The Insect

By Jules Michelet

The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Insect, by Jules Michelet

This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
almost no restrictions whatsoever.  You may copy it, give it away or
re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org


Title: The Insect

Author: Jules Michelet

Illustrator: Giacomelli

Release Date: November 26, 2013 [EBook #44287]

Language: English


*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE INSECT ***




Produced by Chris Curnow, Tom Cosmas and the Online
Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
file was produced from images generously made available
by The Internet Archive)











[Illustration: THE PURSUIT.

_See page 158._]




THE INSECT

BY

JULES MICHELET.


WITH 140 ILLUSTRATIONS BY GIACOMELLI,

ILLUSTRATOR OF "THE BIRD."


[Illustration]


LONDON:

T. NELSON AND SONS, PATERNOSTER ROW;

EDINBURGH; AND NEW YORK.

1875.




[Illustration]




Preface.


"The Insect" is one of the four remarkable works in which the late
M. Michelet embodied the results of a loving and persevering study
of Nature. These works are absolutely unique; the poetry of Science
was never before illustrated on so large a scale, or with so much
vividness of fancy, or in so eloquent a style. The aspects of Nature
were never before examined with so strong an enthusiasm or so definite
an individuality,--with so eager a desire to identify them with the
feelings, hopes, and aspirations of humanity. Michelet approached his
subject neither as philosopher nor as poet, but yet with something
of the spirit of both. His philosophy and poetry, however, were both
subordinate to his ardent sympathy with what he conceived to be the
soul, the personality of Nature; and whether his attention was directed
to the life of ocean, the bird, the insect, or the mountain-plant, he
still sought for some evidence of its special and distinct existence,
with thoughts and emotions, as it were, and a character of its own. It
was almost as if he saw in Nature a likeness to, and a kinship with,
humanity. No doubt, in expressing these views he was occasionally led
into a certain extravagance, and his enthusiasm not infrequently outran
or overmastered his judgment. He lacked the profound insight and sober
reflection of Wordsworth, and accuracy of detail was often sacrificed
for the sake of a brilliant generalization. But, after making due
allowance for defects inseparable, perhaps, from a genius rather
passionate and impulsive than analytic and self-composed, it must be
admitted that the lover of Nature has cause to be grateful for the fine
fancies, rich illustrations, and suggestive analogies crowded into the
books we speak of.

A recent writer, M. Monod,[A] has pronounced upon them an animated
eulogium:--"Scientific men may discover in these books errors,
inaccuracies, and exaggerations; but, in spite of all, they have shown
that the physical sciences, though accused of withering the soul, and
robbing Nature of poetry and life of enchantment, contain the elements
of a profound and varied poetry, that never loses its charm, because
it is not dependent on the caprices of taste and fashion, but has its
source in the unchangeable reality of things. Many have said that
science will drive out religion and poetry; Michelet finds in every
branch of science the demonstration of a new faith, revealing to him
a harmony till then unperceived, centred in the supreme unity of the
Divine mind and of the Absolute Being."

[Footnote A: _Macmillan's Magazine_, July 1874, pp. 231, 232.]

Whether the reader endorses this high eulogium or not, he will
certainly, in "The Insect," as in "The Bird," find a new stimulus to
the study of Nature, and a fresh proof of the power and fancy of one of
the greatest of modern French writers.

Of the present translation, it is necessary only to say that it has
been executed with a conscientious adherence to the original, and with
an effort to preserve, as far as possible, its peculiarities of style.
If it should be thought that in the attempt something of freedom and
fluency has been sacrificed, it is hoped the critic will acknowledge
that something of faithfulness has been gained. The author of "The
Insect" took much interest in the presentation of it and its companions
to the English reader in an English dress, and was pleased to express
his approval of the manner in which the Translator had accomplished his
task.

It remains to be added that the exquisite Illustrations, by M. H.
Giacomelli, have all been specially drawn and engraved for the English
edition.

