<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<h1>THE LIFE OF THE SPIDER</h1>
<h2>CHAPTER I: THE BLACK-BELLIED TARANTULA</h2>
<p>The Spider has a bad name: to most of us, she represents an odious,
noxious animal, which every one hastens to crush under foot. Against
this summary verdict the observer sets the beast’s industry, its
talent as a weaver, its wiliness in the chase, its tragic nuptials and
other characteristics of great interest. Yes, the Spider is well
worth studying, apart from any scientific reasons; but she is said to
be poisonous and that is her crime and the primary cause of the repugnance
wherewith she inspires us. Poisonous, I agree, if by that we understand
that the animal is armed with two fangs which cause the immediate death
of the little victims which it catches; but there is a wide difference
between killing a Midge and harming a man. However immediate in
its effects upon the insect entangled in the fatal web, the Spider’s
poison is not serious for us and causes less inconvenience than a Gnat-bite.
That, at least, is what we can safely say as regards the great majority
of the Spiders of our regions.</p>
<p>Nevertheless, a few are to be feared; and foremost among these is
the Malmignatte, the terror of the Corsican peasantry. I have
seen her settle in the furrows, lay out her web and rush boldly at insects
larger than herself; I have admired her garb of black velvet speckled
with carmine-red; above all, I have heard most disquieting stories told
about her. Around Ajaccio and Bonifacio, her bite is reputed very
dangerous, sometimes mortal. The countryman declares this for
a fact and the doctor does not always dare deny it. In the neighbourhood
of Pujaud, not far from Avignon, the harvesters speak with dread of
<i>Theridion lugubre</i>, <SPAN name="citation1"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote1">{1}</SPAN>
first observed by Léon Dufour in the Catalonian mountains; according
to them, her bite would lead to serious accidents. The Italians
have bestowed a bad reputation on the Tarantula, who produces convulsions
and frenzied dances in the person stung by her. To cope with ‘tarantism,’
the name given to the disease that follows on the bite of the Italian
Spider, you must have recourse to music, the only efficacious remedy,
so they tell us. Special tunes have been noted, those quickest
to afford relief. There is medical choreography, medical music.
And have we not the tarentella, a lively and nimble dance, bequeathed
to us perhaps by the healing art of the Calabrian peasant?</p>
<p>Must we take these queer things seriously or laugh at them?
From the little that I have seen, I hesitate to pronounce an opinion.
Nothing tells us that the bite of the Tarantula may not provoke, in
weak and very impressionable people, a nervous disorder which music
will relieve; nothing tells us that a profuse perspiration, resulting
from a very energetic dance, is not likely to diminish the discomfort
by diminishing the cause of the ailment. So far from laughing,
I reflect and enquire, when the Calabrian peasant talks to me of his
Tarantula, the Pujaud reaper of his <i>Theridion lugubre</i>, the Corsican
husbandman of his Malmignatte. Those Spiders might easily deserve,
at least partly, their terrible reputation.</p>
<p>The most powerful Spider in my district, the Black-bellied Tarantula,
will presently give us something to think about, in this connection.
It is not my business to discuss a medical point, I interest myself
especially in matters of instinct; but, as the poison-fangs play a leading
part in the huntress’ manoeuvres of war, I shall speak of their
effects by the way. The habits of the Tarantula, her ambushes,
her artifices, her methods of killing her prey: these constitute my
subject. I will preface it with an account by Léon Dufour,
<SPAN name="citation2"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote2">{2}</SPAN> one of those accounts
in which I used to delight and which did much to bring me into closer
touch with the insect. The Wizard of the Landes tells us of the
ordinary Tarantula, that of the Calabrias, observed by him in Spain:</p>
<blockquote><p>‘<i>Lycosa tarantula</i> by preference inhabits
open places, dry, arid, uncultivated places, exposed to the sun.
She lives generally—at least when full-grown—in underground
passages, regular burrows, which she digs for herself. These burrows
are cylindrical; they are often an inch in diameter and run into the
ground to a depth of more than a foot; but they are not perpendicular.
The inhabitant of this gut proves that she is at the same time a skilful
hunter and an able engineer. It was a question for her not only
of constructing a deep retreat that could hide her from the pursuit
of her foes: she also had to set up her observatory whence to watch
for her prey and dart out upon it. The Tarantula provides for
every contingency: the underground passage, in fact, begins by being
vertical, but, at four or five inches from the surface, it bends at
an obtuse angle, forms a horizontal turning and then becomes perpendicular
once more. It is at the elbow of this tunnel that the Tarantula
posts herself as a vigilant sentry and does not for a moment lose sight
of the door of her dwelling; it was there that, at the period when I
was hunting her, I used to see those eyes gleaming like diamonds, bright
as a cat’s eyes in the dark.</p>
<p>‘The outer orifice of the Tarantula’s burrow is usually
surmounted by a shaft constructed throughout by herself. It is
a genuine work of architecture, standing as much as an inch above the
ground and sometimes two inches in diameter, so that it is wider than
the burrow itself. This last circumstance, which seems to have
been calculated by the industrious Spider, lends itself admirably to
the necessary extension of the legs at the moment when the prey is to
be seized. The shaft is composed mainly of bits of dry wood joined
by a little clay and so artistically laid, one above the other, that
they form the scaffolding of a straight column, the inside of which
is a hollow cylinder. The solidity of this tubular building, of
this outwork, is ensured above all by the fact that it is lined, upholstered
within, with a texture woven by the Lycosa’s <SPAN name="citation3"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote3">{3}</SPAN>
spinnerets and continued throughout the interior of the burrow.
It is easy to imagine how useful this cleverly-manufactured lining must
be for preventing landslip or warping, for maintaining cleanliness and
for helping her claws to scale the fortress.</p>
<p>‘I hinted that this outwork of the burrow was not there invariably;
as a matter of fact, I have often come across Tarantulas’ holes
without a trace of it, perhaps because it had been accidentally destroyed
by the weather, or because the Lycosa may not always light upon the
proper building-materials, or, lastly, because architectural talent
is possibly declared only in individuals that have reached the final
stage, the period of perfection of their physical and intellectual development.</p>
<p>‘One thing is certain, that I have had numerous opportunities
of seeing these shafts, these out-works of the Tarantula’s abode;
they remind me, on a larger scale, of the tubes of certain Caddis-worms.
The Arachnid had more than one object in view in constructing them:
she shelters her retreat from the floods; she protects it from the fall
of foreign bodies which, swept by the wind, might end by obstructing
it; lastly, she uses it as a snare by offering the Flies and other insects
whereon she feeds a projecting point to settle on. Who shall tell
us all the wiles employed by this clever and daring huntress?</p>
<p>‘Let us now say something about my rather diverting Tarantula-hunts.
The best season for them is the months of May and June. The first
time that I lighted on this Spider’s burrows and discovered that
they were inhabited by seeing her come to a point on the first floor
of her dwelling—the elbow which I have mentioned—I thought
that I must attack her by main force and pursue her relentlessly in
order to capture her; I spent whole hours in opening up the trench with
a knife a foot long by two inches wide, without meeting the Tarantula.
I renewed the operation in other burrows, always with the same want
of success; I really wanted a pickaxe to achieve my object, but I was
too far from any kind of house. I was obliged to change my plan
of attack and I resorted to craft. Necessity, they say, is the
mother of invention.</p>
<p>‘It occurred to me to take a stalk, topped with its spikelet,
by way of a bait, and to rub and move it gently at the orifice of the
burrow. I soon saw that the Lycosa’s attention and desires
were roused. Attracted by the bait, she came with measured steps
towards the spikelet. I withdrew it in good time a little outside
the hole, so as not to leave the animal time for reflexion; and the
Spider suddenly, with a rush, darted out of her dwelling, of which I
hastened to close the entrance. The Tarantula, bewildered by her
unaccustomed liberty, was very awkward in evading my attempts at capture;
and I compelled her to enter a paper bag, which I closed without delay.</p>
<p>‘Sometimes, suspecting the trap, or perhaps less pressed by
hunger, she would remain coy and motionless, at a slight distance from
the threshold, which she did not think it opportune to cross.
Her patience outlasted mine. In that case, I employed the following
tactics: after making sure of the Lycosa’s position and the direction
of the tunnel, I drove a knife into it on the slant, so as to take the
animal in the rear and cut off its retreat by stopping up the burrow.
I seldom failed in my attempt, especially in soil that was not stony.
In these critical circumstances, either the Tarantula took fright and
deserted her lair for the open, or else she stubbornly remained with
her back to the blade. I would then give a sudden jerk to the
knife, which flung both the earth and the Lycosa to a distance, enabling
me to capture her. By employing this hunting-method, I sometimes
caught as many as fifteen Tarantulae within the space of an hour.</p>
<p>‘In a few cases, in which the Tarantula was under no misapprehension
as to the trap which I was setting for her, I was not a little surprised,
when I pushed the stalk far enough down to twist it round her hiding-place,
to see her play with the spikelet more or less contemptuously and push
it away with her legs, without troubling to retreat to the back of her
lair.</p>
<p>‘The Apulian peasants, according to Baglivi’s <SPAN name="citation4"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote4">{4}</SPAN>
account, also hunt the Tarantula by imitating the humming of an insect
with an oat-stalk at the entrance to her burrow. I quote the passage:</p>
<p>‘“<i>Ruricolæ nostri quando eas captare volunt,
ad illorum latibula accedunt, tenuisque avenacæ fistulæ
sonum, apum murmuri non absimilem, modulantur. Quo audito, ferox
exit Tarentula ut muscas vel alia hujus modi insecta, quorum murmur
esse putat, captat; captatur tamen ista a rustico insidiatore</i>.”
<SPAN name="citation5"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote5">{5}</SPAN></p>
<p>‘The Tarantula, so dreadful at first sight, especially when
we are filled with the idea that her bite is dangerous, so fierce in
appearance, is nevertheless quite easy to tame, as I have often found
by experiment.</p>
<p>‘On the 7th of May 1812, while at Valencia, in Spain, I caught
a fair-sized male Tarantula, without hurting him, and imprisoned him
in a glass jar, with a paper cover in which I cut a trap-door.
At the bottom of the jar I put a paper bag, to serve as his habitual
residence. I placed the jar on a table in my bedroom, so as to
have him under frequent observation. He soon grew accustomed to
captivity and ended by becoming so familiar that he would come and take
from my fingers the live Fly which I gave him. After killing his
victim with the fangs of his mandibles, he was not satisfied, like most
Spiders, to suck her head: he chewed her whole body, shoving it piecemeal
into his mouth with his palpi, after which he threw up the masticated
teguments and swept them away from his lodging.</p>
<p>‘Having finished his meal, he nearly always made his toilet,
which consisted in brushing his palpi and mandibles, both inside and
out, with his front tarsi. After that, he resumed his air of motionless
gravity. The evening and the night were his time for taking his
walks abroad. I often heard him scratching the paper of the bag.
These habits confirm the opinion, which I have already expressed elsewhere,
that most Spiders have the faculty of seeing by day and night, like
cats.</p>
<p>‘On the 28th of June, my Tarantula cast his skin. It
was his last moult and did not perceptibly alter either the colour of
his attire or the dimensions of his body. On the 14th of July,
I had to leave Valencia; and I stayed away until the 23rd. During
this time, the Tarantula fasted; I found him looking quite well on my
return. On the 20th of August, I again left for a nine days’
absence, which my prisoner bore without food and without detriment to
his health. On the 1st of October, I once more deserted the Tarantula,
leaving him without provisions. On the 21st, I was fifty miles
from Valencia and, as I intended to remain there, I sent a servant to
fetch him. I was sorry to learn that he was not found in the jar,
and I never heard what became of him.</p>
<p>‘I will end my observations on the Tarantulae with a short
description of a curious fight between those animals. One day,
when I had had a successful hunt after these Lycosae, I picked out two
full-grown and very powerful males and brought them together in a wide
jar, in order to enjoy the sight of a combat to the death. After
walking round the arena several times, to try and avoid each other,
they were not slow in placing themselves in a warlike attitude, as though
at a given signal. I saw them, to my surprise, take their distances
and sit up solemnly on their hind-legs, so as mutually to present the
shield of their chests to each other. After watching them face
to face like that for two minutes, during which they had doubtless provoked
each other by glances that escaped my own, I saw them fling themselves
upon each other at the same time, twisting their legs round each other
and obstinately struggling to bite each other with the fangs of the
mandibles. Whether from fatigue or from convention, the combat
was suspended; there was a few seconds’ truce; and each athlete
moved away and resumed his threatening posture. This circumstance
reminded me that, in the strange fights between cats, there are also
suspensions of hostilities. But the contest was soon renewed between
my two Tarantulae with increased fierceness. One of them, after
holding victory in the balance for a while, was at last thrown and received
a mortal wound in the head. He became the prey of the conqueror,
who tore open his skull and devoured it. After this curious duel,
I kept the victorious Tarantula alive for several weeks.’</p>
</blockquote>
<p>My district does not boast the ordinary Tarantula, the Spider whose
habits have been described above by the Wizard of the Landes; but it
possesses an equivalent in the shape of the Black-bellied Tarantula,
or Narbonne Lycosa, half the size of the other, clad in black velvet
on the lower surface, especially under the belly, with brown chevrons
on the abdomen and grey and white rings around the legs. Her favourite
home is the dry, pebbly ground, covered with sun-scorched thyme.
In my <i>harmas</i> <SPAN name="citation6"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote6">{6}</SPAN>
laboratory there are quite twenty of this Spider’s burrows.
Rarely do I pass by one of these haunts without giving a glance down
the pit where gleam, like diamonds, the four great eyes, the four telescopes,
of the hermit. The four others, which are much smaller, are not
visible at that depth.</p>
<p>Would I have greater riches, I have but to walk a hundred yards from
my house, on the neighbouring plateau, once a shady forest, to-day a
dreary solitude where the Cricket browses and the Wheat-ear flits from
stone to stone. The love of lucre has laid waste the land.
Because wine paid handsomely, they pulled up the forest to plant the
vine. Then came the Phylloxera, the vine-stocks perished and the
once green table-land is now no more than a desolate stretch where a
few tufts of hardy grasses sprout among the pebbles. This waste-land
is the Lycosa’s paradise: in an hour’s time, if need were,
I should discover a hundred burrows within a limited range.</p>
<p>These dwellings are pits about a foot deep, perpendicular at first
and then bent elbow-wise. The average diameter is an inch.
On the edge of the hole stands a kerb, formed of straw, bits and scraps
of all sorts and even small pebbles, the size of a hazel-nut.
The whole is kept in place and cemented with silk. Often, the
Spider confines herself to drawing together the dry blades of the nearest
grass, which she ties down with the straps from her spinnerets, without
removing the blades from the stems; often, also, she rejects this scaffolding
in favour of a masonry constructed of small stones. The nature
of the kerb is decided by the nature of the materials within the Lycosa’s
reach, in the close neighbourhood of the building-yard. There
is no selection: everything meets with approval, provided that it be
near at hand.</p>
<p>Economy of time, therefore, causes the defensive wall to vary greatly
as regards its constituent elements. The height varies also.
One enclosure is a turret an inch high; another amounts to a mere rim.
All have their parts bound firmly together with silk; and all have the
same width as the subterranean channel, of which they are the extension.
There is here no difference in diameter between the underground manor
and its outwork, nor do we behold, at the opening, the platform which
the turret leaves to give free play to the Italian Tarantula’s
legs. The Black-bellied Tarantula’s work takes the form
of a well surmounted by its kerb.</p>
<p>When the soil is earthy and homogeneous, the architectural type is
free from obstructions and the Spider’s dwelling is a cylindrical
tube; but, when the site is pebbly, the shape is modified according
to the exigencies of the digging. In the second case, the lair
is often a rough, winding cave, at intervals along whose inner wall
stick blocks of stone avoided in the process of excavation. Whether
regular or irregular, the house is plastered to a certain depth with
a coat of silk, which prevents earth-slips and facilitates scaling when
a prompt exit is required.</p>
<p>Baglivi, in his unsophisticated Latin, teaches us how to catch the
Tarantula. I became his <i>rusticus insidiator</i>; I waved
a spikelet at the entrance of the burrow to imitate the humming of a
Bee and attract the attention of the Lycosa, who rushes out, thinking
that she is capturing a prey. This method did not succeed with
me. The Spider, it is true, leaves her remote apartments and comes
a little way up the vertical tube to enquire into the sounds at her
door; but the wily animal soon scents a trap; it remains motionless
at mid-height and, at the least alarm, goes down again to the branch
gallery, where it is invisible.</p>
<p>Léon Dufour’s appears to me a better method if it were
only practicable in the conditions wherein I find myself. To drive
a knife quickly into the ground, across the burrow, so as to cut off
the Tarantula’s retreat when she is attracted by the spikelet
and standing on the upper floor, would be a manoeuvre certain of success,
if the soil were favourable. Unfortunately, this is not so in
my case: you might as well try to dig a knife into a block of tufa.</p>
<p>Other stratagems become necessary. Here are two which were
successful: I recommend them to future Tarantula-hunters. I insert
into the burrow, as far down as I can, a stalk with a fleshy spikelet,
which the Spider can bite into. I move and turn and twist my bait.
The Tarantula, when touched by the intruding body, contemplates self-defence
and bites the spikelet. A slight resistance informs my fingers
that the animal has fallen into the trap and seized the tip of the stalk
in its fangs. I draw it to me, slowly, carefully; the Spider hauls
from below, planting her legs against the wall. It comes, it rises.
I hide as best I may, when the Spider enters the perpendicular tunnel:
if she saw me, she would let go the bait and slip down again.
I thus bring her, by degrees, to the orifice. This is the difficult
moment. If I continue the gentle movement, the Spider, feeling
herself dragged out of her home, would at once run back indoors.
It is impossible to get the suspicious animal out by this means.
Therefore, when it appears at the level of the ground, I give a sudden
pull. Surprised by this foul play, the Tarantula has no time to
release her hold; gripping the spikelet, she is thrown some inches away
from the burrow. Her capture now becomes an easy matter.
Outside her own house, the Lycosa is timid, as though scared, and hardly
capable of running away. To push her with a straw into a paper
bag is the affair of a second.</p>
<p>It requires some patience to bring the Tarantula who has bitten into
the insidious spikelet to the entrance of the burrow. The following
method is quicker: I procure a supply of live Bumble-bees. I put
one into a little bottle with a mouth just wide enough to cover the
opening of the burrow; and I turn the apparatus thus baited over the
said opening. The powerful Bee at first flutters and hums about
her glass prison; then, perceiving a burrow similar to that of her family,
she enters it without much hesitation. She is extremely ill-advised:
while she goes down, the Spider comes up; and the meeting takes place
in the perpendicular passage. For a few moments, the ear perceives
a sort of death-song: it is the humming of the Bumble-bee, protesting
against the reception given her. This is followed by a long silence.
Then I remove the bottle and dip a long-jawed forceps into the pit.
I withdraw the Bumble-bee, motionless, dead, with hanging proboscis.
A terrible tragedy must have happened. The Spider follows, refusing
to let go so rich a booty. Game and huntress are brought to the
orifice. Sometimes, mistrustful, the Lycosa goes in again; but
we have only to leave the Bumble-bee on the threshold of the door, or
even a few inches away, to see her reappear, issue from her fortress
and daringly recapture her prey. This is the moment: the house
is closed with the finger, or a pebble and, as Baglivi says, ‘<i>captatur
tamen ista a rustico insidiatore</i>,’ to which I will add, ‘<i>adjuvante
Bombo</i>.’ <SPAN name="citation7"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote7">{7}</SPAN></p>
<p>The object of these hunting methods was not exactly to obtain Tarantulae;
I had not the least wish to rear the Spider in a bottle. I was
interested in a different matter. Here, thought I, is an ardent
huntress, living solely by her trade. She does not prepare preserved
foodstuffs for her offspring; <SPAN name="citation8"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote8">{8}</SPAN>
she herself feeds on the prey which she catches. She is not a
‘paralyzer,’ <SPAN name="citation9"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote9">{9}</SPAN>
who cleverly spares her quarry so as to leave it a glimmer of life and
keep it fresh for weeks at a time; she is a killer, who makes a meal
off her capture on the spot. With her, there is no methodical
vivisection, which destroys movement without entirely destroying life,
but absolute death, as sudden as possible, which protects the assailant
from the counter-attacks of the assailed.</p>
<p>Her game, moreover, is essentially bulky and not always of the most
peaceful character. This Diana, ambushed in her tower, needs a
prey worthy of her prowess. The big Grasshopper, with the powerful
jaws; the irascible Wasp; the Bee, the Bumble-bee and other wearers
of poisoned daggers must fall into the ambuscade from time to time.
The duel is nearly equal in point of weapons. To the venomous
fangs of the Lycosa the Wasp opposes her venomous stiletto. Which
of the two bandits shall have the best of it? The struggle is
a hand-to-hand one. The Tarantula has no secondary means of defence,
no cord to bind her victim, no trap to subdue her. When the Epeira,
or Garden Spider, sees an insect entangled in her great upright web,
she hastens up and covers the captive with corded meshes and silk ribbons
by the armful, making all resistance impossible. When the prey
is solidly bound, a prick is carefully administered with the poison-fangs;
then the Spider retires, waiting for the death-throes to calm down,
after which the huntress comes back to the game. In these conditions,
there is no serious danger.</p>
<p>In the case of the Lycosa, the job is riskier. She has naught
to serve her but her courage and her fangs and is obliged to leap upon
the formidable prey, to master it by her dexterity, to annihilate it,
in a measure, by her swift-slaying talent.</p>
<p>Annihilate is the word: the Bumble-bees whom I draw from the fatal
hole are a sufficient proof. As soon as that shrill buzzing, which
I called the death-song, ceases, in vain I hasten to insert my forceps:
I always bring out the insect dead, with slack proboscis and limp legs.
Scarce a few quivers of those legs tell me that it is a quite recent
corpse. The Bumble-bee’s death is instantaneous. Each
time that I take a fresh victim from the terrible slaughter-house, my
surprise is renewed at the sight of its sudden immobility.</p>
<p>Nevertheless, both animals have very nearly the same strength; for
I choose my Bumble-bees from among the largest (<i>Bombus hortorum</i>
and <i>B. terrestris</i>). Their weapons are almost equal: the
Bee’s dart can bear comparison with the Spider’s fangs;
the sting of the first seems to me as formidable as the bite of the
second. How comes it that the Tarantula always has the upper hand
and this moreover in a very short conflict, whence she emerges unscathed?
There must certainly be some cunning strategy on her part. Subtle
though her poison may be, I cannot believe that its mere injection,
at any point whatever of the victim, is enough to produce so prompt
a catastrophe. The ill-famed rattlesnake does not kill so quickly,
takes hours to achieve that for which the Tarantula does not require
a second. We must, therefore, look for an explanation of this
sudden death to the vital importance of the point attacked by the Spider,
rather than to the virulence of the poison.</p>
<p>What is this point? It is impossible to recognize it on the
Bumble-bees. They enter the burrow; and the murder is committed
far from sight. Nor does the lens discover any wound upon the
corpse, so delicate are the weapons that produce it. One would
have to see the two adversaries engage in a direct contest. I
have often tried to place a Tarantula and a Bumble-bee face to face
in the same bottle. The two animals mutually flee each other,
each being as much upset as the other at its captivity. I have
kept them together for twenty-four hours, without aggressive display
on either side. Thinking more of their prison than of attacking
each other, they temporize, as though indifferent. The experiment
has always been fruitless. I have succeeded with Bees and Wasps,
but the murder has been committed at night and has taught me nothing.
I would find both insects, next morning, reduced to a jelly under the
Spider’s mandibles. A weak prey is a mouthful which the
Spider reserves for the calm of the night. A prey capable of resistance
is not attacked in captivity. The prisoner’s anxiety cools
the hunter’s ardour.</p>
<p>The arena of a large bottle enables each athlete to keep out of the
other’s way, respected by her adversary, who is respected in her
turn. Let us reduce the lists, diminish the enclosure. I
put Bumble-bee and Tarantula into a test-tube that has only room for
one at the bottom. A lively brawl ensues, without serious results.
If the Bumble-bee be underneath, she lies down on her back and with
her legs wards off the other as much as she can. I do not see
her draw her sting. The Spider, meanwhile, embracing the whole
circumference of the enclosure with her long legs, hoists herself a
little upon the slippery surface and removes herself as far as possible
from her adversary. There, motionless, she awaits events, which
are soon disturbed by the fussy Bumble-bee. Should the latter
occupy the upper position, the Tarantula protects herself by drawing
up her legs, which keep the enemy at a distance. In short, save
for sharp scuffles when the two champions are in touch, nothing happens
that deserves attention. There is no duel to the death in the
narrow arena of the test-tube, any more than in the wider lists afforded
by the bottle. Utterly timid once she is away from home, the Spider
obstinately refuses the battle; nor will the Bumble-bee, giddy though
she be, think of striking the first blow. I abandon experiments
in my study.</p>
<p>We must go direct to the spot and force the duel upon the Tarantula,
who is full of pluck in her own stronghold. Only, instead of the
Bumble-bee, who enters the burrow and conceals her death from our eyes,
it is necessary to substitute another adversary, less inclined to penetrate
underground. There abounds in the garden, at this moment, on the
flowers of the common clary, one of the largest and most powerful Bees
that haunt my district, the Carpenter-bee (<i>Xylocopa violacea</i>),
clad in black velvet, with wings of purple gauze. Her size, which
is nearly an inch, exceeds that of the Bumble-bee. Her sting is
excruciating and produces a swelling that long continues painful.
I have very exact memories on this subject, memories that have cost
me dear. Here indeed is an antagonist worthy of the Tarantula,
if I succeed in inducing the Spider to accept her. I place a certain
number, one by one, in bottles small in capacity, but having a wide
neck capable of surrounding the entrance to the burrow.</p>
<p>As the prey which I am about to offer is capable of overawing the
huntress, I select from among the Tarantulae the lustiest, the boldest,
those most stimulated by hunger. The spikeleted stalk is pushed
into the burrow. When the Spider hastens up at once, when she
is of a good size, when she climbs boldly to the aperture of her dwelling,
she is admitted to the tourney; otherwise, she is refused. The
bottle, baited with a Carpenter-bee, is placed upside down over the
door of one of the elect. The Bee buzzes gravely in her glass
bell; the huntress mounts from the recesses of the cave; she is on the
threshold, but inside; she looks; she waits. I also wait.
The quarters, the half-hours pass: nothing. The Spider goes down
again: she has probably judged the attempt too dangerous. I move
to a second, a third, a fourth burrow: still nothing; the huntress refuses
to leave her lair.</p>
<p>Fortune at last smiles upon my patience, which has been heavily tried
by all these prudent retreats and particularly by the fierce heat of
the dog-days. A Spider suddenly rushes from her hole: she has
been rendered warlike, doubtless, by prolonged abstinence. The
tragedy that happens under the cover of the bottle lasts for but the
twinkling of an eye. It is over: the sturdy Carpenter-bee is dead.
Where did the murderess strike her? That is easily ascertained:
the Tarantula has not let go; and her fangs are planted in the nape
of the neck. The assassin has the knowledge which I suspected:
she has made for the essentially vital centre, she has stung the insect’s
cervical ganglia with her poison-fangs. In short, she has bitten
the only point a lesion in which produces sudden death. I was
delighted with this murderous skill, which made amends for the blistering
which my skin received in the sun.</p>
<p>Once is not custom: one swallow does not make a summer. Is
what I have just seen due to accident or to premeditation? I turn
to other Lycosae. Many, a deal too many for my patience, stubbornly
refuse to dart from their haunts in order to attack the Carpenter-bee.
The formidable quarry is too much for their daring. Shall not
hunger, which brings the wolf from the wood, also bring the Tarantula
out of her hole? Two, apparently more famished than the rest,
do at last pounce upon the Bee and repeat the scene of murder before
my eyes. The prey, again bitten in the neck, exclusively in the
neck, dies on the instant. Three murders, perpetrated in my presence
under identical conditions, represent the fruits of my experiment pursued,
on two occasions, from eight o’clock in the morning until twelve
midday.</p>
<p>I had seen enough. The quick insect-killer had taught me her
trade as had the paralyzer <SPAN name="citation10"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote10">{10}</SPAN>
before her: she had shown me that she is thoroughly versed in the art
of the butcher of the Pampas. <SPAN name="citation11"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote11">{11}</SPAN>
The Tarantula is an accomplished <i>desnucador</i>. It remained
to me to confirm the open-air experiment with experiments in the privacy
of my study. I therefore got together a menagerie of these poisonous
Spiders, so as to judge of the virulence of their venom and its effect
according to the part of the body injured by the fangs. A dozen
bottles and test-tubes received the prisoners, whom I captured by the
methods known to the reader. To one inclined to scream at the
sight of a Spider, my study, filled with odious Lycosae, would have
presented a very uncanny appearance.</p>
<p>Though the Tarantula scorns or rather fears to attack an adversary
placed in her presence in a bottle, she scarcely hesitates to bite what
is thrust beneath her fangs. I take her by the thorax with my
forceps and present to her mouth the animal which I wish stung.
Forthwith, if the Spider be not already tired by experiments, the fangs
are raised and inserted. I first tried the effects of the bite
upon the Carpenter-bee. When struck in the neck, the Bee succumbs
at once. It was the lightning death which I witnessed on the threshold
of the burrows. When struck in the abdomen and then placed in
a large bottle that leaves its movements free, the insect seems, at
first, to have suffered no serious injury. It flutters about and
buzzes. But half an hour has not elapsed before death is imminent.
The insect lies motionless upon its back or side. At most, a few
movements of the legs, a slight pulsation of the belly, continuing till
the morrow, proclaim that life has not yet entirely departed.
Then everything ceases: the Carpenter-bee is a corpse.</p>
<p>The importance of this experiment compels our attention. When
stung in the neck, the powerful Bee dies on the spot; and the Spider
has not to fear the dangers of a desperate struggle. Stung elsewhere,
in the abdomen, the insect is capable, for nearly half an hour, of making
use of its dart, its mandibles, its legs; and woe to the Lycosa whom
the stiletto reaches. I have seen some who, stabbed in the mouth
while biting close to the sting, died of the wound within the twenty-four
hours. That dangerous prey, therefore, requires instantaneous
death, produced by the injury to the nerve-centres of the neck; otherwise,
the hunter’s life would often be in jeopardy.</p>
<p>The Grasshopper order supplied me with a second series of victims:
Green Grasshoppers as long as one’s finger, large-headed Locusts,
Ephippigerae. <SPAN name="citation12"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote12">{12}</SPAN>
The same result follows when these are bitten in the neck: lightning
death. When injured elsewhere, notably in the abdomen, the subject
of the experiment resists for some time. I have seen a Grasshopper,
bitten in the belly, cling firmly for fifteen hours to the smooth, upright
wall of the glass bell that constituted his prison. At last, he
dropped off and died. Where the Bee, that delicate organism, succumbs
in less than half an hour, the Grasshopper, coarse ruminant that he
is, resists for a whole day. Put aside these differences, caused
by unequal degrees of organic sensitiveness, and we sum up as follows:
when bitten by the Tarantula in the neck, an insect, chosen from among
the largest, dies on the spot; when bitten elsewhere, it perishes also,
but after a lapse of time which varies considerably in the different
entomological orders.</p>
<p>This explains the long hesitation of the Tarantula, so wearisome
to the experimenter when he presents to her, at the entrance to the
burrow, a rich, but dangerous prey. The majority refuse to fling
themselves upon the Carpenter-bee. The fact is that a quarry of
this kind cannot be seized recklessly: the huntress who missed her stroke
by biting at random would do so at the risk of her life. The nape
of the neck alone possesses the desired vulnerability. The adversary
must be nipped there and no elsewhere. Not to floor her at once
would mean to irritate her and make her more dangerous than ever.
The Spider is well aware of this. In the safe shelter of her threshold,
therefore, prepared to beat a quick retreat if necessary, she watches
for the favourable moment; she waits for the big Bee to face her, when
the neck is easily grabbed. If this condition of success offer,
she leaps out and acts; if not, weary of the violent evolutions of the
quarry, she retires indoors. And that, no doubt, is why it took
me two sittings of four hours apiece to witness three assassinations.</p>
<p>Formerly, instructed by the paralysing Wasps, I had myself tried
to produce paralysis by injecting a drop of ammonia into the thorax
of those insects, such as Weevils, Buprestes, <SPAN name="citation13"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote13">{13}</SPAN>
and Dung-beetles, whose compact nervous system assists this physiological
operation. I showed myself a ready pupil to my masters’
teaching and used to paralyze a Buprestis or a Weevil almost as well
as a Cerceris <SPAN name="citation14"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote14">{14}</SPAN>
could have done. Why should I not to-day imitate that expert butcher,
the Tarantula? With the point of a fine needle, I inject a tiny
drop of ammonia at the base of the skull of a Carpenter-bee or a Grasshopper.
The insect succumbs then and there, without any other movement than
wild convulsions. When attacked by the acrid fluid, the cervical
ganglia cease to do their work; and death ensues. Nevertheless,
this death is not immediate; the throes last for some time. The
experiment is not wholly satisfactory as regards suddenness. Why?
Because the liquid which I employ, ammonia, cannot be compared, for
deadly efficacy, with the Lycosa’s poison, a pretty formidable
poison, as we shall see.</p>
<p>I make a Tarantula bite the leg of a young, well-fledged Sparrow,
ready to leave the nest. A drop of blood flows; the wounded spot
is surrounded by a reddish circle, changing to purple. The bird
almost immediately loses the use of its leg, which drags, with the toes
doubled in; it hops upon the other. Apart from this, the patient
does not seem to trouble much about his hurt; his appetite is good.
My daughters feed him on Flies, bread-crumb, apricot-pulp. He
is sure to get well, he will recover his strength; the poor victim of
the curiosity of science will be restored to liberty. This is
the wish, the intention of us all. Twelve hours later, the hope
of a cure increases; the invalid takes nourishment readily; he clamours
for it, if we keep him waiting. But the leg still drags.
I set this down to a temporary paralysis which will soon disappear.
Two days after, he refuses his food. Wrapping himself in his stoicism
and his rumpled feathers, the Sparrow hunches into a ball, now motionless,
now twitching. My girls take him in the hollow of their hands
and warm him with their breath. The spasms become more frequent.
A gasp proclaims that all is over. The bird is dead.</p>
<p>There was a certain coolness among us at the evening-meal.
I read mute reproaches, because of my experiment, in the eyes of my
home-circle; I read an unspoken accusation of cruelty all around me.
The death of the unfortunate Sparrow had saddened the whole family.
I myself was not without some remorse of conscience: the poor result
achieved seemed to me too dearly bought. I am not made of the
stuff of those who, without turning a hair, rip up live Dogs to find
out nothing in particular.</p>
<p>Nevertheless, I had the courage to start afresh, this time on a Mole
caught ravaging a bed of lettuces. There was a danger lest my
captive, with his famished stomach, should leave things in doubt, if
we had to keep him for a few days. He might die not of his wound,
but of inanition, if I did not succeed in giving him suitable food,
fairly plentiful and dispensed at fairly frequent intervals. In
that case, I ran a risk of ascribing to the poison what might well be
the result of starvation. I must therefore begin by finding out
if it was possible for me to keep the Mole alive in captivity.
The animal was put into a large receptacle from which it could not get
out and fed on a varied diet of insects—Beetles, Grasshoppers,
especially Cicadae <SPAN name="citation15"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote15">{15}</SPAN>—which
it crunched up with an excellent appetite. Twenty-four hours of
this regimen convinced me that the Mole was making the best of the bill
of fare and taking kindly to his captivity.</p>
<p>I make the Tarantula bite him at the tip of the snout. When
replaced in his cage, the Mole keeps on scratching his nose with his
broad paws. The thing seems to burn, to itch. Henceforth,
less and less of the provision of Cicadae is consumed; on the evening
of the following day, it is refused altogether. About thirty-six
hours after being bitten, the Mole dies during the night and certainly
not from inanition, for there are still half a dozen live Cicadae in
the receptacle, as well as a few Beetles.</p>
<p>The bite of the Black-bellied Tarantula is therefore dangerous to
other animals than insects: it is fatal to the Sparrow, it is fatal
to the Mole. Up to what point are we to generalize? I do
not know, because my enquiries extended no further. Nevertheless,
judging from the little that I saw, it appears to me that the bite of
this Spider is not an accident which man can afford to treat lightly.
This is all that I have to say to the doctors.</p>
<p>To the philosophical entomologists I have something else to say:
I have to call their attention to the consummate knowledge of the insect-killers,
which vies with that of the paralyzers. I speak of insect-killers
in the plural, for the Tarantula must share her deadly art with a host
of other Spiders, especially with those who hunt without nets.
These insect-killers, who live on their prey, strike the game dead instantaneously
by stinging the nerve-centres of the neck; the paralyzers, on the other
hand, who wish to keep the food fresh for their larvae, destroy the
power of movement by stinging the game in the other nerve-centres.
Both of them attack the nervous chain, but they select the point according
to the object to be attained. If death be desired, sudden death,
free from danger to the huntress, the insect is attacked in the neck;
if mere paralysis be required, the neck is respected and the lower segments—sometimes
one alone, sometimes three, sometimes all or nearly all, according to
the special organization of the victim—receive the dagger-thrust.</p>
<p>Even the paralyzers, at least some of them, are acquainted with the
immense vital importance of the nerve-centres of the neck. We
have seen the Hairy Ammophila munching the caterpillar’s brain,
the Languedocian Sphex munching the brain of the Ephippigera, with the
object of inducing a passing torpor. But they simply squeeze the
brain and do even this with a wise discretion; they are careful not
to drive their sting into this fundamental centre of life; not one of
them ever thinks of doing so, for the result would be a corpse which
the larva would despise. The Spider, on the other hand, inserts
her double dirk there and there alone; any elsewhere it would inflict
a wound likely to increase resistance through irritation. She
wants a venison for consumption without delay and brutally thrusts her
fangs into the spot which the others so conscientiously respect.</p>
<p>If the instinct of these scientific murderers is not, in both cases,
an inborn predisposition, inseparable from the animal, but an acquired
habit, then I rack my brain in vain to understand how that habit can
have been acquired. Shroud these facts in theoretic mists as much
as you will, you shall never succeed in veiling the glaring evidence
which they afford of a pre-established order of things.</p>
<h2>CHAPTER II: THE BANDED EPEIRA</h2>
<p>In the inclement season of the year, when the insect has nothing
to do and retires to winter quarters, the observer profits by the mildness
of the sunny nooks and grubs in the sand, lifts the stones, searches
the brushwood; and often he is stirred with a pleasurable excitement,
when he lights upon some ingenious work of art, discovered unawares.
Happy are the simple of heart whose ambition is satisfied with such
treasure-trove! I wish them all the joys which it has brought
me and which it will continue to bring me, despite the vexations of
life, which grow ever more bitter as the years follow their swift downward
course.</p>
<p>Should the seekers rummage among the wild grasses in the osier-beds
and copses, I wish them the delight of finding the wonderful object
that, at this moment, lies before my eyes. It is the work of a
Spider, the nest of the Banded Epeira (<i>Epeira fasciata</i>, LATR.).</p>
<p>A Spider is not an insect, according to the rules of classification;
and as such the Epeira seems out of place here. <SPAN name="citation16"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote16">{16}</SPAN>
A fig for systems! It is immaterial to the student of instinct
whether the animal have eight legs instead of six, or pulmonary sacs
instead of air-tubes. Besides, the Araneida belong to the group
of segmented animals, organized in sections placed end to end, a structure
to which the terms ‘insect’ and ‘entomology’
both refer.</p>
<p>Formerly, to describe this group, people said ‘articulate animals,’
an expression which possessed the drawback of not jarring on the ear
and of being understood by all. This is out of date. Nowadays,
they use the euphonious term ‘Arthropoda.’ And to
think that there are men who question the existence of progress!
Infidels! Say, ‘articulate,’ first; then roll out,
‘Arthropoda;’ and you shall see whether zoological science
is not progressing!</p>
<p>In bearing and colouring, <i>Epeira fasciata</i> is the handsomest
of the Spiders of the South. On her fat belly, a mighty silk-warehouse
nearly as large as a hazel-nut, are alternate yellow, black and silver
sashes, to which she owes her epithet of Banded. Around that portly
abdomen, the eight long legs, with their dark- and pale-brown rings,
radiate like spokes.</p>
<p>Any small prey suits her; and, as long as she can find supports for
her web, she settles wherever the Locust hops, wherever the Fly hovers,
wherever the Dragon-fly dances or the Butterfly flits. As a rule,
because of the greater abundance of game, she spreads her toils across
some brooklet, from bank to bank among the rushes. She also stretches
them, but not assiduously, in the thickets of evergreen oak, on the
slopes with the scrubby greenswards, dear to the Grasshoppers.</p>
<p>Her hunting-weapon is a large upright web, whose outer boundary,
which varies according to the disposition of the ground, is fastened
to the neighbouring branches by a number of moorings. The structure
is that adopted by the other weaving Spiders. Straight threads
radiate at equal intervals from a central point. Over this framework
runs a continuous spiral thread, forming chords, or cross-bars, from
the centre to the circumference. It is magnificently large and
magnificently symmetrical.</p>
<p>In the lower part of the web, starting from the centre, a wide opaque
ribbon descends zigzag-wise across the radii. This is the Epeira’s
trade-mark, the flourish of an artist initialling his creation.
‘<i>Fecit</i> So-and-so,’ she seems to say, when giving
the last throw of the shuttle to her handiwork.</p>
<p>That the Spider feels satisfied when, after passing and repassing
from spoke to spoke, she finishes her spiral, is beyond a doubt: the
work achieved ensures her food for a few days to come. But, in
this particular case, the vanity of the spinstress has naught to say
to the matter: the strong silk zigzag is added to impart greater firmness
to the web.</p>
<p>Increased resistance is not superfluous, for the net is sometimes
exposed to severe tests. The Epeira cannot pick and choose her
prizes. Seated motionless in the centre of her web, her eight
legs wide-spread to feel the shaking of the network in any direction,
she waits for what luck will bring her: now some giddy weakling unable
to control its flight, anon some powerful prey rushing headlong with
a reckless bound.</p>
<p>The Locust in particular, the fiery Locust, who releases the spring
of his long shanks at random, often falls into the trap. One imagines
that his strength ought to frighten the Spider; the kick of his spurred
levers should enable him to make a hole, then and there, in the web
and to get away. But not at all. If he does not free himself
at the first effort, the Locust is lost.</p>
<p>Turning her back on the game, the Epeira works all her spinnerets,
pierced like the rose of a watering-pot, at one and the same time.
The silky spray is gathered by the hind-legs, which are longer than
the others and open into a wide arc to allow the stream to spread.
Thanks to this artifice, the Epeira this time obtains not a thread,
but an iridescent sheet, a sort of clouded fan wherein the component
threads are kept almost separate. The two hind-legs fling this
shroud gradually, by rapid alternate armfuls, while, at the same time,
they turn the prey over and over, swathing it completely.</p>
<p>The ancient <i>retiarius</i>, when pitted against a powerful wild
beast, appeared in the arena with a rope-net folded over his left shoulder.
The animal made its spring. The man, with a sudden movement of
his right arm, cast the net after the manner of the fishermen; he covered
the beast and tangled it in the meshes. A thrust of the trident
gave the quietus to the vanquished foe.</p>
<p>The Epeira acts in like fashion, with this advantage, that she is
able to renew her armful of fetters. Should the first not suffice,
a second instantly follows and another and yet another, until the reserves
of silk become exhausted.</p>
<p>When all movement ceases under the snowy winding-sheet, the Spider
goes up to her bound prisoner. She has a better weapon than the
<i>bestiarius</i>’ trident: she has her poison-fangs. She
gnaws at the Locust, without undue persistence, and then withdraws,
leaving the torpid patient to pine away.</p>
<p>Soon she comes back to her motionless head of game: she sucks it,
drains it, repeatedly changing her point of attack. At last, the
clean-bled remains are flung out of the net and the Spider returns to
her ambush in the centre of the web.</p>
<p>What the Epeira sucks is not a corpse, but a numbed body. If
I remove the Locust immediately after he has been bitten and release
him from the silken sheath, the patient recovers his strength to such
an extent that he seems, at first, to have suffered no injury.
