeth ; tail long, entirely hairy, not prehensile ; nails straight, raised, and somewhat claw-like. Animals of small size. PLATE XXIII. — 1. C. SCIUREUS, Squirrel callithrix, or Siamiri. Simia sciurea, Linn. ; Siamiri, Audeb. ; F. Cuv. Hist • Nat. ; Desm. Mamm. Titi de TOronoque, Humb. Obs. Zool. i. 322 and 257. Sagoin siamiri, Desm. Mamm. p. 86. Grayish-biown, with a black muzzle ; extremities bright reddish ; length of the body seven inches ; tail be- tween thirteen and fourteen. Inhabits Brasil, Cayenne. Varies in being entirely of one shade of brown, and with, the back bright reddish and black. 2. C. PERSONATUS, Masked callithrix — Callithrix a masque, Geoff. Ann. du Mus. xix. p. 113. Simia personals, Humb. Obs. Zool. i. p. 357. Sagoin a masque, Desm. Mamm. p. 86. Grayish-yellow ; head and the four hands black ; tail reddish. Inhabits Brasil between the 18° and 21° of south latitude. 266 SYNOPSIS OF THE SIMIADJB 3 C. LUGENS, Mourning callithrix. — Veuve, Geoff- Ann. dtt Mus. xix. p. 113. La viduita de 1'Oronoque, Humb. Obs. Zool. i. p. 319 — 357. Sagoin veuve, Desm. Mamm. p. 87. Black ; throat and anterior hands white ; tail scarcely longer than the body. Inhabits banks of tho rivers Guaviare and Cassiquaire. Not gregarious. 4. C. AMICTUS, Ruffed callithrix — Callithrix a fraise, Geoff. Ann. du Mus. xix. 114. Simia amicta, Humb, Obs. Zool. p. 357. Sajou a fraise, Desm. Mamm. p. 87. Brownish-black ; throat white ; anterior hands dusky yel- low ; tail a fourth longer than the body. Inhabits Brasil. 5. C. TORQUATUS, Collared callithrix — Callithrix a collm, Hoffmann, Geoff. Ann. du Mus. xix. p. 114. Simia tor- quata, Humb. Obs. Zool. i. p. 357. Sagoin a collier, Desm. Mamm. p. 87. Chestnukbrown ; yellowish beneath; throat white, in the form of a collar. Inhabits Brasil. Known only by the description of Count Hoffmannsegg. 6. C. MOLOCH, the Moloch. — Cebus moloch, Hoffmann. Moloch, Geoff. Ann. du Mus. xix. p. 114. Simia mo- loch, Humb. Obs. Zool. i. p. 158. Sajou moloch, Desm. Mamm. p. 37. Gray ; temples, cheek, and be)Jy, bright reddish ; hands, and end of the tail, nearly white. Inhabits Peru. ?. C. MELANOCHIR, Black-Handed Callithrix Prince Maxi- milien, Sagoin aux mains noirea, Kuhl ; Desm. Mamm. Gray lower part of the back ; end of the tail reddish ; an- terior hands dull black ; inhabits Brasil. Known only by the description of KuhL 9, C. iNPutATtis, Mitred Callithrix — Saguin Mitre, Kuhl; Desm. Mamm. p. 89. Gray above ; reddish-yellow be- neath ; a large white spot, surrounded with black, beneath the eyes; end of the tail black ; inhabits Brasil. Known by the description of Kuhl and Lichtenstein. SYNOPSIS OB THE SIMIADJJ. 267 GENUS XXII. — Aotes, HUMBOLDT. Head round, proportionally large ; muzzle short ; facial angle about 60° ; separation of the nostrils narrow ; ears small ; tail longer than the body ; not prehensile ; nails flat ; eyes and habits nocturnal ; live in pairs. PLATE XXIV. — 1. AOTES TRIVIROATUS, The Douroucouli— . Simia trivirgata, Douroucouli, Humb. Obs. Zoo/, i. p. 307 and 358. Aote Douroucouli, Desm, Mamm. p. 88 ; Illig. Prod, p. 71. Gray ; the belly reddish- yellow ; fore- head marked with three dark longitudinal stripes. Inhabits thick forests on the banks of the Cassiquaire. t GENUS XXIII Pithecia, DESMAREST. Head round ; muzzle short ; facial angle 60° ; canine teeth very strong ; cars of middle size ; tail shorter than the body, and covered with very long hairs ; nails claws-like, short, and bent ; habits nocturnal. PLATE XXV — 1. P. SATANus,The Cuxio — Couxio, Geoff. Ann. du Mus. xix. p. 115 ; Humb. Obs. Zool. i. p. 314. pi. 27. Saki Couxio, Desm. Mamm. p. 89. Hair brownish- black; furnished with a thick beard; breast and belly nearly hairless ; female brownish-red. Inhabits the banks of the Oronooko. 