W. H. DAVENPORT ADAMS.

[Illustration]




[Illustration]




Contents.


INTRODUCTION.

     I. THE LIVING INFINITE,                                            17
    II. OUR STUDIES AT PARIS AND IN SWITZERLAND,                        23
   III. OUR STUDIES AT FONTAINEBLEAU,                                   36
    IV. OUR STUDIES AT FONTAINEBLEAU (CONTINUED),                       46


BOOK I.--METAMORPHOSIS.

     I. TERROR AND REPUGNANCE OF CHILDHOOD,                             57
    II. COMPASSION,                                                     67
   III. WORLD-BUILDERS,                                                 79
    IV. LOVE AND DEATH,                                                 89
     V. THE ORPHAN: ITS FEEBLENESS,                                     99
    VI. THE MUMMY, NYMPH, OR CHRYSALIS,                                109
   VII. THE PHOENIX,                                                   119


BOOK II.--MISSION AND ARTS OF THE INSECT.

     I. SWAMMERDAM,                                                    129
    II. THE MICROSCOPE:--HAS THE INSECT A PHYSIOGNOMY?                 143
   III. THE INSECT AS THE AGENT OF NATURE IN THE
          ACCELERATION OF DEATH AND LIFE,                              155
    IV. THE INSECT AS MAN'S AUXILIARY,                                 165
     V. A PHANTASMAGORIA OF LIGHT AND COLOUR,                          175
    VI. THE SILKWORM,                                                  185
   VII. INSTRUMENTS OF THE INSECT: AND ITS CHEMICAL
          ENERGIES, AS IN THE COCHINEAL AND THE CANTHARIDES,           193
  VIII. ON THE RENOVATION OF OUR ARTS BY THE STUDY OF THE INSECT,      201
    IX. THE SPIDER--INDUSTRY--THE STOPPAGE,                            211
     X. THE HOME AND LOVES OF THE SPIDER,                              223

BOOK III.--COMMUNITIES OF INSECTS.

     I. THE CITY IN THE SHADOWS: THE TERMITES, OR WHITE ANTS,          235
    II. THE ANTS:--THEIR DOMESTIC ECONOMY--THEIR NUPTIALS,             245
   III. THE ANTS:--THEIR FLOCKS AND THEIR SLAVES,                      259
    IV. THE ANTS:--CIVIL WAR--EXTERMINATION OF THE COMMUNITY,          271
     V. THE WASPS: THEIR FURY OF IMPROVISATION,                        283
    VI. "THE BEES" OF VIRGIL,                                          293
   VII. THE BEE IN THE FIELDS,                                         301
  VIII. THE BEES AS ARCHITECTS: THE CITY,                              311
    IX. HOW THE BEES CREATE THE PEOPLE AND THE COMMON MOTHER,          321


CONCLUSION,                                                            333

ILLUSTRATIVE NOTES,                                                    341

ANALYSIS OF SUBJECTS,                                                  363

[Illustration]




[Illustration]




List of Illustrations.

DRAWN BY H. GIACOMELLI.

[Illustration: arrows]