The Spider, therefore, does not kill her capture before sucking its
juices; she is content to deprive it of the power of motion by producing
a state of torpor. Perhaps this kindlier bite gives her greater
facility in working her pump. The humours, if stagnant, in a corpse,
would not respond so readily to the action of the sucker; they are more
easily extracted from a live body, in which they move about.</p>
<p>The Epeira, therefore, being a drinker of blood, moderates the virulence
of her sting, even with victims of appalling size, so sure is she of
her retiarian art. The long-legged Tryxalis, <SPAN name="citation17"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote17">{17}</SPAN>
the corpulent Grey Locust, the largest of our Grasshoppers are accepted
without hesitation and sucked dry as soon as numbed. Those giants,
capable of making a hole in the net and passing through it in their
impetuous onrush, can be but rarely caught. I myself place them
on the web. The Spider does the rest. Lavishing her silky
spray, she swathes them and then sucks the body at her ease. With
an increased expenditure of the spinnerets, the very biggest game is
mastered as successfully as the everyday prey.</p>
<p>I have seen even better than that. This time, my subject is
the Silky Epeira (<i>Epeira sericea</i>, OLIV.), with a broad, festooned,
silvery abdomen. Like that of the other, her web is large, upright
and ‘signed’ with a zigzag ribbon. I place upon it
a Praying Mantis, <SPAN name="citation18"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote18">{18}</SPAN>
a well-developed specimen, quite capable of changing rôles, should
circumstances permit, and herself making a meal off her assailant.
It is a question no longer of capturing a peaceful Locust, but a fierce
and powerful ogre, who would rip open the Epeira’s paunch with
one blow of her harpoons.</p>
<p>Will the Spider dare? Not immediately. Motionless in
the centre of her net, she consults her strength before attacking the
formidable quarry; she waits until the struggling prey has its claws
more thickly entangled. At last, she approaches. The Mantis
curls her belly; lifts her wings like vertical sails; opens her saw-toothed
arm-pieces; in short, adopts the spectral attitude which she employs
when delivering battle.</p>
<p>The Spider disregards these menaces. Spreading wide her spinnerets,
she pumps out sheets of silk which the hind-legs draw out, expand and
fling without stint in alternate armfuls. Under this shower of
threads, the Mantis’ terrible saws, the lethal legs, quickly disappear
from sight, as do the wings, still erected in the spectral posture.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, the swathed one gives sudden jerks, which make the Spider
fall out of her web. The accident is provided for. A safety-cord,
emitted at the same instant by the spinnerets, keeps the Epeira hanging,
swinging in space. When calm is restored, she packs her cord and
climbs up again. The heavy paunch and the hind-legs are now bound.
The flow slackens, the silk comes only in thin sheets. Fortunately,
the business is done. The prey is invisible under the thick shroud.</p>
<p>The Spider retires without giving a bite. To master the terrible
quarry, she has spent the whole reserves of her spinning-mill, enough
to weave many good-sized webs. With this heap of shackles, further
precautions are superfluous.</p>
<p>After a short rest in the centre of the net, she comes down to dinner.
Slight incisions are made in different parts of the prize, now here,
now there; and the Spider puts her mouth to each and sucks the blood
of her prey. The meal is long protracted, so rich is the dish.
For ten hours, I watch the insatiable glutton, who changes her point
of attack as each wound sucked dries up. Night comes and robs
me of the finish of the unbridled debauch. Next morning, the drained
Mantis lies upon the ground. The Ants are eagerly devouring the
remains.</p>
<p>The eminent talents of the Epeirae are displayed to even better purpose
in the industrial business of motherhood than in the art of the chase.
The silk bag, the nest, in which the Banded Epeira houses her eggs,
is a much greater marvel than the bird’s nest. In shape,
it is an inverted balloon, nearly the size of a Pigeon’s egg.
The top tapers like a pear and is cut short and crowned with a scalloped
rim, the corners of which are lengthened by means of moorings that fasten
the object to the adjoining twigs. The whole, a graceful ovoid,
hangs straight down, amid a few threads that steady it.</p>
<p>The top is hollowed into a crater closed with a silky padding.
Every other part is contained in the general wrapper, formed of thick,
compact white satin, difficult to break and impervious to moisture.
Brown and even black silk, laid out in abroad ribbons, in spindle-shaped
patterns, in fanciful meridian waves, adorns the upper portion of the
exterior. The part played by this fabric is self-evident: it is
a waterproof cover which neither dew nor rain can penetrate.</p>
<p>Exposed to all the inclemencies of the weather, among the dead grasses,
close to the ground, the Epeira’s nest has also to protect its
contents from the winter cold. Let us cut the wrapper with our
scissors. Underneath, we find a thick layer of reddish-brown silk,
not worked into a fabric this time, but puffed into an extra-fine wadding.
It is a fleecy cloud, an incomparable quilt, softer than any swan’s-down.
This is the screen set up against loss of heat.</p>
<p>And what does this cosy mass protect? See: in the middle of
the eiderdown hangs a cylindrical pocket, round at the bottom, cut square
at the top and closed with a padded lid. It is made of extremely
fine satin; it contains the Epeira’s eggs, pretty little orange-coloured
beads, which, glued together, form a globule the size of a pea.
This is the treasure to be defended against the asperities of the winter.</p>
<p>Now that we know the structure of the work, let us try to see in
what manner the spinstress sets about it. The observation is not
an easy one, for the Banded Epeira is a night-worker. She needs
nocturnal quiet in order not to go astray amid the complicated rules
that guide her industry. Now and again, at very early hours in
the morning, I have happened to catch her working, which enables me
to sum up the progress of the operations.</p>
<p>My subjects are busy in their bell-shaped cages, at about the middle
of August. A scaffolding is first run up, at the top of the dome;
it consists of a few stretched threads. The wire trellis represents
the twigs and the blades of grass which the Spider, if at liberty, would
have used as suspension-points. The loom works on this shaky support.
The Epeira does not see what she is doing; she turns her back on her
task. The machinery is so well put together that the whole thing
goes automatically.</p>
<p>The tip of the abdomen sways, a little to the right, a little to
the left, rises and falls, while the Spider moves slowly round and round.
The thread paid out is single. The hind-legs draw it out and place
it in position on that which is already done. Thus is formed a
satin receptacle the rim of which is gradually raised until it becomes
a bag about a centimetre deep. <SPAN name="citation19"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote19">{19}</SPAN>
The texture is of the daintiest. Guy-ropes bind it to the nearest
threads and keep it stretched, especially at the mouth.</p>
<p>Then the spinnerets take a rest and the turn of the ovaries comes.
A continuous shower of eggs falls into the bag, which is filled to the
top. The capacity of the receptacle has been so nicely calculated
that there is room for all the eggs, without leaving any space unoccupied.
When the Spider has finished and retires, I catch a momentary glimpse
of the heap of orange-coloured eggs; but the work of the spinnerets
is at once resumed.</p>
<p>The next business is to close the bag. The machinery works
a little differently. The tip of the belly no longer sways from
side to side. It sinks and touches a point; it retreats, sinks
again and touches another point, first here, then there, describing
inextricable zigzags. At the same time, the hind-legs tread the
material emitted. The result is no longer a stuff, but a felt,
a blanketing.</p>
<p>Around the satin capsule, which contains the eggs, is the eiderdown
destined to keep out the cold. The youngsters will bide for some
time in this soft shelter, to strengthen their joints and prepare for
the final exodus. It does not take long to make. The spinning-mill
suddenly alters the raw material: it was turning out white silk; it
now furnishes reddish-brown silk, finer than the other and issuing in
clouds which the hind-legs, those dexterous carders, beat into a sort
of froth. The egg-pocket disappears, drowned in this exquisite
wadding.</p>
<p>The balloon-shape is already outlined; the top of the work tapers
to a neck. The Spider, moving up and down, tacking first to one
side and then to the other, from the very first spray marks out the
graceful form as accurately as though she carried a compass in her abdomen.</p>
<p>Then, once again, with the same suddenness, the material changes.
The white silk reappears, wrought into thread. This is the moment
to weave the outer wrapper. Because of the thickness of the stuff
and the density of its texture, this operation is the longest of the
series.</p>
<p>First, a few threads are flung out, hither and thither, to keep the
layer of wadding in position. The Epeira takes special pains with
the edge of the neck, where she fashions an indented border, the angles
of which, prolonged with cords or lines, form the main support of the
building. The spinnerets never touch this part without giving
it, each time, until the end of the work, a certain added solidity,
necessary to secure the stability of the balloon. The suspensory
indentations soon outline a crater which needs plugging. The Spider
closes the bag with a padded stopper similar to that with which she
sealed the egg-pocket.</p>
<p>When these arrangements are made, the real manufacture of the wrapper
begins. The Spider goes backwards and forwards, turns and turns
again. The spinnerets do not touch the fabric. With a rhythmical,
alternate movement, the hind-legs, the sole implements employed, draw
the thread, seize it in their combs and apply it to the work, while
the tip of the abdomen sways methodically to and fro.</p>
<p>In this way, the silken fibre is distributed in an even zigzag, of
almost geometrical precision and comparable with that of the cotton
thread which the machines in our factories roll so neatly into balls.
And this is repeated all over the surface of the work, for the Spider
shifts her position a little at every moment.</p>
<p>At fairly frequent intervals, the tip of the abdomen is lifted to
the mouth of the balloon; and then the spinnerets really touch the fringed
edge. The length of contact is even considerable. We find,
therefore, that the thread is stuck in this star-shaped fringe, the
foundation of the building and the crux of the whole, while every elsewhere
it is simply laid on, in a manner determined by the movements of the
hind-legs. If we wished to unwind the work, the thread would break
at the margin; at any other point, it would unroll.</p>
<p>The Epeira ends her web with a dead-white, angular flourish; she
ends her nest with brown mouldings, which run down, irregularly, from
the marginal junction to the bulging middle. For this purpose,
she makes use, for the third time, of a different silk; she now produces
silk of a dark hue, varying from russet to black. The spinnerets
distribute the material with a wide longitudinal swing, from pole to
pole; and the hind-legs apply it in capricious ribbons. When this
is done, the work is finished. The Spider moves away with slow
strides, without giving a glance at the bag. The rest does not
interest her: time and the sun will see to it.</p>
<p>She felt her hour at hand and came down from her web. Near
by, in the rank grass, she wove the tabernacle of her offspring and,
in so doing, drained her resources. To resume her hunting-post,
to return to her web would be useless to her: she has not the wherewithal
to bind the prey. Besides, the fine appetite of former days has
gone. Withered and languid, she drags out her existence for a
few days and, at last, dies. This is how things happen in my cages;
this is how they must happen in the brushwood.</p>
<p>The Silky Epeira (<i>Epeira sericea</i>, OLIV.) excels the Banded
Epeira in the manufacture of big hunting-nets, but she is less gifted
in the art of nest-building. She gives her nest the inelegant
form of an obtuse cone. The opening of this pocket is very wide
and is scalloped into lobes by which the edifice is slung. It
is closed with a large lid, half satin, half swan’s-down.
The rest is a stout white fabric, frequently covered with irregular
brown streaks.</p>
<p>The difference between the work of the two Epeirae does not extend
beyond the wrapper, which is an obtuse cone in the one case and a balloon
in the other. The same internal arrangements prevail behind this
frontage: first, a flossy quilt; next, a little keg in which the eggs
are packed. Though the two Spiders build the outer wall according
to special architectural rules, they both employ the same means as a
protection against the cold.</p>
<p>As we see, the egg-bag of the Epeirae, particularly that of the Banded
Epeira, is an important and complex work. Various materials enter
into its composition: white silk, red silk, brown silk; moreover, these
materials are worked into dissimilar products: stout cloth, soft eiderdown,
dainty satinette, porous felt. And all of this comes from the
same workshop that weaves the hunting-net, warps the zigzag ribbon-band
and casts an entangling shroud over the prey.</p>
<p>What a wonderful silk-factory it is! With a very simple and
never-varying plant, consisting of the hind-legs and the spinnerets,
it produces, by turns, rope-maker’s, spinner’s, weaver’s,
ribbon-maker’s and fuller’s work. How does the Spider
direct an establishment of this kind? How does she obtain, at
will, skeins of diverse hues and grades? How does she turn them
out, first in this fashion, then in that? I see the results, but
I do not understand the machinery and still less the process.
It beats me altogether.</p>
<p>The Spider also sometimes loses her head in her difficult trade,
when some trouble disturbs the peace of her nocturnal labours.
I do not provoke this trouble myself, for I am not present at those
unseasonable hours. It is simply due to the conditions prevailing
in my menagerie.</p>
<p>In their natural state, the Epeirae settle separately, at long distances
from one another. Each has her own hunting-grounds, where there
is no reason to fear the competition that would result from the close
proximity of the nets. In my cages, on the other hand, there is
cohabitation. In order to save space, I lodge two or three Epeirae
in the same cage. My easy-going captives live together in peace.
There is no strife between them, no encroaching on the neighbour’s
property. Each of them weaves herself a rudimentary web, as far
from the rest as possible, and here, rapt in contemplation, as though
indifferent to what the others are doing, she awaits the hop of the
Locust.</p>
<p>Nevertheless, these close quarters have their drawbacks when laying-time
arrives. The cords by which the different establishments are hung
interlace and criss-cross in a confused network. When one of them
shakes, all the others are more or less affected. This is enough
to distract the layer from her business and to make her do silly things.
Here are two instances.</p>
<p>A bag has been woven during the night. I find it, when I visit
the cage in the morning, hanging from the trellis-work and completed.
It is perfect, as regards structure; it is decorated with the regulation
black meridian curves. There is nothing missing, nothing except
the essential thing, the eggs, for which the spinstress has gone to
such expense in the matter of silks. Where are the eggs?
They are not in the bag, which I open and find empty. They are
lying on the ground below, on the sand in the pan, utterly unprotected.</p>
<p>Disturbed at the moment of discharging them, the mother has missed
the mouth of the little bag and dropped them on the floor. Perhaps
even, in her excitement, she came down from above and, compelled by
the exigencies of the ovaries, laid her eggs on the first support that
offered. No matter: if her Spider brain contains the least gleam
of sense, she must be aware of the disaster and is therefore bound at
once to abandon the elaborate manufacture of a now superfluous nest.</p>
<p>Not at all: the bag is woven around nothing, as accurate in shape,
as finished in structure as under normal conditions. The absurd
perseverance displayed by certain Bees, whose egg and provisions I used
to remove, <SPAN name="citation20"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote20">{20}</SPAN> is
here repeated without the slightest interference from me. My victims
used scrupulously to seal up their empty cells. In the same way,
the Epeira puts the eiderdown quilting and the taffeta wrapper round
a capsule that contains nothing.</p>
<p>Another, distracted from her work by some startling vibration, leaves
her nest at the moment when the layer of red-brown wadding is being
completed. She flees to the dome, at a few inches above her unfinished
work, and spends upon a shapeless mattress, of no use whatever, all
the silk with which she would have woven the outer wrapper if nothing
had come to disturb her.</p>
<p>Poor fool! You upholster the wires of your cage with swan’s-down
and you leave the eggs imperfectly protected. The absence of the
work already executed and the hardness of the metal do not warn you
that you are now engaged upon a senseless task. You remind me
of the Pelopaeus, <SPAN name="citation21"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote21">{21}</SPAN>
who used to coat with mud the place on the wall whence her nest had
been removed. You speak to me, in your own fashion, of a strange
psychology which is able to reconcile the wonders of a master craftsmanship
with aberrations due to unfathomable stupidity.</p>
<p>Let us compare the work of the Banded Epeira with that of the Penduline
Titmouse, the cleverest of our small birds in the art of nest-building.
This Tit haunts the osier-beds of the lower reaches of the Rhone.
Rocking gently in the river breeze, his nest sways pendent over the
peaceful backwaters, at some distance from the too-impetuous current.
It hangs from the drooping end of the branch of a poplar, an old willow
or an alder, all of them tall trees, favouring the banks of streams.</p>
<p>It consists of a cotton bag, closed all round, save for a small opening
at the side, just sufficient to allow of the mother’s passage.
In shape, it resembles the body of an alembic, a chemist’s retort
with a short lateral neck, or, better still, the foot of a stocking,
with the edges brought together, but for a little round hole left at
one side. The outward appearances increase the likeness: one can
almost see the traces of a knitting-needle working with coarse stitches.
That is why, struck by this shape, the Provençal peasant, in
his expressive language, calls the Penduline <i>lou Debassaire</i>,
the Stocking-knitter.</p>
<p>The early-ripening seedlets of the widows and poplars furnish the
materials for the work. There breaks from them, in May, a sort
of vernal snow, a fine down, which the eddies of the air heap in the
crevices of the ground. It is a cotton similar to that of our
manufactures, but of very short staple. It comes from an inexhaustible
warehouse: the tree is bountiful; and the wind from the osier-beds gathers
the tiny flocks as they pour from the seeds. They are easy to
pick up.</p>
<p>The difficulty is to set to work. How does the bird proceed,
in order to knit its stocking? How, with such simple implements
as its beak and claws, does it manage to produce a fabric which our
skilled fingers would fail to achieve? An examination of the nest
will inform us, to a certain extent.</p>
<p>The cotton of the poplar cannot, of itself, supply a hanging pocket
capable of supporting the weight of the brood and resisting the buffeting
of the wind. Rammed, entangled and packed together, the flocks,
similar to those which ordinary wadding would give if chopped up very
fine, would produce only an agglomeration devoid of cohesion and liable
to be dispelled by the first breath of air. They require a canvas,
a warp, to keep them in position.</p>
<p>Tiny dead stalks, with fibrous barks, well softened by the action
of moisture and the air, furnish the Penduline with a coarse tow, not
unlike that of hemp. With these ligaments, purged of every woody
particle and tested for flexibility and tenacity, he winds a number
of loops round the end of the branch which he has selected as a support
for his structure.</p>
<p>It is not a very accurate piece of work. The loops run clumsily
and anyhow: some are slacker, others tighter; but, when all is said,
it is solid, which is the main point. Also, this fibrous sheath,
the keystone of the edifice, occupies a fair length of branch, which
enables the fastenings for the net to be multiplied.</p>
<p>The several straps, after describing a certain number of turns, ravel
out at the ends and hang loose. After them come interlaced threads,
greater in number and finer in texture. In the tangled jumble
occur what might almost be described as weaver’s knots.
As far as one can judge by the result alone, without having seen the
bird at work, this is how the canvas, the support of the cotton wall,
is obtained.</p>
<p>This warp, this inner framework, is obviously not constructed in
its entirety from the start; it goes on gradually, as the bird stuffs
the part above it with cotton. The wadding, picked up bit by bit
from the ground, is teazled by the bird’s claws and inserted,
all fleecy, into the meshes of the canvas. The beak pushes it,
the breast presses it, both inside and out. The result is a soft
felt a couple of inches thick.</p>
<p>Near the top of the pouch, on one side, is contrived a narrow orifice,
tapering into a short neck. This is the kitchen-door. In
order to pass through it, the Penduline, small though he be, has to
force the elastic partition, which yields slightly and then contracts.
Lastly, the house is furnished with a mattress of first-quality cotton.
Here lie from six to eight white eggs, the size of a cherry-stone.</p>
<p>Well, this wonderful nest is a barbarous casemate compared with that
of the Banded Epeira. As regards shape, this stocking-foot cannot
be mentioned in the same breath with the Spider’s elegant and
faultlessly-rounded balloon. The fabric of mixed cotton and tow
is a rustic frieze beside the spinstress’ satin; the suspension-straps
are clumsy cables compared with her delicate silk fastenings.
Where shall we find in the Penduline’s mattress aught to vie with
the Epeira’s eiderdown, that teazled russet gossamer? The
Spider is superior to the bird in every way, in so far as concerns her
work.</p>
<p>But, on her side, the Penduline is a more devoted mother. For
weeks on end, squatting at the bottom of her purse, she presses to her
heart the eggs, those little white pebbles from which the warmth of
her body will bring forth life. The Epeira knows not these softer
passions. Without bestowing a second glance an it, she abandons
her nest to its fate, be it good or ill.</p>
<h2>CHAPTER III: THE NARBONNE LYCOSA</h2>
<p>The Epeira, who displays such astonishing industry to give her eggs
a dwelling-house of incomparable perfection, becomes, after that, careless
of her family. For what reason? She lacks the time.
She has to die when the first cold comes, whereas the eggs are destined
to pass the winter in their downy snuggery. The desertion of the
nest is inevitable, owing to the very force of things. But, if
the hatching were earlier and took place in the Epeira’s lifetime,
I imagine that she would rival the bird in devotion.</p>
<p>So I gather from the, analogy of <i>Thomisus onustus</i>, WALCK.,
a shapely Spider who weaves no web, lies in wait for her prey and walks
sideways, after the manner of the Crab. I have spoken elsewhere
<SPAN name="citation22"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote22">{22}</SPAN> of her encounters
with the Domestic Bee, whom she jugulates by biting her in the neck.</p>
<p>Skilful in the prompt despatch of her prey, the little Crab Spider
is no less well-versed in the nesting art. I find her settled
on a privet in the enclosure. Here, in the heart of a cluster
of flowers, the luxurious creature plaits a little pocket of white satin,
shaped like a wee thimble. It is the receptacle for the eggs.
A round, flat lid, of a felted fabric, closes the mouth.</p>
<p>Above this ceiling rises a dome of stretched threads and faded flowerets
which have fallen from the cluster. This is the watcher’s
belvedere, her conning-tower. An opening, which is always free,
gives access to this post.</p>
<p>Here the Spider remains on constant duty. She has thinned greatly
since she laid her eggs, has almost lost her corporation. At the
least alarm, she sallies forth, waves a threatening limb at the passing
stranger and invites him, with a gesture, to keep his distance.
Having put the intruder to flight, she quickly returns indoors.</p>
<p>And what does she do in there, under her arch of withered flowers
and silk? Night and day, she shields the precious eggs with her
poor body spread out flat. Eating is neglected. No more
lying in wait, no more Bees drained to the last drop of blood.
Motionless, rapt in meditation, the Spider is in an incubating posture,
in other words, she is sitting on her eggs. Strictly speaking,
the word ‘incubating’ means that and nothing else.</p>
<p>The brooding Hen is no more assiduous, but she is also a heating-apparatus
and, with the gentle warmth of her body, awakens the germs to life.
For the Spider, the heat of the sun suffices; and this alone keeps me
from saying that she ‘broods.’</p>
<p>For two or three weeks, more and more wrinkled by abstinence, the
little Spider never relaxes her position. Then comes the hatching.
The youngsters stretch a few threads in swing-like curves from twig
to twig. The tiny rope-dancers practise for some days in the sun;
then they disperse, each intent upon his own affairs.</p>
<p>Let us now look at the watch-tower of the nest. The mother
is still there, but this time lifeless. The devoted creature has
known the delight of seeing her family born; she has assisted the weaklings
through the trap-door; and, when her duty was done, very gently she
died. The Hen does not reach this height of self-abnegation.</p>
<p>Other Spiders do better still, as, for instance, the Narbonne Lycosa,
or Black-bellied Tarantula (<i>Lycosa narbonnensis</i>, WALCK.), whose
prowess has been described in an earlier chapter. The reader will
remember her burrow, her pit of a bottle-neck’s width, dug in
the pebbly soil beloved by the lavender and the thyme. The mouth
is rimmed by a bastion of gravel and bits of wood cemented with silk.
There is nothing else around her dwelling: no web, no snares of any
kind.</p>
<p>From her inch-high turret, the Lycosa lies in wait for the passing
Locust. She gives a bound, pursues the prey and suddenly deprives
it of motion with a bite in the neck. The game is consumed on
the spot, or else in the lair; the insect’s tough hide arouses
no disgust. The sturdy huntress is not a drinker of blood, like
the Epeira; she needs solid food, food that crackles between the jaws.
She is like a Dog devouring his bone.</p>
<p>Would you care to bring her to the light of day from the depths of
her well? Insert a thin straw into the burrow and move it about.
Uneasy as to what is happening above, the recluse hastens to climb up
and stops, in a threatening attitude, at some distance from the orifice.
You see her eight eyes gleaming like diamonds in the dark; you see her
powerful poison-fangs yawning, ready to bite. He who is not accustomed
to the sight of this horror, rising from under the ground, cannot suppress
a shiver. B-r-r-r-r! Let us leave the beast alone.</p>
<p>Chance, a poor stand-by, sometimes contrives very well. At
the beginning of the month of August, the children call me to the far
side of the enclosure, rejoicing in a find which they have made under
the rosemary-bushes. It is a magnificent Lycosa, with an enormous
belly, the sign of an impending delivery.</p>
<p>The obese Spider is gravely devouring something in the midst of a
circle of onlookers. And what? The remains of a Lycosa a
little smaller than herself, the remains of her male. It is the
end of the tragedy that concludes the nuptials. The sweetheart
is eating her lover. I allow the matrimonial rites to be fulfilled
in all their horror; and, when the last morsel of the unhappy wretch
has been scrunched up, I incarcerate the terrible matron under a cage
standing in an earthen pan filled with sand.</p>
<p>Early one morning, ten days later, I find her preparing for her confinement.
A silk network is first spun on the ground, covering an extent about
equal to the palm of one’s hand. It is coarse and shapeless,
but firmly fixed. This is the floor on which the Spider means
to operate.</p>
<p>On this foundation, which acts as a protection from the sand, the
Lycosa fashions a round mat, the size of a two-franc piece and made
of superb white silk. With a gentle, uniform movement, which might
be regulated by the wheels of a delicate piece of clockwork, the tip
of the abdomen rises and falls, each time touching the supporting base
a little farther away, until the extreme scope of the mechanism is attained.</p>
<p>Then, without the Spider’s moving her position, the oscillation
is resumed in the opposite direction. By means of this alternate
motion, interspersed with numerous contacts, a segment of the sheet
is obtained, of a very accurate texture. When this is done, the
Spider moves a little along a circular line and the loom works in the
same manner on another segment.</p>
<p>The silk disk, a sort of hardly concave paten, now no longer receives
aught from the spinnerets in its centre; the marginal belt alone increases
in thickness. The piece thus becomes a bowl-shaped porringer,
surrounded by a wide, flat edge.</p>
<p>The time for the laying has come. With one quick emission,
the viscous, pale-yellow eggs are laid in the basin, where they heap
together in the shape of a globe which projects largely outside the
cavity. The spinnerets are once more set going. With short
movements, as the tip of the abdomen rises and falls to weave the round
mat, they cover up the exposed hemisphere. The result is a pill
set in the middle of a circular carpet.</p>
<p>The legs, hitherto idle, are now working. They take up and
break off one by one the threads that keep the round mat stretched on
the coarse supporting network. At the same time, the fangs grip
this sheet, lift it by degrees, tear it from its base and fold it over
upon the globe of eggs. It is a laborious operation. The
whole edifice totters, the floor collapses, fouled with sand.
By a movement of the legs, those soiled shreds are cast aside.
Briefly, by means of violent tugs of the fangs, which pull, and broom-like
efforts of the legs, which clear away, the Lycosa extricates the bag
of eggs and removes it as a clear-cut mass, free from any adhesion.</p>
<p>It is a white-silk pill, soft to the touch and glutinous. Its
size is that of an average cherry. An observant eye will notice,
running horizontally around the middle, a fold which a needle is able
to raise without breaking it. This hem, generally undistinguishable
from the rest of the surface, is none other than the edge of the circular
mat, drawn over the lower hemisphere. The other hemisphere, through
which the youngsters will go out, is less well fortified: its only wrapper
is the texture spun over the eggs immediately after they were laid.</p>
<p>Inside, there is nothing but the eggs: no mattress, no soft eiderdown,
like that of the Epeirae. The Lycosa, indeed, has no need to guard
her eggs against the inclemencies of the winter, for the hatching will
take place long before the cold weather comes. Similarly, the
Thomisus, with her early brood, takes good care not to incur useless
expenditure: she gives her eggs, for their protection, a simple purse
of satin.</p>
<p>The work of spinning, followed by that of tearing, is continued for
a whole morning, from five to nine o’clock. Worn out with
fatigue, the mother embraces her dear pill and remains motionless.
I shall see no more to-day. Next morning, I find the Spider carrying
the bag of eggs slung from her stern.</p>
<p>Henceforth, until the hatching, she does not leave go of the precious
burden, which, fastened to the spinnerets by a short ligament, drags
and bumps along the ground. With this load banging against her
heels, she goes about her business; she walks or rests, she seeks her
prey, attacks it and devours it. Should some accident cause the
wallet to drop off, it is soon replaced. The spinnerets touch
it somewhere, anywhere, and that is enough: adhesion is at once restored.</p>
<p>The Lycosa is a stay-at-home. She never goes out except to
snap up some game passing within her hunting-domains, near the burrow.
At the end of August, however, it is not unusual to meet her roaming
about, dragging her wallet behind her. Her hesitations make one
think that she is looking for her home, which she has left for the moment
and has a difficulty in finding.</p>
<p>Why these rambles? There are two reasons: first the pairing
and then the making of the pill. There is a lack of space in the
burrow, which provides only room enough for the Spider engaged in long
contemplation. Now the preparations for the egg-bag require an
extensive flooring, a supporting framework about the size of one’s
hand, as my caged prisoner has shown us. The Lycosa has not so
much space at her disposal, in her well; hence the necessity for coming
out and working at her wallet in the open air, doubtless in the quiet
hours of the night.</p>
<p>The meeting with the male seems likewise to demand an excursion.
Running the risk of being eaten alive, will he venture to plunge into
his lady’s cave, into a lair whence flight would be impossible?
It is very doubtful. Prudence demands that matters should take
place outside. Here at least there is some chance of beating a
hasty retreat which will enable the rash swain to escape the attacks
of his horrible bride.</p>
<p>The interview in the open air lessens the danger without removing
it entirely. We had proof of this when we caught the Lycosa in
the act of devouring her lover aboveground, in a part of the enclosure
which had been broken for planting and which was therefore not suitable
for the Spider’s establishment. The burrow must have been
some way off; and the meeting of the pair took place at the very spot
of the tragic catastrophe. Although he had a clear road, the male
was not quick enough in getting away and was duly eaten.</p>
<p>After this cannibal orgy, does the Lycosa go back home? Perhaps
not, for a while. Besides, she would have to go out a second time,
to manufacture her pill on a level space of sufficient extent.</p>
<p>When the work is done, some of them emancipate themselves, think
they will have a look at the country before retiring for good and all.
It is these whom we sometimes meet wandering aimlessly and dragging
their bag behind them. Sooner or later, however, the vagrants
return home; and the month of August is not over before a straw rustled
in any burrow will bring the mother up, with her wallet slung behind
her. I am able to procure as many as I want and, with them, to
indulge in certain experiments of the highest interest.</p>
<p>It is a sight worth seeing, that of the Lycosa dragging her treasure
after her, never leaving it, day or night, sleeping or waking, and defending
it with a courage that strikes the beholder with awe. If I try
to take the bag from her, she presses it to her breast in despair, hangs
on to my pincers, bites them with her poison-fangs. I can hear
the daggers grating on the steel. No, she would not allow herself
to be robbed of the wallet with impunity, if my fingers were not supplied
with an implement.</p>
<p>By dint of pulling and shaking the pill with the forceps, I take
it from the Lycosa, who protests furiously. I fling her in exchange
a pill taken from another Lycosa. It is at once seized in the
fangs, embraced by the legs and hung on to the spinneret. Her
own or another’s: it is all one to the Spider, who walks away
proudly with the alien wallet. This was to be expected, in view
of the similarity of the pills exchanged.</p>
<p>A test of another kind, with a second subject, renders the mistake
more striking. I substitute, in the place of the lawful bag which
I have removed, the work of the Silky Epeira. The colour and softness
of the material are the same in both cases; but the shape is quite different.
The stolen object is a globe; the object presented in exchange is an
elliptical conoid studded with angular projections along the edge of
the base. The Spider takes no account of this dissimilarity.
She promptly glues the queer bag to her spinnerets and is as pleased
as though she were in possession of her real pill. My experimental
villainies have no other consequences beyond an ephemeral carting.
When hatching-time arrives, early in the case of the Lycosa, late in
that of the Epeira, the gulled Spider abandons the strange bag and pays
it no further attention.</p>
<p>Let us penetrate yet deeper into the wallet-bearer’s stupidity.
After depriving the Lycosa of her eggs, I throw her a ball of cork,
roughly polished with a file and of the same size as the stolen pill.
She accepts the corky substance, so different from the silk purse, without
the least demur. One would have thought that she would recognize
her mistake with those eight eyes of hers, which gleam like precious
stones. The silly creature pays no attention. Lovingly she
embraces the cork ball, fondles it with her palpi, fastens it to her
spinnerets and thenceforth drags it after her as though she were dragging
her own bag.</p>
<p>Let us give another the choice between the imitation and the real.
The rightful pill and the cork ball are placed together on the floor
of the jar. Will the Spider be able to know the one that belongs
to her? The fool is incapable of doing so. She makes a wild
rush and seizes haphazard at one time her property, at another my sham
product. Whatever is first touched becomes a good capture and
is forthwith hung up.</p>
<p>If I increase the number of cork balls, if I put in four or five
of them, with the real pill among them, it is seldom that the Lycosa
recovers her own property. Attempts at enquiry, attempts at selection
there are none. Whatever she snaps up at random she sticks to,
be it good or bad. As there are more of the sham pills of cork,
these are the most often seized by the Spider.</p>
<p>This obtuseness baffles me. Can the animal be deceived by the
soft contact of the cork? I replace the cork balls by pellets
of cotton or paper, kept in their round shape with a few bands of thread.
Both are very readily accepted instead of the real bag that has been
removed.</p>
<p>Can the illusion be due to the colouring, which is light in the cork
and not unlike the tint of the silk globe when soiled with a little
earth, while it is white in the paper and the cotton, when it is identical
with that of the original pill? I give the Lycosa, in exchange
for her work, a pellet of silk thread, chosen of a fine red, the brightest
of all colours. The uncommon pill is as readily accepted and as
jealously guarded as the others.</p>
<p>We will leave the wallet-bearer alone; we know all that we want to
know about her poverty of intellect. Let us wait for the hatching,
which takes place in the first fortnight in September. As they
come out of the pill, the youngsters, to the number of about a couple
of hundred, clamber on the Spider’s back and there sit motionless,
jammed close together, forming a sort of bark of mingled legs and paunches.
The mother is unrecognizable under this live mantilla. When the
hatching is over, the wallet is loosened from the spinnerets and cast
aside as a worthless rag.</p>
<p>The little ones are very good: none stirs none tries to get more
room for himself at his neighbours’ expense. What are they
doing there, so quietly? They allow themselves to be carted about,
like the young of the Opossum. Whether she sit in long meditation
at the bottom of her den, or come to the orifice, in mild weather, to
bask in the sun, the Lycosa never throws off her great-coat of swarming
youngsters until the fine season comes.</p>
<p>If, in the middle of winter, in January or February, I happen, out
in the fields, to ransack the Spider’s dwelling, after the rain,
snow and frost have battered it and, as a rule, dismantled the bastion
at the entrance, I always find her at home, still full of vigour, still
carrying her family. This vehicular upbringing lasts five or six
months at least, without interruption. The celebrated American
carrier, the Opossum, who emancipates her offspring after a few weeks’
carting, cuts a poor figure beside the Lycosa.</p>
<p>What do the little ones eat, on the maternal spine? Nothing,
so far as I know. I do not see them grow larger. I find
them, at the tardy period of their emancipation, just as they were when
they left the bag.</p>
<p>During the bad season, the mother herself is extremely abstemious.
At long intervals, she accepts, in my jars, a belated Locust, whom I
have captured, for her benefit, in the sunnier nooks. In order
to keep herself in condition, as when she is dug up in the course of
my winter excavations, she must therefore sometimes break her fast and
come out in search of prey, without, of course, discarding her live
mantilla.</p>
<p>The expedition has its dangers. The youngsters may be brushed
off by a blade of grass. What becomes of them when they have a
fall? Does the mother give them a thought? Does she come
to their assistance and help them to regain their place on her back?
Not at all. The affection of a Spider’s heart, divided among
some hundreds, can spare but a very feeble portion to each. The
Lycosa hardly troubles, whether one youngster fall from his place, or
six, or all of them. She waits impassively for the victims of
the mishap to get out of their own difficulty, which they do, for that
matter, and very nimbly.</p>
<p>I sweep the whole family from the back of one of my boarders with
a hair-pencil. Not a sign of emotion, not an attempt at search
on the part of the denuded one. After trotting about a little
on the sand, the dislodged youngsters find, these here, those there,
one or other of the mother’s legs, spread wide in a circle.
By means of these climbing-poles, they swarm to the top and soon the
dorsal group resumes its original form. Not one of the lot is
missing. The Lycosa’s sons know their trade as acrobats
to perfection: the mother need not trouble her head about their fall.</p>
<p>With a sweep of the pencil, I make the family of one Spider fall
around another laden with her own family. The dislodged ones nimbly
scramble up the legs and climb on the back of their new mother, who
kindly allows them to behave as though they belonged to her. There
is no room on the abdomen, the regulation resting-place, which is already
occupied by the real sons. The invaders thereupon encamp on the
front part, beset the thorax and change the carrier into a horrible
pin-cushion that no longer bears the least resemblance to a Spider form.
Meanwhile, the sufferer raises no sort of protest against this access
of family. She placidly accepts them all and walks them all about.</p>
<p>The youngsters, on their side, are unable to distinguish between
what is permitted and forbidden. Remarkable acrobats that they
are, they climb on the first Spider that comes along, even when of a
different species, provided that she be of a fair size. I place
them in the presence of a big Epeira marked with a white cross on a
pale-orange ground (<i>Epeira pallida</i>, OLIV.). The little
ones, as soon as they are dislodged from the back of the Lycosa their
mother, clamber up the stranger without hesitation.</p>
<p>Intolerant of these familiarities, the Spider shakes the leg encroached
upon and flings the intruders to a distance. The assault is doggedly
resumed, to such good purpose that a dozen succeed in hoisting themselves
to the top. The Epeira, who is not accustomed to the tickling
of such a load, turns over on her back and rolls on the ground in the
manner of a donkey when his hide is itching. Some are lamed, some
are even crushed. This does not deter the others, who repeat the
escalade as soon as the Epeira is on her legs again. Then come
more somersaults, more rollings on the back, until the giddy swarm are
all discomfited and leave the Spider in peace.</p>
<h2>CHAPTER IV: THE NARBONNE LYCOSA: THE BURROW</h2>
<p>Michelet <SPAN name="citation23"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote23">{23}</SPAN>
has told us how, as a printer’s apprentice in a cellar, he established
amicable relations with a Spider. At a certain hour of the day,
a ray of sunlight would glint through the window of the gloomy workshop
and light up the little compositor’s case. Then his eight-legged
neighbour would come down from her web and take her share of the sunshine
on the edge of the case. The boy did not interfere with her; he
welcomed the trusting visitor as a friend and as a pleasant diversion
from the long monotony. When we lack the society of our fellow-men,
we take refuge in that of animals, without always losing by the change.</p>
<p>I do not, thank God, suffer from the melancholy of a cellar: my solitude
is gay with light and verdure; I attend, whenever I please, the fields’
high festival, the Thrushes’ concert, the Crickets’ symphony;
and yet my friendly commerce with the Spider is marked by an even greater
devotion than the young typesetter’s. I admit her to the
intimacy of my study, I make room for her among my books, I set her
in the sun on my window-ledge, I visit her assiduously at her home,
in the country. The object of our relations is not to create a
means of escape from the petty worries of life, pin-pricks whereof I
have my share like other men, a very large share, indeed; I propose
to submit to the Spider a host of questions whereto, at times, she condescends
to reply.</p>
<p>To what fair problems does not the habit of frequenting her give
rise! To set them forth worthily, the marvellous art which the
little printer was to acquire were not too much. One needs the
pen of a Michelet; and I have but a rough, blunt pencil. Let us
try, nevertheless: even when poorly clad, truth is still beautiful.</p>
<p>I will therefore once more take up the story of the Spider’s
instinct, a story of which the preceding chapters have given but a very
rough idea. Since I wrote those earlier essays, my field of observation
has been greatly extended. My notes have been enriched by new
and most remarkable facts. It is right that I should employ them
for the purpose of a more detailed biography.</p>
<p>The exigencies of order and clearness expose me, it is true, to occasional
repetitions. This is inevitable when one has to marshal in an
harmonious whole a thousand items culled from day to day, often unexpectedly,
and bearing no relation one to the other. The observer is not
master of his time; opportunity leads him and by unsuspected ways.
A certain question suggested by an earlier fact finds no reply until
many years after. Its scope, moreover, is amplified and completed
with views collected on the road. In a work, therefore, of this
fragmentary character, repetitions, necessary for the due co-ordination
of ideas, are inevitable. I shall be as sparing of them as I can.</p>
<p>Let us once more introduce our old friends the Epeira and the Lycosa,
who are the most important Spiders in my district. The Narbonne
Lycosa, or Black-bellied Tarantula, chooses her domicile in the waste,
pebbly lands beloved of the thyme. Her dwelling, a fortress rather
than a villa, is a burrow about nine inches deep and as wide as the
neck of a claret-bottle. The direction is perpendicular, in so
far as obstacles, frequent in a soil of this kind, permit. A bit
of gravel can be extracted and hoisted outside; but a flint is an immovable
boulder which the Spider avoids by giving a bend to her gallery.
If more such are met with, the residence becomes a winding cave, with
stone vaults, with lobbies communicating by means of sharp passages.</p>
<p>This lack of plan has no attendant drawbacks, so well does the owner,
from long habit, know every corner and storey of her mansion.
If any interesting buzz occur overhead, the Lycosa climbs up from her
rugged manor with the same speed as from a vertical shaft. Perhaps
she even finds the windings and turnings an advantage, when she has
to drag into her den a prey that happens to defend itself.</p>
<p>As a rule, the end of the burrow widens into a side-chamber, a lounge
or resting-place where the Spider meditates at length and is content
to lead a life of quiet when her belly is full.</p>
<p>A silk coating, but a scanty one, for the Lycosa has not the wealth
of silk possessed by the Weaving Spiders, lines the walls of the tube
and keeps the loose earth from falling. This plaster, which cements
the incohesive and smooths the rugged parts, is reserved more particularly
for the top of the gallery, near the mouth. Here, in the daytime,
if things be peaceful all around, the Lycosa stations herself, either
to enjoy the warmth of the sun, her great delight, or to lie in wait
for game. The threads of the silk lining afford a firm hold to
the claws on every side, whether the object be to sit motionless for
hours, revelling in the light and heat, or to pounce upon the passing
prey.</p>
<p>Around the orifice of the burrow rises, to a greater or lesser height,
a circular parapet, formed of tiny pebbles, twigs and straps borrowed
from the dry leaves of the neighbouring grasses, all more or less dexterously
tied together and cemented with silk. This work of rustic architecture
is never missing, even though it be no more than a mere pad.</p>
<p>When she reaches maturity and is once settled, the Lycosa becomes
eminently domesticated. I have been living in close communion
with her for the last three years. I have installed her in large
earthen pans on the window-sills of my study and I have her daily under
my eyes. Well, it is very rarely that I happen on her outside,
a few inches from her hole, back to which she bolts at the least alarm.</p>
<p>We may take it, then, that, when not in captivity, the Lycosa does
not go far afield to gather the wherewithal to build her parapet and
that she makes shift with what she finds upon her threshold. In
these conditions, the building-stones are soon exhausted and the masonry
ceases for lack of materials.</p>
<p>The wish came over me to see what dimensions the circular edifice
would assume, if the Spider were given an unlimited supply. With
captives to whom I myself act as purveyor the thing is easy enough.
