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The Arabians say that the whole world would swarm with these
serpents, if they were not kept in check in the way in which I know
that vipers are. Of a truth Divine Providence does appear to be, as
indeed one might expect beforehand, a wise contriver. For timid
animals which are a prey to others are all made to produce young
abundantly, that so the species may not be entirely eaten up and lost;
while savage and noxious creatures are made very unfruitful. The
hare, for instance, which is hunted alike by beasts, birds, and
men, breeds so abundantly as even to superfetate, a thing which is
true of no other animal. You find in a hare's belly, at one and the
same time, some of the young all covered with fur, others quite
naked, others again just fully formed in the womb, while the hare
perhaps has lately conceived afresh. The lioness, on the other hand,
which is one of the strongest and boldest of brutes, brings forth young
but once in her lifetime, and then a single cub; she cannot possibly
conceive again, since she loses her womb at the same time that she
drops her young. The reason of this is that as soon as the cub begins
to stir inside the dam, his claws, which are sharper than those of any
other animal, scratch the womb; as the time goes on, and he grows
bigger, he tears it ever more and more; so that at last, when the
birth comes, there is not a morsel in the whole womb that is sound.
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