                                              _Engraved by_         _Page_
  The Pursuit,                                _Rouget_,     _Frontispiece_
  A Home among the Mountains--Lucerne,        _Sargent_,                15
  On the Watch,                               _Berveiller_,             17
  Border--Amongst the Flowers,                _Berveiller_,             18
  Border--Insect Life,                        _Berveiller_,             19
  Border--Mailed Insects,                     _Méaulle_,                20
  Border--Bees and Beetles,                   _Méaulle_,                21
  Border--Grasshoppers and Beetles,           _Méaulle_,                22
  Tailpiece--Naturalist's "Traps,"            _Berveiller_,             22
  Border--Caterpillars,                       _Coste_,                  23
  Tailpiece--The Author's Implements,         _Ansseau_,                35
  The Forest of Fontainebleau,                _Rouget_,                 39
  The Woodpecker,                             _Berveiller_,             46
  Tailpiece--Flowers,                         _Morison_,                52
  Fallen Fruit,                               _Whymper_,                55
  Horned Beetles,                             _Méaulle_,                57
  The Childhood's Home of Madame Michelet,    _Rouget_,                 59
  Tailpiece--Insect Prey,                     _Méaulle_,                63
  A Winged Intruder,                          _Sargent_,                65
  War!                                        _Méaulle_,                67
  Between Chillon and Clarens,                _Jonnard_,                71
  The Field--Various Insects,                 _Berveiller_,             72
  Tailpiece--An Etherized Prisoner,           _Méaulle_,                75
  World-Builders,                             _Méaulle_,                77
  Polyzoa,                                    _Jonnard_,                79
  "Food for Fishes,"                          _Jonnard_,                82
  Coral Island,                               _Whymper_,                84
  Tailpiece--Shells,                          _Jonnard_,                85
  Sunshine and Shade,                         _Jonnard_,                87
  Love and Death,                             _Méaulle_,                89
  In the Wood,                                _Sargent_,                91
  Gathering Sweets,                           _Berveiller_,             92
  Tailpiece--A Shady Nook,                    _Morison_,                95
  Nest of Humble-Bee,                         _Rouget_,                 97
  "The Chilly One,"                           _Sargent_,                99
  Tailpiece--Cocoon,                          _Berveiller_,            105
  The Dragon-Fly,                             _Jonnard_,               107
  The Sacred Beetle of the Egyptians,         _Jonnard_,               109
  Butterflies and Flowers,                    _Jonnard_,               112
  Tailpiece--Chrysalis,                       _Sargent_,               115
  The Phoenix,                                _Méaulle_,               117
  Seeking the Light,                          _Whymper_,               119
  A Winged Warrior,                           _Berveiller_,            122
  The Imperial Weevil,                        _Berveiller_,            123
  Tailpiece--The Weevil on the Mountain-Top,  _Morison_,               124
  Swammerdam,                                 _Méaulle_,               127
  Dutch Landscape,                            _Méaulle_,               129
  "Melancholy Meads,"                         _Ansseau_,               132
  A Tempest on the Dutch Coast,               _Méaulle_,               137
  Tailpiece--The Task,                        _Ansseau_,               139
  Under the Microscope,                       _Méaulle_,               141
  A Philosopher's "Den,"                      _Coste_,                 143
  Tailpiece--A Finished Task,                 _Ansseau_,               151
  A Coleopterous Giant,                       _Méaulle_,               153
  An Agent of Nature,                         _Rouget_,                155
  "Rhinoceros-like Cuirassiers."              _Méaulle_,               159
  Tailpiece--Horned Beetle,                   _Méaulle_,               162
  Man's Auxiliary,                            _Rouget_,                163
  Carabidæ,                                   _Jonnard_,               165
  Hunting the Enemy,                          _Ansseau_,               168
  Tailpiece--The Pilgrim Locust,              _Ansseau_,               172
  Aerial Beauties,                            _Sargent_,               173
  The Acrocinus,                              _Whymper_,               175
  Streaked Taupin, and Earwig,                _Ansseau_,               176
  Buprestidans,                               _Coste_,                 179
  Tailpiece--Butterfly and Flower,            _Berveiller_,            182
  Insect Manufacturers                        _Méaulle_,               183
  The Dead-Leaf Moth,                         _Sargent_,               185
  Cocoons,                                    _Jonnard_,               188
  Tailpiece--A Prisoner,                      _Jonnard_,               189
  Long-Horned Beetles,                        _Méaulle_,               191
  Insects and their Weapons,                  _Méaulle_,               193