2. P. CHIROPOTES, Hard-drinking Saki Capuchin, Geoff. Ann. du Mus. xix. p. 116; Humb. Obs. Zool. i. p. 358. Saki capuchin, Desm. Mamm. p. 89. Reddish- brown : hair of the head thick, divided in the middle in two tufts; beard long and thick; tail blackish-brown. Inhabits the forests of the High Oronooko, to the south and east of the Cataracts. 3. P. RUFIVENTER, Red-bellied Saki Saki a ventre noux. Geoff. Ann. du Mus. xix. p. 116 ; Desm. Mamm. p. 90. Simia run* venter, Humb. Obs. Zool. i. p. 358. Brown, tinted with reddish ; belly reddish-brown ; hair on th» 2G8 SSTNOPSIS OF THE SIMIADJJ. sieyarating and falling down in front; ^eartfless Inhabits French Guiana. 4. P. MONACHUS, the Monk — Moine, Geoff. Ann. du Mus. xix. p. 116. Simia monachus, Humb. Obs. Zoo/. L p. 359. Saki moine, Desm. Mamm. p. 91. Varied with spots of brown and dusky-yellow ; hair of the head elon- gated ; tail as long as the body. Inhabits Brasil. 5. P. MIRIQUOUINA, the Miriquouina — Miriquouina Azara, Hist, of Parag. ; Geoff. Ann. du Mus. xix. p. 117. Simia Azarae, Humb. Obs. Zoo/, i. 359. Saki miriquouina, Desm. Mamm. p. 90. Gray ; underneath reddish ; hairs on the back ringed with black and white ; a white spat above each eye. Inhabits the province of Chaco, and the south bank of the river Paraguay. 6. P. LEUCOCEPHALA, the Yarke __ Yarke, Buff. Simia leucocephala, Humb. Obs. Zoo/, i. p. 359. Pithecia leucocephala, Geoff. Ann. du Mus. xix. p. 117. Saki yarque, Desm. Mamm. p. 91. Black, with the head whitish ; tail nearly the length of the body. Inhabits Guiana. PLATE XXVI — 7. P. MELANOCEPHALA, the Cacajao.— Sirnia melanocephala, Humb. Obs. Zoo/, i. p. 359. Cacajao, Humb. ; Geoff. Ann. du Mus. xix. 117. Saki cacajan Desm. Mamm. p. 91. Hair yellowish-brown; head and tip of the tail black ; tail, a sixth of the length of the body. Inhabits the forests bordering the Cassiquaire and Negro. 8. P. RUFIBARBA, Red-bearded saki. — Saki a moustach, rouses, Desm. Mamm. p. 90. Upper part of the bodv brownish-black, under part pale-red ; eyebrows reddish ; tail slender toward the tip. Inhabits Surinam. Described by Kuhl, from Temmink's Collection. 9 P. OCHROCEPHALA, Yellow-headed saki — Saki a teta jaune, Desm. Mamm. p. 90. Hair above of a clem- SYNOPSIS OF THE SIMIAD^]. 269 chestnut, beneath yellowish-gray ; four hand? brownish. hlack ; face surrounded with a circle of ochreous-yellow. Inhabits Cayenne. Described by Kuhl, from Temmink's Collection. GENUS XXIV. — Hapales, ILLIGER. Muzzle short; facial angle 60°. The upper lateral incisors insulated ; the under lateral incisors longest ; inferior canine teeth very small ; nails, except those of the hinder thumbs, in the form of cla-ws ; tail longer than the body, and squirrel-like. PLATE XXVII — 1. H. VULGARIS, Ouistiti, or the Striated Mon- key Ouistiti vulgare, Jacchus vulgaris, Geoff. Ann. du Mus. xix. 119; Desm. Mamm. 92. Simia jacclms, Humb. Obs. ZooL i. p. 365. Deep gray ; lower part of the back and tail banded with brown ; head of a chestnut. red ; forehead with a white spot ; the hairs from the cheeks and behind the ears nearly white, and very long. Inhabits Guiana and Brasil. Desmarest mentions a variety with the fur red, tinged with gray. 2. H. PENICILLATUS, The Tufted Ouistiti — Pinceau, Geoff. Ann. du Mus. xix. 119. Ouistiti pinceau, Jacchus penicillatus, Desm. Mamm. p. 94. Simia penioillata, Humb. Obs. ZooL i. p. 365. Gray; tail and lower part of the back banded with brown ; forehead with a white spot ; hairs of the cheeks and behind the ears long and black. Inhabits Brasil. 