I
like rats. Rather, I admire them, as I admire almost anyone who is resourceful and
endures. I don’t share the revulsion most feel in their presence. I once killed
a rat with a shovel, flattening him in our backyard, and I shot several with a
pellet gun, but I was young and filled with bloodlust. Last summer I interviewed
a neuroengineer who dissects rat brains, cutting them into thin slices like prosciutto di Parma. He spoke
lovingly, with unfeigned respect, of the rat and the beautiful symmetry of its
hippocampus. Thanks to the rat and his sliced-up brain we may someday eliminate
Parkinson’s disease. The neuroengineer’s tone of admiration reminded me of the
exterminator Joseph Mitchell quotes in “The Rats on the Waterfront,” collected in The Bottom of the Harbor (1960):
“Rats
are almost as fecund as germs. In New York, under fair conditions, they bear
from three to five times a years, in litters of from five to twenty-two. They
live to be three or four years old, although now and then one may live somewhat
longer; a rat at four is older than a man at ninety. `Rats that survive to the
age of four are the wisest and the most cynical beasts on earth,’ one
exterminator says. `A trap means nothing to them, no matter how skillfully set.
They just kick it around until it snaps; then they eat the bait. And they can
detect poisoned bait a yard off. I believe some of them can read.’”
Evidently,
Dr. Johnson shared our interest in rats. Boswell reports a 1776 conversation regarding
Bishop Thomas Percy, a friend to both men best remembered for assembling the
ballad collection Reliques of Ancient
English Poetry (1765). Boswell writes:
“I
told him, that I heard Dr. Percy was writing the history of the wolf in
Great-Britain. Johnson. “The wolf, Sir! why the wolf? Why does he not write of
the bear, which we had formerly? Nay, it is said we had the beaver. Or why does
he not write of the grey rat, the Hanover rat [better known as the brown rat, sewer
rat, Norwegian rat, Rattus norvegicus],
as it is called, because it is said to have come into this country about the
time that the family of Hanover came? I should like to see The History of the Grey Rat, by Thomas Percy, D.D., Chaplain in
Ordinary to His Majesty,’ (laughing immoderately). Boswell. `I am afraid a
court chaplain could not decently write of the grey rat.’ Johnson. “Sir, he
need not give it the name of the Hanover rat.” Thus could he indulge a
luxuriant sportive imagination, when talking of a friend whom he loved and
esteemed.”
The
Hanover rats of eighteen-century England were the likely ancestors of the rats whose
brains my neuroengineering friend was thin-slicing in his lab. My roof rat,
too, was an import, possibly from North Africa or anywhere on the Mediterranean,
probably sometime in the last five-hundred years. As I watched, he walked away
slowly, past the book-chute, under a railing and down the alley where he
disappeared.
4 comments:
I have read that the Norway rats essentially ended the plague in England by driving out the black rats that carried the plague fleas. Doesn't Squire Western talk of "Hanover rats"?
Perhaps, like Mitchell's rats, your roof rat was interrupted on his way back to the stacks, where he longed to resume his scholarly studies.
When I was in the U.S. Navy, rat guards,conical metal shields, were secured around mooring lines. The Navy went to great lengths to prevent parasitic creatures, great and small, from coming on board. One that was particularly feared was the common bed bug. The New York Times recently reported that bed bugs have been found inhabiting library books, including those of our local university library. My wife now insists that I place any checked-out library books in a plastic garbage bag and, when I arrive home, throw them in the freezer for a few hours.
TJG
This story our magazine published about research on rat empathy really made me like the little buggers.
http://mag.uchicago.edu/science-medicine/emotional-release
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