  Tailpiece--Cat and Cantharides,             _Ansseau_,               197
  A Thing of Beauty,                          _Jonnard_,               199
  Leaf-Rollers,                               _Berveiller_,            201
  Grasshopper of Guiana,                      _Ansseau_,               203
  Cassida,                                    _Coste_,                 205
  Tailpiece--Insects "Fantastic and
    Wonderful,"                               _Méaulle_,               207
  The Spider,                                 _Rouget_,                209
  Aquatic Spiders,                            _Jonnard_,               211
  On the Look-out,                            _Berveiller_,            216
  Blue-Bottles and Beetles,                   _Ansseau_,               217
  Tailpiece--Bird-catching Spider,            _Berveiller_,            219
  The Garden Spider,                          _Jonnard_,               221
  Trap-door Spider and House,                 _Sargent_,               223
  Spider and Butterfly,                       _Méaulle_,               226
  Tailpiece--The Musical Spider,              _Ansseau_,               230
  The City in the Shadows,                    _Méaulle_,               233
  Ruins Caused by the Termites in Valencia,   _Méaulle_,               235
  Tailpiece--Termites (Solders, Worker, and
    Female) from the Coast of Guinea,         _Berveiller_,            241
  Ants at Work,                               _Rouget_,                243
  The Nuptials of the Ants,                   _Jonnard_,               245
  Nest of Russet Ants,                        _Rouget_,                249
  Carpenter Ants,                             _Berveiller_,            253
  Tailpiece--Ants and Flowers,                _Jonnard_,               255
  A Migration of Ants,                        _Rouget_,                257
  Roses, Grubs, and Ants,                     _Whymper_,               259
  A Feast for the Ants,                       _Berveiller_,            266
  Tailpiece--Honey-making Ants,               _Ansseau_,               268
  The Nightingale--"Dreaming and Listening,"  _Rouget_,                269
  Bramble and Ants,                           _Berveiller_,            271
  Tailpiece--The Unhappy Fugitive,            _Berveiller_,            280
  The Home of the Wasps,                      _Rouget_,                281
  Polystes and their Nests,                   _Berveiller_,            283
  Eumenes domiformes and their Nests,         _Sargent_,               287
  Tailpiece--Wasp and Fruit,                  _Méaulle_,               289
  A Tomb at Père-Lachaise,                    _Sargent_,               291
  The Living and the Dead,                    _Berveiller_,            293
  Tailpiece--Virgilian Bees,                  _Berveiller_,            298
  The Bee in the Fields,                      _Berveiller_,            299
  Bees and Wild Flowers,                      _Berveiller_,            301
  Bees and Blossoms,                          _Berveiller_,            305
  Tailpiece--Drone Bee,                       _Berveiller_,            308
  "Busy Bees,"                                _Méaulle_,               309
  The Sphinx Atropos,                         _Méaulle_,               311
  Tailpiece--A Winged Brigand,                _Méaulle_,               317
  Bees on the Wing,                           _Méaulle_,               319
  Inside the Hive,                            _Berveiller_,            321
  Bees in Search of the Natural Hive,         _Jonnard_,               326
  Tailpiece--Queen-Bee,                       _Berveiller_,            329
  The Praying-Mantis, and other Insects,      _Berveiller_,            331
  Lady-Birds and Grain,                       _Méaulle_,               333
  Butterfly and Moth,                         _Jonnard_,               334
  The Stag-Beetle,                            _Méaulle,_,              335
  Tailpiece--The Author's Visitors,           _Berveiller_,            338
  Book, Flowers, and Insects,                 _Berveiller_,            339
  Stag-Beetle,                                _Sargent_,               341
  Carabus Auratus,                            _Sargent_,               345
  A Sacrifice to Science,                     _Méaulle_,               346
  Horned Centrote and Globular Bocydie,       _Sargent_,               347
  Beetle,                                     _Méaulle_,               348
  Caterpillar and Leaf,                       _Sargent_,               348
  Butterfly and Flower,                       _Sargent_,               350
  Rhinoceros-horned Beetle,                   _Méaulle_,               351
  Birds and Lady-Bird,                        _Berveiller_,            351
  Wasps,                                      _Morison_,               352
  Tuft-horned Beetle,                         _Morison_,               353
  Garden Spider,                              _Morison_,               354
  Termite: Long-sheathed Nymph,               _Ansseau_,               354
  Rhinoceros-horned Beetle,                   _Morison_,               356
  Dragon-Fly and Ants,                        _Ansseau_,               356
  Wasps,                                      _Berveiller_,            357
  Bees,                                       _Ansseau_,               358
  Bird and Butterfly,                         _Berveiller_,            362

