but when he described the white mouse who had been given intelligence, he was as pompous and artificial as the others.
As if he were trying on the mantle of his teachers. I restrained myself at that point more out of friendship for Burt than anything else.
Letting Algernon out of his cage would throw the meeting into chaos, and after all this was Burt's debut into the rat-race of academic preferment.
I had my finger on the cage door release, and as Algernon watched the movement of my hand with his pink-candy eyes,
I'm certain he knew what I had in mind. At that moment Burt took the cage for his demonstration.
He explained the complexity of the shifting lock, and the problem-solving required each time the lock was to be opened.
(Thin plastic bolts fell into place in varying patterns and had to be controlled by the mouse, who depressed a series of levers in the same order.)
As Algernon's intelligence increased, his problem-solving speed increased—that much was obvious. But then Burt revealed one thing I had not known.
At the peak of his intelligence, Algernon's performance had become variable.
There were times, according to Burt's report, when Algernon refused to work at all—even when apparently hungry—
and other times when he would solve the problem but, instead of taking his food reward, would hurl himself against the walls of his cage.
When someone from the audience asked Burt if he was suggesting that this erratic behavior was directly caused by increased intelligence,
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