Were it only with a view to helping whoso may one day care to continue
these relations with the big Spider of the waste-lands, let me describe
how my subjects are housed.</p>
<p>A good-sized earthenware pan, some nine inches deep, is filled with
a red, clayey earth, rich in pebbles, similar, in short, to that of
the places haunted by the Lycosa. Properly moistened into a paste,
the artificial soil is heaped, layer by layer, around a central reed,
of a bore equal to that of the animal’s natural burrow.
When the receptacle is filled to the top, I withdraw the reed, which
leaves a yawning, perpendicular shaft. I thus obtain the abode
which shall replace that of the fields.</p>
<p>To find the hermit to inhabit it is merely the matter of a walk in
the neighbourhood. When removed from her own dwelling, which is
turned topsy-turvy by my trowel, and placed in possession of the den
produced by my art, the Lycosa at once disappears into that den.
She does not come out again, seeks nothing better elsewhere. A
large wire-gauze cover rests on the soil in the pan and prevents escape.</p>
<p>In any case, the watch, in this respect, makes no demands upon my
diligence. The prisoner is satisfied with her new abode and manifests
no regret for her natural burrow. There is no attempt at flight
on her part. Let me not omit to add that each pan must receive
not more than one inhabitant. The Lycosa is very intolerant.
To her, a neighbour is fair game, to be eaten without scruple when one
has might on one’s side. Time was when, unaware of this
fierce intolerance, which is more savage still at breeding-time, I saw
hideous orgies perpetrated in my overstocked cages. I shall have
occasion to describe those tragedies later.</p>
<p>Let us meanwhile consider the isolated Lycosae. They do not
touch up the dwelling which I have moulded for them with a bit of reed;
at most, now and again, perhaps with the object of forming a lounge
or bedroom at the bottom, they fling out a few loads of rubbish.
But all, little by little, build the kerb that is to edge the mouth.</p>
<p>I have given them plenty of first-rate materials, far superior to
those which they use when left to their own resources. These consist,
first, for the foundations, of little smooth stones, some of which are
as large as an almond. With this road-metal are mingled short
strips of raphia, or palm-fibre, flexible ribbons, easily bent.
These stand for the Spider’s usual basket-work, consisting of
slender stalks and dry blades of grass. Lastly, by way of an unprecedented
treasure, never yet employed by a Lycosa, I place at my captives’
disposal some thick threads of wool, cut into inch lengths.</p>
<p>As I wish, at the same time, to find out whether my animals, with
the magnificent lenses of their eyes, are able to distinguish colours
and prefer one colour to another, I mix up bits of wool of different
hues: there are red, green, white and yellow pieces. If the Spider
have any preference, she can choose where she pleases.</p>
<p>The Lycosa always works at night, a regrettable circumstance, which
does not allow me to follow the worker’s methods. I see
the result; and that is all. Were I to visit the building-yard
by the light of a lantern, I should be no wiser. The animal, which
is very shy, would at once dive into her lair; and I should have lost
my sleep for nothing. Furthermore, she is not a very diligent
labourer; she likes to take her time. Two or three bits of wool
or raphia placed in position represent a whole night’s work.
And to this slowness we must add long spells of utter idleness.</p>
<p>Two months pass; and the result of my liberality surpasses my expectations.
Possessing more windfalls than they know what to do with, all picked
up in their immediate neighbourhood, my Lycosae have built themselves
donjon-keeps the like of which their race has not yet known. Around
the orifice, on a slightly sloping bank, small, flat, smooth stones
have been laid to form a broken, flagged pavement. The larger
stones, which are Cyclopean blocks compared with the size of the animal
that has shifted them, are employed as abundantly as the others.</p>
<p>On this rockwork stands the donjon. It is an interlacing of
raphia and bits of wool, picked up at random, without distinction of
shade. Red and white, green and yellow are mixed without any attempt
at order. The Lycosa is indifferent to the joys of colour.</p>
<p>The ultimate result is a sort of muff, a couple of inches high.
Bands of silk, supplied by the spinnerets, unite the pieces, so that
the whole resembles a coarse fabric. Without being absolutely
faultless, for there are always awkward pieces on the outside, which
the worker could not handle, the gaudy building is not devoid of merit.
The bird lining its nest would do no better. Whoso sees the curious,
many-coloured productions in my pans takes them for an outcome of my
industry, contrived with a view to some experimental mischief; and his
surprise is great when I confess who the real author is. No one
would ever believe the Spider capable of constructing such a monument.</p>
<p>It goes without saying that, in a state of liberty, on our barren
waste-lands, the Lycosa does not indulge in such sumptuous architecture.
I have given the reason: she is too great a stay-at-home to go in search
of materials and she makes use of the limited resources which she finds
around her. Bits of earth, small chips of stone, a few twigs,
a few withered grasses: that is all, or nearly all. Wherefore
the work is generally quite modest and reduced to a parapet that hardly
attracts attention.</p>
<p>My captives teach us that, when materials are plentiful, especially
textile materials that remove all fears of landslip, the Lycosa delights
in tall turrets. She understands the art of donjon-building and
puts it into practice as often as she possesses the means.</p>
<p>This art is akin to another, from which it is apparently derived.
If the sun be fierce or if rain threaten, the Lycosa closes the entrance
to her dwelling with a silken trellis-work, wherein she embeds different
matters, often the remnants of victims which she has devoured.
The ancient Gael nailed the heads of his vanquished enemies to the door
of his hut. In the same way, the fierce Spider sticks the skulls
of her prey into the lid of her cave. These lumps look very well
on the ogre’s roof; but we must be careful not to mistake them
for warlike trophies. The animal knows nothing of our barbarous
bravado. Everything at the threshold of the burrow is used indiscriminately:
fragments of Locust, vegetable remains and especially particles of earth.
A Dragon-fly’s head baked by the sun is as good as a bit of gravel
and no better.</p>
<p>And so, with silk and all sorts of tiny materials, the Lycosa builds
a lidded cap to the entrance of her home. I am not well acquainted
with the reasons that prompt her to barricade herself indoors, particularly
as the seclusion is only temporary and varies greatly in duration.
I obtain precise details from a tribe of Lycosae wherewith the enclosure,
as will be seen later, happens to be thronged in consequence of my investigations
into the dispersal of the family.</p>
<p>At the time of the tropical August heat, I see my Lycosae, now this
batch, now that, building, at the entrance to the burrow, a convex ceiling,
which is difficult to distinguish from the surrounding soil. Can
it be to protect themselves from the too-vivid light? This is
doubtful; for, a few days later, though the power of the sun remain
the same, the roof is broken open and the Spider reappears at her door,
where she revels in the torrid heat of the dog-days.</p>
<p>Later, when October comes, if it be rainy weather, she retires once
more under a roof, as though she were guarding herself against the damp.
Let us not be too positive of anything, however: often, when it is raining
hard, the Spider bursts her ceiling and leaves her house open to the
skies.</p>
<p>Perhaps the lid is only put on for serious domestic events, notably
for the laying. I do, in fact, perceive young Lycosae who shut
themselves in before they have attained the dignity of motherhood and
who reappear, some time later, with the bag containing the eggs hung
to their stern. The inference that they close the door with the
object of securing greater quiet while spinning the maternal cocoon
would not be in keeping with the unconcern displayed by the majority.
I find some who lay their eggs in an open burrow; I come upon some who
weave their cocoon and cram it with eggs in the open air, before they
even own a residence. In short, I do not succeed in fathoming
the reasons that cause the burrow to be closed, no matter what the weather,
hot or cold, wet or dry.</p>
<p>The fact remains that the lid is broken and repaired repeatedly,
sometimes on the same day. In spite of the earthy casing, the
silk woof gives it the requisite pliancy to cleave when pushed by the
anchorite and to rip open without falling into ruins. Swept back
to the circumference of the mouth and increased by the wreckage of further
ceilings, it becomes a parapet, which the Lycosa raises by degrees in
her long moments of leisure. The bastion which surmounts the burrow,
therefore, takes its origin from the temporary lid. The turret
derives from the split ceiling.</p>
<p>What is the purpose of this turret? My pans will tell us that.
An enthusiastic votary of the chase, so long as she is not permanently
fixed, the Lycosa, once she has set up house, prefers to lie in ambush
and wait for the quarry. Every day, when the heat is greatest,
I see my captives come up slowly from under ground and lean upon the
battlements of their woolly castle-keep. They are then really
magnificent in their stately gravity. With their swelling belly
contained within the aperture, their head outside, their glassy eyes
staring, their legs gathered for a spring, for hours and hours they
wait, motionless, bathing voluptuously in the sun.</p>
<p>Should a tit-bit to her liking happen to pass, forthwith the watcher
darts from her tall tower, swift as an arrow from the bow. With
a dagger-thrust in the neck, she stabs the jugular of the Locust, Dragon-fly
or other prey whereof I am the purveyor; and she as quickly scales the
donjon and retires with her capture. The performance is a wonderful
exhibition of skill and speed.</p>
<p>Very seldom is a quarry missed, provided that it pass at a convenient
distance, within the range of the huntress’ bound. But,
if the prey be at some distance, for instance on the wire of the cage,
the Lycosa takes no notice of it. Scorning to go in pursuit, she
allows it to roam at will. She never strikes except when sure
of her stroke. She achieves this by means of her tower.
Hiding behind the wall, she sees the stranger advancing, keeps her eyes
on him and suddenly pounces when he comes within reach. These
abrupt tactics make the thing a certainty. Though he were winged
and swift of flight, the unwary one who approaches the ambush is lost.</p>
<p>This presumes, it is true, an exemplary patience on the Lycosa’s
part; for the burrow has naught that can serve to entice victims.
At best, the ledge provided by the turret may, at rare intervals, tempt
some weary wayfarer to use it as a resting-place. But, if the
quarry do not come to-day, it is sure to come to-morrow, the next day,
or later, for the Locusts hop innumerable in the waste-land, nor are
they always able to regulate their leaps. Some day or other, chance
is bound to bring one of them within the purlieus of the burrow.
This is the moment to spring upon the pilgrim from the ramparts.
Until then, we maintain a stoical vigilance. We shall dine when
we can; but we shall end by dining.</p>
<p>The Lycosa, therefore, well aware of these lingering eventualities,
waits and is not unduly distressed by a prolonged abstinence.
She has an accommodating stomach, which is satisfied to be gorged to-day
and to remain empty afterwards for goodness knows how long. I
have sometimes neglected my catering-duties for weeks at a time; and
my boarders have been none the worse for it. After a more or less
protracted fast, they do not pine away, but are smitten with a wolf-like
hunger. All these ravenous eaters are alike: they guzzle to excess
to-day, in anticipation of to-morrow’s dearth.</p>
<p>In her youth, before she has a burrow, the Lycosa earns her living
in another manner. Clad in grey like her elders, but without the
black-velvet apron which she receives on attaining the marriageable
age, she roams among the scrubby grass. This is true hunting.
Should a suitable quarry heave in sight, the Spider pursues it, drives
it from its shelters, follows it hot-foot. The fugitive gains
the heights, makes as though to fly away. He has not the time.
With an upward leap, the Lycosa grabs him before he can rise.</p>
<p>I am charmed with the agility wherewith my yearling boarders seize
the Flies which I provide for them. In vain does the Fly take
refuge a couple of inches up, on some blade of grass. With a sudden
spring into the air, the Spider pounces on the prey. No Cat is
quicker in catching her Mouse.</p>
<p>But these are the feats of youth not handicapped by obesity.
Later, when a heavy paunch, dilated with eggs and silk, has to be trailed
along, those gymnastic performances become impracticable. The
Lycosa then digs herself a settled abode, a hunting-box, and sits in
her watch-tower, on the look-out for game.</p>
<p>When and how is the burrow obtained wherein the Lycosa, once a vagrant,
now a stay-at-home, is to spend the remainder of her long life?
We are in autumn, the weather is already turning cool. This is
how the Field Cricket sets to work: as long as the days are fine and
the nights not too cold, the future chorister of spring rambles over
the fallows, careless of a local habitation. At critical moments,
the cover of a dead leaf provides him with a temporary shelter.
In the end, the burrow, the permanent dwelling, is dug as the inclement
season draws nigh.</p>
<p>The Lycosa shares the Cricket’s views: like him, she finds
a thousand pleasures in the vagabond life. With September comes
the nuptial badge, the black-velvet bib. The Spiders meet at night,
by the soft moonlight: they romp together, they eat the beloved shortly
after the wedding; by day, they scour the country, they track the game
on the short-pile, grassy carpet, they take their fill of the joys of
the sun. That is much better than solitary meditation at the bottom
of a well. And so it is not rare to see young mothers dragging
their bag of eggs, or even already carrying their family, and as yet
without a home.</p>
<p>In October, it is time to settle down. We then, in fact, find
two sorts of burrows, which differ in diameter. The larger, bottle-neck
burrows belong to the old matrons, who have owned their house for two
years at least. The smaller, of the width of a thick lead-pencil,
contain the young mothers, born that year. By dint of long and
leisurely alterations, the novice’s earths will increase in depth
as well as in diameter and become roomy abodes, similar to those of
the grandmothers. In both, we find the owner and her family, the
latter sometimes already hatched and sometimes still enclosed in the
satin wallet.</p>
<p>Seeing no digging-tools, such as the excavation of the dwelling seemed
to me to require, I wondered whether the Lycosa might not avail herself
of some chance gallery, the work of the Cicada or the Earth-worm.
This ready-made tunnel, thought I, must shorten the labours of the Spider,
who appears to be so badly off for tools; she would only have to enlarge
it and put it in order. I was wrong: the burrow is excavated,
from start to finish, by her unaided labour.</p>
<p>Then where are the digging-implements? We think of the legs,
of the claws. We think of them, but reflection tells us that tools
such as these would not do: they are too long and too difficult to wield
in a confined space. What is required is the miner’s short-handled
pick, wherewith to drive hard, to insert, to lever and to extract; what
is required is the sharp point that enters the earth and crumbles it
into fragments. There remain the Lycosa’s fangs, delicate
weapons which we at first hesitate to associate with such work, so illogical
does it seem to dig a pit with surgeon’s scalpels.</p>
<p>The fangs are a pair of sharp, curved points, which, when at rest,
crook like a finger and take shelter between two strong pillars.
The Cat sheathes her claws under the velvet of the paw, to preserve
their edge and sharpness. In the same way, the Lycosa protects
her poisoned daggers by folding them within the case of two powerful
columns, which come plumb on the surface and contain the muscles that
work them.</p>
<p>Well, this surgical outfit, intended for stabbing the jugular artery
of the prey, suddenly becomes a pick-axe and does rough navvy’s
work. To witness the underground digging is impossible; but we
can, at least, with the exercise of a little patience, see the rubbish
carted away. If I watch my captives, without tiring, at a very
early hour—for the work takes place mostly at night and at long
intervals—in the end I catch them coming up with a load.
Contrary to what I expected, the legs take no part in the carting.
It is the mouth that acts as the barrow. A tiny ball of earth
is held between the fangs and is supported by the palpi, or feelers,
which are little arms employed in the service of the mouth-parts.
The Lycosa descends cautiously from her turret, goes to some distance
to get rid of her burden and quickly dives down again to bring up more.</p>
<p>We have seen enough: we know that the Lycosa’s fangs, those
lethal weapons, are not afraid to bite into clay and gravel. They
knead the excavated rubbish into pellets, take up the mass of earth
and carry it outside. The rest follows naturally; it is the fangs
that dig, delve and extract. How finely-tempered they must be,
not to be blunted by this well-sinker’s work and to do duty presently
in the surgical operation of stabbing the neck!</p>
<p>I have said that the repairs and extensions of the burrow are made
at long intervals. From time to time, the circular parapet receives
additions and becomes a little higher; less frequently still, the dwelling
is enlarged and deepened. As a rule, the mansion remains as it
was for a whole season. Towards the end of winter, in March more
than at any other period, the Lycosa seems to wish to give herself a
little more space. This is the moment to subject her to certain
tests.</p>
<p>We know that the Field Cricket, when removed from his burrow and
caged under conditions that would allow him to dig himself a new home
should the fit seize him, prefers to tramp from one casual shelter to
another, or rather abandons every idea of creating a permanent residence.
There is a short season whereat the instinct for building a subterranean
gallery is imperatively aroused. When this season is past, the
excavating artist, if accidentally deprived of his abode, becomes a
wandering Bohemian, careless of a lodging. He has forgotten his
talents and he sleeps out.</p>
<p>That the bird, the nest-builder, should neglect its art when it has
no brood to care for is perfectly logical: it builds for its family,
not for itself. But what shall we say of the Cricket, who is exposed
to a thousand mishaps when away from home? The protection of a
roof would be of great use to him; and the giddy-pate does not give
it a thought, though he is very strong and more capable than ever of
digging with his powerful jaws.</p>
<p>What reason can we allege for this neglect? None, unless it
be that the season of strenuous burrowing is past. The instincts
have a calendar of their own. At the given hour, suddenly they
awaken; as suddenly, afterwards, they fall asleep. The ingenious
become incompetent when the prescribed period is ended.</p>
<p>On a subject of this kind, we can consult the Spider of the waste-lands.
I catch an old Lycosa in the fields and house her, that same day, under
wire, in a burrow where I have prepared a soil to her liking.
If, by my contrivances and with a bit of reed, I have previously moulded
a burrow roughly representing the one from which I took her, the Spider
enters it forthwith and seems pleased with her new residence.
The product of my art is accepted as her lawful property and undergoes
hardly any alterations. In course of time, a bastion is erected
around the orifice; the top of the gallery is cemented with silk; and
that is all. In this establishment of my building, the animal’s
behaviour remains what it would be under natural conditions.</p>
<p>But place the Lycosa on the surface of the ground, without first
shaping a burrow. What will the homeless Spider do? Dig
herself a dwelling, one would think. She has the strength to do
so; she is in the prime of life. Besides, the soil is similar
to that whence I ousted her and suits the operation perfectly.
We therefore expect to see the Spider settled before long in a shaft
of her own construction.</p>
<p>We are disappointed. Weeks pass and not an effort is made,
not one. Demoralized by the absence of an ambush, the Lycosa hardly
vouchsafes a glance at the game which I serve up. The Crickets
pass within her reach in vain; most often she scorns them. She
slowly wastes away with fasting and boredom. At length, she dies.</p>
<p>Take up your miner’s trade again, poor fool! Make yourself
a home, since you know how to, and life will be sweet to you for many
a long day yet: the weather is fine and victuals plentiful. Dig,
delve, go underground, where safety lies. Like an idiot, you refrain;
and you perish. Why?</p>
<p>Because the craft which you were wont to ply is forgotten; because
the days of patient digging are past and your poor brain is unable to
work back. To do a second time what has been done already is beyond
your wit. For all your meditative air, you cannot solve the problem
of how to reconstruct that which is vanished and gone.</p>
<p>Let us now see what we can do with younger Lycosae, who are at the
burrowing-stage. I dig out five or six at the end of February.
They are half the size of the old ones; their burrows are equal in diameter
to my little finger. Rubbish quite fresh-spread around the pit
bears witness to the recent date of the excavations.</p>
<p>Relegated to their wire cages, these young Lycosae behave differently
according as the soil placed at their disposal is or is not already
provided with a burrow made by me. A burrow is hardly the word:
I give them but the nucleus of a shaft, about an inch deep, to lure
them on. When in possession of this rudimentary lair, the Spider
does not hesitate to pursue the work which I have interrupted in the
fields. At night, she digs with a will. I can see this by
the heap of rubbish flung aside. She at last obtains a house to
suit her, a house surmounted by the usual turret.</p>
<p>The others, on the contrary, those Spiders for whom the thrust of
my pencil has not contrived an entrance-hall representing, to a certain
extent, the natural gallery whence I dislodged them, absolutely refuse
to work; and they die, notwithstanding the abundance of provisions.</p>
<p>The first pursue the season’s task. They were digging
when I caught them; and, carried away by the enthusiasm of their activity,
they go on digging inside my cages. Taken in by my decoy-shaft,
they deepen the imprint of the pencil as though they were deepening
their real vestibule. They do not begin their labours over again;
they continue them.</p>
<p>The second, not having this inducement, this semblance of a burrow
mistaken for their own work, forsake the idea of digging and allow themselves
to die, because they would have to travel back along the chain of actions
and to resume the pick-strokes of the start. To begin all over
again requires reflection, a quality wherewith they are not endowed.</p>
<p>To the insect—and we have seen this in many earlier cases—what
is done is done and cannot be taken up again. The hands of a watch
do not move backwards. The insect behaves in much the same way.
Its activity urges it in one direction, ever forwards, without allowing
it to retrace its steps, even when an accident makes this necessary.</p>
<p>What the Mason-bees and the others taught us erewhile the Lycosa
now confirms in her manner. Incapable of taking fresh pains to
build herself a second dwelling, when the first is done for, she will
go on the tramp, she will break into a neighbour’s house, she
will run the risk of being eaten should she not prove the stronger,
but she will never think of making herself a home by starting afresh.</p>
<p>What a strange intellect is that of the animal, a mixture of mechanical
routine and subtle brain-power! Does it contain gleams that contrive,
wishes that pursue a definite object? Following in the wake of
so many others, the Lycosa warrants us in entertaining a doubt.</p>
<h2>CHAPTER V: THE NARBONNE LYCOSA: THE FAMILY</h2>
<p>For three weeks and more, the Lycosa trails the bag of eggs hanging
to her spinnerets. The reader will remember the experiments described
in the third chapter of this volume, particularly those with the cork
ball and the thread pellet which the Spider so foolishly accepts in
exchange for the real pill. Well, this exceedingly dull-witted
mother, satisfied with aught that knocks against her heels, is about
to make us wonder at her devotion.</p>
<p>Whether she come up from her shaft to lean upon the kerb and bask
in the sun, whether she suddenly retire underground in the face of danger,
or whether she be roaming the country before settling down, never does
she let go her precious bag, that very cumbrous burden in walking, climbing
or leaping. If, by some accident, it become detached from the
fastening to which it is hung, she flings herself madly on her treasure
and lovingly embraces it, ready to bite whoso would take it from her.
I myself am sometimes the thief. I then hear the points of the
poison-fangs grinding against the steel of my pincers, which tug in
one direction while the Lycosa tugs in the other. But let us leave
the animal alone: with a quick touch of the spinnerets, the pill is
restored to its place; and the Spider strides off, still menacing.</p>
<p>Towards the end of summer, all the householders, old or young, whether
in captivity on the window-sill or at liberty in the paths of the enclosure,
supply me daily with the following improving sight. In the morning,
as soon as the sun is hot and beats upon their burrow, the anchorites
come up from the bottom with their bag and station themselves at the
opening. Long siestas on the threshold in the sun are the order
of the day throughout the fine season; but, at the present time, the
position adopted is a different one. Formerly, the Lycosa came
out into the sun for her own sake. Leaning on the parapet, she
had the front half of her body outside the pit and the hinder half inside.</p>
<p>The eyes took their fill of light; the belly remained in the dark.
When carrying her egg-bag, the Spider reverses the posture: the front
is in the pit, the rear outside. With her hind-legs she holds
the white pill bulging with germs lifted above the entrance; gently
she turns and returns it, so as to present every side to the life-giving
rays. And this goes on for half the day, so long as the temperature
is high; and it is repeated daily, with exquisite patience, during three
or four weeks. To hatch its eggs, the bird covers them with the
quilt of its breast; it strains them to the furnace of its heart.
The Lycosa turns hers in front of the hearth of hearths, she gives them
the sun as an incubator.</p>
<p>In the early days of September, the young ones, who have been some
time hatched, are ready to come out. The pill rips open along
the middle fold. We read of the origin of this fold in an earlier
chapter. <SPAN name="citation24"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote24">{24}</SPAN>
Does the mother, feeling the brood quicken inside the satin wrapper,
herself break open the vessel at the opportune moment? It seems
probable. On the other hand, there may be a spontaneous bursting,
such as we shall see later in the Banded Epeira’s balloon, a tough
wallet which opens a breach of its own accord, long after the mother
has ceased to exist.</p>
<p>The whole family emerges from the bag straightway. Then and
there, the youngsters climb to the mother’s back. As for
the empty bag, now a worthless shred, it is flung out of the burrow;
the Lycosa does not give it a further thought. Huddled together,
sometimes in two or three layers, according to their number, the little
ones cover the whole back of the mother, who, for seven or eight months
to come, will carry her family night and day. Nowhere can we hope
to see a more edifying domestic picture than that of the Lycosa clothed
in her young.</p>
<p>From time to time, I meet a little band of gipsies passing along
the high-road on their way to some neighbouring fair. The new-born
babe mewls on the mother’s breast, in a hammock formed out of
a kerchief. The last-weaned is carried pick-a-back; a third toddles
clinging to its mother’s skirts; others follow closely, the biggest
in the rear, ferreting in the blackberry-laden hedgerows. It is
a magnificent spectacle of happy-go-lucky fruitfulness. They go
their way, penniless and rejoicing. The sun is hot and the earth
is fertile.</p>
<p>But how this picture pales before that of the Lycosa, that incomparable
gipsy whose brats are numbered by the hundred! And one and all
of them, from September to April, without a moment’s respite,
find room upon the patient creature’s back, where they are content
to lead a tranquil life and to be carted about.</p>
<p>The little ones are very good; none moves, none seeks a quarrel with
his neighbours. Clinging together, they form a continuous drapery,
a shaggy ulster under which the mother becomes unrecognizable.
Is it an animal, a fluff of wool, a cluster of small seeds fastened
to one another? ’Tis impossible to tell at the first glance.</p>
<p>The equilibrium of this living blanket is not so firm but that falls
often occur, especially when the mother climbs from indoors and comes
to the threshold to let the little ones take the sun. The least
brush against the gallery unseats a part of the family. The mishap
is not serious. The Hen, fidgeting about her Chicks, looks for
the strays, calls them, gathers them together. The Lycosa knows
not these maternal alarms. Impassively, she leaves those who drop
off to manage their own difficulty, which they do with wonderful quickness.
Commend me to those youngsters for getting up without whining, dusting
themselves and resuming their seat in the saddle! The unhorsed
ones promptly find a leg of the mother, the usual climbing-pole; they
swarm up it as fast as they can and recover their places on the bearer’s
back. The living bark of animals is reconstructed in the twinkling
of an eye.</p>
<p>To speak here of mother-love were, I think, extravagant. The
Lycosa’s affection for her offspring hardly surpasses that of
the plant, which is unacquainted with any tender feeling and nevertheless
bestows the nicest and most delicate care upon its seeds. The
animal, in many cases, knows no other sense of motherhood. What
cares the Lycosa for her brood! She accepts another’s as
readily as her own; she is satisfied so long as her back is burdened
with a swarming crowd, whether it issue from her ovaries or elsewhence.
There is no question here of real maternal affection.</p>
<p>I have described elsewhere the prowess of the Copris <SPAN name="citation25"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote25">{25}</SPAN>
watching over cells that are not her handiwork and do not contain her
offspring. With a zeal which even the additional labour laid upon
her does not easily weary, she removes the mildew from the alien dung-balls,
which far exceed the regular nests in number; she gently scrapes and
polishes and repairs them; she listens to them attentively and enquires
by ear into each nursling’s progress. Her real collection
could not receive greater care. Her own family or another’s:
it is all one to her.</p>
<p>The Lycosa is equally indifferent. I take a hair-pencil and
sweep the living burden from one of my Spiders, making it fall close
to another covered with her little ones. The evicted youngsters
scamper about, find the new mother’s legs outspread, nimbly clamber
up these and mount on the back of the obliging creature, who quietly
lets them have their way.</p>
<p>They slip in among the others, or, when the layer is too thick, push
to the front and pass from the abdomen to the thorax and even to the
head, though leaving the region of the eyes uncovered. It does
not do to blind the bearer: the common safety demands that. They
know this and respect the lenses of the eyes, however populous the assembly
be. The whole animal is now covered with a swarming carpet of
young, all except the legs, which must preserve their freedom of action,
and the under part of the body, where contact with the ground is to
be feared.</p>
<p>My pencil forces a third family upon the already overburdened Spider;
and this too is peacefully accepted. The youngsters huddle up
closer, lie one on top of the other in layers and room is found for
all. The Lycosa has lost the last semblance of an animal, has
become a nameless bristling thing that walks about. Falls are
frequent and are followed by continual climbings.</p>
<p>I perceive that I have reached the limits not of the bearer’s
good-will, but of equilibrium. The Spider would adopt an indefinite
further number of foundlings, if the dimensions of her back afforded
them a firm hold. Let us be content with this. Let us restore
each family to its mother, drawing at random from the lot. There
must necessarily be interchanges, but that is of no importance: real
children and adopted children are the same thing in the Lycosa’s
eyes.</p>
<p>One would like to know if, apart from my artifices, in circumstances
where I do not interfere, the good-natured dry-nurse sometimes burdens
herself with a supplementary family; it would also be interesting to
learn what comes of this association of lawful offspring and strangers.
I have ample materials wherewith to obtain an answer to both questions.
I have housed in the same cage two elderly matrons laden with youngsters.
Each has her home as far removed from the other’s as the size
of the common pan permits. The distance is nine inches or more.
It is not enough. Proximity soon kindles fierce jealousies between
those intolerant creatures, who are obliged to live far apart, so as
to secure adequate hunting-grounds.</p>
<p>One morning, I catch the two harridans fighting out their quarrel
on the floor. The loser is laid flat upon her back; the victress,
belly to belly with her adversary, clutches her with her legs and prevents
her from moving a limb. Both have their poison-fangs wide open,
ready to bite without yet daring, so mutually formidable are they.
After a certain period of waiting, during which the pair merely exchange
threats, the stronger of the two, the one on top, closes her lethal
engine and grinds the head of the prostrate foe. Then she calmly
devours the deceased by small mouthfuls.</p>
<p>Now what do the youngsters do, while their mother is being eaten?
Easily consoled, heedless of the atrocious scene, they climb on the
conqueror’s back and quietly take their places among the lawful
family. The ogress raises no objection, accepts them as her own.
She makes a meal off the mother and adopts the orphans.</p>
<p>Let us add that, for many months yet, until the final emancipation
comes, she will carry them without drawing any distinction between them
and her own young. Henceforth, the two families, united in so
tragic a fashion, will form but one. We see how greatly out of
place it would be to speak, in this connection, of mother-love and its
fond manifestations.</p>
<p>Does the Lycosa at least feed the younglings who, for seven months,
swarm upon her back? Does she invite them to the banquet when
she has secured a prize? I thought so at first; and, anxious to
assist at the family repast, I devoted special attention to watching
the mothers eat. As a rule, the prey is consumed out of sight,
in the burrow; but sometimes also a meal is taken on the threshold,
in the open air. Besides, it is easy to rear the Lycosa and her
family in a wire-gauze cage, with a layer of earth wherein the captive
will never dream of sinking a well, such work being out of season.
Everything then happens in the open.</p>
<p>Well, while the mother munches, chews, expresses the juices and swallows,
the youngsters do not budge from their camping-ground on her back.
Not one quits its place nor gives a sign of wishing to slip down and
join in the meal. Nor does the mother extend an invitation to
them to come and recruit themselves, nor put any broken victuals aside
for them. She feeds and the others look on, or rather remain indifferent
to what is happening. Their perfect quiet during the Lycosa’s
feast points to the posession of a stomach that knows no cravings.</p>
<p>Then with what are they sustained, during their seven months’
upbringing on the mother’s back? One conceives a notion
of exudations supplied by the bearer’s body, in which case the
young would feed on their mother, after the manner of parasitic vermin,
and gradually drain her strength.</p>
<p>We must abandon this notion. Never are they seen to put their
mouths to the skin that should be a sort of teat to them. On the
other hand, the Lycosa, far from being exhausted and shrivelling, keeps
perfectly well and plump. She has the same pot-belly when she
finishes rearing her young as when she began. She has not lost
weight: far from it; on the contrary, she has put on flesh: she has
gained the wherewithal to beget a new family next summer, one as numerous
as to-day’s.</p>
<p>Once more, with what do the little ones keep up their strength?
We do not like to suggest reserves supplied by the egg as rectifying
the beastie’s expenditure of vital force, especially when we consider
that those reserves, themselves so close to nothing, must be economized
in view of the silk, a material of the highest importance, of which
a plentiful use will be made presently. There must be other powers
at play in the tiny animal’s machinery.</p>
<p>Total abstinence from food could be understood, if it were accompanied
by inertia: immobility is not life. But the young Lycosae, although
usually quiet on their mother’s back, are at all times ready for
exercise and for agile swarming. When they fall from the maternal
perambulator, they briskly pick themselves up, briskly scramble up a
leg and make their way to the top. It is a splendidly nimble and
spirited performance. Besides, once seated, they have to keep
a firm balance in the mass; they have to stretch and stiffen their little
limbs in order to hang on to their neighbours. As a matter of
fact, there is no absolute rest for them. Now physiology teaches
us that not a fibre works without some expenditure of energy.
The animal, which can be likened, in no small measure, to our industrial
machines, demands, on the one hand, the renovation of its organism,
which wears out with movement, and, on the other, the maintenance of
the heat transformed into action. We can compare it with the locomotive-engine.
As the iron horse performs its work, it gradually wears out its pistons,
its rods, its wheels, its boiler-tubes, all of which have to be made
good from time to time. The founder and the smith repair it, supply
it, so to speak, with ‘plastic food,’ the food that becomes
embodied with the whole and forms part of it. But, though it have
just come from the engine-shop, it is still inert. To acquire
the power of movement, it must receive from the stoker a supply of ‘energy-producing
food;’ in other words, he lights a few shovelfuls of coal in its
inside. This heat will produce mechanical work.</p>
<p>Even so with the beast. As nothing is made from nothing, the
egg supplies first the materials of the new-born animal; then the plastic
food, the smith of living creatures, increases the body, up to a certain
limit, and renews it as it wears away. The stoker works at the
same time, without stopping. Fuel, the source of energy, makes
but a short stay in the system, where it is consumed and furnishes heat,
whence movement is derived. Life is a fire-box. Warmed by
its food, the animal machine moves, walks, runs, jumps, swims, flies,
sets its locomotory apparatus going in a thousand manners.</p>
<p>To return to the young Lycosae, they grow no larger until the period
of their emancipation. I find them at the age of seven months
the same as when I saw them at their birth. The egg supplied the
materials necessary for their tiny frames; and, as the loss of waste
substance is, for the moment, excessively small, or even <i>nil</i>,
additional plastic food is not needed so long as the beastie does not
grow. In this respect, the prolonged abstinence presents no difficulty.
But there remains the question of energy-producing food, which is indispensable,
for the little Lycosa moves, when necessary, and very actively at that.
To what shall we attribute the heat expended upon action, when the animal
takes absolutely no nourishment?</p>
<p>An idea suggests itself. We say to ourselves that, without
being life, a machine is something more than matter, for man has added
a little of his mind to it. Now the iron beast, consuming its
ration of coal, is really browsing the ancient foliage of arborescent
ferns in which solar energy has accumulated.</p>
<p>Beasts of flesh and blood act no otherwise. Whether they mutually
devour one another or levy tribute on the plant, they invariably quicken
themselves with the stimulant of the sun’s heat, a heat stored
in grass, fruit, seed and those which feed on such. The sun, the
soul of the universe, is the supreme dispenser of energy.</p>
<p>Instead of being served up through the intermediary of food and passing
through the ignominious circuit of gastric chemistry, could not this
solar energy penetrate the animal directly and charge it with activity,
even as the battery charges an accumulator with power? Why not
live on sun, seeing that, after all, we find naught but sun in the fruits
which we consume?</p>
<p>Chemical science, that bold revolutionary, promises to provide us
with synthetic food-stuffs. The laboratory and the factory will
take the place of the farm. Why should not physical science step
in as well? It would leave the preparation of plastic food to
the chemist’s retorts; it would reserve for itself that of energy-producing
food, which, reduced to its exact terms, ceases to be matter.
With the aid of some ingenious apparatus, it would pump into us our
daily ration of solar energy, to be later expended in movement, whereby
the machine would be kept going without the often painful assistance
of the stomach and its adjuncts. What a delightful world, where
one would lunch off a ray of sunshine!</p>
<p>Is it a dream, or the anticipation of a remote reality? The
problem is one of the most important that science can set us.
Let us first hear the evidence of the young Lycosae regarding its possibilities.</p>
<p>For seven months, without any material nourishment, they expend strength
in moving. To wind up the mechanism of their muscles, they recruit
themselves direct with heat and light. During the time when she
was dragging the bag of eggs behind her, the mother, at the best moments
of the day, came and held up her pill to the sun. With her two
hind-legs, she lifted it out of the ground, into the full light; slowly
she turned it and returned it, so that every side might receive its
share of the vivifying rays. Well, this bath of life, which awakened
the germs, is now prolonged to keep the tender babes active.</p>
<p>Daily, if the sky be clear, the Lycosa, carrying her young, comes
up from the burrow, leans on the kerb and spends long hours basking
in the sun. Here, on their mother’s back, the youngsters
stretch their limbs delightedly, saturate themselves with heat, take
in reserves of motor power, absorb energy.</p>
<p>They are motionless; but, if I only blow upon them, they stampede
as nimbly as though a hurricane were passing. Hurriedly, they
disperse; hurriedly, they reassemble: a proof that, without material
nourishment, the little animal machine is always at full pressure, ready
to work. When the shade comes, mother and sons go down again,
surfeited with solar emanations. The feast of energy at the Sun
Tavern is finished for the day. It is repeated in the same way
daily, if the weather be mild, until the hour of emancipation comes,
followed by the first mouthfuls of solid food.</p>
<h2>CHAPTER VI: THE NARBONNE LYCOSA: THE CLIMBING-INSTINCT</h2>
<p>The month of March comes to an end; and the departure of the youngsters
begins, in glorious weather, during the hottest hours of the morning.
Laden with her swarming burden, the mother Lycosa is outside her burrow,
squatting on the parapet at the entrance. She lets them do as
they please; as though indifferent to what is happening, she exhibits
neither encouragement nor regret. Whoso will goes; whoso will
remains behind.</p>
<p>First these, then those, according as they feel themselves duly soaked
with sunshine, the little ones leave the mother in batches, run about
for a moment on the ground and then quickly reach the trellis-work of
the cage, which they climb with surprising alacrity. They pass
through the meshes, they clamber right to the top of the citadel.
All, with not one exception, make for the heights, instead of roaming
on the ground, as might reasonably be expected from the eminently earthly
habits of the Lycosae; all ascend the dome, a strange procedure whereof
I do not yet guess the object.</p>
<p>I receive a hint from the upright ring that finishes the top of the
cage. The youngsters hurry to it. It represents the porch
of their gymnasium. They hang out threads across the opening;
they stretch others from the ring to the nearest points of the trellis-work.
On these foot-bridges, they perform slack-rope exercises amid endless
comings and goings. The tiny legs open out from time to time and
straddle as though to reach the most distant points. I begin to
realize that they are acrobats aiming at loftier heights than those
of the dome.</p>
<p>I top the trellis with a branch that doubles the attainable height.
The bustling crowd hastily scrambles up it, reaches the tip of the topmost
twigs and thence sends out threads that attach themselves to every surrounding
object. These form so many suspension-bridges; and my beasties
nimbly run along them, incessantly passing to and fro. One would
say that they wished to climb higher still. I will endeavour to
satisfy their desires.</p>
<p>I take a nine-foot reed, with tiny branches spreading right up to
the top, and place it above the cage. The little Lycosae clamber
to the very summit. Here, longer threads are produced from the
rope-yard and are now left to float, anon converted into bridges by
the mere contact of the free end with the neighbouring supports.
The rope-dancers embark upon them and form garlands which the least
breath of air swings daintily. The thread is invisible when it
does not come between the eyes and the sun; and the whole suggests rows
of Gnats dancing an aerial ballet.</p>
<p>Then, suddenly, teased by the air-currents, the delicate mooring
breaks and flies through space. Behold the emigrants off and away,
clinging to their thread. If the wind be favourable, they can
land at great distances. Their departure is thus continued for
a week or two, in bands more or less numerous, according to the temperature
and the brightness of the day. If the sky be overcast, none dreams
of leaving. The travellers need the kisses of the sun, which give
energy and vigour.</p>
<p>At last, the whole family has disappeared, carried afar by its flying-ropes.
The mother remains alone. The loss of her offspring hardly seems
to distress her. She retains her usual colour and plumpness, which
is a sign that the maternal exertions have not been too much for her.</p>
<p>I also notice an increased fervour in the chase. While burdened
with her family, she was remarkably abstemious, accepting only with
great reserve the game placed at her disposal. The coldness of
the season may have militated against copious refections; perhaps also
the weight of the little ones hampered her movements and made her more
discreet in attacking the prey.</p>
<p>To-day, cheered by the fine weather and able to move freely, she
hurries up from her lair each time I set a tit-bit to her liking buzzing
at the entrance to her burrow; she comes and takes from my fingers the
savoury Locust, the portly Anoxia; <SPAN name="citation26"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote26">{26}</SPAN>
and this performance is repeated daily, whenever I have the leisure
to devote to it. After a frugal winter, the time has come for
plentiful repasts.</p>
<p>This appetite tells us that the animal is not at the point of death;
one does not feast in this way with a played-out stomach. My boarders
are entering in full vigour upon their fourth year. In the winter,
in the fields, I used to find large mothers, carting their young, and
others not much more than half their size. The whole series, therefore,
represented three generations. And now, in my earthenware pans,
after the departure of the family, the old matrons still carry on and
continue as strong as ever. Every outward appearance tells us
that, after becoming great-grandmothers, they still keep themselves
fit for propagating their species.</p>
<p>The facts correspond with these anticipations. When September
returns, my captives are dragging a bag as bulky as that of last year.
For a long time, even when the eggs of the others have been hatched
for some weeks past, the mothers come daily to the threshold of the
burrow and hold out their wallets for incubation by the sun. Their
perseverance is not rewarded: nothing issues from the satin purse; nothing
stirs within. Why? Because, in the prison of my cages, the
eggs have had no father. Tired of waiting and at last recognizing
the barrenness of their produce, they push the bag of eggs outside the
burrow and trouble about it no more. At the return of spring,
by which time the family, if developed according to rule, would have
been emancipated, they die. The mighty Spider of the waste-lands,
therefore, attains to an even more patriarchal age than her neighbour
the Sacred Beetle: <SPAN name="citation27"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote27">{27}</SPAN>
she lives for five years at the very least.</p>
<p>Let us leave the mothers to their business and return to the youngsters.
It is not without a certain surprise that we see the little Lycosae,
at the first moment of their emancipation, hasten to ascend the heights.
Destined to live on the ground, amidst the short grass, and afterwards
to settle in the permanent abode, a pit, they start by being enthusiastic
acrobats. Before descending to the low levels, their normal dwelling-place,
they affect lofty altitudes.</p>
<p>To rise higher and ever higher is their first need. I have
not, it seems, exhausted the limit of their climbing-instinct even with
a nine-foot pole, suitably furnished with branches to facilitate the
escalade. Those who have eagerly reached the very top wave their
legs, fumble in space as though for yet higher stalks. It behoves
us to begin again and under better conditions.</p>
<p>Although the Narbonne Lycosa, with her temporary yearning for the
heights, is more interesting than other Spiders, by reason of the fact
that her usual habitation is underground, she is not so striking at
swarming-time, because the youngsters, instead of all migrating at once,
leave the mother at different periods and in small batches. The
sight will be a finer one with the common Garden or Cross Spider, the
Diadem Epeira (<i>Epeira diadema</i>, LIN.), decorated with three white
crosses on her back.</p>
<p>She lays her eggs in November and dies with the first cold snap.