[Illustration]




Introduction.

[Illustration: A HOME AMONG THE MOUNTAINS.]




[Illustration]


I.

THE LIVING INFINITE.


We have followed the Bird in all its liberties of flight, and space,
and light; but the Earth which we quitted would not quit us. The sweet
melodies of the winged world could not prevent us from hearing the
murmur of an infinite world of shadow and silence, which, wanting the
speech of man, expresses itself, nevertheless, with eloquent force, by
means of a myriad mute tongues.

A universal appeal made to us simultaneously by all Nature, from the
depths of Earth and Sea, from the bosom of every plant, from the very
air which we breathe.

The eloquent appeal of the ingenious arts of the Insect, of its powers
of love so vividly manifested through its wings and colours, in the
brilliant scintillation with which it enkindles our nights.

[Illustration]

An appeal which becomes frightful from the number of those who make it.
What is the little tribe of Birds, or that of Quadrupeds, compared with
them? All the animal species, all the various forms of life, brought
face to face with this one family, disappear, and are as nothing. Put
the world on one side, and on the other the Insect World; the latter
has the advantage.

Our collections contain about one hundred thousand species. But taking
into consideration that every plant at the least nourishes three,
we obtain the result, according to the number of known plants, of
three hundred and sixty thousand species of insects! And each, be it
remembered, of prodigious fecundity.

Now call to mind that every creature nourishes other creatures on its
surface, in the thickness of its solids, in its fluids, and in its
blood; that each insect is a little world inhabited by insects; and
that these again have parasites of their own.

Is this all? No; in the masses men have supposed to be mineral or
inorganic, animals are now revealed to us of which it would take a
thousand millions to form one inch in thickness,--the which do not
the less present us with a rough sketch or outline of the Insect, and
have a right to be spoken of as _insects commenced_. And what are the
numbers of these? A single species accumulates the Apennines out of its
_débris_, and with its atoms has raised up that enormous backbone of
America, the Cordilleras.

[Illustration]

       *       *       *       *       *

Having arrived at this point, we think our review is ended. Patience!
The molluscs, which in the Southern Seas have created so many
islands,--which literally pave, as recent soundings have shown, the
twelve hundred leagues of Ocean separating us from America,--these
molluscs are qualified by many naturalists with the name of _embryo
insects_; so that their fertile tribes form, as it were, a dependency
of the higher race,--candidates, one might say, for the rank of Insect.

This is sublime. The reason that, nevertheless, makes me regret the
little world of Birds,--those charming companions which bore me aloft
on their wings not long ago,--is not their harmonious concerts, is not
even the spectacle of their airy and sublime life--but because they
understood me!

We comprehended and we loved one another; we interchanged our
languages. I spoke for the Bird, and the Bird sang for me.

Having fallen from heaven at the threshold of the sombre kingdom, and
in the presence of the mute and mysterious sons of night, what language
am I to invent, and what signs of intelligence? How am I to exercise
my wits to discover a mode of communicating with them? My voice and
gestures do but drive them away. There is no glance of recognition in
their eyes; no emotion visible on their inscrutable mask. Under its
warrior-cuirass the Insect remains impenetrable. Does its heart--for
it has one--beat after the fashion of mine? Its senses are infinitely
subtle, but do they resemble _my_ senses? It seems as if they still
remained apart, unknown, ay, and without a name.