3. H. LEUCOCEPHALUS, White-headed Ouistiti — Ouistiti a tete blanche, Jacchus leucocephalus, Geoff. Ann. du Mus. xix. 119 ; Desm. Mamm. 94. Simia Geoffroyi, Humb. Obs. ZooL i. 365. Hair red ; head and breast white ; neck black ; tail tinged with brown and gray ; hair be- hind the ears black and long. Inhabits Brasil. 4. H. AURITUS, Eared Ouistiti Ouistiti oreillard, Jacchus auritus, Geoff. Ann. du Mus. xix. 119 ; Desm. Mamm. 270 SYNOPSIS or THE SIMIADJB. p. 95. Simia aurita, Humb. Obs. Zoo/, i. 356. Hair black, mixed with brown ; tail tinged with black and gray ; a white spot on the forehead ; long white hair hides the interior of the ears ; young hrown ; the adult markings obscure. Inhabits Brasil. Nos. 2 and 4 are much allied to H. vulgaris . 5. H. HUMERALIFER, White-shouldered Ouistiti. — Ouistiti camail, Jacchus humeralifer, Geoff. Ann. du Mus. xix. p. 120 ; Desm. Mamm. p. 95. Simia hurncralifera, Humb. Obs. Zoo/, i. 365. Hair brownish-chestnut ; tail slightly tinged wfth gray ; shoulders, breast and arms, white. Inhabits Brasil. 6. H. ARGENTATUS, The Mico. — Simia argentata, Linn. ; Humb. — Mico. Audeb. Ouistiti mico, Jacchus argentatus, Geoff. Ann. du Mus. xix. p. 120 ; Desm. Mamm. p. 94. Hair shining, entirely white ; the tail black ; face and hands deep flesh-colour. Inhabits Para. According to Kuhl the tail is sometimes white. 7. H. ALBIFRONS, White-fronted Ouistiti — Ouistiti a front blanc, Jacchus albifrons, Desm. Mamm. Supp. p. 534. Hair black; white at the roots; face black; forehead, sides of the neck and throat, clothed with short white hair ; hair of the occiput and behind the ears long and black ; tail brown, slightly varied with white. Native district un- known. 8. H. MELANURUS, Black-tailed Ouistiti — Ouistiti melanure, Jacchus melanurus, Geoff. Ann. du Mus. xix. p. 120. ; Desm. Mamm. p. 94. Simia melanura, Humb. Obs. Zoo/. i. p. 365. Hair brown above ; beneath yellowish ; tail of a uniform black. Inhabits Brasil, Humboldt. Probably forms the passage to the next genus, Midat. GENUS XXV — Midas, GEOFFROY. Muzzle short ; facial angle 60° : forehead appearing prominent, SYNOPSIS OF THE SIMIADJE. 271 by the great angie of the upper edge of the orbits ; upper Incisoii contiguous, under incisors equal in size ; two inferior canine teeth nearly equal in 'size to the upper; nails, except on the lauuer thumbs, formed like claws ; tail as in Hapales. L. M. RUFIMANUS, Red-Handed Tamarin. — Simia midas, Linn. Rumb. Tamarin, Audeb. Tamarin a mains rousses, Geoff. Ann. du Mus. xix, p. 121. Ouistiti tamarin, Desm. Mamm. p. 94. Hair black ; lower part of the back varied with gray ; four hands reddish. Guiana. (Not found in Brasil, Desm.) 2. M. URSULUS, The Negro Tamarin. — Tamarin negre, Audeb ; Geoff. Ann. du Mus. xix. p. 121. Ouisciti negre, Desm. Mamm. p. 94. Hair black ; back wa^d with bright reddish 5 hands black. Inhabits Para, Allied to the preceding. 3. M. LABIATUS, White-lipped Tamarin — Tamarin labid, Geoff. Ann. du Mus. xix. p. 121. Ouistiti labirf, Desm. Mamm. p. 95. Hair blackish, reddish beneath ; head black •, nose and lips white. Inhabits Brasil. 4. M. CHRYSOMELAS, Yellow-fronted Tamarin. Ouistiti a front jaune, Desm. Mamm. p. 95. Hair black ; fore- head and upper side of the tail golden-yellow ; forehead, knees, breast, and sides of the head, of a chestnut-red. Inhabits Brasil and Para. PLATEXXVIII 5. M.ROSALIA, The Marikina, or Silky Tamarin. Simia rosalia, Linn. Humb. Marikina, Buff. Audeb. Geoff. Ouistiti marikina, Desm. Mamm, p. 95. Hair of a golden yellow, varying from a yellower to a redder tinge ; a main upon the neck. Inhabits Guiana, and the southern regions of Brasil, from Rio Janeiro to Cape Frio. Desmarest mentions a variety from Guiana, varied with red and black-~-frorn Brasil, bright shining red. PLATE XXIX 6. M. LEONINUS, Leonine Tamarin. SitrU leonina, Humb. Obs. Zool. i. 361. Leoncito, Geoff. 