She is denied the Lycosa’s longevity. She leaves the natal
wallet early one spring and never sees the following spring. This
wallet, which contains the eggs, has none of the ingenious structure
which we admired in the Banded and in the Silky Epeira. No longer
do we see a graceful balloon-shape nor yet a paraboloid with a starry
base; no longer a tough, waterproof satin stuff; no longer a swan’s-down
resembling a fleecy, russet cloud; no longer an inner keg in which the
eggs are packed. The art of stout fabrics and of walls within
walls is unknown here.</p>
<p>The work of the Cross Spider is a pill of white silk, wrought into
a yielding felt, through which the new-born Spiders will easily work
their way, without the aid of the mother, long since dead, and without
having to rely upon its bursting at the given hour. It is about
the size of a damson.</p>
<p>We can judge the method of manufacture from the structure.
Like the Lycosa, whom we saw, in Chapter III., at work in one of my
earthenware pans, the Cross Spider, on the support supplied by a few
threads stretched between the nearest objects, begins by making a shallow
saucer of sufficient thickness to dispense with subsequent corrections.
The process is easily guessed. The tip of the abdomen goes up
and down, down and up with an even beat, while the worker shifts her
place a little. Each time, the spinnerets add a bit of thread
to the carpet already made.</p>
<p>When the requisite thickness is obtained, the mother empties her
ovaries, in one continuous flow, into the centre of the bowl.
Glued together by their inherent moisture, the eggs, of a handsome orange-yellow,
form a ball-shaped heap. The work of the spinnerets is resumed.
The ball of germs is covered with a silk cap, fashioned in the same
way as the saucer. The two halves of the work are so well joined
that the whole constitutes an unbroken sphere.</p>
<p>The Banded Epeira and the Silky Epeira, those experts in the manufacture
of rainproof textures, lay their eggs high up, on brushwood and bramble,
without shelter of any kind. The thick material of the wallets
is enough to protect the eggs from the inclemencies of the winter, especially
from damp. The Diadem Epeira, or Cross Spider, needs a cranny
for hers, which is contained in a non-waterproof felt. In a heap
of stones, well exposed to the sun, she will choose a large slab to
serve as a roof. She lodges her pill underneath it, in the company
of the hibernating Snail.</p>
<p>More often still, she prefers the thick tangle of some dwarf shrub,
standing eight or nine inches high and retaining its leaves in winter.
In the absence of anything better, a tuft of grass answers the purpose.
Whatever the hiding-place, the bag of eggs is always near the ground,
tucked away as well as may be, amid the surrounding twigs.</p>
<p>Save in the case of the roof supplied by a large stone, we see that
the site selected hardly satisfies proper hygienic needs. The
Epeira seems to realize this fact. By way of an additional protection,
even under a stone, she never fails to make a thatched roof for her
eggs. She builds them a covering with bits of fine, dry grass,
joined together with a little silk. The abode of the eggs becomes
a straw wigwam.</p>
<p>Good luck procures me two Cross Spiders’ nests, on the edge
of one of the paths in the enclosure, among some tufts of ground-cypress,
or lavender-cotton. This is just what I wanted for my plans.
The find is all the more valuable as the period of the exodus is near
at hand.</p>
<p>I prepare two lengths of bamboo, standing about fifteen feet high
and clustered with little twigs from top to bottom. I plant one
of them straight up in the tuft, beside the first nest. I clear
the surrounding ground, because the bushy vegetation might easily, thanks
to threads carried by the wind, divert the emigrants from the road which
I have laid out for them. The other bamboo I set up in the middle
of the yard, all by itself, some few steps from any outstanding object.
The second nest is removed as it is, shrub and all, and placed at the
bottom of the tall, ragged distaff.</p>
<p>The events expected are not long in coming. In the first fortnight
in May, a little earlier in one case, a little later in the other, the
two families, each presented with a bamboo climbing-pole, leave their
respective wallets. There is nothing remarkable about the mode
of egress. The precincts to be crossed consist of a very slack
net-work, through which the outcomers wriggle: weak little orange-yellow
beasties, with a triangular black patch upon their sterns. One
morning is long enough for the whole family to make its appearance.</p>
<p>By degrees, the emancipated youngsters climb the nearest twigs, clamber
to the top, and spread a few threads. Soon, they gather in a compact,
ball-shaped cluster, the size of a walnut. They remain motionless.
With their heads plunged into the heap and their sterns projecting,
they doze gently, mellowing under the kisses of the sun. Rich
in the possession of a thread in their belly as their sole inheritance,
they prepare to disperse over the wide world.</p>
<p>Let us create a disturbance among the globular group by stirring
it with a straw. All wake up at once. The cluster softly
dilates and spreads, as though set in motion by some centrifugal force;
it becomes a transparent orb wherein thousands and thousands of tiny
legs quiver and shake, while threads are extended along the way to be
followed. The whole work resolves itself into a delicate veil
which swallows up the scattered family. We then see an exquisite
nebula against whose opalescent tapestry the tiny animals gleam like
twinkling orange stars.</p>
<p>This straggling state, though it last for hours, is but temporary.
If the air grow cooler, if rain threaten, the spherical group reforms
at once. This is a protective measure. On the morning after
a shower, I find the families on either bamboo in as good condition
as on the day before. The silk veil and the pill formation have
sheltered them well enough from the downpour. Even so do Sheep,
when caught in a storm in the pastures, gather close, huddle together
and make a common rampart of their backs.</p>
<p>The assembly into a ball-shaped mass is also the rule in calm, bright
weather, after the morning’s exertions. In the afternoon,
the climbers collect at a higher point, where they weave a wide, conical
tent, with the end of a shoot for its top, and, gathered into a compact
group, spend the night there. Next day, when the heat returns,
the ascent is resumed in long files, following the shrouds which a few
pioneers have rigged and which those who come after elaborate with their
own work.</p>
<p>Collected nightly into a globular troop and sheltered under a fresh
tent, for three or four days, each morning, before the sun grows too
hot, my little emigrants thus raise themselves, stage by stage, on both
bamboos, until they reach the sun-unit, at fifteen feet above the ground.
The climb comes to an end for lack of foothold.</p>
<p>Under normal conditions, the ascent would be shorter. The young
Spiders have at their disposal the bushes, the brushwood, providing
supports on every side for the threads wafted hither and thither by
the eddying air-currents. With these rope-bridges flung across
space, the dispersal presents no difficulties. Each emigrant leaves
at his own good time and travels as suits him best.</p>
<p>My devices have changed these conditions somewhat. My two bristling
poles stand at a distance from the surrounding shrubs, especially the
one which I planted in the middle of the yard. Bridges are out
of the question, for the threads flung into the air are not long enough.
And so the acrobats, eager to get away, keep on climbing, never come
down again, are impelled to seek in a higher position what they have
failed to find in a lower. The top of my two bamboos probably
fails to represent the limit of what my keen climbers are capable of
achieving.</p>
<p>We shall see, in a moment, the object of this climbing-propensity,
which is a sufficiently remarkable instinct in the Garden Spiders, who
have as their domain the low-growing brushwood wherein their nets are
spread; it becomes a still more remarkable instinct in the Lycosa, who,
except at the moment when she leaves her mother’s back, never
quits the ground and yet, in the early hours of her life, shows herself
as ardent a wooer of high places as the young Garden Spiders.</p>
<p>Let us consider the Lycosa in particular. In her, at the moment
of the exodus, a sudden instinct arises, to disappear, as promptly and
for ever, a few hours later. This is the climbing-instinct, which
is unknown to the adult and soon forgotten by the emancipated youngling,
doomed to wander homeless, for many a long day, upon the ground.
Neither of them dreams of climbing to the top of a grass-stalk.
The full-grown Spider hunts trapper-fashion, ambushed in her tower;
the young one hunts afoot through the scrubby grass. In both cases
there is no web and therefore no need for lofty contact-points.
They are not allowed to quit the ground and climb the heights.</p>
<p>Yet here we have the young Lycosa, wishing to leave the maternal
abode and to travel far afield by the easiest and swiftest methods,
suddenly becoming an enthusiastic climber. Impetuously she scales
the wire trellis of the cage where she was born; hurriedly she clambers
to the top of the tall mast which I have prepared for her. In
the same way, she would make for the summit of the bushes in her waste-land.</p>
<p>We catch a glimpse of her object. From on high, finding a wide
space beneath her, she sends a thread floating. It is caught by
the wind and carries her hanging to it. We have our aeroplanes;
she too possesses her flying-machine. Once the journey is accomplished,
naught remains of this ingenious business. The climbing-instinct
conies suddenly, at the hour of need, and no less suddenly vanishes.</p>
<h2>CHAPTER VII: THE SPIDERS’ EXODUS</h2>
<p>Seeds, when ripened in the fruit, are disseminated, that is to say,
scattered on the surface of the ground, to sprout in spots as yet unoccupied
and fill the expanses that realize favourable conditions.</p>
<p>Amid the wayside rubbish grows one of the gourd family, <i>Ecbalium
elaterium</i>, commonly called the squirting cucumber, whose fruit—a
rough and extremely bitter little cucumber—is the size of a date.
When ripe, the fleshy core resolves into a liquid in which float the
seeds. Compressed by the elastic rind of the fruit, this liquid
bears upon the base of the footstalk, which is gradually forced out,
yields like a stopper, breaks off and leaves an orifice through which
a stream of seeds and fluid pulp is suddenly ejected. If, with
a novice hand, under a scorching sun, you shake the plant laden with
yellow fruit, you are bound to be somewhat startled when you hear a
noise among the leaves and receive the cucumber’s grapeshot in
your face.</p>
<p>The fruit of the garden balsam, when ripe, splits, at the least touch,
into five fleshy valves, which curl up and shoot their seeds to a distance.
The botanical name of <i>Impatiens</i> given to the balsam alludes to
this sudden dehiscence of the capsules, which cannot endure contact
without bursting.</p>
<p>In the damp and shady places of the woods there exists a plant of
the same family which, for similar reasons, bears the even more expressive
name of <i>Impatiens noli-me-tangere</i>, or touch-me-not.</p>
<p>The capsule of the pansy expands into three valves, each scooped
out like a boat and laden in the middle with two rows of seeds.
When these valves dry, the edges shrivel, press upon the grains and
eject them.</p>
<p>Light seeds, especially those of the order of Compositae, have aeronautic
apparatus—tufts, plumes, fly-wheels—which keep them up in
the air and enable them to take distant voyages. In this way,
at the least breath, the seeds of the dandelion, surmounted by a tuft
of feathers, fly from their dry receptacle and waft gently in the air.</p>
<p>Next to the tuft, the wing is the most satisfactory contrivance for
dissemination by wind. Thanks to their membranous edge, which
gives them the appearance of thin scales, the seeds of the yellow wall-flower
reach high cornices of buildings, clefts of inaccessible rocks, crannies
in old walls, and sprout in the remnant of mould bequeathed by the mosses
that were there before them.</p>
<p>The samaras, or keys, of the elm, formed of a broad, light fan with
the seed cased in its centre; those of the maple, joined in pairs and
resembling the unfurled wings of a bird; those of the ash, carved like
the blade of an oar, perform the most distant journeys when driven before
the storm.</p>
<p>Like the plant, the insect also sometimes possesses travelling-apparatus,
means of dissemination that allow large families to disperse quickly
over the country, so that each member may have his place in the sun
without injuring his neighbour; and these apparatus, these methods vie
in ingenuity with the elm’s samara, the dandelion-plume and the
catapult of the squirting cucumber.</p>
<p>Let us consider, in particular, the Epeirae, those magnificent Spiders
who, to catch their prey, stretch, between one bush and the next, great
vertical sheets of meshes, resembling those of the fowler. The
most remarkable in my district is the Banded Epeira (<i>Epeira fasciata</i>,
WALCK.), so prettily belted with yellow, black and silvery white.
Her nest, a marvel of gracefulness, is a satin bag, shaped like a tiny
pear. Its neck ends in a concave mouthpiece closed with a lid,
also of satin. Brown ribbons, in fanciful meridian waves, adorn
the object from pole to pole.</p>
<p>Open the nest. We have seen, in an earlier chapter, <SPAN name="citation28"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote28">{28}</SPAN>
what we find there; let us retell the story. Under the outer wrapper,
which is as stout as our woven stuffs and, moreover, perfectly waterproof,
is a russet eiderdown of exquisite delicacy, a silky fluff resembling
driven smoke. Nowhere does mother-love prepare a softer bed.</p>
<p>In the middle of this downy mass hangs a fine, silk, thimble-shaped
purse, closed with a movable lid. This contains the eggs, of a
pretty orange-yellow and about five hundred in number.</p>
<p>All things considered, is not this charming edifice an animal fruit,
a germ-casket, a capsule to be compared with that of the plants?
Only, the Epeira’s wallet, instead of seeds, holds eggs.
The difference is more apparent than real, for egg and grain are one.</p>
<p>How will this living fruit, ripening in the heat beloved of the Cicadae,
manage to burst? How, above all, will dissemination take place?
They are there in their hundreds. They must separate, go far away,
isolate themselves in a spot where there is not too much fear of competition
among neighbours. How will they set to work to achieve this distant
exodus, weaklings that they are, taking such very tiny steps?</p>
<p>I receive the first answer from another and much earlier Epeira,
whose family I find, at the beginning of May, on a yucca in the enclosure.
The plant blossomed last year. The branching flower-stem, some
three feet high, still stands erect, though withered. On the green
leaves, shaped like a sword-blade, swarm two newly-hatched families.
The wee beasties are a dull yellow, with a triangular black patch upon
their stern. Later on, three white crosses, ornamenting the back,
will tell me that my find corresponds with the Cross or Diadem Spider
(<i>Epeira diadema</i>, WALCK.).</p>
<p>When the sun reaches this part of the enclosure, one of the two groups
falls into a great state of flutter. Nimble acrobats that they
are, the little Spiders scramble up, one after the other, and reach
the top of the stem. Here, marches and countermarches, tumult
and confusion reign, for there is a slight breeze which throws the troop
into disorder. I see no connected manoeuvres. From the top
of the stalk they set out at every moment, one by one; they dart off
suddenly; they fly away, so to speak. It is as though they had
the wings of a Gnat.</p>
<p>Forthwith they disappear from view. Nothing that my eyes can
see explains this strange flight; for precise observation is impossible
amid the disturbing influences out of doors. What is wanted is
a peaceful atmosphere and the quiet of my study.</p>
<p>I gather the family in a large box, which I close at once, and instal
it in the animals’ laboratory, on a small table, two steps from
the open window. Apprised by what I have just seen of their propensity
to resort to the heights, I give my subjects a bundle of twigs, eighteen
inches tall, as a climbing-pole. The whole band hurriedly clambers
up and reaches the top. In a few moments there is not one lacking
in the group on high. The future will tell us the reason of this
assemblage on the projecting tips of the twigs.</p>
<p>The little Spiders are now spinning here and there at random: they
go up, go down, come up again. Thus is woven a light veil of divergent
threads, a many-cornered web with the end of the branch for its summit
and the edge of the table for its base, some eighteen inches wide.
This veil is the drill-ground, the work-yard where the preparations
for departure are made.</p>
<p>Here hasten the humble little creatures, running indefatigably to
and fro. When the sun shines upon them, they become gleaming specks
and form upon the milky background of the veil a sort of constellation,
a reflex of those remote points in the sky where the telescope shows
us endless galaxies of stars. The immeasurably small and the immeasurably
large are alike in appearance. It is all a matter of distance.</p>
<p>But the living nebula is not composed of fixed stars; on the contrary,
its specks are in continual movement. The young Spiders never
cease shifting their position on the web. Many let themselves
drop, hanging by a length of thread, which the faller’s weight
draws from the spinnerets. Then quickly they climb up again by
the same thread, which they wind gradually into a skein and lengthen
by successive falls. Others confine themselves to running about
the web and also give me the impression of working at a bundle of ropes.</p>
<p>The thread, as a matter of fact, does not flow from the spinneret;
it is drawn thence with a certain effort. It is a case of extraction,
not emission. To obtain her slender cord, the Spider has to move
about and haul, either by falling or by walking, even as the rope-maker
steps backwards when working his hemp. The activity now displayed
on the drill-ground is a preparation for the approaching dispersal.
The travellers are packing up.</p>
<p>Soon we see a few Spiders trotting briskly between the table and
the open window. They are running in mid-air. But on what?
If the light fall favourably, I manage to see, at moments, behind the
tiny animal, a thread resembling a ray of light, which appears for an
instant, gleams and disappears. Behind, therefore, there is a
mooring, only just perceptible, if you look very carefully; but, in
front, towards the window, there is nothing to be seen at all.</p>
<p>In vain I examine above, below, at the side; in vain I vary the direction
of the eye: I can distinguish no support for the little creature to
walk upon. One would think that the beastie were paddling in space.
It suggests the idea of a small bird, tied by the leg with a thread
and making a flying rush forwards.</p>
<p>But, in this case, appearances are deceptive: flight is impossible;
the Spider must necessarily have a bridge whereby to cross the intervening
space. This bridge, which I cannot see, I can at least destroy.
I cleave the air with a ruler in front of the Spider making for the
window. That is quite enough: the tiny animal at once ceases to
go forward and falls. The invisible foot-plank is broken.
My son, young Paul, who is helping me, is astounded at this wave of
the magic wand, for not even he, with his fresh, young eyes, is able
to see a support ahead for the Spiderling to move along.</p>
<p>In the rear, on the other hand, a thread is visible. The difference
is easily explained. Every Spider, as she goes, at the same time
spins a safety-cord which will guard the rope-walker against the risk
of an always possible fall. In the rear, therefore, the thread
is of double thickness and can be seen, whereas, in front, it is still
single and hardly perceptible to the eye.</p>
<p>Obviously, this invisible foot-bridge is not flung out by the animal:
it is carried and unrolled by a gust of air. The Epeira, supplied
with this line, lets it float freely; and the wind, however softly blowing,
bears it along and unwinds it. Even so is the smoke from the bowl
of a pipe whirled up in the air.</p>
<p>This floating thread has but to touch any object in the neighbourhood
and it will remain fixed to it. The suspension-bridge is thrown;
and the Spider can set out. The South-American Indians are said
to cross the abysses of the Cordilleras in travelling-cradles made of
twisted creepers; the little Spider passes through space on the invisible
and the imponderable.</p>
<p>But to carry the end of the floating thread elsewhither a draught
is needed. At this moment, the draught exists between the door
of my study and the window, both of which are open. It is so slight
that I do not feel its; I only know of it by the smoke from my pipe,
curling softly in that direction. Cold air enters from without
through the door; warm air escapes from the room through the window.
This is the drought that carries the threads with it and enables the
Spiders to embark upon their journey.</p>
<p>I get rid of it by closing both apertures and I break off any communication
by passing my ruler between the window and the table. Henceforth,
in the motionless atmosphere, there are no departures. The current
of air is missing, the skeins are not unwound and migration becomes
impossible.</p>
<p>It is soon resumed, but in a direction whereof I never dreamt.
The hot sun is beating on a certain part of the floor. At this
spot, which is warmer than the rest, a column of lighter, ascending
air is generated. If this column catch the threads, my Spiders
ought to rise to the ceiling of the room.</p>
<p>The curious ascent does, in fact, take place. Unfortunately,
my troop, which has been greatly reduced by the number of departures
through the window, does not lend itself to prolonged experiment.
We must begin again.</p>
<p>The next morning, on the same yucca, I gather the second family,
as numerous as the first. Yesterday’s preparations are repeated.
My legion of Spiders first weaves a divergent framework between the
top of the brushwood placed at the emigrants’ disposal and the
edge of the table. Five or six hundred wee beasties swarm all
over this work-yard.</p>
<p>While this little world is busily fussing, making its arrangements
for departure, I make my own. Every aperture in the room is closed,
so as to obtain as calm an atmosphere as possible. A small chafing-dish
is lit at the foot of the table. My hands cannot feel the heat
of it at the level of the web whereon my Spiders are weaving.
This is the very modest fire which, with its column of rising air, shall
unwind the threads and carry them on high.</p>
<p>Let us first enquire the direction and strength of the current.
Dandelion-plumes, made lighter by the removal of their seeds, serve
as my guides. Released above the chafing-dish, on the level of
the table, they float slowly upwards and, for the most part, reach the
ceiling. The emigrants’ lines should rise in the same way
and even better.</p>
<p>The thing is done: with the aid of nothing that is visible to the
three of us looking on, a Spider makes her ascent. She ambles
with her eight legs through the air; she mounts, gently swaying.
The others, in ever-increasing numbers, follow, sometimes by different
roads, sometimes by the same road. Any one who did not possess
the secret would stand amazed at this magic ascent without a ladder.
In a few minutes, most of them are up, clinging to the ceiling.</p>
<p>Not all of them reach it. I see some who, on attaining a certain
height, cease to go up and even lose ground, although moving their legs
forward with all the nimbleness of which they are capable. The
more they struggle upwards, the faster they come down. This drifting,
which neutralizes the distance covered and even converts it into a retrogression,
is easily explained.</p>
<p>The thread has not reached the platform; it floats, it is fixed only
at the lower end. As long as it is of a fair length, it is able,
although moving, to bear the minute animal’s weight. But,
as the Spider climbs, the float becomes shorter in proportion; and the
time comes when a balance is struck between the ascensional force of
the thread and the weight carried. Then the beastie remains stationary,
although continuing to climb.</p>
<p>Presently, the weight becomes too much for the shorter and shorter
float; and the Spider slips down, in spite of her persistent, forward
striving. She is at last brought back to the branch by the falling
threads. Here, the ascent is soon renewed, either on a fresh thread,
if the supply of silk be not yet exhausted, or on a strange thread,
the work, of those who have gone before.</p>
<p>As a rule, the ceiling is reached. It is twelve feet high.
The little Spider is able, therefore, as the first product of her spinning-mill,
before taking any refreshment, to obtain a line fully twelve feet in
length. And all this, the rope-maker and her rope, was contained
in the egg, a particle of no size at all. To what a degree of
fineness can the silky matter be wrought wherewith the young Spider
is provided! Our manufacturers are able to turn out platinum-wire
that can only be seen when it is made red-hot. With much simpler
means, the Spiderling draws from her wire-mill threads so delicate that,
even the brilliant light of the sun does not always enable us to discern
them.</p>
<p>We must not let all the climbers be stranded on the ceiling, an inhospitable
region where most of them will doubtless perish, being unable to produce
a second thread before they have had a meal. I open the window.
A current of lukewarm air, coming from the chafing-dish, escapes through
the top. Dandelion-plumes, taking that direction, tell me so.
The wafting threads cannot fail to be carried by this flow of air and
to lengthen out in the open, where a light breeze is blowing.</p>
<p>I take a pair of sharp scissors and, without shaking the threads,
cut a few that are just visible at the base, where they are thickened
with an added strand. The result of this operation is marvellous.
Hanging to the flying-rope, which is borne on the wind outside, the
Spider passes through the window, suddenly flies off and disappears.
An easy way of travelling, if the conveyance possessed a rudder that
allowed the passenger to land where he pleases! But the little
things are at the mercy of the winds: where will they alight?
Hundreds, thousands of yards away, perhaps. Let us wish them a
prosperous journey.</p>
<p>The problem of dissemination is now solved. What would happen
if matters, instead of being brought about by my wiles, took place in
the open fields? The answer is obvious. The young Spiders,
born acrobats and rope-walkers, climb to the top of a branch so as to
find sufficient space below them to unfurl their apparatus. Here,
each draws from her rope-factory a thread which she abandons to the
eddies of the air. Gently raised by the currents that ascend from
the ground warmed by the sun, this thread wafts upwards, floats, undulates,
makes for its point of contact. At last, it breaks and vanishes
in the distance, carrying the spinstress hanging to it.</p>
<p>The Epeira with the three white crosses, the Spider who has supplied
us with these first data concerning the process of dissemination, is
endowed with a moderate maternal industry. As a receptacle for
the eggs, she weaves a mere pill of silk. Her work is modest indeed
beside the Banded Epeira’s balloons. I looked to these to
supply me with fuller documents. I had laid up a store by rearing
some mothers during the autumn. So that nothing of importance
might escape me, I divided my stock of balloons, most of which were
woven before my eyes, into two sections. One half remained in
my study, under a wire-gauze cover, with, small bunches of brushwood
as supports; the other half were experiencing the vicissitudes of open-air
life on the rosemaries in the enclosure.</p>
<p>These preparations, which promised so well, did not provide me with
the sight which I expected, namely, a magnificent exodus, worthy of
the tabernacle occupied. However, a few results, not devoid of
interest, are to be noted. Let us state them briefly.</p>
<p>The hatching takes place as March approaches. When this time
comes, let us open the Banded Epeira’s nest with the scissors.
We shall find that some of the youngsters have already left the central
chamber and scattered over the surrounding eiderdown, while the rest
of the laying still consists of a compact mass of orange eggs.
The appearance of the younglings is not simultaneous; it takes place
with intermissions and may last a couple of weeks.</p>
<p>Nothing as yet suggests the future, richly-striped livery.
The abdomen is white and, as it were, floury in the front half; in the
other half it is a blackish-brown. The rest of the body is pale-yellow,
except in front, where the eyes form a black edging. When left
alone, the little ones remain motionless in the soft, russet swan’s-down;
if disturbed, they shuffle lazily where they are, or even walk about
in a hesitating and unsteady fashion. One can see that they have
to ripen before venturing outside.</p>
<p>Maturity is achieved in the exquisite floss that surrounds the natal
chamber and fills out the balloon. This is the waiting-room in
which the body hardens. All dive into it as and when they emerge
from the central keg. They will not leave it until four months
later, when the midsummer heats have come.</p>
<p>Their number is considerable. A patient and careful census
gives me nearly six hundred. And all this comes out of a purse
no larger than a pea. By what miracle is there room for such a
family? How do those thousands of legs manage to grow without
straining themselves?</p>
<p>The egg-bag, as we learnt in Chapter II., is a short cylinder rounded
at the bottom. It is formed of compact white satin, an insuperable
barrier. It opens into a round orifice wherein is bedded a lid
of the same material, through which the feeble beasties would be incapable
of passing. It is not a porous felt, but a fabric as tough as
that of the sack. Then by what mechanism is the delivery effected?</p>
<p>Observe that the disk of the lid doubles back into a short fold,
which edges into the orifice of the bag. In the same way, the
lid of a saucepan fits the mouth by means of a projecting rim, with
this difference, that the rim is not attached to the saucepan, whereas,
in the Epeira’s work, it is soldered to the bag or nest.
Well, at the time of the hatching, this disk becomes unstuck, lifts
and allows the new-born Spiders to pass through.</p>
<p>If the rim were movable and simply inserted, if, moreover, the birth
of all the family took place at the same time, we might think that the
door is forced open by the living wave of inmates, who would set their
backs to it with a common effort. We should find an approximate
image in the case of the saucepan, whose lid is raised by the boiling
of its contents. But the fabric of the cover is one with the fabric
of the bag, the two are closely welded; besides, the hatching is effected
in small batches, incapable of the least exertion. There must,
therefore, be a spontaneous bursting, or dehiscence, independent of
the assistance of the youngsters and similar to that of the seed-pods
of plants.</p>
<p>When fully ripened, the dry fruit of the snap-dragon opens three
windows; that of the pimpernel splits into two rounded halves, something
like those of the outer case of a fob-watch; the fruit of the carnation
partly unseals its valves and opens at the top into a star-shaped hatch.
Each seed-casket has its own system of locks, which are made to work
smoothly by the mere kiss of the sun.</p>
<p>Well, that other dry fruit, the Banded Epeira’s germ-box, likewise
possesses its bursting-gear. As long as the eggs remain unhatched,
the door, solidly fixed in its frame, holds good; as soon as the little
ones swarm and want to get out, it opens of itself.</p>
<p>Come June and July, beloved of the Cicadae, no less beloved of the
young Spiders who are anxious to be off. It were difficult indeed
for them to work their way through the thick shell of the balloon.
For the second time, a spontaneous dehiscence seems called for.
Where will it be effected?</p>
<p>The idea occurs off-hand that it will take place along the edges
of the top cover. Remember the details given in an earlier chapter.
The neck of the balloon ends in a wide crater, which is closed by a
ceiling dug out cup-wise. The material is as stout in this part
as in any other; but, as the lid was the finishing touch to the work,
we expect to find an incomplete soldering, which would allow it to be
unfastened.</p>
<p>The method of construction deceives us: the ceiling is immovable;
at no season can my forceps manage to extract it, without destroying
the building from top to bottom. The dehiscence takes place elsewhere,
at some point on the sides. Nothing informs us, nothing suggests
to us that it will occur at one place rather than another.</p>
<p>Moreover, to tell the truth, it is not a dehiscence prepared by means
of some dainty piece of mechanism; it is a very irregular tear.
Somewhat sharply, under the fierce heat of the sun, the satin bursts
like the rind of an over-ripe pomegranate. Judging by the result,
we think of the expansion of the air inside, which, heated by the sun,
causes this rupture. The signs of pressure from within are manifest:
the tatters of the torn fabric are turned outwards; also, a wisp of
the russet eiderdown that fills the wallet invariably straggles through
the breach. In the midst of the protruding floss, the Spiderlings,
expelled from their home by the explosion, are in frantic commotion.</p>
<p>The balloons of the Banded Epeira are bombs which, to free their
contents, burst under the rays of a torrid sun. To break they
need the fiery heat-waves of the dog-days. When kept in the moderate
atmosphere of my study, most of them do not open and the emergence of
the young does not take place, unless I myself I have a hand in the
business; a few others open with a round hole, a hole so neat that it
might have been made with a punch. This aperture is the work of
the prisoners, who, relieving one another in turns, have, with a patient
tooth, bitten through the stuff of the jar at some point or other.</p>
<p>When exposed to the full force of the sun, however, on the rosemaries
in the enclosure, the balloons burst and shoot forth a ruddy flood of
floss and tiny animals. That is how things occur in the free sun-bath
of the fields. Unsheltered, among the bushes, the wallet of the
Banded Epeira, when the July heat arrives, splits under the effort of
the inner air. The delivery is effected by an explosion of the
dwelling.</p>
<p>A very small part of the family are expelled with the flow of tawny
floss; the vast majority remain in the bag, which is ripped open, but
still bulges with eiderdown. Now that the breach is made, any
one can go out who pleases, in his own good time, without hurrying.
Besides, a solemn action has to be performed before the emigration.
The animal must cast its skin; and the moult is an event that does not
fall on the same date for all. The evacuation of the place, therefore,
lasts several days. It is effected in small squads, as the slough
is flung aside.</p>
<p>Those who sally forth climb up the neighbouring twigs and there,
in the full heat of the sun, proceed with the work of dissemination.
The method is the same as that which we saw in the case of the Cross
Spider. The spinnerets abandon to the breeze a thread that floats,
breaks and flies away, carrying the rope-maker with it. The number
of starters on any one morning is so small as to rob the spectacle of
the greater part of its interest. The scene lacks animation because
of the absence of a crowd.</p>
<p>To my intense disappointment, the Silky Epeira does not either indulge
in a tumultuous and dashing exodus. Let me remind you of her handiwork,
the handsomest of the maternal wallets, next to the Banded Epeira’s.
It is an obtuse conoid, closed with a star-shaped disk. It is
made of a stouter and especially a thicker material than the Banded
Epeira’s balloon, for which reason a spontaneous rupture becomes
more necessary than ever.</p>
<p>This rupture is effected at the sides of the bag, not far from the
edge of the lid. Like the ripping of the balloon, it requires
the rough aid of the heat of July. Its mechanism also seems to
work by the expansion of the heated air, for we again see a partial
emission of the silky floss that fills the pouch.</p>
<p>The exit of the family is performed in a single group and, this time,
before the moult, perhaps for lack of the space necessary for the delicate
casting of the skin. The conical bag falls far short of the balloon
in size; those packed within would sprain their legs in extracting them
from their sheaths. The family, therefore, emerges in a body and
settles on a sprig hard by.</p>
<p>This is a temporary camping-ground, where, spinning in unison, the
youngsters soon weave an open-work tent, the abode of a week, or thereabouts.
The moult is effected in this lounge of intersecting threads.
The sloughed skins form a heap at the bottom of the dwelling; on the
trapezes above, the flaylings take exercise and gain strength and vigour.
Finally, when maturity is attained, they set out, now these, now those,
little by little and always cautiously. There are no audacious
flights on the thready airship; the journey is accomplished by modest
stages.</p>
<p>Hanging to her thread, the Spider lets herself drop straight down,
to a depth of nine or ten inches. A breath of air sets her swinging
like a pendulum, sometimes drives her against a neighbouring branch.
This is a step towards the dispersal. At the point reached, there
is a fresh fall, followed by a fresh pendulous swing that lands her
a little farther afield. Thus, in short tacks, for the thread
is never very long, does the Spiderling go about, seeing the country,
until she comes to a place that suits her. Should the wind blow
at all hard, the voyage is cut short: the cable of the pendulum breaks
and the beastie is carried for some distance on its cord.</p>
<p>To sum up, although, on the whole, the tactics of the exodus remain
much the same, the two spinstresses of my region best-versed in the
art of weaving mothers’ wallets failed to come up to my expectations.
I went to the trouble of rearing them, with disappointing results.
Where shall I find again the wonderful spectacle which the Cross Spider
offered me by chance? I shall find it—in an even more striking
fashion—among humbler Spiders, whom I had neglected to observe.</p>
<h2>CHAPTER VIII: THE CRAB SPIDER</h2>
<p>The Spider that showed me the exodus in all its magnificence is known
officially as <i>Thomisus onustus</i>, WALCK. Though the name
suggest nothing to the reader’s mind, it has the advantage, at
any rate, of hurting neither the throat nor the ear, as is too often
the case with scientific nomenclature, which sounds more like sneezing
than articulate speech. Since it is the rule to dignify plants
and animals with a Latin label, let us at least respect the euphony
of the classics and refrain from harsh splutters which spit out a name
instead of pronouncing it.</p>
<p>What will posterity do in face of the rising tide of a barbarous
vocabulary which, under the pretence of progress, stifles real knowledge?
It will relegate the whole business to the quagmire of oblivion.
But what will never disappear is the popular name, which sounds well,
is picturesque and conveys some sort of information. Such is the
term Crab Spider, applied by the ancients to the group to which the
Thomisus belongs, a pretty accurate term, for, in this case, there is
an evident analogy between the Spider and the Crustacean.</p>
<p>Like the Crab, the Thomisus walks sideways; she also has forelegs
stronger than her hind-legs. The only thing wanting to complete
the resemblance is the front pair of stone gauntlets, raised in the
attitude of self-defence.</p>
<p>The Spider with the Crab-like figure does not know how to manufacture
nets for catching game. Without springs or snares, she lies in
ambush, among the flowers, and awaits the arrival of the quarry, which
she kills by administering a scientific stab in the neck. The
Thomisus, in particular, the subject of this chapter, is passionately
addicted to the pursuit of the Domestic Bee. I have described
the contests between the victim and her executioner, at greater length,
elsewhere.</p>
<p>The Bee appears, seeking no quarrel, intent upon plunder. She
tests the flowers with her tongue; she selects a spot that will yield
a good return. Soon she is wrapped up in her harvesting.
While she is filling her baskets and distending her crop, the Thomisus,
that bandit lurking under cover of the flowers, issues from her hiding-place,
creeps round behind the bustling insect, steals up close and, with a
sudden rush, nabs her in the nape of the neck. In vain, the Bee
protests and darts her sting at random; the assailant does not let go.</p>
<p>Besides, the bite in the neck is paralysing, because the cervical
nerve-centres are affected. The poor thing’s legs stiffen;
and all is over in a second. The murderess now sucks the victim’s
blood at her ease and, when she has done, scornfully flings the drained
corpse aside. She hides herself once more, ready to bleed a second
gleaner should the occasion offer.</p>
<p>This slaughter of the Bee engaged in the hallowed delights of labour
has always revolted me. Why should there be workers to feed idlers,
why sweated to keep sweaters in luxury? Why should so many admirable
lives be sacrificed to the greater prosperity of brigandage? These
hateful discords amid the general harmony perplex the thinker, all the
more as we shall see the cruel vampire become a model of devotion where
her family is concerned.</p>
<p>The ogre loved his children; he ate the children of others.
Under the tyranny of the stomach, we are all of us, beasts and men alike,
ogres. The dignity of labour, the joy of life, maternal affection,
the terrors of death: all these do not count, in others; the main point
is that morsel the be tender and savoury.</p>
<p>According to the etymology of her name—θωμιγξ,
a cord—the Thomisus should be like the ancient lictor, who bound
the sufferer to the stake. The comparison is not inappropriate
as regards many Spiders who tie their prey with a thread to subdue it
and consume it at their ease; but it just happens that the Thomisus
is at variance with her label. She does not fasten her Bee, who,
dying suddenly of a bite in the neck, offers no resistance to her consumer.
Carried away by his recollection of the regular tactics, our Spider’s
godfather overlooked the exception; he did not know of the perfidious
mode of attack which renders the use of a bow-string superfluous.</p>
<p>Nor is the second name of <i>onustus</i>—loaded, burdened,
freighted—any too happily chosen. The fact that the Bee-huntress
carries a heavy paunch is no reason to refer to this as a distinctive
characteristic. Nearly all Spiders have a voluminous belly, a
silk-warehouse where, in some cases, the rigging of the net, in others,
the swan’s-down of the nest is manufactured. The Thomisus,
a first-class nest-builder, does like the rest: she hoards in her abdomen,
but without undue display of obesity, the wherewithal to house her family
snugly.</p>
<p>Can the expression <i>onustus</i> refer simply to her slow and sidelong
walk? The explanation appeals to me, without satisfying me fully.
Except in the case of a sudden alarm, every Spider maintains a sober
gait and a wary pace. When all is said, the scientific term is
composed of a misconception and a worthless epithet. How difficult
it is to name animals rationally! Let us be indulgent to the nomenclator:
the dictionary is becoming exhausted and the constant flood that requires
cataloguing mounts incessantly, wearing out our combinations of syllables.</p>
<p>As the technical name tells the reader nothing, how shall he be informed?
I see but one means, which is to invite him to the May festivals, in
the waste-lands of the South. The murderess of the Bees is of
a chilly constitution; in our parts, she hardly ever moves away from
the olive-districts. Her favourite shrub is the white-leaved rock-rose
(<i>Cistus albidus</i>), with the large, pink, crumpled, ephemeral blooms
that last but a morning and are replaced, next day, by fresh flowers,
which have blossomed in the cool dawn. This glorious efflorescence
goes on for five or six weeks.</p>
<p>Here, the Bees plunder enthusiastically, fussing and bustling in
the spacious whorl of the stamens, which beflour them with yellow.
Their persecutrix knows of this affluence. She posts herself in
her watch-house, under the rosy screen of a petal. Cast your eyes
over the flower, more or less everywhere. If you see a Bee lying
lifeless, with legs and tongue out-stretched, draw nearer: the Thomisus
will be there, nine times out of ten. The thug has struck her
blow; she is draining the blood of the departed.</p>
<p>After all, this cutter of Bees’ throats is a pretty, a very
pretty creature, despite her unwieldy paunch fashioned like a squat
pyramid and embossed on the base, on either side, with a pimple shaped
like a camel’s hump. The skin, more pleasing to the eye
than any satin, is milk-white in some, in others lemon-yellow.
There are fine ladies among them who adorn their legs with a number
of pink bracelets and their back with carmine arabesques. A narrow
pale-green ribbon sometimes edges the right and left of the breast.
It is not so rich as the costume of the Banded Epeira, but much more
elegant because of its soberness, its daintiness and the artful blending
of its hues. Novice fingers, which shrink from touching any other
Spider, allow themselves to be enticed by these attractions; they do
not fear to handle the beauteous Thomisus, so gentle in appearance.</p>
<p>Well, what can this gem among Spiders do? In the first place,
she makes a nest worthy of its architect. With twigs and horse-hair
and bits of wool, the Goldfinch, the Chaffinch and other masters of
the builder’s art construct an aerial bower in the fork of the
branches. Herself a lover of high places, the Thomisus selects
as the site of her nest one of the upper twigs of the rock-rose, her
regular hunting-ground, a twig withered by the heat and possessing a
few dead leaves, which curl into a little cottage. This is where
she settles with a view to her eggs.</p>
<p>Ascending and descending with a gentle swing in more or less every
direction, the living shuttle, swollen with silk, weaves a bag whose
outer casing becomes one with the dry leaves around. The work,
which is partly visible and partly hidden by its supports, is a pure
dead-white. Its shape, moulded in the angular interval between
the bent leaves, is that of a cone and reminds us, on a smaller scale,
of the nest of the Silky Epeira.</p>
<p>When the eggs are laid, the mouth of the receptacle is hermetically
closed with a lid of the same white silk. Lastly, a few threads,
stretched like a thin curtain, form a canopy above the nest and, with
the curved tips of the leaves, frame a sort of alcove wherein the mother
takes up her abode.</p>
<p>It is more than a place of rest after the fatigues of her confinement:
it is a guard-room, an inspection-post where the mother remains sprawling
until the youngsters’ exodus. Greatly emaciated by the laying
of her eggs and by her expenditure of silk, she lives only for the protection
of her nest.</p>
<p>Should some vagrant pass near by, she hurries from her watch-tower,
lifts a limb and puts the intruder to flight. If I tease her with
a straw, she parries with big gestures, like those of a prize-fighter.
She uses her fists against my weapon. When I propose to dislodge
her in view of certain experiments, I find some difficulty in doing
so. She clings to the silken floor, she frustrates my attacks,
which I am bound to moderate lest I should injure her. She is
no sooner attracted outside than she stubbornly returns to her post.
She declines to leave her treasure.</p>
<p>Even so does the Narbonne Lycosa struggle when we try to take away
her pill. Each displays the same pluck and the same devotion;
and also the same denseness in distinguishing her property from that
of others. The Lycosa accepts without hesitation any strange pill
which she is, given in exchange for her own; she confuses alien produce
with the produce of her ovaries and her silk-factory. Those hallowed
words, maternal love, were out of place here: it is an impetuous, an
almost mechanical impulse, wherein real affection plays no part whatever.
The beautiful Spider of the rock-roses is no more generously endowed.
When moved from her nest to another of the same kind, she settles upon
it and never stirs from it, even though the different arrangement of
the leafy fence be such as to warn her that she is not really at home.
Provided that she have satin under her feet, she does not notice her
mistake; she watches over another’s nest with the same vigilance
which she might show in watching over her own.</p>
<p>The Lycosa surpasses her in maternal blindness. She fastens
to her spinnerets and dangles, by way of a bag of eggs, a ball of cork
polished with my file, a paper pellet, a little ball of thread.
In order to discover if the Thomisus is capable of a similar error,
I gathered some broken pieces of silk-worm’s cocoon into a closed
cone, turning the fragments so as to bring the smoother and more delicate
inner surface outside. My attempt was unsuccessful. When
removed from her home and placed on the artificial wallet, the mother
Thomisus obstinately refused to settle there. Can she be more
clear-sighted than the Lycosa? Perhaps so. Let us not be
too extravagant with our praise, however; the imitation of the bag was
a very clumsy one.</p>
<p>The work of laying is finished by the end of May, after which, lying
flat on the ceiling of her nest, the mother never leaves her guard-room,
either by night or day. Seeing her look so thin and wrinkled,
I imagine that I can please her by bringing her a provision of Bees,
as I was wont to do. I have misjudged her needs. The Bee,
hitherto her favourite dish, tempts her no longer. In vain does
the prey buzz close by, an easy capture within the cage: the watcher
does not shift from her post, takes no notice of the windfall.
She lives exclusively upon maternal devotion, a commendable but unsubstantial
fare. And so I see her pining away from day to day, becoming more
and more wrinkled. What is the withered thing waiting for, before
expiring? She is waiting for her children to emerge; the dying
creature is still of use to them.</p>
<p>When the Banded Epeira’s little ones issue from their balloon,
they have long been orphans. There is none to come to their assistance;
and they have not the strength to free themselves unaided. The
balloon has to split automatically and to scatter the youngsters and
their flossy mattress all mixed up together. The Thomisus’
wallet, sheathed in leaves over the greater part of its surface, never
bursts; nor does the lid rise, so carefully is it sealed down.