[Illustration]

It escapes us; Nature has created for it, with respect to man, a
perpetual _alibi_. If she reveals it to us for a moment in a single
gleam of love, she hides it for years in the depths of the shadowy
earth or in the discreet bosom of the oaks. And even when discovered,
captured, opened, dissected, and examined by a microscope in every
detail, it still remains to us an enigma.

And an enigma of by no means reassuring character,--whose singularity
almost scandalizes, while it so confuses our ideas. What shall we say
of a being which breathes through its side and flanks? of a paradoxical
walker, which, contrary to all other organisms, presents its back to
the earth and its belly to the sky? In many respects, we may look upon
the insect as a creature of contradictions.

Add, moreover, that its littleness contributes to the misunderstanding.
Every organ appears to us fantastic and threatening, because our weak
eyes do not see it with sufficient clearness to be able to explain its
structure and utility. What is imperfectly seen always perplexes; and
therefore provisionally, we kill it! And it is so little, too, that we
do not trouble ourselves to be just towards it.

We are in no want of systems. We could willingly accept the definitive
decree of a German dreamer, who sums up the whole matter in a word:
"The good God made the world; but the devil made the insect!"

[Illustration]

The Insect, nevertheless, does not look upon itself as vanquished. To
the systems of the philosopher and the terror of the child (which are,
perhaps, both the same thing), this is its answer:--

In the first place, that Justice is universal, that size has nothing to
do with Right; that if one could suppose the Right to be unequal in its
application, and the Universal Love to incline the balance, it would be
on the side of the little.

It says that it would be absurd to judge by the figure, to condemn
organs of whose uses we are ignorant, which are principally the tools
of special professions, the instruments of a hundred trades; that it,
the insect, is the great destroyer and fabricator, the most industrious
of artisans, the energetic workman of life.

And, finally, it says (this pretension will perhaps appear most
arrogant), that if we judge by visible signs, by works and results,
it is It, among all beings, which loves most truly. Love endows it
with wings, with a marvellous iris of colours, and even with visible
flames. Love is for _it_ the instantaneous or approaching death, with
an astonishing _second sight_ of maternity which continues over the
orphan an ingenious superintendence. And lastly, the maternal genius
extends so far, that, surpassing and eclipsing the rare associations of
birds and quadrupeds, it has enabled the Insect to create republics and
establish cities!

[Illustration]


I admit that this weighty plea has made an impression on me.

If thou toilest and lovest, O Insect, whatever may be thy aspect, I
cannot separate myself from thee. We are truly somewhat akin. For what
am I myself, but a worker? What has been my greatest happiness in this
world?

Our communion of action and destiny will open my heart, and give me
a new sense with which to understand thy silence. Love--the divine
force which circulates in all things, like an universal soul--is the
interpreter through whose agency our insects discourse and understand
each other without speech.

[Illustration]




[Illustration]


II.

OUR STUDIES AT PARIS AND IN SWITZERLAND.


In the prolonged perusal of naturalists and travellers by which we
prepared ourselves for writing "The Bird," and for which nothing less
was required than the patience of a solitary woman, we gathered on
the way a number of facts and details which presented the Insect to
our eyes under the most varied aspects. The Insect appeared to us
incessantly in company with the Bird,--here like a harmony, there as an
antagonism,--but too often in profile, and as a subordinate being.

I was in the middle of the sixteenth century, and while engaged for
about three years in historical studies, my knowledge on this point was
collected only by means of extracts, readings, and conversations every
evening. The various elements of this grand study I acquired through
the medium of a soul eminently gentle towards the things of nature, and
generously given to love the weak; whose loyal and patient affection,
indefinitely extending curiosity, picked up, so to speak, like the
ant, and as so many grains of sand, the materials which we found less
frequently in the more important works than in an infinity of memoirs
and scattered dissertations.