272 SYNOPSIS OF THE SIMIAD^B. Aim. du Mus. six. i. 121. Ouistiti leoncito, Desm. Mamm. p. 95. Hair brownish ; neck with a mane of the same colour ; face black ; mouth white ; tail black above, white beneath. Inhabits the plains which border the eastern part of the Cordilleras. 7. M. (EDiPus, The Pinche — Simia redipus, Linn. P;nche, Audeb. Titi de Carthagene, Humb. Obs. Zool. i. rf37. Pinche, Geoff. Ann. du Mus. xix. p. 122. Ouistiti pinche, T)esm. Mamm. p. 96. Hair brownish yellow above, white beneath ; a long beard, silky and white ; tail red, extreme half black. Inhabits Carthagena, rare in Goiana, APPENDIX. A OBSERVATIONS Off THE NEW ILLUSTRATIONS, BY ME. JAMES STEWAET, THE ARTIST WHO MADE THE DKAWING3. 275 THE ENTELLTJS MONKEY. PLATE IX. From a Specimen in the ddinburgli Royal Zoological Gardens. THIS rare Monkey, of which there have been several specimens in these Gardens, thrives very ill in this <:liinate, never showing any activity, being always dull and heavy, although never fretful; showing very little agility or disposition to playfulness, even though surrounded by others, sporting all manner of antics. It sits amidst the bustle with dull glaring «yes, totally indifferent to every effort made to in- duce it to join the fun along with the rest. The specimens at the Gardens have varied in colour, from a dull fawn all over the body, lighter beneath, to a pale ashy white; face in all the specimens purplish-black ; hands of a dead flesh colour. 276 CERCOPITHECUS MONA. THE VARIED MONKEY, PLATE X. From a Specimen in the Edinburgh Royal Zoological Gardens. THIS portrait was taken from one of a pair at pre- sent in the Gardens. It is one of the most active, pleasing, and beautiful of all the Monkey -tribes ; keeping its naturally fine coloured and textured fur scrupulously clean. It is extremely good natured, active, and graceful, in all its movements ; very in- quisitive; fond of handling and examining every object within its reach ; yet, with all its apparent familiarity, never permitting itself to be handled. It will at once put out its hands, and examine the back of your hand, lift the cuff of your coat, exa- mine your wrist-band, scrutinizing every part with magpie and marrow-bone like expression ; but, upon the slightest symptom of turning up the palm of THE VARIED MONKEY. 277 your hand, it withdraws its hands with the speed of thought* When given any thing to eat, even its most common food, it applies it with both hands to its nose, then deliberately examines it, applies it to the nose again, and, convinced oT its quality, it begins carefully to remove any skin, husk, or ble- mish ; after which it eats quickly, but not greedily. When, after such examination, it is not satisfied with any thing offered, it lets it drop from its hands, looking after it in its descent, uttering a low gut- tural sound, the only sound it utters except a squal- ling scream when excited. 278 CERCOCEBUS FULIGINOSUS. THE MANGABEY OR WHITE EYELID MONKEY. PLATE XII. From a Specimen in the Royal Zoological Gardens, Edinburgh. THIS Monkey is good-natured and playful, yet, in its most humorous fits, displaying a ludicrous gravity of expression, at the same tune uttering a low, pleased, serious grunt. It was exceedingly inquisi- tive, fond of handling and examining every thing within reach, yet carefully keeping itself clear of being touched; never showed any fits of passion or ill-nature; was not greedy or grasping; took what it got from visitors in the way of dainties, never appearing jealous of much smaller or weaker companions in the same cage, who came in for a share of the good things going. It walked mostly THE MANAGBET OR VHTTTR EYELID MONKEY. 279 on all fours; sometimes carried its tail erect, but for the most part elevated about and horizontal with the back. The back remarkably straight and stiff, appearing not to have the same flexibility of spine, possessed by Monkeys in general. 280 CERCOCEBUS SAB.EUS. THE GREEN MONKEY. PLATE XIII. From a fine Specimen (out of three or four) in the Edinburgh Zoological Gardens. THIS is an exceedingly active, cleanly, and graceful Monkey, familiar and confident, yet not obtrusive or quarrelsome ; but, if roused, attacking boldly, and intimidating much larger and stronger Monkeys than itself. When offered a nut, it did not, like many of its companions, snatch it from the hand ; but took it slowly and confidently. It would then roll it between the palms of its hands ; then wet it in its mouth, rubbing it repeatedly on its hip, till apparently satisfied that it was clean enough; it would then crack it and eat the kernel. This Monkey appears not to thrive well hi con- finement, as several fine specimens, which have been in the Gardens, lived but a very short tune. 281 MACACUS SILENUS. THE WANDEROO MONKEY. PLATE XTV. From a Specimen in the Edinburgh Zoological Gardens. THIS is a very beautiful, gentle, and familiar little Monkey, exceedingly active, and in all its motions, displaying a quiet intelligence; at the same time, looking you in the face with a pleased and peering human-like expression ; fond of handling and exa- mining every thing; at the same time allowing itself, without the least shyness, to be fondled, ex- pressing its satisfaction by a laughing look ; show- Jng its teeth, and applying them gently to the hand, licking it, &c. It shows no selfishness ; but holding out its little hand with a grateful look, will take any of the good things offered, of which the younger visitors are seldom forgetful. It does not 282 THE WAXDEROO MONKEY. show the least anger, although its smaller com- panions should snatch from its hand the bite going into its mouth. The only sound it emits, is a low pleased nicher : and, when excited, a clear sharp whine. 283 ATELES PANISCUS. THE COAITA. PLATE XX. From a Specimens in the Edinburgh Royal Zoological Gardens. THERE have been several specimens of this Monkey in the Gardens, from time to time, all possessed of the same characteristics — extreme gentleness and timidity. Suffering much from cold when in the shade, in our warmest summer weather; its most common posture, when at rest, was sitting, its head resting between its knees, its long arms being folded round them, and clasped on its back, its long tail twined round, and twice encircling its lower extremities. In this position it would sit for *lours, marking, with the keenest attention, every thing occurring within range of its sight. When offered any thing tempting to eat by any of the visitors, it would slowly unfold itself, as if fearful to 284 THE COAITA. expose itself to cold ; and, with pursed mouth and protruding lips, uttering a plaintive and fretful gutteral whine ; would slowly and deliberately take hold of any thing given to it, by a sidelong move- ment of its long narrow hand, divested of even the rudiments of a thumb ; and placing the hollow of its closed hand to its mouth, would pick out any thing it contained. Its gait and movements about its cage were agile, but cautious, never making a leap from one part to another, but climbing quickly about, holding on and letting go with hands, feet, and tail alternately. It was very fond of thrusting its long cold hands between the palms of yours, being pleased with the warmth that yours im- parted ; always uttering its usual whine when you shook yourself clear of it. The smallest Monkey in the same cage tyrannized over it with the utmost impunity. When irritated, which seldom happened, it uttered a short barking grunt. 285 CEBITS MONACHUS. THE LARGE HEADED SAPAJOU. ' PLATE XXH. From a Specimen lately in the Royal Edinburgh Zoological Gardens, THERE was a fine specimen of this Monkey in the Gardens about two years ago ; it was exceedingly timid and morose, yet not ill-natured or mis- chievous, always keeping as far away from the visitors as it could, by clinging to the higher bars of the cage ; avoiding, with equal care, its fellow inmates; by whom, although much smaller and weaker, it underwent a constant system of perse- cution. By the way of bettering its condition, it was removed into a cage, containing four or five Racoons ; but they turned out to be of " the wicked whose tender mercies are cruel ;" as they one night, by way of a ploy, took the liberty of killing and eating him. 286 CALLITHRIX SCIUREUS THE SIAMIRI. PLATE XXIII. From a fine Specimen in the Zoological Gardens. THIS animal lived but a short time in the Gardens. Unfortunately, it arrived in this country near the fall of the year, and the coldness of the climate soon put an end to its existence. In its habits it was quiet and gentle, never show- ing the least symptom of petulance or ill-nature in its movements. On all-fours it was quick but deli- liberate, never springing nor jumping ; but, with a quick running movement, which it generally made in pursuit of flies, of which it seemed very fond, always catching them by a movement of the hand, so quick as to be imperceptible. Before eating its prey, it carefully removed the wings, and if a small fly, it eat it entire ; if a carrion or blue-bottle fly, THE SIAMIRI. 287 of which there are great numbers about the Gar- dens, it would divide the fly, eating only one-half at a tune. If offered any thing eatable, it held out its hand with extreme caution, fixing its large eyes on yours. If the least motion of the other hand were made, it excited suspicion, and it would immediately with- draw to the middle of the cage, the place farthest removed from danger, uttering a low cluttering sound, and hardly any inducement would tempt it from its security again. In walking, its back was much arched, shoulders very low, head higher than the shoulder, tail always drooping. ff Xs Of THE. ^ ( UNIVERSITY ) 288 OUSTITL— THE STRIATED MONKEY. PLATE XXVTI. From a Specimen in the Edinburgh Royal Zoological Gardens. THERE have been numerous specimens of this beau- tiful yet extremely delicate little Monkey in the Gardens, whose short stay there was a mere process of suffering and decay, as they appear to pine from their first arrival. There whole care, when not eat- ing, appeared to be huddling together to protect themselves from cold, almost constantly uttering their low plaintive chitter ; a shivering motion being always perceptible throughout their attenuated and crouched-up frames. The only object that seemed for a moment to rouse their dormant and feeble energies, was the occasional intrusion of an unlucky fly into their cage, which was instantly seized, divested of its wings, divided in two, and greedily devoured. Indeed, from the avidity with which they hunted these insects, and the relish with which they ate them, they appear to be, in a great part, their natural food. RETURN TO the circulation desk of any University of California Library or to the NORTHERN REGIONAL LIBRARY FACILITY Bldg. 400, Richmond Field Station University of California Richmond, CA 94804-4698 BOOKS MAY BE RECALLED AFTER 7 DAY! 2-month loans may be renewed by calling (415)642-6233 I -year loans may be recharged by bringing book! to NRLF Renewals and recharges may be made 4 day* prior to due date DUE AS STAMPED BELOW SEP 1 0 1989 BIOLOGY I