Nevertheless, after the delivery of the brood, we see, at the edge of
the lid, a small, gaping hole, an exit-window. Who contrived this
window, which was not there at first?</p>
<p>The fabric is too thick and tough to have yielded to the twitches
of the feeble little prisoners. It was the mother, therefore,
who, feeling her offspring shuffle impatiently under the silken ceiling,
herself made a hole in the bag. She persists in living for five
or six weeks, despite her shattered health, so as to give a last helping
hand and open the door for her family. After performing this duty,
she gently lets herself die, hugging her nest and turning into a shrivelled
relic.</p>
<p>When July comes, the little ones emerge. In view of their acrobatic
habits, I have placed a bundle of slender twigs at the top of the cage
in which they were born. All of them pass through the wire gauze
and form a group on the summit of the brushwood, where they swiftly
weave a spacious lounge of criss-cross threads. Here they remain,
pretty quietly, for a day or two; then foot-bridges begin to be flung
from one object to the next. This is the opportune moment.</p>
<p>I put the bunch laden with beasties on a small table, in the shade,
before the open window. Soon, the exodus commences, but slowly
and unsteadily. There are hesitations, retrogressions, perpendicular
falls at the end of a thread, ascents that bring the hanging Spider
up again. In short much ado for a poor result.</p>
<p>As matters continue to drag, it occurs to me, at eleven o’clock,
to take the bundle of brushwood swarming with the little Spiders, all
eager to be off, and place it on the window-sill, in the glare of the
sun. After a few minutes of heat and light, the scene assumes
a very different aspect. The emigrants run to the top of the twigs,
bustle about actively. It becomes a bewildering rope-yard, where
thousands of legs are drawing the hemp from the spinnerets. I
do not see the ropes manufactured and sent floating at the mercy of
the air; but I guess their presence.</p>
<p>Three or four Spiders start at a time, each going her own way in
directions independent of her neighbours’. All are moving
upwards, all are climbing some support, as can be perceived by the nimble
motion of their legs. Moreover, the road is visible behind the
climber, it is of double thickness, thanks to an added thread.
Then, at a certain height, individual movement ceases. The tiny
animal soars in space and shines, lit up by the sun. Softly it
sways, then suddenly takes flight.</p>
<p>What has happened? There is a slight breeze outside.
The floating cable has snapped and the creature has gone off, borne
on its parachute. I see it drifting away, showing, like a spot
of light, against the dark foliage of the near cypresses, some forty
feet distant. It rises higher, it crosses over the cypress-screen,
it disappears. Others follow, some higher, some lower, hither
and thither.</p>
<p>But the throng has finished its preparations; the hour has come to
disperse in swarms. We now see, from the crest of the brushwood,
a continuous spray of starters, who shoot up like microscopic projectiles
and mount in a spreading cluster. In the end, it is like the bouquet
at the finish of a pyrotechnic display, the sheaf of rockets fired simultaneously.
The comparison is correct down to the dazzling light itself. Flaming
in the sun like so many gleaming points, the little Spiders are the
sparks of that living firework. What a glorious send-off! What
an entrance into the world! Clutching its aeronautic thread, the
minute creature mounts in an apotheosis.</p>
<p>Sooner or later, nearer or farther, the fall comes. To live,
we have to descend, often very low, alas! The Crested Lark crumbles
the mule-droppings in the road and thus picks up his food, the oaten
grain which he would never find by soaring in the sky, his throat swollen
with song. We have to descend; the stomach’s inexorable
claims demand it. The Spiderling, therefore, touches land.
Gravity, tempered by the parachute, is kind to her.</p>
<p>The rest of her story escapes me. What infinitely tiny Midges
does she capture before possessing the strength to stab her Bee?
What are the methods, what the wiles of atom contending with atom?
I know not. We shall find her again in spring, grown quite large
and crouching among the flowers whence the Bee takes toll.</p>
<h2>CHAPTER IX: THE GARDEN SPIDERS: BUILDING THE WEB</h2>
<p>The fowling-snare is one of man’s ingenious villainies.
With lines, pegs and poles, two large, earth-coloured nets are stretched
upon the ground, one to the right, the other to the left of a bare surface.
A long cord, pulled, at the right moment, by the fowler, who hides in
a brushwood hut, works them and brings them together suddenly, like
a pair of shutters.</p>
<p>Divided between the two nets are the cages of the decoy-birds—Linnets
and Chaffinches, Greenfinches and Yellowhammers, Buntings and Ortolans—sharp-eared
creatures which, on perceiving the distant passage of a flock of their
own kind, forthwith utter a short calling note. One of them, the
<i>Sambé</i>, an irresistible tempter, hops about and flaps his
wings in apparent freedom. A bit of twine fastens him to his convict’s
stake. When, worn with fatigue and driven desperate by his vain
attempts to get away, the sufferer lies down flat and refuses to do
his duty, the fowler is able to stimulate him without stirring from
his hut. A long string sets in motion a little lever working on
a pivot. Raised from the ground by this diabolical contrivance,
the bird flies, falls down and flies up again at each jerk of the cord.</p>
<p>The fowler waits, in the mild sunlight of the autumn morning.
Suddenly, great excitement in the cages. The Chaffinches chirp
their rallying-cry:</p>
<p>‘Pinck! Pinck!’</p>
<p>There is something happening in the sky. The <i>Sambé</i>,
quick! They are coming, the simpletons; they swoop down upon the
treacherous floor. With a rapid movement, the man in ambush pulls
his string. The nets close and the whole flock is caught.</p>
<p>Man has wild beast’s blood in his veins. The fowler hastens
to the slaughter. With his thumb, he stifles the beating of the
captives’ hearts, staves in their skulls. The little birds,
so many piteous heads of game, will go to market, strung in dozens on
a wire passed through their nostrils.</p>
<p>For scoundrelly ingenuity the Epeira’s net can bear comparison
with the fowler’s; it even surpasses it when, on patient study,
the main features of its supreme perfection stand revealed. What
refinement of art for a mess of Flies! Nowhere, in the whole animal
kingdom, has the need to eat inspired a more cunning industry.
If the reader will meditate upon the description that follows, he will
certainly share my admiration.</p>
<p>First of all, we must witness the making of the net; we must see
it constructed and see it again and again, for the plan of such a complex
work can only be grasped in fragments. To-day, observation will
give us one detail; to-morrow, it will give us a second, suggesting
fresh points of view; as our visits multiply, a new fact is each time
added to the sum total of the acquired data, confirming those which
come before or directing our thoughts along unsuspected paths.</p>
<p>The snow-ball rolling over the carpet of white grows enormous, however
scanty each fresh layer be. Even so with truth in observational
science: it is built up of trifles patiently gathered together.
And, while the collecting of these trifles means that the student of
Spider industry must not be chary of his time, at least it involves
no distant and speculative research. The smallest garden contains
Epeirae, all accomplished weavers.</p>
<p>In my enclosure, which I have stocked carefully with the most famous
breeds, I have six different species under observation, all of a useful
size, all first-class spinners. Their names are the Banded Epeira
(<i>Epeira fasciata</i>, WALCK.), the Silky Epeira (<i>E. sericea</i>,
WALCK.), the Angular Epeira (<i>E. angulata</i>, WALCK.), the Pale-tinted
Epeira (<i>E. pallida</i>, OLIV.), the Diadem Epeira, or Cross Spider
(<i>E. diadema</i>, CLERK.), and the Crater Epeira (<i>E. cratera</i>,
WALCK.).</p>
<p>I am able, at the proper hours, all through the fine season, to question
them, to watch them at work, now this one, anon that, according to the
chances of the day. What I did not see very plainly yesterday
I can see the next day, under better conditions, and on any of the following
days, until the phenomenon under observation is revealed in all clearness.</p>
<p>Let us go every evening, step by step, from one border of tall rosemaries
to the next. Should things move too slowly, we will sit down at
the foot of the shrubs, opposite the rope-yard, where the light falls
favourably, and watch with unwearying attention. Each trip will
be good for a fact that fills some gap in the ideas already gathered.
To appoint one’s self, in this way, an inspector of Spiders’
webs, for many years in succession and for long seasons, means joining
a not overcrowded profession, I admit. Heaven knows, it does not
enable one to put money by! No matter: the meditative mind returns
from that school fully satisfied.</p>
<p>To describe the separate progress of the work in the case of each
of the six Epeirae mentioned would be a useless repetition: all six
employ the same methods and weave similar webs, save for certain details
that shall be set forth later. I will, therefore, sum up in the
aggregate the particulars supplied by one or other of them.</p>
<p>My subjects, in the first instance, are young and boast but a slight
corporation, very far removed from what it will be in the late autumn.
The belly, the wallet containing the rope-works, hardly exceeds a peppercorn
in bulk. This slenderness on the part of the spinstresses must
not prejudice us against their work: there is no parity between their
skill and their years. The adult Spiders, with their disgraceful
paunches, can do no better.</p>
<p>Moreover, the beginners have one very precious advantage for the
observer: they work by day, work even in the sun, whereas the old ones
weave only at night, at unseasonable hours. The first show us
the secrets of their looms without much difficulty; the others conceal
them from us. Work starts in July, a couple of hours before sunset.</p>
<p>The spinstresses of my enclosure then leave their daytime hiding-places,
select their posts and begin to spin, one here, another there.
There are many of them; we can choose where we please. Let us
stop in front of this one, whom we surprise in the act of laying the
foundations of the structure. Without any appreciable order, she
runs about the rosemary-hedge, from the tip of one branch to another
within the limits of some eighteen inches. Gradually, she puts
a thread in position, drawing it from her wire-mill with the combs attached
to her hind-legs. This preparatory work presents no appearance
of a concerted plan. The Spider comes and goes impetuously, as
though at random; she goes up, comes down, goes up again, dives down
again and each time strengthens the points of contact with intricate
moorings distributed here and there. The result is a scanty and
disordered scaffolding.</p>
<p>Is disordered the word? Perhaps not. The Epeira’s
eye, more experienced in matters of this sort than mine, has recognized
the general lie of the land; and the rope-fabric has been erected accordingly:
it is very inaccurate in my opinion, but very suitable for the Spider’s
designs. What is it that she really wants? A solid frame
to contain the network of the web. The shapeless structure which
she has just built fulfils the desired conditions: it marks out a flat,
free and perpendicular area. This is all that is necessary.</p>
<p>The whole work, for that matter, is now soon completed; it is done
all over again, each evening, from top to bottom, for the incidents
of the chase destroy it in a night. The net is as yet too delicate
to resist the desperate struggles of the captured prey. On the
other hand, the adults’ net, which is formed of stouter threads,
is adapted to last some time; and the Epeira gives it a more carefully-constructed
framework, as we shall see elsewhere.</p>
<p>A special thread, the foundation of the real net, is stretched across
the area so capriciously circumscribed. It is distinguished from
the others by its isolation, its position at a distance from any twig
that might interfere with its swaying length. It never fails to
have, in the middle, a thick white point, formed of a little silk cushion.
This is the beacon that marks the centre of the future edifice, the
post that will guide the Epeira and bring order into the wilderness
of twists and turns.</p>
<p>The time has come to weave the hunting-snare. The Spider starts
from the centre, which bears the white signpost, and, running along
the transversal thread, hurriedly reaches the circumference, that is
to say, the irregular frame enclosing the free space. Still with
the same sudden movement, she rushes from the circumference to the centre;
she starts again backwards and forwards, makes for the right, the left,
the top, the bottom; she hoists herself up, dives down, climbs up again,
runs down and always returns to the central landmark by roads that slant
in the most unexpected manner. Each time, a radius or spoke is
laid, here, there, or elsewhere, in what looks like mad disorder.</p>
<p>The operation is so erratically conducted that it takes the most
unremitting attention to follow it at all. The Spider reaches
the margin of the area by one of the spokes already placed. She
goes along this margin for some distance from the point at which she
landed, fixes her thread to the frame and returns to the centre by the
same road which she has just taken.</p>
<p>The thread obtained on the way in a broken line, partly on the radius
and partly on the frame, is too long for the exact distance between
the circumference and the central point. On returning to this
point, the Spider adjusts her thread, stretches it to the correct length,
fixes it and collects what remains on the central signpost. In
the case of each radius laid, the surplus is treated in the same fashion,
so that the signpost continues to increase in size. It was first
a speck; it is now a little pellet, or even a small cushion of a certain
breadth.</p>
<p>We shall see presently what becomes of this cushion whereon the Spider,
that niggardly housewife, lays her saved-up bits of thread; for the
moment, we will note that the Epeira works it up with her legs after
placing each spoke, teazles it with her claws, mats it into felt with
noteworthy diligence. In so doing, she gives the spokes a solid
common support, something like the hub of our carriage-wheels.</p>
<p>The eventual regularity of the work suggests that the radii are spun
in the same order in which they figure in the web, each following immediately
upon its next neighbour. Matters pass in another manner, which
at first looks like disorder, but which is really a judicious contrivance.
After setting a few spokes in one direction, the Epeira runs across
to the other side to draw some in the opposite direction. These
sudden changes of course are highly logical; they show us how proficient
the Spider is in the mechanics of rope-construction. Were they
to succeed one another regularly, the spokes of one group, having nothing
as yet to counteract them, would distort the work by their straining,
would even destroy it for lack of a stabler support. Before continuing,
it is necessary to lay a converse group which will maintain the whole
by its resistance. Any combination of forces acting in one direction
must be forthwith neutralized by another in the opposite direction.
This is what our statics teach us and what the Spider puts into practice;
she is a past mistress of the secrets of rope-building, without serving
an apprenticeship.</p>
<p>One would think that this interrupted and apparently disordered labour
must result in a confused piece of work. Wrong: the rays are equidistant
and form a beautifully-regular orb. Their number is a characteristic
mark of the different species. The Angular Epeira places 21 in
her web, the Banded Epeira 32, the Silky Epeira 42. These numbers
are not absolutely fixed; but the variation is very slight.</p>
<p>Now which of us would undertake, off-hand, without much preliminary
experiment and without measuring-instruments, to divide a circle into
a given quantity of sectors of equal width? The Epeirae, though
weighted with a wallet and tottering on threads shaken by the wind,
effect the delicate division without stopping to think. They achieve
it by a method which seems mad according to our notions of geometry.
Out of disorder they evolve order.</p>
<p>We must not, however, give them more than their due. The angles
are only approximately equal; they satisfy the demands of the eye, but
cannot stand the test of strict measurement. Mathematical precision
would be superfluous here. No matter, we are amazed at the result
obtained. How does the Epeira come to succeed with her difficult
problem, so strangely managed? I am still asking myself the question.</p>
<p>The laying of the radii is finished. The Spider takes her place
in the centre, on the little cushion formed of the inaugural signpost
and the bits of thread left over. Stationed on this support, she
slowly turns round and round. She is engaged on a delicate piece
of work. With an extremely thin thread, she describes from spoke
to spoke, starting from the centre, a spiral line with very close coils.
The central space thus worked attains, in the adults’ webs, the
dimensions of the palm of one’s hand; in the younger Spiders’
webs, it is much smaller, but it is never absent. For reasons
which I will explain in the course of this study, I shall call it, in
future, the ‘resting-floor.’</p>
<p>The thread now becomes thicker. The first could hardly be seen;
the second is plainly visible. The Spider shifts her position
with great slanting strides, turns a few times, moving farther and farther
from the centre, fixes her line each time to the spoke which she crosses
and at last comes to a stop at the lower edge of the frame. She
has described a spiral with coils of rapidly-increasing width.
The average distance between the coils, even in the structures of the
young Epeirae, is one centimetre. <SPAN name="citation29"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote29">{29}</SPAN></p>
<p>Let us not be misled by the word ‘spiral,’ which conveys
the notion of a curved line. All curves are banished from the
Spiders’ work; nothing is used but the straight line and its combinations.
All that is aimed at is a polygonal line drawn in a curve as geometry
understands it. To this polygonal line, a work destined to disappear
as the real toils are woven, I will give the name of the ‘auxiliary
spiral.’ Its object is to supply cross-bars, supporting
rungs, especially in the outer zone, where the radii are too distant
from one another to afford a suitable groundwork. Its object is
also to guide the Epeira in the extremely delicate business which she
is now about to undertake.</p>
<p>But, before that, one last task becomes essential. The area
occupied by the spokes is very irregular, being marked out by the supports
of the branch, which are infinitely variable. There are angular
niches which, if skirted too closely, would disturb the symmetry of
the web about to be constructed. The Epeira needs an exact space
wherein gradually to lay her spiral thread. Moreover, she must
not leave any gaps through which her prey might find an outlet.</p>
<p>An expert in these matters, the Spider soon knows the corners that
have to be filled up. With an alternating movement, first in this
direction, then in that, she lays, upon the support of the radii, a
thread that forms two acute angles at the lateral boundaries of the
faulty part and describes a zigzag line not wholly unlike the ornament
known as the fret.</p>
<p>The sharp corners have now been filled with frets on every side;
the time has come to work at the essential part, the snaring-web for
which all the rest is but a support. Clinging on the one hand
to the radii, on the other to the chords of the auxiliary spiral, the
Epeira covers the same ground as when laying the spiral, but in the
opposite direction: formerly, she moved away from the centre; now she
moves towards it and with closer and more numerous circles. She
starts from the base of the auxiliary spiral, near the frame.</p>
<p>What follows is difficult to observe, for the movements are very
quick and spasmodic, consisting of a series of sudden little rushes,
sways and bends that bewilder the eye. It needs continuous attention
and repeated examination to distinguish the progress of the work however
slightly.</p>
<p>The two hind-legs, the weaving implements, keep going constantly.
Let us name them according to their position on the work-floor.
I call the leg that faces the centre of the coil, when the animal moves,
the ‘inner leg;’ the one outside the coil the ‘outer
leg.’</p>
<p>The latter draws the thread from the spinneret and passes it to the
inner leg, which, with a graceful movement, lays it on the radius crossed.
At the same time, the first leg measures the distance; it grips the
last coil placed in position and brings within a suitable range that
point of the radius whereto the thread is to be fixed. As soon
as the radius is touched, the thread sticks to it by its own glue.
There are no slow operations, no knots: the fixing is done of itself.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, turning by narrow degrees, the spinstress approaches the
auxiliary chords that have just served as her support. When, in
the end, these chords become too close, they will have to go; they would
impair the symmetry of the work. The Spider, therefore, clutches
and holds on to the rungs of a higher row; she picks up, one by one,
as she goes along, those which are of no more use to her and gathers
them into a fine-spun ball at the contact-point of the next spoke.
Hence arises a series of silky atoms marking the course of the disappearing
spiral.</p>
<p>The light has to fall favourably for us to perceive these specks,
the only remains of the ruined auxiliary thread. One would take
them for grains of dust, if the faultless regularity of their distribution
did not remind us of the vanished spiral. They continue, still
visible, until the final collapse of the net.</p>
<p>And the Spider, without a stop of any kind, turns and turns and turns,
drawing nearer to the centre and repeating the operation of fixing her
thread at each spoke which she crosses. A good half-hour, an hour
even among the full-grown Spiders, is spent on spiral circles, to the
number of about fifty for the web of the Silky Epeira and thirty for
those of the Banded and the Angular Epeira.</p>
<p>At last, at some distance from the centre, on the borders of what
I have called the resting-floor, the Spider abruptly terminates her
spiral when the space would still allow of a certain number of turns.
We shall see the reason of this sudden stop presently. Next, the
Epeira, no matter which, young or old, hurriedly flings herself upon
the little central cushion, pulls it out and rolls it into a ball which
I expected to see thrown away. But no: her thrifty nature does
not permit this waste. She eats the cushion, at first an inaugural
landmark, then a heap of bits of thread; she once more melts in the
digestive crucible what is no doubt intended to be restored to the silken
treasury. It is a tough mouthful, difficult for the stomach to
elaborate; still, it is precious and must not be lost. The work
finishes with the swallowing. Then and there, the Spider instals
herself, head downwards, at her hunting-post in the centre of the web.</p>
<p>The operation which we have just seen gives rise to a reflection.
Men are born right-handed. Thanks to a lack of symmetry that has
never been explained, our right side is stronger and readier in its
movements than our left. The inequality is especially noticeable
in the two hands. Our language expresses this supremacy of the
favoured side in the terms dexterity, adroitness and address, all of
which allude to the right hand.</p>
<p>Is the animal, on its side, right-handed, left-handed, or unbiased?
We have had opportunities of showing that the Cricket, the Grasshopper
and many others draw their bow, which is on the right wing-case, over
the sounding apparatus, which is on the left wing-case. They are
right-handed.</p>
<p>When you and I take an unpremeditated turn, we spin round on our
right heel. The left side, the weaker, moves on the pivot of the
right, the stronger. In the same way, nearly all the Molluscs
that have spiral shells roll their coils from left to right. Among
the numerous species in both land and water fauna, only a very few are
exceptional and turn from right to left.</p>
<p>It would be interesting to try and work out to what extent that part
of the zoological kingdom which boasts a two-sided structure is divided
into right-handed and left-handed animals. Can dissymetry, that
source of contrasts, be a general rule? Or are there neutrals,
endowed with equal powers of skill and energy on both sides? Yes,
there are; and the Spider is one of them. She enjoys the very
enviable privilege of possessing a left side which is no less capable
than the right. She is ambidextrous, as witness the following
observations.</p>
<p>When laying her snaring-thread, every Epeira turns in either direction
indifferently, as a close watch will prove. Reasons whose secret
escapes us determine the direction adopted. Once this or the other
course is taken, the spinstress does not change it, even after incidents
that sometimes occur to disturb the progress of the work. It may
happen that a Gnat gets caught in the part already woven. The
Spider thereupon abruptly interrupts her labours, hastens up to the
prey, binds it and then returns to where she stopped and continues the
spiral in the same order as before.</p>
<p>At the commencement of the work, gyration in one direction being
employed as well as gyration in the other, we see that, when making
her repeated webs, the same Epeira turns now her right side, now her
left to the centre of the coil. Well, as we have said, it is always
with the inner hind-leg, the leg nearer the centre, that is to say,
in some cases the right and in some cases the left leg, that she places
the thread in position, an exceedingly delicate operation calling for
the display of exquisite skill, because of the quickness of the action
and the need for preserving strictly equal distances. Any one
seeing this leg working with such extreme precision, the right leg to-day,
the left to-morrow, becomes convinced that the Epeira is highly ambidextrous.</p>
<h2>CHAPTER X: THE GARDEN SPIDERS: MY NEIGHBOUR</h2>
<p>Age does not modify the Epeira’s talent in any essential feature.
As the young worked, so do the old, the richer by a year’s experience.
There are no masters nor apprentices in their guild; all know their
craft from the moment that the first thread is laid. We have learnt
something from the novices: let us now look into the matter of their
elders and see what additional task the needs of age impose upon them.</p>
<p>July comes and gives me exactly what I wish for. While the
new inhabitants are twisting their ropes on the rosemaries in the enclosure,
one evening, by the last gleams of twilight, I discover a splendid Spider,
with a mighty belly, just outside my door. This one is a matron;
she dates back to last year; her majestic corpulence, so exceptional
at this season, proclaims the fact. I know her for the Angular
Epeira (<i>Epeira angulata</i>, WALCK.), clad in grey and girdled with
two dark stripes that meet in a point at the back. The base of
her abdomen swells into a short nipple on either side.</p>
<p>This neighbour will certainly serve my turn, provided that she do
not work too late at night. Things bode well: I catch the buxom
one in the act of laying her first threads. At this rate my success
need not be won at the expense of sleep. And, in fact, I am able,
throughout the month of July and the greater part of August, from eight
to ten o’clock in the evening, to watch the construction of the
web, which is more or less ruined nightly by the incidents of the chase
and built up again, next day, when too seriously dilapidated.</p>
<p>During the two stifling months, when the light fails and a spell
of coolness follows upon the furnace-heat of the day, it is easy for
me, lantern in hand, to watch my neighbour’s various operations.
She has taken up her abode, at a convenient height for observation,
between a row of cypress-trees and a clump of laurels, near the entrance
to an alley haunted by Moths. The spot appears well-chosen, for
the Epeira does not change it throughout the season, though she renews
her net almost every night.</p>
<p>Punctually as darkness falls, our whole family goes and calls upon
her. Big and little, we stand amazed at her wealth of belly and
her exuberant somersaults in the maze of quivering ropes; we admire
the faultless geometry of the net as it gradually takes shape.
All agleam in the lantern-light, the work becomes a fairy orb, which
seems woven of moonbeams.</p>
<p>Should I linger, in my anxiety to clear up certain details, the household,
which by this time is in bed, waits for my return before going to sleep:</p>
<p>‘What has she been doing this evening?’ I am asked.
‘Has she finished her web? Has she caught a Moth?’</p>
<p>I describe what has happened. To-morrow, they will be in a
less hurry to go to bed: they will want to see everything, to the very
end. What delightful, simple evenings we have spent looking into
the Spider’s workshop!</p>
<p>The journal of the Angular Epeira, written up day by day, teaches
us, first of all, how she obtains the ropes that form the framework
of the building. All day invisible, crouching amid the cypress-leaves,
the Spider, at about eight o’clock in the evening, solemnly emerges
from her retreat and makes for the top of a branch. In this exalted
position, she sits for some time laying her plans with due regard to
the locality; she consults the weather, ascertains if the night will
be fine. Then, suddenly, with her eight legs wide-spread, she
lets herself drop straight down, hanging to the line that issues from
her spinnerets. Just as the rope-maker obtains the even output
of his hemp by walking backwards, so does the Epeira obtain the discharge
of hers by falling. It is extracted by the weight of her body.</p>
<p>The descent, however, has not the brute speed which the force of
gravity would give it, if uncontrolled. It is governed by the
action of the spinnerets, which contract or expand their pores, or close
them entirely, at the faller’s pleasure. And so, with gentle
moderation she pays out this living plumb-line, of which my lantern
clearly shows me the plumb, but not always the line. The great
squab seems at such times to be sprawling in space, without the least
support.</p>
<p>She comes to an abrupt stop two inches from the ground; the silk-reel
ceases working. The Spider turns round, clutches the line which
she has just obtained and climbs up by this road, still spinning.
But, this time, as she is no longer assisted by the force of gravity,
the thread is extracted in another manner. The two hind-legs,
with a quick alternate action, draw it from the wallet and let it go.</p>
<p>On returning to her starting-point, at a height of six feet or more,
the Spider is now in possession of a double line, bent into a loop and
floating loosely in a current of air. She fixes her end where
it suits her and waits until the other end, wafted by the wind, has
fastened its loop to the adjacent twigs.</p>
<p>The desired result may be very slow in coming. It does not
tire the unfailing patience of the Epeira, but it soon wears out mine.
And it has happened to me sometimes to collaborate with the Spider.
I pick up the floating loop with a straw and lay it on a branch, at
a convenient height. The foot-bridge erected with my assistance
is considered satisfactory, just as though the wind had placed it.
I count this collaboration among the good actions standing to my credit.</p>
<p>Feeling her thread fixed, the Epeira runs along it repeatedly, from
end to end, adding a fibre to it on each journey. Whether I help
or not, this forms the ‘suspension-cable,’ the main piece
of the framework. I call it a cable, in spite of its extreme thinness,
because of its structure. It looks as though it were single, but,
at the two ends, it is seen to divide and spread, tuft-wise, into numerous
constituent parts, which are the product of as many crossings.
These diverging fibres, with their several contact-points, increase
the steadiness of the two extremities.</p>
<p>The suspension-cable is incomparably stronger than the rest of the
work and lasts for an indefinite time. The web is generally shattered
after the night’s hunting and is nearly always rewoven on the
following evening. After the removal of the wreckage, it is made
all over again, on the same site, cleared of everything except the cable
from which the new network is to hang.</p>
<p>The laying of this cable is a somewhat difficult matter, because
the success of the enterprise does not depend upon the animal’s
industry alone. It has to wait until a breeze carries the line
to the pier-head in the bushes. Sometimes, a calm prevails; sometimes,
the thread catches at an unsuitable point. This involves great
expenditure of time, with no certainty of success. And so, when
once the suspension-cable is in being, well and solidly placed, the
Epeira does not change it, except on critical occasions. Every
evening, she passes and repasses over it, strengthening it with fresh
threads.</p>
<p>When the Epeira cannot manage a fall of sufficient depth to give
her the double line with its loop to be fixed at a distance, she employs
another method. She lets herself down and then climbs up again,
as we have already seen; but, this time, the thread ends suddenly in
a filmy hair-pencil, a tuft, whose parts remain disjoined, just as they
come from the spinneret’s rose. Then this sort of bushy
fox’s brush is cut short, as though with a pair of scissors, and
the whole thread, when unfurled, doubles its length, which is now enough
for the purpose. It is fastened by the end joined to the Spider;
the other floats in the air, with its spreading tuft, which easily tangles
in the bushes. Even so must the Banded Epeira go to work when
she throws her daring suspension-bridge across a stream.</p>
<p>Once the cable is laid, in this way or in that, the Spider is in
possession of a base that allows her to approach or withdraw from the
leafy piers at will. From the height of the cable, the upper boundary
of the projected works, she lets herself slip to a slight depth, varying
the points of her fall. She climbs up again by the line produced
by her descent. The result of the operation is a double thread
which is unwound while the Spider walks along her big foot-bridge to
the contact-branch, where she fixes the free end of her thread more
or less low down. In this way, she obtains, to right and left,
a few slanting cross-bars, connecting the cable with the branches.</p>
<p>These cross-bars, in their turn, support others in ever-changing
directions. When there are enough of them, the Epeira need no
longer resort to falls in order to extract her threads; she goes from
one cord to the next, always wire-drawing with her hind-legs and placing
her produce in position as she goes. This results in a combination
of straight lines owning no order, save that they are kept in one, nearly
perpendicular plane. They mark a very irregular polygonal area,
wherein the web, itself a work of magnificent regularity, shall presently
be woven.</p>
<p>It is unnecessary to go over the construction of the masterpiece
again; the younger Spiders have taught us enough in this respect.
In both cases, we see the same equidistant radii laid, with a central
landmark for a guide; the same auxiliary spiral, the scaffolding of
temporary rungs, soon doomed to disappear; the same snaring-spiral,
with its maze of closely-woven coils. Let us pass on: other details
call for our attention.</p>
<p>The laying of the snaring-spiral is an exceedingly delicate operation,
because of the regularity of the work. I was bent upon knowing
whether, if subjected to the din of unaccustomed sounds, the Spider
would hesitate and blunder. Does she work imperturbably?
Or does she need undisturbed quiet? As it is, I know that my presence
and that of my light hardly trouble her at all. The sudden flashes
emitted by my lantern have no power to distract her from her task.
She continues to turn in the light even as she turned in the dark, neither
faster nor slower. This is a good omen for the experiment which
I have in view.</p>
<p>The first Sunday in August is the feast of the patron saint of the
village, commemorating the Finding of St. Stephen. This is Tuesday,
the third day of the rejoicings. There will be fireworks to-night,
at nine o’clock, to conclude the merry-makings. They will
take place on the high-road outside my door, at a few steps from the
spot where my Spider is working. The spinstress is busy upon her
great spiral at the very moment when the village big-wigs arrive with
trumpet and drum and small boys carrying torches.</p>
<p>More interested in animal psychology than in pyrotechnical displays,
I watch the Epeira’s doings, lantern in hand. The hullabaloo
of the crowd, the reports of the mortars, the crackle of Roman candles
bursting in the sky, the hiss of the rockets, the rain of sparks, the
sudden flashes of white, red or blue light: none of this disturbs the
worker, who methodically turns and turns again, just as she does in
the peace of ordinary evenings.</p>
<p>Once before, the gun which I fired under the plane-trees failed to
trouble the concert of the Cicadae; to-day, the dazzling light of the
fire-wheels and the splutter of the crackers do not avail to distract
the Spider from her weaving. And, after all, what difference would
it make to my neighbour if the world fell in! The village could
be blown up with dynamite, without her losing her head for such a trifle.
She would calmly go on with her web.</p>
<p>Let us return to the Spider manufacturing her net under the usual
tranquil conditions. The great spiral has been finished, abruptly,
on the confines of the resting-floor. The central cushion, a mat
of ends of saved thread, is next pulled up and eaten. But, before
indulging in this mouthful, which closes the proceedings, two Spiders,
the only two of the order, the Banded and the Silky Epeira, have still
to sign their work. A broad, white ribbon is laid, in a thick
zigzag, from the centre to the lower edge of the orb. Sometimes,
but not always, a second band of the same shape and of lesser length
occupies the upper portion, opposite the first.</p>
<p>I like to look upon these odd flourishes as consolidating-gear.
To begin with, the young Epeirae never use them. For the moment,
heedless of the future and lavish of their silk, they remake their web
nightly, even though it be none too much dilapidated and might well
serve again. A brand-new snare at sunset is the rule with them.
And there is little need for increased solidity when the work has to
be done again on the morrow.</p>
<p>On the other hand, in the late autumn, the full-grown Spiders, feeling
laying-time at hand, are driven to practise economy, in view of the
great expenditure of silk required for the egg-bag. Owing to its
large size, the net now becomes a costly work which it were well to
use as long as possible, for fear of finding one’s reserves exhausted
when the time comes for the expensive construction of the nest.
For this reason, or for others which escape me, the Banded and the Silky
Epeirae think it wise to produce durable work and to strengthen their
toils with a cross-ribbon. The other Epeirae, who are put to less
expense in the fabrication of their maternal wallet—a mere pill—are
unacquainted with the zigzag binder and, like the younger Spiders, reconstruct
their web almost nightly.</p>
<p>My fat neighbour, the Angular Epeira, consulted by the light of a
lantern, shall tell us how the renewal of the net proceeds. As
the twilight fades, she comes down cautiously from her day-dwelling;
she leaves the foliage of the cypresses for the suspension-cable of
her snare. Here she stands for some time; then, descending to
her web, she collects the wreckage in great armfuls. Everything—spiral,
spokes and frame—is raked up with her legs. One thing alone
is spared and that is the suspension-cable, the sturdy piece of work
that has served as a foundation for the previous buildings and will
serve for the new after receiving a few strengthening repairs.</p>
<p>The collected ruins form a pill which the Spider consumes with the
same greed that she would show in swallowing her prey. Nothing
remains. This is the second instance of the Spiders’ supreme
economy of their silk. We have seen them, after the manufacture
of the net, eating the central guide-post, a modest mouthful; we now
see them gobbling up the whole web, a meal. Refined and turned
into fluid by the stomach, the materials of the old net will serve for
other purposes.</p>
<p>As goon as the site is thoroughly cleared, the work of the frame
and the net begins on the support of the suspension-cable which was
respected. Would it not be simpler to restore the old web, which
might serve many times yet, if a few rents were just repaired?
One would say so; but does the Spider know how to patch her work, as
a thrifty housewife darns her linen? That is the question.</p>
<p>To mend severed meshes, to replace broken threads, to adjust the
new to the old, in short, to restore the original order by assembling
the wreckage would be a far-reaching feat of prowess, a very fine proof
of gleams of intelligence, capable of performing rational calculations.
Our menders excel in this class of work. They have as their guide
their sense, which measures the holes, cuts the new piece to size and
fits it into its proper place. Does the Spider possess the counterpart
of this habit of clear thinking?</p>
<p>People declare as much, without, apparently, looking into the matter
very closely. They seem able to dispense with the conscientious
observer’s scruples, when inflating their bladder of theory.
They go straight ahead; and that is enough. As for ourselves,
less greatly daring, we will first enquire; we will see by experiment
if the Spider really knows how to repair her work.</p>
<p>The Angular Epeira, that near neighbour who has already supplied
me with so many documents, has just finished her web, at nine o’clock
in the evening. It is a splendid night, calm and warm, favourable
to the rounds of the Moths. All promises good hunting. At
the moment when, after completing the great spiral, the Epeira is about
to eat the central cushion and settle down upon her resting-floor, I
cut the web in two, diagonally, with a pair of sharp scissors.
The sagging of the spokes, deprived of their counter-agents, produces
an empty space, wide enough for three fingers to pass through.</p>
<p>The Spider retreats to her cable and looks on without being greatly
frightened. When I have done, she quietly returns. She takes
her stand on one of the halves, at the spot which was the centre of
the original orb; but, as her legs find no footing on one side, she
soon realizes that the snare is defective. Thereupon, two threads
are stretched across the breach, two threads, no more; the legs that
lacked a foothold spread across them; and henceforth the Epeira moves
no more, devoting her attention to the incidents of the chase.</p>
<p>When I saw those two threads laid, joining the edges of the rent,
I began to hope that I was to witness a mending-process:</p>
<p>‘The Spider,’ said I to myself, ‘will increase
the number of those cross-threads from end to end of the breach; and,
though the added piece may not match the rest of the work, at least
it will fill the gap and the continuous sheet will be of the same use
practically as the regular web.’</p>
<p>The reality did not answer to my expectation. The spinstress
made no further endeavour all night. She hunted with her riven
net, for what it was worth; for I found the web next morning in the
same condition wherein I had left it on the night before. There
had been no mending of any kind.</p>
<p>The two threads stretched across the breach even must not be taken
for an attempt at repairing. Finding no foothold for her legs
on one side, the Spider went to look into the state of things and, in
so doing, crossed the rent. In going and returning, she left a
thread, as is the custom with all the Epeirae when walking. It
was not a deliberate mending, but the mere result of an uneasy change
of place.</p>
<p>Perhaps the subject of my experiment thought it unnecessary to go
to fresh trouble and expense, for the web can serve quite well as it
is, after my scissor-cut: the two halves together represent the original
snaring-surface. All that the Spider, seated in a central position,
need do is to find the requisite support for her spread legs.
The two threads stretched from side to side of the cleft supply her
with this, or nearly. My mischief did not go far enough.
Let us devise something better.</p>
<p>Next day, the web is renewed, after the old one has been swallowed.
When the work is done and the Epeira seated motionless at her central
post, I take a straw and, wielding it dexterously, so as to respect
the resting-floor and the spokes, I pull and root up the spiral, which
dangles in tatters. With its snaring-threads ruined, the net is
useless; no passing Moth would allow herself to be caught. Now
what does the Epeira do in the face of this disaster? Nothing
at all. Motionless on her resting-floor, which I have left intact,
she awaits the capture of the game; she awaits it all night in vain
on her impotent web. In the morning, I find the snare as I left
it. Necessity, the mother of invention, has not prompted the Spider
to make a slight repair in her ruined toils.</p>
<p>Possibly this is asking too much of her resources. The silk-glands
may be exhausted after the laying of the great spiral; and to repeat
the same expenditure immediately is out of the question. I want
a case wherein there could be no appeal to any such exhaustion.
I obtain it, thanks to my assiduity.</p>
<p>While I am watching the rolling of the spiral, a head of game rushes
fun tilt into the unfinished snare. The Epeira interrupts her
work, hurries to the giddy-pate, swathes him and takes her fill of him
where he lies. During the struggle, a section of the web has torn
under the weaver’s very eyes. A great gap endangers the
satisfactory working of the net. What will the spider do in the
presence of this grievous rent?</p>
<p>Now or never is the time to repair the broken threads: the accident
has happened this very moment, between the animal’s legs; it is
certainly known and, moreover, the rope-works are in full swing.
This time there is no question of the exhaustion of the silk-warehouse.</p>
<p>Well, under these conditions, so favourable to darning, the Epeira
does no mending at all. She flings aside her prey, after taking
a few sips at it, and resumes her spiral at the point where she interrupted
it to attack the Moth. The torn part remains as it is. The
machine-shuttle in our looms does not revert to the spoiled fabric;
even so with the Spider working at her web.</p>
<p>And this is no case of distraction, of individual carelessness; all
the large spinstresses suffer from a similar incapacity for patching.
The Banded Epeira and the Silky Epeira are noteworthy in this respect.
The Angular Epeira remakes her web nearly every evening; the other two
reconstruct theirs only very seldom and use them even when extremely
dilapidated. They go on hunting with shapeless rags. Before
they bring themselves to weave a new web, the old one has to be ruined
beyond recognition. Well, I have often noted the state of one
of these ruins and, the next morning, I have found it as it was, or
even more dilapidated. Never any repairs; never; never.
I am sorry, because of the reputation which our hard-pressed theorists
have given her, but the Spider is absolutely unable to mend her work.
In spite of her thoughtful appearance, the Epeira is incapable of the
modicum of reflexion required to insert a piece into an accidental gap.</p>
<p>Other Spiders are unacquainted with wide-meshed nets and weave satins
wherein the threads, crossing at random, form a continuous substance.
Among this number is the House Spider (<i>Tegenaria domestica</i>, LIN.).
In the corners of our rooms, she stretches wide webs fixed by angular
extensions. The best-protected nook at one side contains the owner’s
secret apartment. It is a silk tube, a gallery with a conical
opening, whence the Spider, sheltered from the eye, watches events.
The rest of the fabric, which exceeds our finest muslins in delicacy,
is not, properly speaking, a hunting-implement: it is a platform whereon
the Spider, attending to the affairs of her estate, goes her rounds,
especially at night. The real trap consists of a confusion of
lines stretched above the web.</p>
<p>The snare, constructed according to other rules than in the case
of the Epeirae, also works differently. Here are no viscous threads,
but plain toils, rendered invisible by the very number. If a Gnat
rush into the perfidious entanglement, he is caught at once; and the
more he struggles the more firmly is he bound. The snareling falls
on the sheet-web. <i>Tegenaria</i> hastens up and bites him in
the neck.</p>
<p>Having said this, let us experiment a little. In the web of
the House Spider, I make a round hole, two fingers wide. The hole
remains yawning all day long; but next morning it is invariably closed.
An extremely thin gauze covers the breach, the dark appearance of which
contrasts with the dense whiteness of the surrounding fabric.
The gauze is so delicate that, to make sure of its presence, I use a
straw rather than my eyes. The movement of the web, when this
part is touched, proves the presence of an obstacle.</p>
<p>Here, the matter would appear obvious. The House Spider has
mended her work during the night; she has put a patch in the torn stuff,
a talent unknown to the Garden Spiders. It would be greatly to
her credit, if a mere attentive study did not lead to another conclusion.</p>
<p>The web of the House Spider is, as we were saying, a platform for
watching and exploring; it is also a sheet into which the insects caught
in the overhead rigging fall. This surface, a domain subject to
unlimited shocks, is never strong enough, especially as it is exposed
to the additional burden of little bits of plaster loosened from the
wall. The owner is constantly working at it; she adds a new layer
nightly.</p>
<p>Every time that she issues from her tubular retreat or returns to
it, she fixes the thread that hangs behind her upon the road covered.
As evidence of this work, we have the direction of the surface-lines,
all of which, whether straight or winding, according to the fancies
that guide the Spider’s path, converge upon the entrance of the
tube. Each step taken, beyond a doubt, adds a filament to the
web.</p>
<p>We have here the story of the Processionary of the Pine, <SPAN name="citation30"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote30">{30}</SPAN>
whose habits I have related elsewhere. When the caterpillars leave
the silk pouch, to go and browse at night, and also when they enter
it again, they never fail to spin a little on the surface of their nest.
Each expedition adds to the thickness of the wall.</p>
<p>When moving this way or that upon the purse which I have split from
top to bottom with my scissors, the Processionaries upholster the breach
even as they upholster the untouched part, without paying more attention
to it than to the rest of the wall. Caring nothing about the accident,
they behave in the same way as on a non-gutted dwelling. The crevice
is closed, in course of time, not intentionally, but solely by the action
of the usual spinning.</p>
<p>We arrive at the same conclusion on the subject of the House Spider.
Walking about her platform every night, she lays fresh courses without
drawing a distinction between the solid and the hollow. She has
not deliberately put a patch in the torn texture; she has simply gone
on with her ordinary business. If it happen that the hole is eventually
closed, this fortunate result is the outcome not of a special purpose,
but of an unvarying method of work.</p>
<p>Besides, it is evident that, if the Spider really wished to mend
her web, all her endeavours would be concentrated upon the rent.
She would devote to it all the silk at her disposal and obtain in one
sitting a piece very like the rest of the web. Instead of that,
what do we find? Almost nothing: a hardly visible gauze.</p>
<p>The thing is obvious: the Spider did on that rent what she did every
elsewhere, neither more nor less. Far from squandering silk upon
it, she saved her silk so as to have enough for the whole web.