To live long, steadfastly, for ever,--this it is which renders weak
spirits strong. Such a perseverance of taste and affection is not
less necessary when one wishes to put aside one's books, and enter
upon a course of observation, of long and delicate studies of life. I
am not surprised that Mademoiselle Jurine contributed so largely to
her father's astonishing discoveries respecting bees, nor that Madame
Mérian, as the fruit of her far-off wanderings, has bequeathed to us
her wise and beautiful book of drawings of the Insects of Guiana. The
eyes and hands of women, so delicate and well adapted for dealing with
tiny objects, are eminently appropriate for such pursuits as these.
They have also a greater respect for, attention to, and condescension
towards trifling existences, than man exhibits. Though poetical, they
are less poets, and impose less upon the Real the tyranny of their
thought. They are more docile towards it, do not dominate over it,
submit themselves to it, and do not bestow on these little beings
the rapid and often disdainful glance of the higher life. And when,
with all this, they are patient also, they may well become excellent
observers, and miniature Réaumurs.

[Illustration]

Feminine qualities are specially needful in microscopical studies. To
succeed in these, one must become somewhat of a woman. The microscope
is amusing at a first hasty glance; but if one would make a serious
use of it, it demands a certain amount of dexterity, patient tact, and
especially leisure,--considerable leisure,--full liberty of time,--in
order that one may indefinitely repeat the same observations, and
examine the same object on different days, in the pure light of
morning, in the warm ray of noon, and occasionally even at a later
hour. For certain objects which we must regard as a whole are best
seen through a single lens; others only through a transparency, by
illuminating them beneath the mirror of the microscope. Others,
insignificant or commonplace by day, grow marvellous in the evening,
when the focus of the instrument concentrates the light. To conclude:
their study demands--what in the present age one least possesses--an
isolation from the world, a point beyond time; the support of a
blameless curiosity, and of a constant and reverent love of these
imperceptible existences. Theirs is a kind of virginal and solitary
maternity.

[Illustration]

I was not released from my absorption in that terrible sixteenth
century until the spring of 1856. "The Bird" had also made its
appearance. I sought an interval of rest, and established myself at
Montreux, near Clarens, on the Lake of Geneva. But this most delightful
locality, awakening in me a keen perception of Nature, did not restore
my tranquillity. I was still too much affected by the bloody story
I had been narrating. A flame burned within me which nothing could
extinguish. I rambled along the roads, with my cup of fir-wood, tasting
the water at every fountain--all so fresh and so pure!--and demanding
of them if any possessed the property of effacing the bitternesses of
the Past and Present, and which, out of so many springs, might prove to
me a Lethe.

At length I found, at about half a league from Lucerne, an old convent
transformed into a hostelry, where I selected for my study the parlour,
a very spacious apartment, which, through its seven windows opening on
the mountains, the lake, and the town--a threefold prospect--afforded
me a magnificent light at all hours. From morning to evening the sun
remained faithful to me, and revolved around my microscope, set in
the middle of the chamber. The beautiful lake, shining in front and
on every side, is not that which afterwards, when hemmed in by the
heights, and furious and violent, will be called the Lake of Uri. But
the firs which everywhere overhang the landscape warn you not to place
too much reliance on the season,--inform you that you are residing
in a cold country. In numerous things, moreover, you find a certain
barbarous savagery prevailing. It is from the very south the breath
of winter blows. In front of me, and my constant companion, arose, on
the farther shore, the gloomy Pilatus, a barren mountain with keen
razor-like edges; and over its black shoulder gleamed, at ten leagues
distant, the snow-white _Virgin_ and the _Silver Peak_ (the Jungfrau
and the Silberhorn).

[Illustration]

The country is very beautiful and very fresh in July, but frequently,
in September, is already cold. You perceive above and behind you, at
an enormous elevation, an ocean of water suspended. This is the main
reservoir whence issue the great European reservoirs; the mass of St.
Gothard, a table-land measuring ten leagues in every direction, which
from one extremity pours out the Rhine, from another the Rhone, from
a third the Reuss, and towards the south the Ticino. You do not _see_
this reservoir--except a little of its outline--but you _feel_ it. Do
you wish for water? Come hither. Drink; it is the grandest cup which
quenches the thirst of humanity.

[Illustration]

I began to feel less athirst. In the middle of summer the nights were
cold, the mornings and evenings fresh. Those spotless snows, which I
gazed at so eagerly and with insatiable eyes, purified me, it seemed,
from the long, dusty, sun-burned, blood-besprinkled, and sublime, but
also sometimes miry, revolutions of history. I recovered a little my
equilibrium between the drama of the world and the eternal epopea.

What can be more divine than these Alps? Elsewhere I have called
them "the common altar of Europe." And wherefore? Not on account of
their height,--a little higher, or a little lower, one is no nearer
heaven,--but because the grand harmony, elsewhere vague, is palpable
here. The solidarity of life, the circulation of nature, the beneficent
concord of the elements,--all is visible. It kindles a glorious
illumination.

Each chain filters from its glacier, as a revelation of the
inaccessible zone, a torrent which, concentrated, tranquillized
and purified in an ample lake,--translated into pure and azure
water,--emerges as a great river, and diffuses everywhere the soul of
the Alps. From these innumerable waters reascend to the mountains the
mists which renew the treasure of their glaciers.

All is in such perfect sympathy, and the perspectives are so noble,
that the lakes and their rivers still reflect or survey, as they wander
afar, the grave assemblage of the mountains, the upper snows, the
sublime virgin peaks of which they are an emanation.

[Illustration]

They face, they explain one another, harmonize with and love one
another. But in what austerity! In their mutual love we recognize an
identity of the strongest contrasts,--fixity and fluidity, rapidity and
eternity, the snows above the verdure, forebodings of winter in summer.

Hence results a prudent nature, a general sagacity in the things
themselves. One enjoys without forgetting that one's enjoyment will not
be of long duration. But the heart is not the less moved by a world of
such seriousness and purity. This brevity attracts, and this austerity
takes one captive. From the gleaming snows to the lakes, from the woods
to the rivers and to the fresh emerald meads, a sovereign virginity
predominates over the whole country.

Such localities are for all the seasons of life. Old age grows
strengthened by its association with nature, and greets without
melancholy the grand shadows falling from the mountains. And hearts
still young, which feel only the morning and the dawn, expand to the
charming joys of religious tenderness,--tenderness for the Soul of the
world, tenderness for its smallest infants.

The favourite place for our walks, and our usual studio, was a small
grove of firs situated at a tolerable elevation above the lake, in the
rear of the rock of Seeberg. We ascended thither by two routes doubly
illuminated by the mighty radiance of the splendid mirror in which the
four cantons are reflected. No landscape can be more gentle, if we look
towards Lucerne; none more serious or solemn, in the direction of St.
Gothard and the amphitheatre of mountains. But all this grandeur and
brightness terminated suddenly at the first step we took beneath our
firs. It was as if one had reached the end of the world. The light
lessened; sounds seemed subdued; life itself appeared absent.

[Illustration]

Such, at the first glance, is the customary effect of the woods. But at
the second all is changed. The suffocation, or at least subordination,
imposed by the fir upon all those plants which would fain grow in
its shade, lets light into the depths; and when the eyes have become
accustomed to this kind of gloaming, we see considerably further, and
distinguish much more clearly, than in the inextricable labyrinth of
ordinary forests where everything acts as an obstruction.

The spectacle first presented to us under the noble funereal
pillars--the pillars, may we not say? of a stately temple--was a
spectacle of death; not of a saddening death, but of a death rich,
adorned, and graceful, such as Nature frequently vouchsafes to plants.
At every step the old trunks of trees, felled but not uprooted, were
clothed in an incomparable velvety green,--a tissue superbly woven
of fine mosses soft to the touch, which delighted the eye by their
changing aspects, their reflexes, and their shifting gleams.

But where was the animal life of the forest? