Instinct or Cleverness

是本能还是机智?

New Concept English 3, Developing Skills

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  • Lesson 54

  • Instinct or cleverness?

  • Was the writer successful in protecting his peach tree? Why not?

  • We have been brought up to fear insects.

  • We regard them as unnecessary creatures that do more harm than good.

  • We continually wage war on them, for they contaminate our food, carry diseases, or devour our crops.

  • They sting or bite without provocation; they fly uninvited into our rooms on summer nights, or beat against our lighted windows.

  • We live in dread not only of unpleasant insects like spiders or wasps, but of quite harmless ones like moths.

  • Reading about them increases our understanding without dispelling our fears.

  • Knowing that the industrious ant lives in a highly organized society

  • does nothing to prevent us from being filled with revulsion when we find hordes of them crawling over a carefully prepared picnic lunch.

  • No matter how much we like honey,

  • or how much we have read about the uncanny sense of direction which bees possess, we have a horror of being stung.

  • Most of our fears are unreasonable, but they are impossible to erase.

  • At the same time, however, insects are strangely fascinating.

  • We enjoy reading about them, especially when we find that, like the praying mantis, they lead perfectly horrible lives.

  • We enjoy staring at them, entranced as they go about their business, unaware (we hope) of our presence.

  • Who has not stood in awe at the sight of a spider pouncing on a fly,

  • or a column of ants triumphantly bearing home an enormous dead beetle?

  • Last summer I spent days in the garden watching thousands of ants crawling up the trunk of my prize peach tree.