to studying. His shiny black coat; his rounded
back, convex with years of stooping over his minute
work; his angular movements, made natural to him by
his habitual style of manipulation; the aridity of
his organism, with which his voice is in perfect keeping;—all
these marks of his special sedentary occupation are
so nearly what might be expected, and indeed so much,
in accordance with the more general fact that a man’s
aspect is subdued to the look of what he works in,
that I do not feel disposed to accuse myself of exaggeration
in my account of the Scarabee’s appearance.
But I think he has learned something else of his
coleopterous friends. The beetles never smile.
Their physiognomy is not adapted to the display of
the emotions; the lateral movement of their jaws being
effective for alimentary purposes, but very limited
in its gamut of expression. It is with these
unemotional beings that the Scarabee passes his life.
He has but one object, and that is perfectly serious,
to his mind, in fact, of absorbing interest and importance.
In one aspect of the matter he is quite right, for
if the Creator has taken the trouble to make one of
His creatures in just such a way and not otherwise,
from the beginning of its existence on our planet in
ages of unknown remoteness to the present time, the
man who first explains His idea to us is charged with
a revelation. It is by no means impossible that
there may be angels in the celestial hierarchy to whom
it would be new and interesting. I have often
thought that spirits of a higher order than man might
be willing to learn something from a human mind like
that of Newton, and I see no reason why an angelic
being might not be glad to hear a lecture from Mr.
Huxley, or Mr. Tyndall, or one of our friends at
Cambridge.
I have been sinuous as the Links of Forth seen from
Stirling Castle, or as that other river which threads
the Berkshire valley and runs, a perennial stream,
through my memory,—from which I please myself
with thinking that I have learned to wind without
fretting against the shore, or forgetting cohere I
am flowing,—sinuous, I say, but not jerky,—no,
not jerky nor hard to follow for a reader of the right
sort, in the prime of life and full possession of
his or her faculties.
—All this last page or so, you readily
understand, has been my private talk with you, the
Reader. The cue of the conversation which I
interrupted by this digression is to be found in the
words “a good motto;” from which I begin
my account of the visit again.
—Do you receive many visitors,—I
mean vertebrates, not articulates? —said
the Master.
I thought this question might perhaps bring il disiato
riso, the long-wished-for smile, but the Scarabee
interpreted it in the simplest zoological sense, and
neglected its hint of playfulness with the most absolute
unconsciousness, apparently, of anything not entirely
serious and literal.