The gap will be better mended, little by little, afterwards, as the
sheet is strengthened all over with new layers. And this will
take long. Two months later, the window—my work—still
shows through and makes a dark stain against the dead-white of the fabric.</p>
<p>Neither weavers nor spinners, therefore, know how to repair their
work. Those wonderful manufacturers of silk-stuffs lack the least
glimmer of that sacred lamp, reason, which enables the stupidest of
darning-women to mend the heel of an old stocking. The office
of inspector of Spiders’ webs would have its uses, even if it
merely succeeded in ridding us of a mistaken and mischievous idea.</p>
<h2>CHAPTER XI: THE GARDEN SPIDERS: THE LIME-SNARE</h2>
<p>The spiral network of the Epeirae possesses contrivances of fearsome
cunning. Let us give our attention by preference to that of the
Banded Epeira or that of the Silky Epeira, both of which can be observed
at early morning in all their freshness.</p>
<p>The thread that forms them is seen with the naked eye to differ from
that of the framework and the spokes. It glitters in the sun,
looks as though it were knotted and gives the impression of a chaplet
of atoms. To examine it through the lens on the web itself is
scarcely feasible, because of the shaking of the fabric, which trembles
at the least breath. By passing a sheet of glass under the web
and lifting it, I take away a few pieces of thread to study, pieces
that remain fixed to the glass in parallel lines. Lens and microscope
can now play their part.</p>
<p>The sight is perfectly astounding. Those threads, on the borderland
between the visible and the invisible, are very closely twisted twine,
similar to the gold cord of our officers’ sword-knots. Moreover,
they are hollow. The infinitely slender is a tube, a channel full
of a viscous moisture resembling a strong solution of gum arabic.
I can see a diaphanous trail of this moisture trickling through the
broken ends. Under the pressure of the thin glass slide that covers
them on the stage of the microscope, the twists lengthen out, become
crinkled ribbons, traversed from end to end, through the middle, by
a dark streak, which is the empty container.</p>
<p>The fluid contents must ooze slowly through the side of those tubular
threads, rolled into twisted strings, and thus render the network sticky.
It is sticky, in fact, and in such a way as to provoke surprise.
I bring a fine straw flat down upon three or four rungs of a sector.
However gentle the contact, adhesion is at once established. When
I lift the straw, the threads come with it and stretch to twice or three
times their length, like a thread of India-rubber. At last, when
over-taut, they loosen without breaking and resume their original form.
They lengthen by unrolling their twist, they shorten by rolling it again;
lastly, they become adhesive by taking the glaze of the gummy moisture
wherewith they are filled.</p>
<p>In short, the spiral thread is a capillary tube finer than any that
our physics will ever know. It is rolled into a twist so as to
possess an elasticity that allows it, without breaking, to yield to
the tugs of the captured prey; it holds a supply of sticky matter in
reserve in its tube, so as to renew the adhesive properties of the surface
by incessant exudation, as they become impaired by exposure to the air.
It is simply marvellous.</p>
<p>The Epeira hunts not with springs, but with lime-snares. And
such lime-snares! Everything is caught in them, down to the dandelion-plume
that barely brushes against them. Nevertheless, the Epeira, who
is in constant touch with her web, is not caught in them. Why?</p>
<p>Let us first of all remember that the Spider has contrived for herself,
in the middle of her trap, a floor in whose construction the sticky
spiral thread plays no part. We saw how this thread stops suddenly
at some distance from the centre. There is here, covering a space
which, in the larger webs, is about equal to the palm of one’s
hand, a fabric formed of spokes and of the commencement of the auxiliary
spiral, a neutral fabric in which the exploring straw finds no adhesiveness
anywhere.</p>
<p>Here, on this central resting-floor, and here only, the Epeira takes
her stand, waiting whole days for the arrival of the game. However
close, however prolonged her contact with this portion of the web, she
runs no risk of sticking to it, because the gummy coating is lacking,
as is the twisted and tubular structure, throughout the length of the
spokes and throughout the extent of the auxiliary spiral. These
pieces, together with the rest of the framework, are made of plain,
straight, solid thread.</p>
<p>But, when a victim is caught, sometimes right at the edge of the
web, the Spider has to rush up quickly, to bind it and overcome its
attempts to free itself. She is walking then upon her network;
and I do not find that she suffers the least inconvenience. The
lime-threads are not even lifted by the movements of her legs.</p>
<p>In my boyhood, when a troop of us would go, on Thursdays, <SPAN name="citation31"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote31">{31}</SPAN>
to try and catch a Goldfinch in the hemp-fields, we used, before covering
the twigs with glue, to grease our fingers with a few drops of oil,
lest we should get them caught in the sticky matter. Does the
Epeira know the secret of fatty substances? Let us try.</p>
<p>I rub my exploring straw with slightly oiled paper. When applied
to the spiral thread of the web, it now no longer sticks to it.
The principle is discovered. I pull out the leg of a live Epeira.
Brought just as it is into contact with the lime-threads, it does not
stick to them any more than to the neutral cords, whether spokes or
parts of the framework. We were entitled to expect this, judging
by the Spider’s general immunity.</p>
<p>But here is something that wholly alters the result. I put
the leg to soak for a quarter of an hour in disulphide of carbon, the
best solvent of fatty matters. I wash it carefully with a brush
dipped in the same fluid. When this washing is finished, the leg
sticks to the snaring-thread quite easily and adheres to it just as
well as anything else would, the unoiled straw, for instance.</p>
<p>Did I guess aright when I judged that it was a fatty substance that
preserved the Epeira from the snares of her sticky Catherine-wheel?
The action of the carbon disulphide seems to say yes. Besides,
there is no reason why a substance of this kind, which plays so frequent
a part in animal economy, should not coat the Spider very slightly by
the mere act of perspiration. We used to rub our fingers with
a little oil before handling the twigs in which the Goldfinch was to
be caught; even so the Epeira varnishes herself with a special sweat,
to operate on any part of her web without fear of the lime-threads.</p>
<p>However, an unduly protracted stay on the sticky threads would have
its drawbacks. In the long run, continual contact with those threads
might produce a certain adhesion and inconvenience the Spider, who must
preserve all her agility in order to rush upon the prey before it can
release itself. For this reason, gummy threads are never used
in building the post of interminable waiting.</p>
<p>It is only on her resting-floor that the Epeira sits, motionless
and with her eight legs outspread, ready to mark the least quiver in
the net. It is here, again, that she takes her meals, often long-drawn-out,
when the joint is a substantial one; it is hither that, after trussing
and nibbling it, she drags her prey at the end of a thread, to consume
it at her ease on a non-viscous mat. As a hunting-post and refectory,
the Epeira has contrived a central space, free from glue.</p>
<p>As for the glue itself, it is hardly possible to study its chemical
properties, because the quantity is so slight. The microscope
shows it trickling from the broken threads in the form of a transparent
and more or less granular streak. The following experiment will
tell us more about it.</p>
<p>With a sheet of glass passed across the web, I gather a series of
lime-threads which remain fixed in parallel lines. I cover this
sheet with a bell-jar standing in a depth of water. Soon, in this
atmosphere saturated with humidity, the threads become enveloped in
a watery sheath, which gradually increases and begins to flow.
The twisted shape has by this time disappeared; and the channel of the
thread reveals a chaplet of translucent orbs, that is to say, a series
of extremely fine drops.</p>
<p>In twenty-four hours, the threads have lost their contents and are
reduced to almost invisible streaks. If I then lay a drop of water
on the glass, I get a sticky solution, similar to that which a particle
of gum arabic might yield. The conclusion is evident: the Epeira’s
glue is a substance that absorbs moisture freely. In an atmosphere
with a high degree of humidity, it becomes saturated and percolates
by sweating through the side of the tubular threads.</p>
<p>These data explain certain facts relating to the work of the net.
The full-grown Banded and Silky Epeirae weave at very early hours, long
before dawn. Should the air turn misty, they sometimes leave that
part of the task unfinished: they build the general framework, they
lay the spokes, they even draw the auxiliary spiral, for all these parts
are unaffected by excess of moisture; but they are very careful not
to work at the lime-threads, which, if soaked by the fog, would dissolve
into sticky shreds and lose their efficacy by being wetted. The
net that was started will be finished to-morrow, if the atmosphere be
favourable.</p>
<p>While the highly-absorbent character of the snaring-thread has its
drawbacks, it also has compensating advantages. Both Epeirae,
when hunting by day, affect those hot places, exposed to the fierce
rays of the sun, wherein the Crickets delight. In the torrid heats
of the dog-days, therefore, the lime-threads, but for special provisions,
would be liable to dry up, to shrivel into stiff and lifeless filaments.
But the very opposite happens. At the most scorching times of
the day, they continue supple, elastic and more and more adhesive.</p>
<p>How is this brought about? By their very powers of absorption.
The moisture of which the air is never deprived penetrates them slowly;
it dilutes the thick contents of their tubes to the requisite degree
and causes it to ooze through, as and when the earlier stickiness decreases.
What bird-catcher could vie with the Garden Spider in the art of laying
lime-snares? And all this industry and cunning for the capture
of a Moth!</p>
<p>Then, too, what a passion for production! Knowing the diameter
of the orb and the number of coils, we can easily calculate the total
length of the sticky spiral. We find that, in one sitting, each
time that she remakes her web, the Angular Epeira produces some twenty
yards of gummy thread. The more skilful Silky Epeira produces
thirty. Well, during two months, the Angular Epeira, my neighbour,
renewed her snare nearly every evening. During that period, she
manufactured something like three-quarters of a mile of this tubular
thread, rolled into a tight twist and bulging with glue.</p>
<p>I should like an anatomist endowed with better implements than mine
and with less tired eyesight to explain to us the work of the marvellous
rope-yard. How is the silky matter moulded into a capillary tube?
How is this tube filled with glue and tightly twisted? And how
does this same wire-mill also turn out plain threads, wrought first
into a framework and then into muslin and satin; next, a russet foam,
such as fills the wallet of the Banded Epeira; next, the black stripes
stretched in meridian curves on that same wallet? What a number
of products to come from that curious factory, a Spider’s belly!
I behold the results, but fail to understand the working of the machine.
I leave the problem to the masters of the microtome and the scalpel.</p>
<h2>CHAPTER XII: THE GARDEN SPIDERS: THE TELEGRAPH-WIRE</h2>
<p>Of the six Garden Spiders that form the object of my observations,
two only, the Banded and the silky Epeira, remain constantly in their
webs, even under the blinding rays of a fierce sun. The others,
as a rule, do not show themselves until nightfall. At some distance
from the net, they have a rough and ready retreat in the brambles, an
ambush made of a few leaves held together by stretched threads.
It is here that, for the most part, they remain in the daytime, motionless
and sunk in meditation.</p>
<p>But the shrill light that vexes them is the joy of the fields.
At such times, the Locust hops more nimbly than ever, more gaily skims
the Dragon-fly. Besides, the limy web, despite the rents suffered
during the night, is still in serviceable condition. If some giddy-pate
allow himself to be caught, will the Spider, at the distance whereto
she has retired, be unable to take advantage of the windfall?
Never fear. She arrives in a flash. How is she apprised?
Let us explain the matter.</p>
<p>The alarm is given by the vibration of the web, much more than by
the sight of the captured object. A very simple experiment will
prove this. I lay upon a Banded Epeira’s lime-threads a
Locust that second asphyxiated with carbon disulphide. The carcass
is placed in front, or behind, or at either side of the Spider, who
sits moveless in the centre of the net. If the test is to be applied
to a species with a daytime hiding-place amid the foliage, the dead
Locust is laid on the web, more or less near the centre, no matter how.</p>
<p>In both cases, nothing happens at first. The Epeira remains
in her motionless attitude, even when the morsel is at a short distance
in front of her. She is indifferent to the presence of the game,
does not seem to perceive it, so much so that she ends by wearing out
my patience. Then, with a long straw, which enables me to conceal
myself slightly, I set the dead insect trembling.</p>
<p>That is quite enough. The Banded Epeira and the Silky Epeira
hasten to the central floor; the others come down from the branch; all
go to the Locust, swathe him with tape, treat him, in short, as they
would treat a live prey captured under normal conditions. It took
the shaking of the web to decide them to attack.</p>
<p>Perhaps the grey colour of the Locust is not sufficiently conspicuous
to attract attention by itself. Then let us try red, the brightest
colour to our retina and probably also to the Spiders’.
None of the game hunted by the Epeirae being clad in scarlet, I make
a small bundle out of red wool, a bait of the size of a Locust.
I glue it to the web.</p>
<p>My stratagem succeeds. As long as the parcel is stationary,
the Spider is not roused; but, the moment it trembles, stirred by my
straw, she runs up eagerly.</p>
<p>There are silly ones who just touch the thing with their legs and,
without further enquiries, swathe it in silk after the manner of the
usual game. They even go so far as to dig their fangs into the
bait, following the rule of the preliminary poisoning. Then and
then only the mistake is recognized and the tricked Spider retires and
does not come back, unless it be long afterwards, when she flings the
cumbersome object out of the web.</p>
<p>There are also clever ones. Like the others, these hasten to
the red-woollen lure, which my straw insidiously keeps moving; they
come from their tent among the leaves as readily as from the centre
of the web; they explore it with their palpi and their legs; but, soon
perceiving that the thing is valueless, they are careful not to spend
their silk on useless bonds. My quivering bait does not deceive
them. It is flung out after a brief inspection.</p>
<p>Still, the clever ones, like the silly ones, run even from a distance,
from their leafy ambush. How do they know? Certainly not
by sight. Before recognizing their mistake, they have to hold
the object between their legs and even to nibble at it a little.
They are extremely short-sighted. At a hand’s-breadth’s
distance, the lifeless prey, unable to shake the web, remains unperceived.
Besides, in many cases, the hunting takes place in the dense darkness
of the night, when sight, even if it were good, would not avail.</p>
<p>If the eyes are insufficient guides, even close at hand, how will
it be when the prey has to be spied from afar! In that case, an intelligence-apparatus
for long-distance work becomes indispensable. We have no difficulty
in detecting the apparatus.</p>
<p>Let us look attentively behind the web of any Epeira with a daytime
hiding-place: we shall see a thread that starts from the centre of the
network, ascends in a slanting line outside the plane of the web and
ends at the ambush where the Spider lurks all day. Except at the
central point, there is no connection between this thread and the rest
of the work, no interweaving with the scaffolding-threads. Free
of impediment, the line runs straight from the centre of the net to
the ambush-tent. Its length averages twenty-two inches.
The Angular Epeira, settled high up in the trees, has shown me some
as long as eight or nine feet.</p>
<p>There is no doubt that this slanting line is a foot-bridge which
allows the Spider to repair hurriedly to the web, when summoned by urgent
business, and then, when her round is finished, to return to her hut.
In fact, it is the road which I see her follow, in going and coming.
But is that all? No; for, if the Epeira had no aim in view but
a means of rapid transit between her tent and the net, the foot-bridge
would be fastened to the upper edge of the web. The journey would
be shorter and the slope less steep.</p>
<p>Why, moreover, does this line always start in the centre of the sticky
network and nowhere else? Because that is the point where the
spokes meet and, therefore, the common centre of vibration. Anything
that moves upon the web sets it shaking. All then that is needed
is a thread issuing from this central point to convey to a distance
the news of a prey struggling in some part or other of the net.
The slanting cord, extending outside the plane of the web, is more than
a foot-bridge: it is, above all, a signalling-apparatus, a telegraph-wire.</p>
<p>Let us try experiment. I place a Locust on the network.
Caught in the sticky toils, he plunges about. Forthwith, the Spider
issues impetuously from her hut, comes down the foot-bridge, makes a
rush for the Locust, wraps him up and operates on him according to rule.
Soon after, she hoists him, fastened by a line to her spinneret, and
drags him to her hiding-place, where a long banquet will be held.
So far, nothing new: things happen as usual.</p>
<p>I leave the Spider to mind her own affairs for some days, before
I interfere with her. I again propose to give her a Locust; but,
this time, I first cut the signalling-thread with a touch of the scissors,
without shaking any part of the edifice. The game is then laid
on the web. Complete success: the entangled insect struggles,
sets the net quivering; the Spider, on her side, does not stir, as though
heedless of events.</p>
<p>The idea might occur to one that, in this business, the Epeira stays
motionless in her cabin since she is prevented from hurrying down, because
the foot-bridge is broken. Let us undeceive ourselves: for one
road open to her there are a hundred, all ready to bring her to the
place where her presence is now required. The network is fastened
to the branches by a host of lines, all of them very easy to cross.
Well, the Epeira embarks upon none of them, but remains moveless and
self-absorbed.</p>
<p>Why? Because her telegraph, being out of order, no longer tells
her of the shaking of the web. The captured prey is too far off
for her to see it; she is all unwitting. A good hour passes, with
the Locust still kicking, the Spider impassive, myself watching.
Nevertheless, in the end, the Epeira wakes up: no longer feeling the
signalling-thread, broken by my scissors, as taut as usual under her
legs, she comes to look into the state of things. The web is reached,
without the least difficulty, by one of the lines of the framework,
the first that offers. The Locust is then perceived and forthwith
enswathed, after which the signalling-thread is remade, taking the place
of the one which I have broken. Along this road the Spider goes
home, dragging her prey behind her.</p>
<p>My neighbour, the mighty Angular Epeira, with her telegraph-wire
nine feet long, has even better things in store for me. One morning,
I find her web, which is now deserted, almost intact, a proof that the
night’s hunting has not been good. The animal must be hungry.
With a piece of game for a bait, I hope to bring her down from her lofty
retreat.</p>
<p>I entangle in the web a rare morsel, a Dragon-fly, who struggles
desperately and sets the whole net a-shaking. The other, up above,
leaves her lurking-place amid the cypress-foliage, strides swiftly down
along her telegraph-wire, comes to the Dragon-fly, trusses her and at
once climbs home again by the same road, with her prize dangling at
her heels by a thread. The final sacrifice will take place in
the quiet of the leafy sanctuary.</p>
<p>A few days later, I renew my experiment under the same conditions,
but, this time, I first cut the signalling-thread. In vain I select
a large Dragon-fly, a very restless prisoner; in vain I exert my patience:
the Spider does not come down all day. Her telegraph being broken,
she receives no notice of what is happening nine feet below. The
entangled morsel remains where it lies, not despised, but unknown.
At nightfall, the Epeira leaves her cabin, passes over the ruins of
her web, finds the Dragon-fly and eats her on the spot, after which
the net is renewed.</p>
<p>One of the Epeirae whom I have had the opportunity of examining simplifies
the system, while retaining the essential mechanism of a transmission-thread.
This is the Crater Epeira (<i>Epeira cratera</i>, WALCK.), a species
seen in spring, at which time she indulges especially in the chase of
the Domestic Bee, upon the flowering rosemaries. At the leafy
end of a branch, she builds a sort of silken shell, the shape and size
of an acorn-cup. This is where she sits, with her paunch contained
in the round cavity and her forelegs resting on the ledge, ready to
leap. The lazy creature loves this position and rarely stations
herself head downwards on the web, as do the others. Cosily ensconced
in the hollow of her cup, she awaits the approaching game.</p>
<p>Her web, which is vertical, as is the rule among the Epeirae, is
of a fair size and always very near the bowl wherein the Spider takes
her ease. Moreover, it touches the bowl by means of an angular
extension; and the angle always contains one spoke which the Epeira,
seated, so to speak, in her crater, has constantly under her legs.
This spoke, springing from the common focus of the vibrations from all
parts of the network, is eminently fitted to keep the Spider informed
of whatsoever happens. It has a double office: it forms part of
the Catherine-wheel supporting the lime-threads and it warns the Epeira
by its vibrations. A special thread is here superfluous.</p>
<p>The other snarers, on the contrary, who occupy a distant retreat
by day, cannot do without a private wire that keeps them in permanent
communication with the deserted web. All of them have one, in
point of fact, but only when age comes, age prone to rest and to long
slumbers. In their youth, the Epeirae, who are then very wide-awake,
know nothing of the art of telegraphy. Besides, their web, a short-lived
work whereof hardly a trace remains on the morrow, does not allow of
this kind of industry. It is no use going to the expense of a
signalling-apparatus for a ruined snare wherein nothing can now be caught.
Only the old Spiders, meditating or dozing in their green tent, are
warned from afar, by telegraph, of what takes place on the web.</p>
<p>To save herself from keeping a close watch that would degenerate
into drudgery and to remain alive to events even when resting, with
her back turned on the net, the ambushed Spider always has her foot
upon the telegraph-wire. Of my observations on this subject, let
me relate the following, which will be sufficient for our purpose.</p>
<p>An Angular Epeira, with a remarkably fine belly, has spun her web
between two laurestine-shrubs, covering a width of nearly a yard.
The sun beats upon the snare, which is abandoned long before dawn.
The Spider is in her day manor, a resort easily discovered by following
the telegraph-wire. It is a vaulted chamber of dead leaves, joined
together with a few bits of silk. The refuge is deep: the Spider
disappears in it entirely, all but her rounded hind-quarters, which
bar the entrance to the donjon.</p>
<p>With her front half plunged into the back of her hut, the Epeira
certainly cannot see her web. Even if she had good sight, instead
of being purblind, her position could not possibly allow her to keep
the prey in view. Does she give up hunting during this period,
of bright sunlight? Not at all. Look again.</p>
<p>Wonderful! One of her hind-legs is stretched outside the leafy
cabin; and the signalling-thread ends just at the tip of that leg.
Whoso has not seen the Epeira in this attitude, with her hand, so to
speak, on the telegraph-receiver, knows nothing of one of the most curious
instances of animal cleverness. Let any game appear upon the scene;
and the slumberer, forthwith aroused by means of the leg receiving the
vibrations, hastens up. A Locust whom I myself lay on the web
procures her this agreeable shock and what follows. If she is
satisfied with her bag, I am still more satisfied with what I have learnt.</p>
<p>The occasion is too good not to find out, under better conditions
as regards approach, what the inhabitant of the cypress-trees has already
shown me. The next morning, I cut the telegraph-wire, this time
as long as one’s arm and held, like yesterday, by one of the hind-legs
stretched outside the cabin. I then place on the web a double
prey, a Dragon-fly and a Locust. The latter kicks out with his
long, spurred shanks; the other flutters her wings. The web is
tossed about to such an extent that a number of leaves, just beside
the Epeira’s nest, move, shaken by the threads of the framework
affixed to them.</p>
<p>And this vibration, though so close at hand, does not rouse the Spider
in the least, does not make her even turn round to enquire what is going
on. The moment that her signalling-thread ceases to work, she
knows nothing of passing events. All day long, she remains without
stirring. In the evening, at eight o’clock, she sallies
forth to weave the new web and at last finds the rich windfall whereof
she was hitherto unaware.</p>
<p>One word more. The web is often shaken by the wind. The
different parts of the framework, tossed and teased by the eddying air-currents,
cannot fail to transmit their vibration to the signalling-thread.
Nevertheless, the Spider does not quit her hut and remains indifferent
to the commotion prevailing in the net. Her line, therefore, is
something better than a bell-rope that pulls and communicates the impulse
given: it is a telephone capable, like our own, of transmitting infinitesimal
waves of sound. Clutching her telephone-wire with a toe, the Spider
listens with her leg; she perceives the innermost vibrations; she distinguishes
between the vibration proceeding from a prisoner and the mere shaking
caused by the wind.</p>
<h2>CHAPTER XIII: THE GARDEN SPIDERS: PAIRING AND HUNTING</h2>
<p>Notwithstanding the importance of the subject, I shall not enlarge
upon the nuptials of the Epeirae, grim natures whose loves easily turn
to tragedy in the mystery of the night. I have but once been present
at the pairing and for this curious experience I must thank my lucky
star and my fat neighbour, the Angular Epeira, whom I visit so often
by lantern-light. Here you have it.</p>
<p>It is the first week of August, at about nine o’clock in the
evening, under a perfect sky, in calm, hot weather. The Spider
has not yet constructed her web and is sitting motionless on her suspension-cable.
The fact that she should be slacking like this, at a time when her building-operations
ought to be in full swing, naturally astonishes me. Can something
unusual be afoot?</p>
<p>Even so. I see hastening up from the neighbouring bushes and
embarking on the cable a male, a dwarf, who is coming, the whipper-snapper,
to pay his respects to the portly giantess. How has he, in his
distant corner, heard of the presence of the nymph ripe for marriage?
Among the Spiders, these things are learnt in the silence of the night,
without a summons, without a signal, none knows how.</p>
<p>Once, the Great Peacock, <SPAN name="citation32"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote32">{32}</SPAN>
apprised by the magic effluvia, used to come from miles around to visit
the recluse in her bell-jar in my study. The dwarf of this evening,
that other nocturnal pilgrim, crosses the intricate tangle of the branches
without a mistake and makes straight for the rope-walker. He has
as his guide the infallible compass that brings every Jack and his Jill
together.</p>
<p>He climbs the slope of the suspension-cord; he advances circumspectly,
step by step. He stops some distance away, irresolute. Shall
he go closer? Is this the right moment? No. The other
lifts a limb and the scared visitor hurries down again. Recovering
from his fright, he climbs up once more, draws a little nearer.
More sudden flights, followed by fresh approaches, each time nigher
than before. This restless running to and fro is the declaration
of the enamoured swain.</p>
<p>Perseverance spells success. The pair are now face to face,
she motionless and grave, he all excitement. With the tip of his
leg, he ventures to touch the plump wench. He has gone too far,
daring youth that he is! Panic-stricken, he takes a header, hanging
by his safety-line. It is only for a moment, however. Up
he comes again. He has learnt, from certain symptoms, that we
are at last yielding to his blandishments.</p>
<p>With his legs and especially with his palpi, or feelers, he teases
the buxom gossip, who answers with curious skips and bounds. Gripping
a thread with her front tarsi, or fingers, she turns, one after the
other, a number of back somersaults, like those of an acrobat on the
trapeze. Having done this, she presents the under-part of her
paunch to the dwarf and allows him to fumble at it a little with his
feelers. Nothing more: it is done.</p>
<p>The object of the expedition is attained. The whipper-snapper
makes off at full speed, as though he had the Furies at his heels.
If he remained, he would presumably be eaten. These exercises
on the tight-rope are not repeated. I kept watch in vain on the
following evenings: I never saw the fellow again.</p>
<p>When he is gone, the bride descends from the cable, spins her web
and assumes the hunting-attitude. We must eat to have silk, we
must have silk to eat and especially to weave the expensive cocoon of
the family. There is therefore no rest, not even after the excitement
of being married.</p>
<p>The Epeirae are monuments of patience in their lime-snare.
With her head down and her eight legs wide-spread, the Spider occupies
the centre of the web, the receiving-point of the information sent along
the spokes. If anywhere, behind or before, a vibration occur,
the sign of a capture, the Epeira knows about it, even without the aid
of sight. She hastens up at once.</p>
<p>Until then, not a movement: one would think that the animal was hypnotized
by her watching. At most, on the appearance of anything suspicious,
she begins shaking her nest. This is her way of inspiring the
intruder with awe. If I myself wish to provoke the singular alarm,
I have but to tease the Epeira with a bit of straw. You cannot
have a swing without an impulse of some sort. The terror-stricken
Spider, who wishes to strike terror into others, has hit upon something
much better. With nothing to push her, she swings with her floor
of ropes. There is no effort, no visible exertion. Not a
single part of the animal moves; and yet everything trembles.
Violent shaking proceeds from apparent inertia. Rest causes commotion.</p>
<p>When calm is restored, she resumes her attitude, ceaselessly pondering
the harsh problem of life:</p>
<p>‘Shall I dine to-day, or not?’</p>
<p>Certain privileged beings, exempt from those anxieties, have food
in abundance and need not struggle to obtain it. Such is the Gentle,
who swims blissfully in the broth of the putrefying adder. Others—and,
by a strange irony of fate, these are generally the most gifted—only
manage to eat by dint of craft and patience.</p>
<p>You are of their company, O my industrious Epeirae! So that
you may dine, you spend your treasures of patience nightly; and often
without result. I sympathize with your woes, for I, who am as
concerned as you about my daily bread, I also doggedly spread my net,
the net for catching ideas, a more elusive and less substantial prize
than the Moth. Let us not lose heart. The best part of life
is not in the present, still less in the past; it lies in the future,
the domain of hope. Let us wait.</p>
<p>All day long, the sky, of a uniform grey, has appeared to be brewing
a storm. In spite of the threatened downpour, my neighbour, who
is a shrewd weather-prophet, has come out of the cypress-tree and begun
to renew her web at the regular hour. Her forecast is correct:
it will be a fine night. See, the steaming-pan of the clouds splits
open; and, through the apertures, the moon peeps, inquisitively.
I too, lantern in hand, am peeping. A gust of wind from the north
clears the realms on high; the sky becomes magnificent; perfect calm
reigns below. The Moths begin their nightly rounds. Good!
One is caught, a mighty fine one. The Spider will dine to-day.</p>
<p>What happens next, in an uncertain light, does not lend itself to
accurate observation. It is better to turn to those Garden Spiders
who never leave their web and who hunt mainly in the daytime.
The Banded and the Silky Epeira, both of whom live on the rosemaries
in the enclosure, shall show us in broad day-light the innermost details
of the tragedy.</p>
<p>I myself place on the lime-snare a victim of my selecting.
Its six legs are caught without more ado. If the insect raises
one of its tarsi and pulls towards itself, the treacherous thread follows,
unwinds slightly and, without letting go or breaking, yields to the
captive’s desperate jerks. Any limb released only tangles
the others still more and is speedily recaptured by the sticky matter.
There is no means of escape, except by smashing the trap with a sudden
effort whereof even powerful insects are not always capable.</p>
<p>Warned by the shaking of the net, the Epeira hastens up; she turns
round about the quarry; she inspects it at a distance, so as to ascertain
the extent of the danger before attacking. The strength of the
snareling will decide the plan of campaign. Let us first suppose
the usual case, that of an average head of game, a Moth or Fly of some
sort. Facing her prisoner, the Spider contracts her abdomen slightly
and touches the insect for a moment with the end of her spinnerets;
then, with her front tarsi, she sets her victim spinning. The
Squirrel, in the moving cylinder of his cage, does not display a more
graceful or nimbler dexterity. A cross-bar of the sticky spiral
serves as an axis for the tiny machine, which turns, turns swiftly,
like a spit. It is a treat to the eyes to see it revolve.</p>
<p>What is the object of this circular motion? See, the brief
contact of the spinnerets has given a starting-point for a thread, which
the Spider must now draw from her silk-warehouse and gradually roll
around the captive, so as to swathe him in a winding-sheet which will
overpower any effort made. It is the exact process employed in
our wire-mills: a motor-driven spool revolves and, by its action, draws
the wire through the narrow eyelet of a steel plate, making it of the
fineness required, and, with the same movement, winds it round and round
its collar.</p>
<p>Even so with the Epeira’s work. The Spider’s front
tarsi are the motor; the revolving spool is the captured insect; the
steel eyelet is the aperture of the spinnerets. To bind the subject
with precision and dispatch nothing could be better than this inexpensive
and highly-effective method.</p>
<p>Less frequently, a second process is employed. With a quick
movement, the Spider herself turns round about the motionless insect,
crossing the web first at the top and then at the bottom and gradually
placing the fastenings of her line. The great elasticity of the
lime-threads allows the Epeira to fling herself time after time right
into the web and to pass through it without damaging the net.</p>
<p>Let us now suppose the case of some dangerous game: a Praying Mantis,
for instance, brandishing her lethal limbs, each hooked and fitted with
a double saw; an angry Hornet, darting her awful sting; a sturdy Beetle,
invincible under his horny armour. These are exceptional morsels,
hardly ever known to the Epeirae. Will they be accepted, if supplied
by my stratagems?</p>
<p>They are, but not without caution. The game is seen to be perilous
of approach and the Spider turns her back upon it, instead of facing
it; she trains her rope-cannon upon it. Quickly, the hind-legs
draw from the spinnerets something much better than single cords.
The whole silk-battery works at one and the same time, firing a regular
volley of ribbons and sheets, which a wide movement of the legs spreads
fan-wise and flings over the entangled prisoner. Guarding against
sudden starts, the Epeira casts her armfuls of bands on the front-and
hind-parts, over the legs and over the wings, here, there and everywhere,
extravagantly. The most fiery prey is promptly mastered under
this avalanche. In vain, the Mantis tries to open her saw-toothed
arm-guards; in vain, the Hornet makes play with her dagger; in vain,
the Beetle stiffens his legs and arches his back: a fresh wave of threads
swoops down and paralyses every effort.</p>
<p>These lavished, far-flung ribbons threaten to exhaust the factory;
it would be much more economical to resort to the method of the spool;
but, to turn the machine, the Spider would have to go up to it and work
it with her leg. This is too risky; and hence the continuous spray
of silk, at a safe distance. When all is used up, there is more
to come.</p>
<p>Still, the Epeira seems concerned at this excessive outlay.
When circumstances permit, she gladly returns to the mechanism of the
revolving spool. I saw her practise this abrupt change of tactics
on a big Beetle, with a smooth, plump body, which lent itself admirably
to the rotary process. After depriving the beast of all power
of movement, she went up to it and turned her corpulent victim as she
would have done with a medium-sized Moth.</p>
<p>But with the Praying Mantis, sticking out her long legs and her spreading
wings, rotation is no longer feasible. Then, until the quarry
is thoroughly subdued, the spray of bandages goes on continuously, even
to the point of drying up the silk-glands. A capture of this kind
is ruinous. It is true that, except when I interfered, I have
never seen the Spider tackle that formidable provender.</p>
<p>Be it feeble or strong, the game is now neatly trussed, by one of
the two methods. The next move never varies. The bound insect
is bitten, without persistency and without any wound that shows.
The Spider next retires and allows the bite to act, which it soon does.
She then returns.</p>
<p>If the victim be small, a Clothes-moth, for instance, it is consumed
on the spot, at the place where it was captured. But, for a prize
of some importance, on which she hopes to feast for many an hour, sometimes
for many a day, the Spider needs a sequestered dining-room, where there
is naught to fear from the stickiness of the network. Before going
to it, she first makes her prey turn in the converse direction to that
of the original rotation. Her object is to free the nearest spokes,
which supplied pivots for the machinery. They are essential factors
which it behoves her to keep intact, if need be by sacrificing a few
cross-bars.</p>
<p>It is done; the twisted ends are put back into position. The
well-trussed game is at last removed from the web and fastened on behind
with a thread. The Spider then marches in front and the load is
trundled across the web and hoisted to the resting-floor, which is both
an inspection-post and a dining-hall. When the Spider is of a
species that shuns the light and possesses a telegraph-line, she mounts
to her daytime hiding-place along this line, with the game bumping against
her heels.</p>
<p>While she is refreshing herself, let us enquire into the effects
of the little bite previously administered to the silk-swathed captive.
Does the Spider kill the patient with a view to avoiding unseasonable
jerks, protests so disagreeable at dinner-time? Several reasons
make me doubt it. In the first place, the attack is so much veiled
as to have all the appearance of a mere kiss. Besides, it is made
anywhere, at the first spot that offers. The expert slayers <SPAN name="citation33"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote33">{33}</SPAN>
employ methods of the highest precision: they give a stab in the neck,
or under the throat; they wound the cervical nerve-centres, the seat
of energy. The paralyzers, those accomplished anatomists, poison
the motor nerve-centres, of which they know the number and position.
The Epeira possesses none of this fearsome knowledge. She inserts
her fangs at random, as the Bee does her sting. She does not select
one spot rather than another; she bites indifferently at whatever comes
within reach. This being so, her poison would have to possess
unparalleled virulence to produce a corpse-like inertia no matter which
the point attacked. I can scarcely believe in instantaneous death
resulting from the bite, especially in the case of insects, with their
highly-resistant organisms.</p>
<p>Besides, is it really a corpse that the Epeira wants, she who feeds
on blood much more than on flesh? It were to her advantage to
suck a live body, wherein the flow of the liquids, set in movement by
the pulsation of the dorsal vessel, that rudimentary heart of insects,
must act more freely than in a lifeless body, with its stagnant fluids.
The game which the Spider means to suck dry might very well not be dead.
This is easily ascertained.</p>
<p>I place some Locusts of different species on the webs in my menagerie,
one on this, another on that. The Spider comes rushing up, binds
the prey, nibbles at it gently and withdraws, waiting for the bite to
take effect. I then take the insect and carefully strip it of
its silken shroud. The Locust is not dead, far from it; one would
even think that he had suffered no harm. I examine the released
prisoner through the lens in vain; I can see no trace of a wound.</p>
<p>Can he be unscathed, in spite of the sort of kiss which I saw given
to him just now? You would be ready to say so, judging by the
furious way in which he kicks in my fingers. Nevertheless, when
put on the ground, he walks awkwardly, he seems reluctant to hop.
Perhaps it is a temporary trouble, caused by his terrible excitement
in the web. It looks as though it would soon pass.</p>
<p>I lodge my Locusts in cages, with a lettuce-leaf to console them
for their trials; but they will not be comforted. A day elapses,
followed by a second. Not one of them touches the leaf of salad;
their appetite has disappeared. Their movements become more uncertain,
as though hampered by irresistible torpor. On the second day,
they are dead, every one irrecoverably dead.</p>
<p>The Epeira, therefore, does not incontinently kill her prey with
her delicate bite; she poisons it so as to produce a gradual weakness,
which gives the blood-sucker ample time to drain her victim, without
the least risk, before the rigor mortis stops the flow of moisture.</p>
<p>The meal lasts quite twenty-four hours, if the joint be large; and
to the very end the butchered insect retains a remnant of life, a favourable
condition for the exhausting of the juices. Once again, we see
a skilful method of slaughter, very different from the tactics in use
among the expert paralyzers or slayers. Here there is no display
of anatomical science. Unacquainted with the patient’s structure,
the Spider stabs at random. The virulence of the poison does the
rest.</p>
<p>There are, however, some very few cases in which the bite is speedily
mortal. My notes speak of an Angular Epeira grappling with the
largest Dragon-fly in my district (<i>AEshna grandis</i>, LIN.).
I myself had entangled in the web this head of big game, which is not
often captured by the Epeirae. The net shakes violently, seems
bound to break its moorings.</p>
<p>The Spider rushes from her leafy villa, runs boldly up to the giantess,
flings a single bundle of ropes at her and, without further precautions,
grips her with her legs, tries to subdue her and then digs her fangs
into the Dragon-fly’s back. The bite is prolonged in such
a way as to astonish me. This is not the perfunctory kiss with
which I am already familiar; it is a deep, determined wound. After
striking her blow, the Spider retires to a certain distance and waits
for her poison to take effect.</p>
<p>I at once remove the Dragon-fly. She is dead, really and truly
dead. Laid upon my table and left alone for twenty-four hours,
she makes not the slightest movement. A prick of which my lens
cannot see the marks, so sharp-pointed are the Epeira’s weapons,
was enough, with a little insistence, to kill the powerful animal.
Proportionately, the Rattlesnake, the Horned Viper, the Trigonocephalus
and other ill-famed serpents produce less paralysing effects upon their
victims.</p>
<p>And these Epeirae, so terrible to insects, I am able to handle without
any fear. My skin does not suit them. If I persuaded them
to bite me, what would happen to me? Hardly anything. We
have more cause to dread the sting of a nettle than the dagger which
is fatal to Dragon-flies. The same virus acts differently upon
this organism and that, is formidable here and quite mild there.
What kills the insect may easily be harmless to us. Let us not,
however, generalize too far. The Narbonne Lycosa, that other enthusiastic
insect-huntress, would make us pay clearly if we attempted to take liberties
with her.</p>
<p>It is not uninteresting to watch the Epeira at dinner. I light
upon one, the Banded Epeira, at the moment, about three o’clock
in the afternoon, when she has captured a Locust. Planted in the
centre of the web, on her resting-floor, she attacks the venison at
the joint of a haunch. There is no movement, not even of the mouth-parts,
as far as I am able to discover. The mouth lingers, close-applied,
at the point originally bitten. There are no intermittent mouthfuls,
with the mandibles moving backwards and forwards. It is a sort
of continuous kiss.</p>
<p>I visit my Epeira at intervals. The mouth does not change its
place. I visit her for the last time at nine o’clock in
the evening. Matters stand exactly as they did: after six hours’
consumption, the mouth is still sucking at the lower end of the right
haunch. The fluid contents of the victim are transferred to the
ogress’ belly, I know not how.</p>
<p>Next morning, the Spider is still at table. I take away her
dish. Naught remains of the Locust but his skin, hardly altered
in shape, but utterly drained and perforated in several places.
The method, therefore, was changed during the night. To extract
the non-fluent residue, the viscera and muscles, the stiff cuticle had
to be tapped here, there and elsewhere, after which the tattered husk,
placed bodily in the press of the mandibles, would have been chewed,
rechewed and finally reduced to a pill, which the sated Spider throws
up. This would have been the end of the victim, had I not taken
it away before the time.</p>
<p>Whether she wound or kill, the Epeira bites her captive somewhere
or other, no matter where. This is an excellent method on her
part, because of the variety of the game that comes her way. I
see her accepting with equal readiness whatever chance may send her:
Butterflies and Dragon-flies, Flies and Wasps, small Dung-beetles and
Locusts. If I offer her a Mantis, a Bumble-bee, an Anoxia—the
equivalent of the common Cockchafer—and other dishes probably
unknown to her race, she accepts all and any, large and small, thin-skinned
and horny-skinned, that which goes afoot and that which takes winged
flight. She is omnivorous, she preys on everything, down to her
own kind, should the occasion offer.</p>
<p>Had she to operate according to individual structure, she would need
an anatomical dictionary; and instinct is essentially unfamiliar with
generalities: its knowledge is always confined to limited points.
The Cerceres know their Weevils and their Buprestis-beetles absolutely;
the Sphex their Grasshoppers, their Crickets and their Locusts; the
Scoliae <SPAN name="citation34"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote34">{34}</SPAN> their
Cetonia- and Oryctes-grubs. Even so the other paralyzers.
Each has her own victim and knows nothing of any of the others.</p>
<p>The same exclusive tastes prevail among the slayers. Let us
remember, in this connection, <i>Philanthus apivorus</i> <SPAN name="citation35"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote35">{35}</SPAN>
and, especially, the Thomisus, the comely Spider who cuts Bees’
throats. They understand the fatal blow, either in the neck or
under the chin, a thing which the Epeira does not understand; but, just
because of this talent, they are specialists. Their province is
the Domestic Bee.</p>
<p>Animals are a little like ourselves: they excel in an art only on
condition of specializing in it. The Epeira, who, being omnivorous,
is obliged to generalize, abandons scientific methods and makes up for
this by distilling a poison capable of producing torpor and even death,
no matter what the point attacked.</p>
<p>Recognizing the large variety of game, we wonder how the Epeira manages
not to hesitate amid those many diverse forms, how, for instance, she
passes from the Locust to the Butterfly, so different in appearance.
To attribute to her as a guide an extensive zoological knowledge were
wildly in excess of what we may reasonably expect of her poor intelligence.
The thing moves, therefore it is worth catching: this formula seems
to sum up the Spider’s wisdom.</p>
<h2>CHAPTER XIV: THE GARDEN SPIDERS: THE QUESTION OF PROPERTY</h2>
<p>A dog has found a bone. He lies in the shade, holding it between
his paws, and studies it fondly. It is his sacred property, his
chattel. An Epeira has woven her web. Here again is property;
and owning a better title than the other. Favoured by chance and
assisted by his scent, the Dog has merely had a find; he has neither
worked nor paid for it. The Spider is more than a casual owner,
she has created what is hers. Its substance issued from her body,
its structure from her brain. If ever property was sacrosanct,
hers is.</p>
<p>Far higher stands the work of the weaver of ideas, who tissues a
book, that other Spider’s web, and out of his thought makes something
that shall instruct or thrill us. To protect our ‘bone,’
we have the police, invented for the express purpose. To protect
the book, we have none but farcical means. Place a few bricks
one atop the other; join them with mortar; and the law will defend your
wall. Build up in writing an edifice of your thoughts; and it
will be open to any one, without serious impediment, to abstract stones
from it, even to take the whole, if it suit him. A rabbit-hutch
is property; the work of the mind is not. If the animal has eccentric
views as regards the possessions of others, we have ours as well.</p>
<p>‘Might always has the best of the argument,’ said La
Fontaine, to the great scandal of the peace-lovers. The exigencies
of verse, rhyme and rhythm, carried the worthy fabulist further than
he intended: he meant to say that, in a fight between mastiffs and in
other brute conflicts, the stronger is left master of the bone.
He well knew that, as things go, success is no certificate of excellence.
Others came, the notorious evil-doers of humanity, who made a law of
the savage maxim that might is right.</p>
<p>We are the larvae with the changing skins, the ugly caterpillars
of a society that is slowly, very slowly, wending its way to the triumph
of right over might. When will this sublime metamorphosis be accomplished?
To free ourselves from those wild-beast brutalities, must we wait for
the ocean-plains of the southern hemisphere to flow to our side, changing
the face of continents and renewing the glacial period of the Reindeer
and the Mammoth? Perhaps, so slow is moral progress.</p>
<p>True, we have the bicycle, the motor-car, the dirigible airship and
other marvellous means of breaking our bones; but our morality is not
one rung the higher for it all. One would even say that, the farther
we proceed in our conquest of matter, the more our morality recedes.
The most advanced of our inventions consists in bringing men down with
grapeshot and explosives with the swiftness of the reaper mowing the
corn.</p>
<p>Would we see this might triumphant in all its beauty? Let us
spend a few weeks in the Epeira’s company. She is the owner
of a web, her work, her most lawful property. The question at
once presents itself: Does the Spider possibly recognize her fabric
by certain trademarks and distinguish it from that of her fellows?</p>
<p>I bring about a change of webs between two neighbouring Banded Epeirae.
No sooner is either placed upon the strange net than she makes for the
central floor, settles herself head downwards and does not stir from
it, satisfied with her neighbour’s web as with her own.
Neither by day nor by night does she try to shift her quarters and restore
matters to their pristine state. Both Spiders think themselves
in their own domain. The two pieces of work are so much alike
that I almost expected this.</p>
<p>I then decide to effect an exchange of webs between two different
species. I move the Banded Epeira to the net of the Silky Epeira
and vice versa. The two webs are now dissimilar; the Silky Epeira’s
has a limy spiral consisting of closer and more numerous circles.
What will the Spiders do, when thus put to the test of the unknown?
One would think that, when one of them found meshes too wide for her
under her feet, the other meshes too narrow, they would be frightened
by this sudden change and decamp in terror. Not at all.
Without a sign of perturbation, they remain, plant themselves in the
centre and await the coming of the game, as though nothing extraordinary
had happened. They do more than this. Days pass and, as
long as the unfamiliar web is not wrecked to the extent of being unserviceable,
they make no attempt to weave another in their own style. The
Spider, therefore, is incapable of recognizing her web. She takes
another’s work for hers, even when it is produced by a stranger
to her race.</p>
<p>We now come to the tragic side of this confusion. Wishing to
have subjects for study within my daily reach and to save myself the
trouble of casual excursions, I collect different Epeirae whom I find
in the course of my walks and establish them on the shrubs in my enclosure.
In this way, a rosemary-hedge, sheltered from the wind and facing the
sun, is turned into a well-stocked menagerie. I take the Spiders
from the paper bags wherein I had put them separately, to carry them,
and place them on the leaves, with no further precaution. It is
for them to make themselves at home. As a rule, they do not budge
all day from the place where I put them: they wait for nightfall before
seeking a suitable site whereon to weave a net.</p>
<p>Some among them show less patience. A little while ago, they
possessed a web, between the reeds of a brook or in the holm-oak copses;
and now they have none. They go off in search, to recover their
property or seize on some one else’s: it is all the same to them.
I come upon a Banded Epeira, newly imported, making for the web of a
Silky Epeira who has been my guest for some days now. The owner
is at her post, in the centre of the net. She awaits the stranger
with seeming impassiveness. Then suddenly they grip each other;
and a desperate fight begins. The Silky Epeira is worsted.
The other swathes her in bonds, drags her to the non-limy central floor
and, in the calmest fashion, eats her. The dead Spider is munched
for twenty-four hours and drained to the last drop, when the corpse,
a wretched, crumpled ball, is at last flung aside. The web so
foully conquered becomes the property of the stranger, who uses it,
if it have not suffered too much in the contest.</p>
<p>There is here a shadow of an excuse. The two Spiders were of
different species; and the struggle for life often leads to these exterminations
among such as are not akin. What would happen if the two belonged
to the same species? It is easily seen. I cannot rely upon
spontaneous invasions, which may be rare under normal conditions, and
I myself place a Banded Epeira on her kinswoman’s web. A
furious attack is made forthwith. Victory, after hanging for a
moment in the balance, is once again decided in the stranger’s
favour. The vanquished party, this time a sister, is eaten without
the slightest scruple. Her web becomes the property of the victor.</p>
<p>There it is, in all its horror, the right of might: to eat one’s
like and take away their goods. Man did the same in days of old:
he stripped and ate his fellows. We continue to rob one another,
both as nations and as individuals; but we no longer eat one another:
the custom has grown obsolete since we discovered an acceptable substitute
in the mutton-chop.</p>
<p>Let us not, however, blacken the Spider beyond her deserts.
She does not live by warring on her kith and kin; she does not of her
own accord attempt the conquest of another’s property. It
needs extraordinary circumstances to rouse her to these villainies.
I take her from her web and place her on another’s. From
that moment, she knows no distinction between <i>meum</i> and <i>tuum</i>:
the thing which the leg touches at once becomes real estate. And
the intruder, if she be the stronger, ends by eating the occupier, a
radical means of cutting short disputes.</p>
<p>Apart from disturbances similar to those provoked by myself, disturbances
that are possible in the everlasting conflict of events, the Spider,
jealous of her own web, seems to respect the webs of others. She
never indulges in brigandage against her fellows except when dispossessed
of her net, especially in the daytime, for weaving is never done by
day: this work is reserved for the night. When, however, she is
deprived of her livelihood and feels herself the stronger, then she
attacks her neighbour, rips her open, feeds on her and takes possession
of her goods. Let us make allowances and proceed.</p>
<p>We will now examine Spiders of more alien habits. The Banded
and the Silky Epeira differ greatly in form and colouring. The
first has a plump, olive-shaped belly, richly belted with white, bright-yellow
and black; the second’s abdomen is flat, of a silky white and
pinked into festoons. Judging only by dress and figure, we should
not think of closely connecting the two Spiders.</p>
<p>But high above shapes tower tendencies, those main characteristics
which our methods of classification, so particular about minute details
of form, ought to consult more widely than they do. The two dissimilar
Spiders have exactly similar ways of living. Both of them prefer
to hunt by day and never leave their webs; both sign their work with
a zigzag flourish. Their nets are almost identical, so much so
that the Banded Epeira uses the Silky Epeira’s web after eating
its owner. The Silky Epeira, on her side, when she is the stronger,
dispossesses her belted cousin and devours her. Each is at home
on the other’s web, when the argument of might triumphant has
ended the discussion.</p>
<p>Let us next take the case of the Cross Spider, a hairy beast of varying
shades of reddish-brown. She has three large white spots upon
her back, forming a triple-barred cross. She hunts mostly at night,
shuns the sun and lives by day on the adjacent shrubs, in a shady retreat
which communicates with the lime-snare by means of a telegraph-wire.
Her web is very similar in structure and appearance to those of the
two others. What will happen if I procure her the visit of a Banded
Epeira?</p>
<p>The lady of the triple cross is invaded by day, in the full light
of the sun, thanks to my mischievous intermediary. The web is
deserted; the proprietress is in her leafy hut. The telegraph-wire
performs its office; the Cross Spider hastens down, strides all round
her property, beholds the danger and hurriedly returns to her hiding-place,
without taking any measures against the intruder.</p>
<p>The latter, on her side, does not seem to be enjoying herself.
Were she placed on the web of one of her sisters, or even on that of
the Silky Epeira, she would have posted herself in the centre, as soon
as the struggle had ended in the other’s death. This time
there is no struggle, for the web is deserted; nothing prevents her
from taking her position in the centre, the chief strategic point; and
yet she does not move from the place where I put her.</p>
<p>I tickle her gently with the tip of a long straw. When at home,
if teased in this way, the Banded Epeira—like the others, for
that matter—violently shakes the web to intimidate the aggressor.
This time, nothing happens: despite my repeated enticements, the Spider
does not stir a limb. It is as though she were numbed with terror.
And she has reason to be: the other is watching her from her lofty loop-hole.</p>
<p>This is probably not the only cause of her fright. When my
straw does induce her to take a few steps, I see her lift her legs with
some difficulty. She tugs a bit, drags her tarsi till she almost
breaks the supporting threads. It is not the progress of an agile
rope-walker; it is the hesitating gait of entangled feet. Perhaps
the lime-threads are stickier than in her own web. The glue is
of a different quality; and her sandals are not greased to the extent
which the new degree of adhesiveness would demand.</p>
<p>Anyhow, things remain as they are for long hours on end: the Banded
Epeira motionless on the edge of the web; the other lurking in her hut;
both apparently most uneasy. At sunset, the lover of darkness
plucks up courage. She descends from her green tent and, without
troubling about the stranger, goes straight to the centre of the web,
where the telegraph-wire brings her. Panic-stricken at this apparition,
the Banded Epeira releases herself with a jerk and disappears in the
rosemary-thicket.</p>
<p>The experiment, though repeatedly renewed with different subjects,
gave me no other results. Distrustful of a web dissimilar to her
own, if not in structure, at least in stickiness, the bold Banded Epeira
shows the white feather and refuses to attack the Cross Spider.
The latter, on her side, either does not budge from her day shelter
in the foliage, or else rushes back to it, after taking a hurried glance
at the stranger. She here awaits the coming of the night.
Under favour of the darkness, which gives her fresh courage and activity,
she reappears upon the scene and puts the intruder to flight by her
mere presence, aided, if need be, by a cuff or two. Injured right
is the victor.</p>
<p>Morality is satisfied; but let us not congratulate the Spider therefore.
If the invader respects the invaded, it is because very serious reasons
impel her. First, she would have to contend with an adversary
ensconced in a stronghold whose ambushes are unknown to the assailant.
Secondly, the web, if conquered, would be inconvenient to use, because
of the lime-threads, possessing a different degree of stickiness from
those which she knows so well. To risk one’s skin for a
thing of doubtful value were twice foolish. The Spider knows this
and forbears.</p>
<p>But let the Banded Epeira, deprived of her web, come upon that of
one of her kind or of the Silky Epeira, who works her gummy twine in
the same manner: then discretion is thrown to the winds; the owner is
fiercely ripped open and possession taken of the property.</p>
<p>Might is right, says the beast; or, rather, it knows no right.
The animal world is a rout of appetites, acknowledging no other rein
than impotence. Mankind, alone capable of emerging from the slough
of the instincts, is bringing equity into being, is creating it slowly
as its conception grows clearer. Out of the sacred rushlight,
so flickering as yet, but gaining strength from age to age, man will
make a flaming torch that will put an end, among us, to the principles
of the brutes and, one day, utterly change the face of society.</p>
<h2>CHAPTER XV: THE LABYRINTH SPIDER</h2>
<p>While the Epeirae, with their gorgeous net-tapestries, are incomparable
weavers, many other Spiders excel in ingenious devices for filling their
stomachs and leaving a lineage behind them: the two primary laws of
living things. Some of them are celebrities of long-standing renown,
who are mentioned in all the books.</p>
<p>Certain Mygales <SPAN name="citation36"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote36">{36}</SPAN>
inhabit a burrow, like the Narbonne Lycosa, but of a perfection unknown
to the brutal Spider of the waste-lands. The Lycosa surrounds
the mouth of her shaft with a simple parapet, a mere collection of tiny
pebbles, sticks and silk; the others fix a movable door to theirs, a
round shutter with a hinge, a groove and a set of bolts. When
the Mygale comes home, the lid drops into the groove and fits so exactly
that there is no possibility of distinguishing the join. If the
aggressor persist and seek to raise the trap-door, the recluse pushes
the bolt, that is to say, plants her claws into certain holes on the
opposite side to the hinge, props herself against the wall and holds
the door firmly.</p>
<p>Another, the Argyroneta, or Water Spider, builds herself an elegant
silken diving-bell, in which she stores air. Thus supplied with
the wherewithal to breathe, she awaits the coming of the game and keeps
herself cool meanwhile. At times of scorching heat, hers must
be a regular sybaritic abode, such as eccentric man has sometimes ventured
to build under water, with mighty blocks of stone and marble.
The submarine palaces of Tiberius are no more than an odious memory;
the Water Spider’s dainty cupola still flourishes.</p>
<p>If I possessed documents derived from personal observation, I should
like to speak of these ingenious workers; I would gladly add a few unpublished
facts to their life-history. But I must abandon the idea.
The Water Spider is not found in my district. The Mygale, the
expert in hinged doors, is found there, but very seldom. I saw
one once, on the edge of a path skirting a copse. Opportunity,
as we know, is fleeting. The observer, more than any other, is
obliged to take it by the forelock. Preoccupied as I was with
other researches, I but gave a glance at the magnificent subject which
good fortune offered. The opportunity fled and has never returned.</p>
<p>Let us make up for it with trivial things of frequent encounter,
a condition favourable to consecutive study. What is common is
not necessarily unimportant. Give it our sustained attention and
we shall discover in it merits which our former ignorance prevented
us from seeing. When patiently entreated, the least of creatures
adds its note to the harmonies of life.</p>
<p>In the fields around, traversed, in these days, with a tired step,
but still vigilantly explored, I find nothing so often as the Labyrinth
Spider (<i>Agelena labyrinthica</i>, CLERCK.). Not a hedge but
shelters a few at its foot, amidst grass, in quiet, sunny nooks.
In the open country and especially in hilly places laid bare by the
wood-man’s axe, the favourite sites are tufts of bracken, rock-rose,
lavender, everlasting and rosemary cropped close by the teeth of the
flocks. This is where I resort, as the isolation and kindliness
of the supports lend themselves to proceedings which might not be tolerated
by the unfriendly hedge.</p>
<p>Several times a week, in July, I go to study my Spiders on the spot,
at an early hour, before the sun beats fiercely on one’s neck.
The children accompany me, each provided with an orange wherewith to
slake the thirst that will not be slow in coming. They lend me
their good eyes and supple limbs. The expedition promises to be
fruitful.</p>
<p>We soon discover high silk buildings, betrayed at a distance by the
glittering threads which the dawn has converted into dewy rosaries.
The children are wonderstruck at those glorious chandeliers, so much
so that they forget their oranges for a moment. Nor am I, on my
part, indifferent. A splendid spectacle indeed is that of our
Spider’s labyrinth, heavy with the tears of the night and lit
up by the first rays of the sun. Accompanied as it is by the Thrushes’
symphony, this alone is worth getting up for.</p>
<p>Half an hour’s heat; and the magic jewels disappear with the
dew. Now is the moment to inspect the webs. Here is one
spreading its sheet over a large cluster of rock-roses; it is the size
of a handkerchief. A profusion of guy-ropes, attached to any chance
projection, moor it to the brushwood. There is not a twig but
supplies a contact-point. Entwined on every side, surrounded and
surmounted, the bush disappears from view, veiled in white muslin.</p>
<p>The web is flat at the edges, as far as the unevenness of the support
permits, and gradually hollows into a crater, not unlike the bell of
a hunting-horn. The central portion is a cone-shaped gulf, a funnel
whose neck, narrowing by degrees, dives perpendicularly into the leafy
thicket to a depth of eight or nine inches.</p>
<p>At the entrance to the tube, in the gloom of that murderous alley,
sits the Spider, who looks at us and betrays no great excitement at
our presence. She is grey, modestly adorned on the thorax with
two black ribbons and on the abdomen with two stripes in which white
specks alternate with brown. At the tip of the belly, two small,
mobile appendages form a sort of tail, a rather curious feature in a
Spider.</p>
<p>The crater-shaped web is not of the same structure throughout.
At the borders, it is a gossamer weft of sparse threads; nearer the
centre, the texture becomes first fine muslin and then satin; lower
still, on the narrower part of the opening, it is a network of roughly
lozenged meshes. Lastly, the neck of the funnel, the usual resting-place,
is formed of solid silk.</p>
<p>The Spider never ceases working at her carpet, which represents her
investigation-platform. Every night she goes to it, walks over
it, inspecting her snares, extending her domain and increasing it with
new threads. The work is done with the silk constantly hanging
from the spinnerets and constantly extracted as the animal moves about.
The neck of the funnel, being more often walked upon than the rest of
the dwelling, is therefore provided with a thicker upholstery.
Beyond it are the slopes of the crater, which are also much-frequented
regions. Spokes of some regularity fix the diameter of the mouth;
a swaying walk and the guiding aid of the caudal appendages have laid
lozengy meshes across these spokes. This part has been strengthened
by the nightly rounds of inspection. Lastly come the less-visited
expanses, which consequently have a thinner carpet.</p>
<p>At the bottom of the passage dipping into the brushwood, we might
expect to find a secret cabin, a wadded cell where the Spider would
take refuge in her hours of leisure. The reality is something
entirely different. The long funnel-neck gapes at its lower end,
where a private door stands always ajar, allowing the animal, when hard-pushed,
to escape through the grass and gain the open.</p>
<p>It is well to know this arrangement of the home, if you wish to capture
the Spider without hurting her. When attacked from the front,
the fugitive runs down and slips through the postern-gate at the bottom.
To look for her by rummaging in the brushwood often leads to nothing,
so swift is her flight; besides, a blind search entails a great risk
of maiming her. Let us eschew violence, which is but seldom successful,
and resort to craft.</p>
<p>We catch sight of the Spider at the entrance to her tube. If
practicable, squeeze the bottom of the tuft, containing the neck of
the funnel, with both hands. That is enough; the animal is caught.
Feeling its retreat cut off, it readily darts into the paper bag held
out to it; if necessary, it can be stimulated with a bit of straw.
In this way, I fill my cages with subjects that have not been demoralized
by contusions.</p>
<p>The surface of the crater is not exactly a snare. It is just
possible for the casual pedestrian to catch his legs in the silky carpets;
but giddy-pates who come here for a walk must be very rare. What
is wanted is a trap capable of securing the game that hops or flies.
The Epeira has her treacherous limed net; the Spider of the bushes has
her no less treacherous labyrinth.</p>
<p>Look above the web. What a forest of ropes! It might
be the rigging of a ship disabled by a storm. They run from every
twig of the supporting shrubs, they are fastened to the tip of every
branch. There are long ropes and short ropes, upright and slanting,
straight and bent, taut and slack, all criss-cross and a-tangle, to
the height of three feet or so in inextricable disorder. The whole
forms a chaos of netting, a labyrinth which none can pass through, unless
he be endowed with wings of exceptional power.</p>
<p>We have here nothing similar to the lime-threads used by the Garden
Spiders. The threads are not sticky; they act only by their confused
multitude. Would you care to see the trap at work? Throw
a small Locust into the rigging. Unable to obtain a steady foothold
on that shaky support, he flounders about; and the more he struggles
the more he entangles his shackles. The Spider, spying on the
threshold of her abyss, lets him have his way. She does not run
up the shrouds of the mast-work to seize the desperate prisoner; she
waits until his bonds of threads, twisted backwards and forwards, make
him fall on the web.</p>
<p>He falls; the other comes and flings herself upon her prostrate prey.
The attack is not without danger. The Locust is demoralized rather
than tied up; it is merely bits of broken thread that he is trailing
from his legs. The bold assailant does not mind. Without
troubling, like the Epeirae, to bury her capture under a paralysing
winding-sheet, she feels it, to make sure of its quality, and then,
regardless of kicks, inserts her fangs.</p>
<p>The bite is usually given at the lower end of a haunch: not that
this place is more vulnerable than any other thin-skinned part, but
probably because it has a better flavour. The different webs which
I inspect to study the food in the larder show me, among other joints,
various Flies and small Butterflies and carcasses of almost-untouched
Locusts, all deprived of their hind-legs, or at least of one.
Locusts’ legs often dangle, emptied of their succulent contents,
on the edges of the web, from the meat-hooks of the butcher’s
shop. In my urchin-days, days free from prejudices in regard to
what one ate, I, like many others, was able to appreciate that dainty.
It is the equivalent, on a very small scale, of the larger legs of the
Crayfish.</p>
<p>The rigging-builder, therefore, to whom we have just thrown a Locust
attacks the prey at the lower end of a thigh. The bite is a lingering
one: once the Spider has planted her fangs, she does not let go.
She drinks, she sips, she sucks. When this first point is drained,
she passes on to others, to the second haunch in particular, until the
prey becomes an empty hulk without losing its outline.</p>
<p>We have seen that Garden Spiders feed in a similar way, bleeding
their venison and drinking it instead of eating it. At last, however,
in the comfortable post-prandial hours, they take up the drained morsel,
chew it, rechew it and reduce it to a shapeless ball. It is a
dessert for the teeth to toy with. The Labyrinth Spider knows
nothing of the diversions of the table; she flings the drained remnants
out of her web, without chewing them. Although it lasts long,
the meal is eaten in perfect safety. From the first bite, the
Locust becomes a lifeless thing; the Spider’s poison has settled
him.</p>
<p>The labyrinth is greatly inferior, as a work of art, to that advanced
geometrical contrivance, the Garden Spider’s net; and, in spite
of its ingenuity, it does not give a favourable notion of its constructor.
It is hardly more than a shapeless scaffolding, run up anyhow.
And yet, like the others, the builder of this slovenly edifice must
have her own principles of beauty and accuracy. As it is, the
prettily-latticed mouth of the crater makes us suspect this; the nest,
the mother’s usual masterpiece, will prove it to the full.</p>
<p>When laying-time is at hand, the Spider changes her residence; she
abandons her web in excellent condition; she does not return to it.
Whoso will can take possession of the house. The hour has come
to found the family-establishment. But where? The Spider
knows right well; I am in the dark. Mornings are spent in fruitless
searches. In vain I ransack the bushes that carry the webs: I
never find aught that realizes my hopes.</p>
<p>I learn the secret at last. I chance upon a web which, though
deserted, is not yet dilapidated, proving that it has been but lately
quitted. Instead of hunting in the brushwood whereon it rests,
let us inspect the neighbourhood, to a distance of a few paces.
If these contain a low, thick cluster, the nest is there, hidden from
the eye. It carries an authentic certificate of its origin, for
the mother invariably occupies it.</p>
<p>By this method of investigation, far from the labyrinth-trap, I become
the owner of as many nests as are needed to satisfy my curiosity.
They do not by a long way come up to my idea of the maternal talent.
They are clumsy bundles of dead leaves, roughly drawn together with
silk threads. Under this rude covering is a pouch of fine texture
containing the egg-casket, all in very bad condition, because of the
inevitable tears incurred in its extrication from the brushwood.
No, I shall not be able to judge of the artist’s capacity by these
rags and tatters.</p>
<p>The insect, in its buildings, has its own architectural rules, rules
as unchangeable as anatomical peculiarities. Each group builds
according to the same set of principles, conforming to the laws of a
very elementary system of aesthetics; but often circumstances beyond
the architect’s control—the space at her disposal, the unevenness
of the site, the nature of the material and other accidental causes—interfere
with the worker’s plans and disturb the structure. Then
virtual regularity is translated into actual chaos; order degenerates
into disorder.</p>
<p>We might discover an interesting subject of research in the type
adopted by each species when the work is accomplished without hindrances.
The Banded Epeira weaves the wallet of her eggs in the open, on a slim
branch that does not get in her way; and her work is a superbly artistic
jar. The Silky Epeira also has all the elbow-room she needs; and
her paraboloid is not without elegance. Can the Labyrinth Spider,
that other spinstress of accomplished merit, be ignorant of the precepts
of beauty when the time comes for her to weave a tent for her offspring?
As yet, what I have seen of her work is but an unsightly bundle.
Is that all she can do?</p>
<p>I look for better things if circumstances favour her. Toiling
in the midst of a dense thicket, among a tangle of dead leaves and twigs,
she may well produce a very inaccurate piece of work; but compel her
to labour when free from all impediment: she will then—I am convinced
of it beforehand—apply her talents without constraint and show
herself an adept in the building of graceful nests.</p>
<p>As laying-time approaches, towards the middle of August, I instal
half-a-dozen Labyrinth Spiders in large wire-gauze cages, each standing
in an earthen pan filled with sand. A sprig of thyme, planted
in the centre, will furnish supports for the structure, together with
the trellis-work of the top and sides. There is no other furniture,
no dead leaves, which would spoil the shape of the nest if the mother
were minded to employ them as a covering. By way of provision,
Locusts, every day. They are readily accepted, provided they be
tender and not too large.</p>
<p>The experiment works perfectly. August is hardly over before
I am in possession of six nests, magnificent in shape and of a dazzling
whiteness. The latitude of the workshop has enabled the spinstress
to follow the inspiration of her instinct without serious obstacles;
and the result is a masterpiece of symmetry and elegance, if we allow
for a few angularities demanded by the suspension-points.</p>
<p>It is an oval of exquisite white muslin, a diaphanous abode wherein
the mother must make a long stay to watch over the brood. The
size is nearly that of a Hen’s egg. The cabin is open at
either end. The front-entrance broadens into a gallery; the back-entrance
tapers into a funnel-neck. I fail to see the object of this neck.
As for the opening in front, which is wider, this is, beyond a doubt,
a victualling-door. I see the Spider, at intervals, standing here
on the look-out for the Locust, whom she consumes outside, taking care
not to soil the spotless sanctuary with corpses.</p>
<p>The structure of the nest is not without a certain similarity to
that of the home occupied during the hunting-season. The passage
at the back represents the funnel-neck, that ran almost down to the
ground and afforded an outlet for flight in case of grave danger.
The one in front, expanding into a mouth kept wide open by cords stretched
backwards and forwards, recalls the yawning gulf into which the victims
used to fall. Every part of the old dwelling is repeated: even
the labyrinth, though this, it is true, is on a much smaller scale.
In front of the bell-shaped mouth is a tangle of threads wherein the
passers-by are caught. Each species, in this way, possesses a
primary architectural model which is followed as a whole, in spite of
altered conditions. The animal knows its trade thoroughly, but
it does not know and will never know aught else, being incapable of
originality.</p>
<p>Now this palace of silk, when all is said, is nothing more than a
guard-house. Behind the soft, milky opalescence of the wall glimmers
the egg-tabernacle, with its form vaguely suggesting the star of some
order of knighthood. It is a large pocket, of a splendid dead-white,
isolated on every side by radiating pillars which keep it motionless
in the centre of the tapestry. These pillars are about ten in
number and are slender in the middle, expanding at one end into a conical
capital and at the other into a base of the same shape. They face
one another and mark the position of the vaulted corridors which allow
free movement in every direction around the central chamber. The
mother walks gravely to and fro under the arches of her cloisters, she
stops first here, then there; she makes a lengthy auscultation of the
egg-wallet; she listens to all that happens inside the satin wrapper.
To disturb her would be barbarous.</p>
<p>For a closer examination, let us use the dilapidated nests which
we brought from the fields. Apart from its pillars, the egg-pocket
is an inverted conoid, reminding us of the work of the Silky Epeira.
Its material is rather stout; my pincers, pulling at it, do not tear
it without difficulty. Inside the bag there is nothing but an
extremely fine, white wadding and, lastly, the eggs, numbering about
a hundred and comparatively large, for they measure a millimetre and
a half. <SPAN name="citation37"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote37">{37}</SPAN>
They are very pale amber-yellow beads, which do not stick together and
which roll freely as soon as I remove the swan’s-down shroud.
Let us put everything into a glass-tube to study the hatching.</p>
<p>We will now retrace our steps a little. When laying-time comes,
the mother forsakes her dwelling, her crater into which her falling
victims dropped, her labyrinth in which the flight of the Midges was
cut short; she leaves intact the apparatus that enabled her to live
at her ease. Thoughtful of her natural duties, she goes to found
another establishment at a distance. Why at a distance?</p>
<p>She has still a few long months to live and she needs nourishment.
Were it not better, then, to lodge the eggs in the immediate neighbourhood
of the present home and to continue her hunting with the excellent snare
at her disposal? The watching of the nest and the easy acquisition
of provender would go hand in hand. The Spider is of another opinion;
and I suspect the reason.</p>
<p>The sheet-net and the labyrinth that surmounts it are objects visible
from afar, owing to their whiteness and the height whereat they are
placed. Their scintillation in the sun, in frequented paths, attracts
Mosquitoes and Butterflies, like the lamps in our rooms and the fowler’s
looking-glass. Whoso comes to look at the bright thing too closely
dies the victim of his curiosity. There is nothing better for
playing upon the folly of the passer-by, but also nothing more dangerous
to the safety of the family.</p>
<p>Harpies will not fail to come running at this signal, showing up
against the green; guided by the position of the web, they will assuredly
find the precious purse; and a strange grub, feasting on a hundred new-laid
eggs, will ruin the establishment. I do not know these enemies,
not having sufficient materials at my disposal for a register of the
parasites; but, from indications gathered elsewhere, I suspect them.</p>
<p>The Banded Epeira, trusting to the strength of her stuff, fixes her
nest in the sight of all, hangs it on the brushwood, taking no precautions
whatever to hide it. And a bad business it proves for her.
Her jar provides me with an Ichneumon <SPAN name="citation38"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote38">{38}</SPAN>
possessed of the inoculating larding-pin: a <i>Cryptus</i> who, as a
grub, had fed on Spiders’ eggs. Nothing but empty shells
was left inside the central keg; the germs were completely exterminated.
There are other Ichneumon-flies, moreover, addicted to robbing Spiders’
nests; a basket of fresh eggs is their offspring’s regular food.</p>
<p>Like any other, the Labyrinth Spider dreads the scoundrelly advent
of the pickwallet; she provides for it and, to shield herself against
it as far as possible, chooses a hiding-place outside her dwelling,
far removed from the tell-tale web. When she feels her ovaries
ripen, she shifts her quarters; she goes off at night to explore the
neighbourhood and seek a less dangerous refuge. The points selected
are, by preference, the low brambles dragging along the ground, keeping
their dense verdure during the winter and crammed with dead leaves from
the oaks hard by. Rosemary-tufts, which gain in thickness what
they lose in height on the unfostering rock, suit her particularly.
This is where I usually find her nest, not without long seeking, so
well is it hidden.</p>
<p>So far, there is no departure from current usage. As the world
is full of creatures on the prowl for tender mouthfuls, every mother
has her apprehensions; she also has her natural wisdom, which advises
her to establish her family in secret places. Very few neglect
this precaution; each, in her own manner, conceals the eggs she lays.</p>
<p>In the case of the Labyrinth Spider, the protection of the brood
is complicated by another condition. In the vast majority of instances,
the eggs, once lodged in a favourable spot, are abandoned to themselves,
left to the chances of good or ill fortune. The Spider of the
brushwood, on the contrary, endowed with greater maternal devotion,
has, like the Crab Spider, to mount guard over hers until they hatch.</p>
<p>With a few threads and some small leaves joined together, the Crab
Spider builds, above her lofty nest, a rudimentary watch-tower where
she stays permanently, greatly emaciated, flattened into a sort of wrinkled
shell through the emptying of her ovaries and the total absence of food.
And this mere shred, hardly more than a skin that persists in living
without eating, stoutly defends her egg-sack, shows fight at the approach
of any tramp. She does not make up her mind to die until the little
ones are gone.</p>
<p>The Labyrinth Spider is better treated. After laying her eggs,
so far from becoming thin, she preserves an excellent appearance and
a round belly. Moreover, she does not lose her appetite and is
always prepared to bleed a Locust. She therefore requires a dwelling
with a hunting-box close to the eggs watched over. We know this
dwelling, built in strict accordance with artistic canons under the
shelter of my cages.</p>
<p>Remember the magnificent oval guard-room, running into a vestibule
at either end; the egg-chamber slung in the centre and isolated on every
side by half a score of pillars; the front-hall expanding into a wide
mouth and surmounted by a network of taut threads forming a trap.
The semi-transparency of the walls allows us to see the Spider engaged
in her household affairs. Her cloister of vaulted passages enables
her to proceed to any point of the star-shaped pouch containing the
eggs. Indefatigable in her rounds, she stops here and there; she
fondly feels the satin, listens to the secrets of the wallet.
If I shake the net at any point with a straw, she quickly runs up to
enquire what is happening. Will this vigilance frighten off the
Ichneumon and other lovers of omelettes? Perhaps so. But,
though this danger be averted, others will come when the mother is no
longer there.</p>
<p>Her attentive watch does not make her overlook her meals. One
of the Locusts whereof I renew the supply at intervals in the cages
is caught in the cords of the great entrance-hall. The Spider
arrives hurriedly, snatches the giddy-pate and disjoints his shanks,
which she empties of their contents, the best part of the insect.
The remainder of the carcass is afterwards drained more or less, according
to her appetite at the time. The meal is taken outside the guard-room,
on the threshold, never indoors.</p>
<p>These are not capricious mouthfuls, serving to beguile the boredom
of the watch for a brief while; they are substantial repasts, which
require several sittings. Such an appetite astonishes me, after
I have seen the Crab Spider, that no less ardent watcher, refuse the
Bees whom I give her and allow herself to die of inanition. Can
this other mother have so great a need as that to eat? Yes, certainly
she has; and for an imperative reason.</p>
<p>At the beginning of her work, she spent a large amount of silk, perhaps
all that her reserves contained; for the double dwelling—for herself
and for her offspring—is a huge edifice, exceedingly costly in
materials; and yet, for nearly another month, I see her adding layer
upon layer both to the wall of the large cabin and to that of the central
chamber, so much so that the texture, which at first was translucent
gauze, becomes opaque satin. The walls never seem thick enough;
the Spider is always working at them. To satisfy this lavish expenditure,
she must incessantly, by means of feeding, fill her silk-glands as and
when she empties them by spinning. Food is the means whereby she
keeps the inexhaustible factory going.</p>
<p>A month passes and, about the middle of September, the little ones
hatch, but without leaving their tabernacle, where they are to spend
the winter packed in soft wadding. The mother continues to watch
and spin, lessening her activity from day to day. She recruits
herself with a Locust at longer intervals; she sometimes scorns those
whom I myself entangle in her trap. This increasing abstemiousness,
a sign of decrepitude, slackens and at last stops the work of the spinnerets.</p>
<p>For four or five weeks longer, the mother never ceases her leisurely
inspection-rounds, happy at hearing the new-born Spiders swarming in
the wallet. At length, when October ends, she clutches her offspring’s
nursery and dies withered. She has done all that maternal devotion
can do; the special providence of tiny animals will do the rest.
When spring comes, the youngsters will emerge from their snug habitation,
disperse all over the neighbourhood by the expedient of the floating
thread and weave their first attempts at a labyrinth on the tufts of
thyme.</p>
<p>Accurate in structure and neat in silk-work though they be, the nests
of the caged captives do not tell us everything; we must go back to
what happens in the fields, with their complicated conditions.
Towards the end of December, I again set out in search, aided by all
my youthful collaborators. We inspect the stunted rosemaries along
the edge of a path sheltered by a rocky, wooded slope; we lift the branches
that spread over the ground. Our zeal is rewarded with success.
In a couple of hours, I am the owner of some nests.</p>
<p>Pitiful pieces of work are they, injured beyond recognition by the
assaults of the weather! It needs the eyes of faith to see in
these ruins the equivalent of the edifices built inside my cages.
Fastened to the creeping branch, the unsightly bundle lies on the sand
heaped up by the rains. Oak-leaves, roughly joined by a few threads,
wrap it all round. One of these leaves, larger than the others,
roofs it in and serves as a scaffolding for the whole of the ceiling.
If we did not see the silky remnants of the two vestibules projecting
and feel a certain resistance when separating the parts of the bundle,
we might take the thing for a casual accumulation, the work of the rain
and the wind.</p>
<p>Let us examine our find and look more closely into its shapelessness.
Here is the large room, the maternal cabin, which rips as the coating
of leaves is removed; here are the circular galleries of the guard-room;
here are the central chamber and its pillars, all in a fabric of immaculate
white. The dirt from the damp ground has not penetrated to this
dwelling protected by its wrapper of dead leaves.</p>
<p>Now open the habitation of the offspring. What is this?
To my utter astonishment, the contents of the chamber are a kernel of
earthy matters, as though the muddy rain-water had been allowed to soak
through. Put aside that idea, says the satin wall, which itself
is perfectly clean inside. It is most certainly the mother’s
doing, a deliberate piece of work, executed with minute care.
The grains of sand are stuck together with a cement of silk; and the
whole resists the pressure of the fingers.</p>
<p>If we continue to unshell the kernel, we find, below this mineral
layer, a last silken tunic that forms a globe around the brood.
No sooner do we tear this final covering than the frightened little
ones run away and scatter with an agility that is singular at this cold
and torpid season.</p>
<p>To sum up, when working in the natural state, the Labyrinth Spider
builds around the eggs, between two sheets of satin, a wall composed
of a great deal of sand and a little silk. To stop the Ichneumon’s
probe and the teeth of the other ravagers, the best thing that occurred
to her was this hoarding which combines the hardness of flint with the
softness of muslin.</p>
<p>This means of defence seems to be pretty frequent among Spiders.
Our own big House Spider, <i>Tegenaria domestica</i>, encloses her eggs
in a globule strengthened with a rind of silk and of crumbly wreckage
from the mortar of the walls. Other species, living in the open
under stones, work in the same way. They wrap their eggs in a
mineral shell held together with silk. The same fears have inspired
the same protective methods.</p>
<p>Then how comes it that, of the five mothers reared in my cages, not
one has had recourse to the clay rampart? After all, sand abounded:
the pans in which the wire-gauze covers stood were full of it.
On the other hand, under normal conditions, I have often come across
nests without any mineral casing. These incomplete nests were
placed at some height from the ground, in the thick of the brushwood;
the others, on the contrary, those supplied with a coating of sand,
lay on the ground.</p>
<p>The method of the work explains these differences. The concrete
of our buildings is obtained by the simultaneous manipulation of gravel
and mortar. In the same way, the Spider mixes the cement of the
silk with the grains of sand; the spinnerets never cease working, while
the legs fling under the adhesive spray the solid materials collected
in the immediate neighbourhood. The operation would be impossible
if, after cementing each grain of sand, it were necessary to stop the
work of the spinnerets and go to a distance to fetch further stony elements.
Those materials have to be right under her legs; otherwise the Spider
does without and continues her work just the same.</p>
<p>In my cages, the sand is too far off. To obtain it, the Spider
would have to leave the top of the dome, where the nest is being built
on its trellis-work support; she would have to come down some nine inches.
The worker refuses to take this trouble, which, if repeated in the case
of each grain, would make the action of the spinnerets too irksome.
She also refuses to do so when, for reasons which I have not fathomed,
the site chosen is some way up in the tuft of rosemary. But, when
the nest touches the ground, the clay rampart is never missing.</p>
<p>Are we to see in this fact proof of an instinct capable of modification,
either making for decadence and gradually neglecting what was the ancestors’
safeguard, or making for progress and advancing, hesitatingly, towards
perfection in the mason’s art? No inference is permissible
in either direction. The Labyrinth Spider has simply taught us
that instinct possesses resources which are employed or left latent
according to the conditions of the moment. Place sand under her
legs and the spinstress will knead concrete; refuse her that sand, or
put it out of her reach, and the Spider will remain a simple silk-worker,
always ready, however, to turn mason under favourable conditions.
The aggregate of things that come within the observer’s scope
proves that it were mad to expect from her any further innovations,
such as would utterly change her methods of manufacture and cause her,
for instance, to abandon her cabin, with its two entrance-halls and
its star-like tabernacle, in favour of the Banded Epeira’s pear-shaped
gourd.</p>
<h2>CHAPTER XVI: THE CLOTHO SPIDER</h2>
<p>She is named Durand’s Clotho (<i>Clotho Durandi</i>, LATR.),
in memory of him who first called attention to this particular Spider.
To enter on eternity under the safe-conduct of a diminutive animal which
saves us from speedy oblivion under the mallows and rockets is no contemptible
advantage. Most men disappear without leaving an echo to repeat
their name; they lie buried in forgetfulness, the worst of graves.</p>
<p>Others, among the naturalists, benefit by the designation given to
this or that object in life’s treasure-house: it is the skiff
wherein they keep afloat for a brief while. A patch of lichen
on the bark of an old tree, a blade of grass, a puny beastie: any one
of these hands down a man’s name to posterity as effectively as
a new comet. For all its abuses, this manner of honouring the
departed is eminently respectable. If we would carve an epitaph
of some duration, what could we find better than a Beetle’s wing-case,
a Snail’s shell or a Spider’s web? Granite is worth
none of them. Entrusted to the hard stone, an inscription becomes
obliterated; entrusted to a Butterfly’s wing, it is indestructible.
‘Durand,’ therefore, by all means.</p>
<p>But why drag in ‘Clotho’? Is it the whim of a nomenclator,
at a loss for words to denote the ever-swelling tide of beasts that
require cataloguing? Not entirely. A mythological name came
to his mind, one which sounded well and which, moreover, was not out
of place in designating a spinstress. The Clotho of antiquity
is the youngest of the three Fates; she holds the distaff whence our
destinies are spun, a distaff wound with plenty of rough flocks, just
a few shreds of silk and, very rarely, a thin strand of gold.</p>
<p>Prettily shaped and clad, as far as a Spider can be, the Clotho of
the naturalists is, above all, a highly talented spinstress; and this
is the reason why she is called after the distaff-bearing deity of the
infernal regions. It is a pity that the analogy extends no further.
The mythological Clotho, niggardly with her silk and lavish with her
coarse flocks, spins us a harsh existence; the eight-legged Clotho uses
naught but exquisite silk. She works for herself; the other works
for us, who are hardly worth the trouble.</p>
<p>Would we make her acquaintance? On the rocky slopes in the
oliveland, scorched and blistered by the sun, turn over the flat stones,
those of a fair size; search, above all, the piles which the shepherds
set up for a seat whence to watch the sheep browsing amongst the lavender
below. Do not be too easily disheartened: the Clotho is rare;
not every spot suits her. If fortune smile at last upon our perseverance,
we shall see, clinging to the lower surface of the stone which we have
lifted, an edifice of a weather-beaten aspect, shaped like an over-turned
cupola and about the size of half a tangerine orange. The outside
is encrusted or hung with small shells, particles of earth and, especially,
dried insects.</p>
<p>The edge of the cupola is scalloped into a dozen angular lobes, the
points of which spread and are fixed to the stone. In between
these straps is the same number of spacious inverted arches. The
whole represents the Ishmaelite’s camel-hair tent, but upside
down. A flat roof, stretched between the straps, closes the top
of the dwelling.</p>
<p>Then where is the entrance? All the arches of the edge open
upon the roof; not one leads to the interior. The eye seeks in
vain; there is nothing to point to a passage between the inside and
the outside. Yet the owner of the house must go out from time
to time, were it only in search of food; on returning from her expedition,
she must go in again. How does she make her exits and her entrances?
A straw will tell us the secret.</p>
<p>Pass it over the threshold of the various arches. Everywhere,
the searching straw encounters resistance; everywhere, it finds the
place rigorously closed. But one of the scallops, differing in
no wise from the others in appearance, if cleverly coaxed, opens at
the edge into two lips and stands slightly ajar. This is the door,
which at once shuts again of its own elasticity. Nor is this all:
the Spider, when she returns home, often bolts herself in, that is to
say, she joins and fastens the two leaves of the door with a little
silk.</p>
<p>The Mason Mygale is no safer in her burrow, with its lid undistinguishable
from the soil and moving on a hinge, than is the Clotho in her tent,
which is inviolable by any enemy ignorant of the device. The Clotho,
when in danger, runs quickly home; she opens the chink with a touch
of her claw, enters and disappears. The door closes of itself
and is supplied, in case of need, with a lock consisting of a few threads.
No burglar, led astray by the multiplicity of arches, one and all alike,
will ever discover how the fugitive vanished so suddenly.</p>
<p>While the Clotho displays a more simple ingenuity as regards her
defensive machinery, she is incomparably ahead of the Mygale in the
matter of domestic comfort. Let us open her cabin. What
luxury! We are taught how a Sybarite of old was unable to rest,
owing to the presence of a crumpled rose-leaf in his bed. The
Clotho is quite as fastidious. Her couch is more delicate than
swan’s-down and whiter than the fleece of the clouds where brood
the summer storms. It is the ideal blanket. Above is a canopy
or tester of equal softness. Between the two nestles the Spider,
short-legged, clad in sombre garments, with five yellow favours on her
back.</p>
<p>Rest in this exquisite retreat demands perfect stability, especially
on gusty days, when sharp draughts penetrate beneath the stone.
This condition is admirably fulfilled. Take a careful look at
the habitation. The arches that gird the roof with a balustrade
and bear the weight of the edifice are fixed to the slab by their extremities.
Moreover, from each point of contact, there issues a cluster of diverging
threads that creep along the stone and cling to it throughout their
length, which spreads afar. I have measured some fully nine inches
long. These are so many cables; they represent the ropes and pegs
that hold the Arab’s tent in position. With such supports
as these, so numerous and so methodically arranged, the hammock cannot
be torn from its bearings save by the intervention of brutal methods
with which the Spider need not concern herself, so seldom do they occur.</p>
<p>Another detail attracts our attention: whereas the interior of the
house is exquisitely clean, the outside is covered with dirt, bits of
earth, chips of rotten wood, little pieces of gravel. Often there
are worse things still: the exterior of the tent becomes a charnel-house.
Here, hung up or embedded, are the dry carcasses of Opatra, Asidae and
other Tenebrionidae <SPAN name="citation39"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote39">{39}</SPAN>
that favour underrock shelters; segments of Iuli, <SPAN name="citation40"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote40">{40}</SPAN>
bleached by the sun; shells of Pupae, <SPAN name="citation41"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote41">{41}</SPAN>
common among the stones; and, lastly, Snail-shells, selected from among
the smallest.</p>
<p>These relics are obviously, for the most part, table-leavings, broken
victuals. Unversed in the trapper’s art, the Clotho courses
her game and lives upon the vagrants who wander from one stone to another.
Whoso ventures under the slab at night is strangled by the hostess;
and the dried-up carcass, instead of being flung to a distance, is hung
to the silken wall, as though the Spider wished to make a bogey-house
of her home. But this cannot be her aim. To act like the
ogre who hangs his victims from the castle battlements is the worst
way to disarm suspicion in the passers-by whom you are lying in wait
to capture.</p>
<p>There are other reasons which increase our doubts. The shells
hung up are most often empty; but there are also some occupied by the
Snail, alive and untouched. What can the Clotho do with a <i>Pupa
cinerea</i>, a <i>Pupa quadridens</i> and other narrow spirals wherein
the animal retreats to an inaccessible depth? The Spider is incapable
of breaking the calcareous shell or of getting at the hermit through
the opening. Then why should she collect those prizes, whose slimy
flesh is probably not to her taste? We begin to suspect a simple
question of ballast and balance. The House Spider, or <i>Tegenaria
domestica</i>, prevents her web, spun in a corner of the wall, from
losing its shape at the least breath of air, by loading it with crumbling
plaster and allowing tiny fragments of mortar to accumulate. Are
we face to face with a similar process? Let us try experiment,
which is preferable to any amount of conjecture.</p>
<p>To rear the Clotho is not an arduous undertaking; we are not obliged
to take the heavy flagstone, on which the dwelling is built, away with
us. A very simple operation suffices. I loosen the fastenings
with my pocket-knife. The Spider has such stay-at-home ways that
she very rarely makes off. Besides, I use the utmost discretion
in my rape of the house. And so I carry away the building, together
with its owner, in a paper bag.</p>
<p>The flat stones, which are too heavy to move and which would occupy
too much room upon my table, are replaced either by deal disks, which
once formed part of cheese-boxes, or by round pieces of cardboard.
I arrange each silken hammock under one of these by itself, fastening
the angular projections, one by one, with strips of gummed paper.
The whole stands on three short pillars and gives a very fair imitation
of the underrock shelter in the form of a small dolmen. Throughout
this operation, if you are careful to avoid shocks and jolts, the Spider
remains indoors. Finally, each apparatus is placed under a wire-gauze,
bell-shaped cage, which stands in a dish filled with sand.</p>
<p>We can have an answer by the next morning. If, among the cabins
swung from the ceilings of the deal or cardboard dolmens, there be one
that is all dilapidated, that was seriously knocked out of shape at
the time of removal, the Spider abandons it during the night and instals
herself elsewhere, sometimes even on the trellis-work of the wire cage.</p>
<p>The new tent, the work of a few hours, attains hardly the diameter
of a two-franc piece. It is built, however, on the same principles
as the old manor-house and consists of two thin sheets laid one above
the other, the upper one flat and forming a tester, the lower curved
and pocket-shaped. The texture is extremely delicate: the least
trifle would deform it, to the detriment of the available space, which
is already much reduced and only just sufficient for the recluse.</p>
<p>Well, what has the Spider done to keep the gossamer stretched, to
steady it and to make it retain its greatest capacity? Exactly
what our static treatises would advise her to do: she has ballasted
her structure, she has done her best to lower its centre of gravity.
From the convex surface of the pocket hang long chaplets of grains of
sand strung together with slender silken cords. To these sandy
stalactites, which form a bushy beard, are added a few heavy lumps hung
separately and lower down, at the end of a thread. The whole is
a piece of ballast-work, an apparatus for ensuring equilibrium and tension.</p>
<p>The present edifice, hastily constructed in the space of a night,
is the frail rough sketch of what the home will afterwards become.
Successive layers will be added to it; and the partition-wall will grow
into a thick blanket capable of partly retaining, by its own weight,
the requisite curve and capacity. The Spider now abandons the
stalactites of sand, which were used to keep the original pocket stretched,
and confines herself to dumping down on her abode any more or less heavy
object, mainly corpses of insects, because she need not look for these
and finds them ready to hand after each meal. They are weights,
not trophies; they take the place of materials that must otherwise be
collected from a distance and hoisted to the top. In this way,
a breastwork is obtained that strengthens and steadies the house.
Additional equilibrium is often supplied by tiny shells and other objects
hanging a long way down.</p>
<p>What would happen if one robbed an old dwelling, long since completed,
of its outer covering? In case of such a disaster, would the Spider
go back to the sandy stalactites, as a ready means of restoring stability?
This is easily ascertained. In my hamlets under wire, I select
a fair-sized cabin. I strip the exterior, carefully removing any
foreign body. The silk reappears in its original whiteness.
The tent looks magnificent, but seems to me too limp.</p>
<p>This is also the Spider’s opinion. She sets to work,
next evening, to put things right. And how? Once more with
hanging strings of sand. In a few nights, the silk bag bristles
with a long, thick beard of stalactites, a curious piece of work, excellently
adapted to maintain the web in an unvaried curve. Even so are
the cables of a suspension-bridge steadied by the weight of the superstructure.</p>
<p>Later, as the Spider goes on feeding, the remains of the victuals
are embedded in the wall, the sand is shaken and gradually drops away
and the home resumes its charnel-house appearance. This brings
us to the same conclusion as before: the Clotho knows her statics; by
means of additional weights, she is able to lower the centre of gravity
and thus to give her dwelling the proper equilibrium and capacity.</p>
<p>Now what does she do in her softly-wadded home? Nothing, that
I know of. With a full stomach, her legs luxuriously stretched
over the downy carpet, she does nothing, thinks of nothing; she listens
to the sound of earth revolving on its axis. It is not sleep,
still less is it waking; it is a middle state where naught prevails
save a dreamy consciousness of well-being. We ourselves, when
comfortably in bed, enjoy, just before we fall asleep, a few moments
of bliss, the prelude to cessation of thought and its train of worries;
and those moments are among the sweetest in our lives. The Clotho
seems to know similar moments and to make the most of them.</p>
<p>If I push open the door of the cabin, invariably I find the Spider
lying motionless, as though in endless meditation. It needs the
teasing of a straw to rouse her from her apathy. It needs the
prick of hunger to bring her out of doors; and, as she is extremely
temperate, her appearances outside are few and far between. During
three years of assiduous observation, in the privacy of my study, I
have not once seen her explore the domain of the wire cage by day.
Not until a late hour at night does she venture forth in quest of victuals;
and it is hardly feasible to follow her on her excursions.</p>
<p>Patience once enabled me to find her, at ten o’clock in the
evening, taking the air on the flat roof of her house, where she was
doubtless waiting for the game to pass. Startled by the light
of my candle, the lover of darkness at once returned indoors, refusing
to reveal any of her secrets. Only, next day, there was one more
corpse hanging from the wall of the cabin, a proof that the chase was
successfully resumed after my departure.</p>
<p>The Clotho, who is not only nocturnal, but also excessively shy,
conceals her habits from us; she shows us her works, those precious
historical documents, but hides her actions, especially the laying,
which I estimate approximately to take place in October. The sum
total of the eggs is divided into five or six small, flat, lentiform
pockets, which, taken together, occupy the greater part of the maternal
home. These capsules have each their own partition-wall of superb
white satin, but they are so closely soldered, both together and to
the floor of the house, that it is impossible to part them without tearing
them, impossible, therefore, to obtain them separately. The eggs
in all amount to about a hundred.</p>
<p>The mother sits upon the heap of pockets with the same devotion as
a brooding hen. Maternity has not withered her. Although
decreased in bulk, she retains an excellent look of health; her round
belly and her well-stretched skin tell us from the first that her part
is not yet wholly played.</p>
<p>The hatching takes place early. November has not arrived before
the pockets contain the young: wee things clad in black, with five yellow
specks, exactly like their elders. The new-born do not leave their
respective nurseries. Packed close together, they spend the whole
of the wintry season there, while the mother, squatting on the pile
of cells, watches over the general safety, without knowing her family
other than by the gentle trepidations felt through the partitions of
the tiny chambers. The Labyrinth Spider has shown us how she maintains
a permanent sitting for two months in her guard-room, to defend, in
case of need, the brood which she will never see. The Clotho does
the same during eight months, thus earning the right to set eyes for
a little while on her family trotting around her in the main cabin and
to assist at the final exodus, the great journey undertaken at the end
of a thread.</p>
<p>When the summer heat arrives, in June, the young ones, probably aided
by their mother, pierce the walls of their cells, leave the maternal
tent, of which they know the secret outlet well, take the air on the
threshold for a few hours and then fly away, carried to some distance
by a funicular aeroplane, the first product of their spinning-mill.</p>
<p>The elder Clotho remains behind, careless of this emigration which
leaves her alone. She is far from being faded indeed, she looks
younger than ever. Her fresh colour, her robust appearance suggest
great length of life, capable of producing a second family. On
this subject I have but one document, a pretty far-reaching one, however.
There were a few mothers whose actions I had the patience to watch,
despite the wearisome minutiae of the rearing and the slowness of the
result. These abandoned their dwellings after the departure of
their young; and each went to weave a new one for herself on the wire
net-work of the cage.</p>
<p>They were rough-and-ready summaries, the work of a night. Two
hangings, one above the other, the upper one flat, the lower concave
and ballasted with stalactites of grains of sand, formed the new home,
which, strengthened daily by fresh layers, promised to become similar
to the old one. Why does the Spider desert her former mansion,
which is in no way dilapidated—far from it—and still exceedingly
serviceable, as far as one can judge? Unless I am mistaken, I
think I have an inkling of the reason.</p>
<p>The old cabin, comfortably wadded though it be, possesses serious
disadvantages: it is littered with the ruins of the children’s
nurseries. These ruins are so close-welded to the rest of the
home that my forceps cannot extract them without difficulty; and to
remove them would be an exhausting business for the Clotho and possibly
beyond her strength. It is a case of the resistance of Gordian
knots, which not even the very spinstress who fastened them is capable
of untying. The encumbering litter, therefore, will remain.</p>
<p>If the Spider were to stay alone, the reduction of space, when all
is said, would hardly matter to her: she wants so little room, merely
enough to move in! Besides, when you have spent seven or eight
months in the cramping presence of those bedchambers, what can be the
reason of a sudden need for greater space? I see but one: the
Spider requires a roomy habitation, not for herself—she is satisfied
with the smallest den—but for a second family. Where is
she to place the pockets of eggs, if the ruins of the previous laying
remain in the way? A new brood requires a new home. That,
no doubt, is why, feeling that her ovaries are not yet dried up, the
Spider shifts her quarters and founds a new establishment.</p>
<p>The facts observed are confined to this change of dwelling.
I regret that other interests and the difficulties attendant upon a
long upbringing did not allow me to pursue the question and definitely
to settle the matter of the repeated layings and the longevity of the
Clotho, as I did in that of the Lycosa.</p>
<p>Before taking leave of this Spider, let us glance at a curious problem
which has already been set by the Lycosa’s offspring. When
carried for seven months on the mother’s back, they keep in training
as agile gymnasts without taking any nourishment. It is a familiar
exercise for them, after a fall, which frequently occurs, to scramble
up a leg of their mount and nimbly to resume their place in the saddle.
They expend energy without receiving any material sustenance.</p>
<p>The sons of the Clotho, the Labyrinth Spider and many others confront
us with the same riddle: they move, yet do not eat. At any period
of the nursery stage, even in the heart of winter, on the bleak days
of January, I tear the pockets of the one and the tabernacle of the
other, expecting to find the swarm of youngsters lying in a state of
complete inertia, numbed by the cold and by lack of food. Well,
the result is quite different. The instant their cells are broken
open, the anchorites run out and flee in every direction as nimbly as
at the best moments of their normal liberty. It is marvellous
to see them scampering about. No brood of Partridges, stumbled
upon by a Dog, scatters more promptly.</p>
<p>Chicks, while still no more than tiny balls of yellow fluff, hasten
up at the mother’s call and scurry towards the plate of rice.
Habit has made us indifferent to the spectacle of those pretty little
animal machines, which work so nimbly and with such precision; we pay
no attention, so simple does it all appear to us. Science examines
and looks at things differently. She says to herself:</p>
<p>‘Nothing is made with nothing. The chick feeds itself;
it consumes or rather it assimilates and turns the food into heat, which
is converted into energy.’</p>
<p>Were any one to tell us of a chick which, for seven or eight months
on end, kept itself in condition for running, always fit, always brisk,
without taking the least beakful of nourishment from the day when it
left the egg, we could find no words strong enough to express our incredulity.
Now this paradox of activity maintained without the stay of food is
realized by the Clotho Spider and others.</p>
<p>I believe I have made it sufficiently clear that the young Lycosae
take no food as long as they remain with their mother. Strictly
speaking, doubt is just admissible, for observation is needs dumb as
to what may happen earlier or later within the mysteries of the burrow.
It seems possible that the repleted mother may there disgorge to her
family a mite of the contents of her crop. To this suggestion
the Clotho undertakes to make reply.</p>
<p>Like the Lycosa, she lives with her family; but the Clotho is separated
from them by the walls of the cells in which the little ones are hermetically
enclosed. In this condition, the transmission of solid nourishment
becomes impossible. Should any one entertain a theory of nutritive
humours cast up by the mother and filtering through the partitions at
which the prisoners might come and drink, the Labyrinth Spider would
at once dispel the idea. She dies a few weeks after her young
are hatched; and the children, still locked in their satin bed-chamber
for the best part of the year, are none the less active.</p>
<p>Can it be that they derive sustenance from the silken wrapper?
Do they eat their house? The supposition is not absurd, for we
have seen the Epeirae, before beginning a new web, swallow the ruins
of the old. But the explanation cannot be accepted, as we learn
from the Lycosa, whose family boasts no silky screen. In short,
it is certain that the young, of whatever species, take absolutely no
nourishment.</p>
<p>Lastly, we wonder whether they may possess within themselves reserves
that come from the egg, fatty or other matters the gradual combustion
of which would be transformed into mechanical force. If the expenditure
of energy were of but short duration, a few hours or a few days, we
could gladly welcome this idea of a motor viaticum, the attribute of
every creature born into the world. The chick possesses it in
a high degree: it is steady on its legs, it moves for a little while
with the sole aid of the food wherewith the egg furnishes it; but soon,
if the stomach is not kept supplied, the centre of energy becomes extinct
and the bird dies. How would the chick fare if it were expected,
for seven or eight months without stopping, to stand on its feet, to
run about, to flee in the face of danger? Where would it stow
the necessary reserves for such an amount of work?</p>
<p>The little Spider, in her turn, is a minute particle of no size at
all. Where could she store enough fuel to keep up mobility during
so long a period? The imagination shrinks in dismay before the
thought of an atom endowed with inexhaustible motive oils.</p>
<p>We must needs, therefore, appeal to the immaterial, in particular
to heat-rays coming from the outside and converted into movement by
the organism. This is nutrition of energy reduced to its simplest
expression: the motive heat, instead of being extracted from the food,
is utilized direct, as supplied by the sun, which is the seat of all
life. Inert matter has disconcerting secrets, as witness radium;
living matter has secrets of its own, which are more wonderful still.
Nothing tells us that science will not one day turn the suspicion suggested
by the Spider into an established truth and a fundamental theory of
physiology.</p>
<h2>APPENDIX: THE GEOMETRY OF THE EPEIRA’S WEB</h2>
<p>I find myself confronted with a subject which is not only highly
interesting, but somewhat difficult: not that the subject is obscure;
but it presupposes in the reader a certain knowledge of geometry: a
strong meat too often neglected. I am not addressing geometricians,
who are generally indifferent to questions of instinct, nor entomological
collectors, who, as such, take no interest in mathematical theorems;
I write for any one with sufficient intelligence to enjoy the lessons
which the insect teaches.</p>
<p>What am I to do? To suppress this chapter were to leave out
the most remarkable instance of Spider industry; to treat it as it should
be treated, that is to say, with the whole armoury of scientific formulae,
would be out of place in these modest pages. Let us take a middle
course, avoiding both abstruse truths and complete ignorance.</p>
<p>Let us direct our attention to the nets of the Epeirae, preferably
to those of the Silky Epeira and the Banded Epeira, so plentiful in
the autumn, in my part of the country, and so remarkable for their bulk.
We shall first observe that the radii are equally spaced; the angles
formed by each consecutive pair are of perceptibly equal value; and
this in spite of their number, which in the case of the Silky Epeira
exceeds two score. We know by what strange means the Spider attains
her ends and divides the area wherein the web is to be warped into a
large number of equal sectors, a number which is almost invariable in
the work of each species. An operation without method, governed,
one might imagine, by an irresponsible whim, results in a beautiful
rose-window worthy of our compasses.</p>
<p>We shall also notice that, in each sector, the various chords, the
elements of the spiral windings, are parallel to one another and gradually
draw closer together as they near the centre. With the two radiating
lines that frame them they form obtuse angles on one side and acute
angles on the other; and these angles remain constant in the same sector,
because the chords are parallel.</p>
<p>There is more than this: these same angles, the obtuse as well as
the acute, do not alter in value, from one sector to another, at any
rate so far as the conscientious eye can judge. Taken as a whole,
therefore, the rope-latticed edifice consists of a series of cross-bars
intersecting the several radiating lines obliquely at angles of equal
value.</p>
<p>By this characteristic we recognize the ‘logarithmic spiral.’
Geometricians give this name to the curve which intersects obliquely,
at angles of unvarying value, all the straight lines or ‘radii
vectores’ radiating from a centre called the ‘Pole.’
The Epeira’s construction, therefore, is a series of chords joining
the intersections of a logarithmic spiral with a series of radii.
It would become merged in this spiral if the number of radii were infinite,
for this would reduce the length of the rectilinear elements indefinitely
and change this polygonal line into a curve.</p>
<p>To suggest an explanation why this spiral has so greatly exercised
the meditations of science, let us confine ourselves for the present
to a few statements of which the reader will find the proof in any treatise
on higher geometry.</p>
<p>The logarithmic spiral describes an endless number of circuits around
its pole, to which it constantly draws nearer without ever being able
to reach it. This central point is indefinitely inaccessible at
each approaching turn. It is obvious that this property is beyond
our sensory scope. Even with the help of the best philosophical
instruments, our sight could not follow its interminable windings and
would soon abandon the attempt to divide the invisible. It is
a volute to which the brain conceives no limits. The trained mind,
alone, more discerning than our retina, sees clearly that which defies
the perceptive faculties of the eye.</p>
<p>The Epeira complies to the best of her ability with this law of the
endless volute. The spiral revolutions come closer together as
they approach the pole. At a given distance, they stop abruptly;
but, at this point, the auxiliary spiral, which is not destroyed in
the central region, takes up the thread; and we see it, not without
some surprise, draw nearer to the pole in ever-narrowing and scarcely
perceptible circles. There is not, of course, absolute mathematical
accuracy, but a very close approximation to that accuracy. The
Epeira winds nearer and nearer round her pole, so far as her equipment,
which, like our own, is defective, will allow her. One would believe
her to be thoroughly versed in the laws of the spiral.</p>
<p>I will continue to set forth, without explanations, some of the properties
of this curious curve. Picture a flexible thread wound round a
logarithmic spiral. If we then unwind it, keeping it taut the
while, its free extremity will describe a spiral similar at all points
to the original. The curve will merely have changed places.</p>
<p>Jacques Bernouilli, <SPAN name="citation42"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote42">{42}</SPAN>
to whom geometry owes this magnificent theorem, had engraved on his
tomb, as one of his proudest titles to fame, the generating spiral and
its double, begotten of the unwinding of the thread. An inscription
proclaimed, ‘<i>Eadem mutata resurgo</i>: I rise again like unto
myself.’ Geometry would find it difficult to better this
splendid flight of fancy towards the great problem of the hereafter.</p>
<p>There is another geometrical epitaph no less famous. Cicero,
when quaestor in Sicily, searching for the tomb of Archimedes amid the
thorns and brambles that cover us with oblivion, recognized it, among
the ruins, by the geometrical figure engraved upon the stone: the cylinder
circumscribing the sphere. Archimedes, in fact, was the first
to know the approximate relation of circumference to diameter; from
it he deduced the perimeter and surface of the circle, as well as the
surface and volume of the sphere. He showed that the surface and
volume of the last-named equal two-thirds of the surface and volume
of the circumscribing cylinder. Disdaining all pompous inscription,
the learned Syracusan honoured himself with his theorem as his sole
epitaph. The geometrical figure proclaimed the individual’s
name as plainly as would any alphabetical characters.</p>
<p>To have done with this part of our subject, here is another property
of the logarithmic spiral. Roll the curve along an indefinite
straight line. Its pole will become displaced while still keeping
on one straight line. The endless scroll leads to rectilinear
progression; the perpetually varied begets uniformity.</p>
<p>Now is this logarithmic spiral, with its curious properties, merely
a conception of the geometers, combining number and extent, at will,
so as to imagine a tenebrous abyss wherein to practise their analytical
methods afterwards? Is it a mere dream in the night of the intricate,
an abstract riddle flung out for our understanding to browse upon?</p>
<p>No, it is a reality in the service of life, a method of construction
frequently employed in animal architecture. The Mollusc, in particular,
never rolls the winding ramp of the shell without reference to the scientific
curve. The first-born of the species knew it and put it into practice;
it was as perfect in the dawn of creation as it can be to-day.</p>
<p>Let us study, in this connection, the Ammonites, those venerable
relics of what was once the highest expression of living things, at
the time when the solid land was taking shape from the oceanic ooze.
Cut and polished length-wise, the fossil shows a magnificent logarithmic
spiral, the general pattern of the dwelling which was a pearl palace,
with numerous chambers traversed by a siphuncular corridor.</p>
<p>To this day, the last representative of the Cephalopoda with partitioned
shells, the Nautilus of the Southern Seas, remains faithful to the ancient
design; it has not improved upon its distant predecessors. It
has altered the position of the siphuncle, has placed it in the centre
instead of leaving it on the back, but it still whirls its spiral logarithmically
as did the Ammonites in the earliest ages of the world’s existence.</p>
<p>And let us not run away with the idea that these princes of the Mollusc
tribe have a monopoly of the scientific curve. In the stagnant
waters of our grassy ditches, the flat shells, the humble Planorbes,
sometimes no bigger than a duckweed, vie with the Ammonite and the Nautilus
in matters of higher geometry. At least one of them, <i>Planorbis
vortex</i>, for example, is a marvel of logarithmic whorls.</p>
<p>In the long-shaped shells, the structure becomes more complex, though
remaining subject to the same fundamental laws. I have before
my eyes some species of the genus Terebra, from New Caledonia.
They are extremely tapering cones, attaining almost nine inches in length.
Their surface is smooth and quite plain, without any of the usual ornaments,
such as furrows, knots or strings of pearls. The spiral edifice
is superb, graced with its own simplicity alone. I count a score
of whorls which gradually decrease until they vanish in the delicate
point. They are edged with a fine groove.</p>
<p>I take a pencil and draw a rough generating line to this cone; and,
relying merely on the evidence of my eyes, which are more or less practised
in geometric measurements, I find that the spiral groove intersects
this generating line at an angle of unvarying value.</p>
<p>The consequence of this result is easily deduced. If projected
on a plane perpendicular to the axis of the shell, the generating lines
of the cone would become radii; and the groove which winds upwards from
the base to the apex would be converted into a plane curve which, meeting
those radii at an unvarying angle, would be neither more nor less than
a logarithmic spiral. Conversely, the groove of the shell may
be considered as the projection of this spiral on a conic surface.</p>
<p>Better still. Let us imagine a plane perpendicular to the aids
of the shell and passing through its summit. Let us imagine, moreover,
a thread wound along the spiral groove. Let us unroll the thread,
holding it taut as we do so. Its extremity will not leave the
plane and will describe a logarithmic spiral within it. It is,
in a more complicated degree, a variant of Bernouilli’s ‘<i>Eadem
mutata resurgo</i>:’ the logarithmic conic curve becomes a logarithmic
plane curve.</p>
<p>A similar geometry is found in the other shells with elongated cones,
Turritellae, Spindle-shells, Cerithia, as well as in the shells with
flattened cones, Trochidae, Turbines. The spherical shells, those
whirled into a volute, are no exception to this rule. All, down
to the common Snail-shell, are constructed according to logarithmic
laws. The famous spiral of the geometers is the general plan followed
by the Mollusc rolling its stone sheath.</p>
<p>Where do these glairy creatures pick up this science? We are
told that the Mollusc derives from the Worm. One day, the Worm,
rendered frisky by the sun, emancipated itself, brandished its tail
and twisted it into a corkscrew for sheer glee. There and then
the plan of the future spiral shell was discovered.</p>
<p>This is what is taught quite seriously, in these days, as the very
last word in scientific progress. It remains to be seen up to
what point the explanation is acceptable. The Spider, for her
part, will have none of it. Unrelated to the appendix-lacking,
corkscrew-twirling Worm, she is nevertheless familiar with the logarithmic
spiral. From the celebrated curve she obtains merely a sort of
framework; but, elementary though this framework be, it clearly marks
the ideal edifice. The Epeira works on the same principles as
the Mollusc of the convoluted shell.</p>
<p>The Mollusc has years wherein to construct its spiral and it uses
the utmost finish in the whirling process. The Epeira, to spread
her net, has but an hour’s sitting at the most, wherefore the
speed at which she works compels her to rest content with a simpler
production. She shortens the task by confining herself to a skeleton
of the curve which the other describes to perfection.</p>
<p>The Epeira, therefore, is versed in the geometric secrets of the
Ammonite and the <i>Nautilus pompilus</i>; she uses, in a simpler form,
the logarithmic line dear to the Snail. What guides her?
There is no appeal here to a wriggle of some kind, as in the case of
the Worm that ambitiously aspires to become a Mollusc. The animal
must needs carry within itself a virtual diagram of its spiral.
Accident, however fruitful in surprises we may presume it to be, can
never have taught it the higher geometry wherein our own intelligence
at once goes astray, without a strict preliminary training.</p>
<p>Are we to recognize a mere effect of organic structure in the Epeira’s
art? We readily think of the legs, which, endowed with a very
varying power of extension, might serve as compasses. More or
less bent, more or less outstretched, they would mechanically determine
the angle whereat the spiral shall intersect the radius; they would
maintain the parallel of the chords in each sector.</p>
<p>Certain objections arise to affirm that, in this instance, the tool
is not the sole regulator of the work. Were the arrangement of
the thread determined by the length of the legs, we should find the
spiral volutes separated more widely from one another in proportion
to the greater length of implement in the spinstress. We see this
in the Banded Epeira and the Silky Epeira. The first has longer
limbs and spaces her cross-threads more liberally than does the second,
whose legs are shorter.</p>
<p>But we must not rely too much on this rule, say others. The
Angular Epeira, the Paletinted Epeira and the Cross Spider, all three
more or less short-limbed, rival the Banded Epeira in the spacing of
their lime-snares. The last two even dispose them with greater
intervening distances.</p>
<p>We recognize in another respect that the organization of the animal
does not imply an immutable type of work. Before beginning the
sticky spiral, the Epeirae first spin an auxiliary intended to strengthen
the stays. This spiral, formed of plain, non-glutinous thread,
starts from the centre and winds in rapidly-widening circles to the
circumference. It is merely a temporary construction, whereof
naught but the central part survives when the Spider has set its limy
meshes. The second spiral, the essential part of the snare, proceeds,
on the contrary, in serried coils from the circumference to the centre
and is composed entirely of viscous cross-threads.</p>
<p>Here we have, following one after the other merely by a sudden alteration
of the machine, two volutes of an entirely different order as regards
direction, the number of whorls and intersection. Both of them
are logarithmic spirals. I see no mechanism of the legs, be they
long or short, that can account for this alteration.</p>
<p>Can it then be a premeditated design on the part of the Epeira?
Can there be calculation, measurement of angles, gauging of the parallel
by means of the eye or otherwise? I am inclined to think that
there is none of all this, or at least nothing but an innate propensity,
whose effects the animal is no more able to control than the flower
is able to control the arrangement of its verticils. The Epeira
practises higher geometry without knowing or caring. The thing
works of itself and takes its impetus from an instinct imposed upon
creation from the start.</p>
<p>The stone thrown by the hand returns to earth describing a certain
curve; the dead leaf torn and wafted away by a breath of wind makes
its journey from the tree to the ground with a similar curve.
On neither the one side nor the other is there any action by the moving
body to regulate the fall; nevertheless, the descent takes place according
to a scientific trajectory, the ‘parabola,’ of which the
section of a cone by a plane furnished the prototype to the geometer’s
speculations. A figure, which was at first but a tentative glimpse,
becomes a reality by the fall of a pebble out of the vertical.</p>
<p>The same speculations take up the parabola once more, imagine it
rolling on an indefinite straight line and ask what course does the
focus of this curve follow. The answer comes: The focus of the
parabola describes a ‘catenary,’ a line very simple in shape,
but endowed with an algebraic symbol that has to resort to a kind of
cabalistic number at variance with any sort of numeration, so much so
that the unit refuses to express it, however much we subdivide the unit.
It is called the number <i>e</i>. Its value is represented by
the following series carried out ad infinitum:</p>
<blockquote><p>e = 1 + 1/1 + 1/(1*2) + 1/(1*2*3) + 1/(1*2*3*4) + 1/(1*2*3*4*5)
+ etc</p>
</blockquote>
<p>If the reader had the patience to work out the few initial terms
of this series, which has no limit, because the series of natural numerals
itself has none, he would find:</p>
<blockquote><p>e=2.7182818...</p>
</blockquote>
<p>With this weird number are we now stationed within the strictly defined
realm of the imagination? Not at all: the catenary appears actually
every time that weight and flexibility act in concert. The name
is given to the curve formed by a chain suspended by two of its points
which are not placed on a vertical line. It is the shape taken
by a flexible cord when held at each end and relaxed; it is the line
that governs the shape of a sail bellying in the wind; it is the curve
of the nanny-goat’s milk-bag when she returns from filling her
trailing udder. And all this answers to the number e.</p>
<p>What a quantity of abstruse science for a bit of string! Let
us not be surprised. A pellet of shot swinging at the end of a
thread, a drop of dew trickling down a straw, a splash of water rippling
under the kisses of the air, a mere trifle, after all, requires a titanic
scaffolding when we wish to examine it with the eye of calculation.
We need the club of Hercules to crush a fly.</p>
<p>Our methods of mathematical investigation are certainly ingenious;
we cannot too much admire the mighty brains that have invented them;
but how slow and laborious they appear when compared with the smallest
actualities! Will it never be given to us to probe reality in
a simpler fashion? Will our intelligence be able one day to dispense
with the heavy arsenal of formulae? Why not?</p>
<p>Here we have the abracadabric number <i>e</i> reappearing, inscribed
on a Spider’s thread. Let us examine, on a misty morning,
the meshwork that has been constructed during the night. Owing
to their hygrometrical nature, the sticky threads are laden with tiny
drops, and, bending under the burden, have become so many catenaries,
so many chaplets of limpid gems, graceful chaplets arranged in exquisite
order and following the curve of a swing. If the sun pierce the
mist, the whole lights up with iridescent fires and becomes a resplendent
cluster of diamonds. The number <i>e</i> is in its glory.</p>
<p>Geometry, that is to say, the science of harmony in space, presides
over everything. We find it in the arrangement of the scales of
a fir-cone, as in the arrangement of an Epeira’s limy web; we
find it in the spiral of a Snail-shell, in the chaplet of a Spider’s
thread, as in the orbit of a planet; it is everywhere, as perfect in
the world of atoms as in the world of immensities.</p>
<p>And this universal geometry tells us of an Universal Geometrician,
whose divine compass has measured all things. I prefer that, as
an explanation of the logarithmic curve of the Ammonite and the Epeira,
to the Worm screwing up the tip of its tail. It may not perhaps
be in accordance with latter-day teaching, but it takes a loftier flight.</p>
<h2>FOOTNOTES</h2>
<p><SPAN name="footnote1"></SPAN><SPAN href="#citation1">{1}</SPAN> A small
or moderate-sized spider found among foliage.—Translator’s
Note.</p>
<p><SPAN name="footnote2"></SPAN><SPAN href="#citation2">{2}</SPAN> Léon
Dufour (1780-1865) was an army surgeon who served with distinction in
several campaigns and subsequently practised as a doctor in the Landes.
He attained great eminence as a naturalist.—Translator’s
Note.</p>
<p><SPAN name="footnote3"></SPAN><SPAN href="#citation3">{3}</SPAN> The Tarantula
is a Lycosa, or Wolf-spider. Fabre’s Tarantula, the Black-bellied
Tarantula, is identical with the Narbonne Lycosa, under which name the
description is continued in Chapters iii. to vi., all of which were
written at a considerably later date than the present chapter.—Translator’s
Note.</p>
<p><SPAN name="footnote4"></SPAN><SPAN href="#citation4">{4}</SPAN> Giorgio
Baglivi (1669-1707), professor of anatomy and medicine at Rome.—Translator’s
Note.</p>
<p><SPAN name="footnote5"></SPAN><SPAN href="#citation5">{5}</SPAN> ‘When
our husbandmen wish to catch them, they approach their hiding-places,
and play on a thin grass pipe, making a sound not unlike the humming
of bees. Hearing which, the Tarantula rushes out fiercely that
she may catch the flies or other insects of this kind, whose buzzing
she thinks it to be; but she herself is caught by her rustic trapper.’</p>
<p><SPAN name="footnote6"></SPAN><SPAN href="#citation6">{6}</SPAN> Provençal
for the bit of waste ground on which the author studies his insects
in the natural state.—Translator’s note.</p>
<p><SPAN name="footnote7"></SPAN><SPAN href="#citation7">{7}</SPAN> ‘Thanks
to the Bumble-bee.’</p>
<p><SPAN name="footnote8"></SPAN><SPAN href="#citation8">{8}</SPAN> Like the
Dung-beetles.—Translator’s Note.</p>
<p><SPAN name="footnote9"></SPAN><SPAN href="#citation9">{9}</SPAN> Like the
Solitary Wasps.—Translator’s Note.</p>
<p><SPAN name="footnote10"></SPAN><SPAN href="#citation10">{10}</SPAN> Such
as the Hairy Ammophila, the Cerceris and the Languedocian Sphex, Digger-wasps
described in other of the author’s essays.—Translator’s
Note.</p>
<p><SPAN name="footnote11"></SPAN><SPAN href="#citation11">{11}</SPAN> The
<i>desnucador</i>, the Argentine slaughterman whose methods of slaying
cattle are detailed in the author’s essay entitled, The Theory
of Instinct.—Translator’s Note.</p>
<p><SPAN name="footnote12"></SPAN><SPAN href="#citation12">{12}</SPAN> A family
of Grasshoppers.—Translator’s Note.</p>
<p><SPAN name="footnote13"></SPAN><SPAN href="#citation13">{13}</SPAN> A genus
of Beetles.—Translator’s Note.</p>
<p><SPAN name="footnote14"></SPAN><SPAN href="#citation14">{14}</SPAN> A species
of Digger-wasp.—Translator’s Note.</p>
<p><SPAN name="footnote15"></SPAN><SPAN href="#citation15">{15}</SPAN> The
Cicada is the <i>Cigale</i>, an insect akin to the Grasshopper and found
more particularly in the South of France.—Translator’s Note.</p>
<p><SPAN name="footnote16"></SPAN><SPAN href="#citation16">{16}</SPAN> The
generic title of the work from which these essays are taken is Entomological
Memories, or, Studies relating to the Instinct and Habits of Insects.—Translator’s
Note.</p>
<p><SPAN name="footnote17"></SPAN><SPAN href="#citation17">{17}</SPAN> A species
of Grasshopper.—Translator’s Note.</p>
<p><SPAN name="footnote18"></SPAN><SPAN href="#citation18">{18}</SPAN> An
insect akin to the Locusts and Crickets, which, when at rest, adopts
an attitude resembling that of prayer. When attacking, it assumes
what is known as ‘the spectral attitude.’ Its forelegs
form a sort of saw-like or barbed harpoons. Cf. Social Life in
the Insect World, by J. H. Fabre, translated by Bernard Miall: chaps.
v. to vii.—Translator’s Note.</p>
<p><SPAN name="footnote19"></SPAN><SPAN href="#citation19">{19}</SPAN> .39
inch.—Translator’s Note.</p>
<p><SPAN name="footnote20"></SPAN><SPAN href="#citation20">{20}</SPAN> These
experiments are described in the author’s essay on the Mason Bees
entitled Fragments on Insect Psychology.—Translator’s Note.</p>
<p><SPAN name="footnote21"></SPAN><SPAN href="#citation21">{21}</SPAN> A species
of Wasp.—Translator’s Note.</p>
<p><SPAN name="footnote22"></SPAN><SPAN href="#citation22">{22}</SPAN> In
Chap. VIII. of the present volume.—Translator’s Note.</p>
<p><SPAN name="footnote23"></SPAN><SPAN href="#citation23">{23}</SPAN> Jules
Michelet (1798-1874), author of L’Oiseau and L’Insecte,
in addition to the historical works for which he is chiefly known.
As a lad, he helped his father, a printer by trade, in setting type.—Translator’s
Note.</p>
<p><SPAN name="footnote24"></SPAN><SPAN href="#citation24">{24}</SPAN> Chapter
III. of the present volume.—Translator’s Note.</p>
<p><SPAN name="footnote25"></SPAN><SPAN href="#citation25">{25}</SPAN> A species
of Dung-beetle. Cf. The Life and Love of the Insect, by
J. Henri Fabre, translated by Alexander Teixeira de Mattos: chap. v.—Translator’s
Note.</p>
<p><SPAN name="footnote26"></SPAN><SPAN href="#citation26">{26}</SPAN> A species
of Beetle.—Translator’s Note.</p>
<p><SPAN name="footnote27"></SPAN><SPAN href="#citation27">{27}</SPAN> Cf.
Insect Life, by J. H. Fabre, translated by the author of Mademoiselle
Mori: chaps. i. and ii.; The Life and Love of the Insect, by J. Henri
Fabre, translated by Alexander Teixeira de Mattos: chaps. i. to iv.—Translator’s
Note.</p>
<p><SPAN name="footnote28"></SPAN><SPAN href="#citation28">{28}</SPAN> Chapter
II.—Translator’s Note.</p>
<p><SPAN name="footnote29"></SPAN><SPAN href="#citation29">{29}</SPAN> .39
inch.—Translator’s Note.</p>
<p><SPAN name="footnote30"></SPAN><SPAN href="#citation30">{30}</SPAN> The
Processionaries are Moth-caterpillars that feed on various leaves and
march in file, laying a silken trail as they go.—Translator’s
Note.</p>
<p><SPAN name="footnote31"></SPAN><SPAN href="#citation31">{31}</SPAN> The
weekly half-holiday in French schools.—Translator’s Note.</p>
<p><SPAN name="footnote32"></SPAN><SPAN href="#citation32">{32}</SPAN> Cf.
Social Life in the Insect World, by J. H. Fabre, translated by Bernard
Miall: chap. xiv.—Translator’s Note.</p>
<p><SPAN name="footnote33"></SPAN><SPAN href="#citation33">{33}</SPAN> Cf.
Insect Life, by J. H. Fabre, translated by the author of Mademoiselle
Mori: chap. v.—Translator’s Note.</p>
<p><SPAN name="footnote34"></SPAN><SPAN href="#citation34">{34}</SPAN> The
Scolia is a Digger-wasp, like the Cerceris and the Sphex, and feeds
her larvae on the grubs of the Cetonia, or Rose-chafer, and the Oryctes,
or Rhinoceros Beetle. Cf. The Life and Love of the Insect, by
J. Henri Fabre, translated by Alexander Teixeira de Mattos: chap. xi.—Translator’s
Note.</p>
<p><SPAN name="footnote35"></SPAN><SPAN href="#citation35">{35}</SPAN> Cf.
Social Life in the Insect World, by J. H. Fabre, translated by Bernard
Miall. chap. xiii., in which the name is given, by a printer’s
error, as <i>Philanthus aviporus</i>.—Translator’s Note.</p>
<p><SPAN name="footnote36"></SPAN><SPAN href="#citation36">{36}</SPAN> Or
Bird Spiders, known also as the American Tarantula.—Translator’s
Note.</p>
<p><SPAN name="footnote37"></SPAN><SPAN href="#citation37">{37}</SPAN> .059
inch.—Translator’s Note.</p>
<p><SPAN name="footnote38"></SPAN><SPAN href="#citation38">{38}</SPAN> The
Ichneumon-flies are very small insects which carry long ovipositors,
wherewith they lay their eggs in the eggs of other insects and also,
more especially, in caterpillars. Their parasitic larvae live
and develop at the expense of the egg or grub attacked, which degenerates
in consequence.—Translator’s Note.</p>
<p><SPAN name="footnote39"></SPAN><SPAN href="#citation39">{39}</SPAN> One
of the largest families of Beetles, darkish in colour and shunning the
light.—Translator’s Note.</p>
<p><SPAN name="footnote40"></SPAN><SPAN href="#citation40">{40}</SPAN> The
Iulus is one of the family of Myriapods, which includes Centipedes,
etc.—Translator’s Note.</p>
<p><SPAN name="footnote41"></SPAN><SPAN href="#citation41">{41}</SPAN> A species
of Land-snail.—Translator’s Note.</p>
<p><SPAN name="footnote42"></SPAN><SPAN href="#citation42">{42}</SPAN> Jacques
Bernouilli (1654-1705), professor of mathematics at the University of
Basel from 1687 to the year of his death. He improved the differential
calculus, solved the isoperimetrical problem and discovered the properties
of the logarithmic spiral.—Translator’s Note.</p>
<SPAN name="endofbook"></SPAN>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />