SKELETON OF PROTOHIPPUS VENTICOLUS--EARLY HORSE
Nat. Hist. Mus.
This difference between the reptile world and the world of our human minds is one our sympathies seem unable to pass. We cannot conceive in ourselves the swift uncomplicated urgency of a reptile?s instinctive motives, its appetites, fears and hates. We {41} cannot understand them in their simplicity because all our motives are complicated; our?s are balances and resultants and not simple urgencies. But the mammals and birds have self-restraint and consideration for other individuals, a social appeal, a self- control that is, at its lower level, after our own fashion. We can in consequence establish relations with almost all sorts of them. When they suffer they utter cries and make movements that rouse our feelings. We can make understanding pets of them with a mutual recognition. They can be tamed to self-restraint towards us, domesticated and taught.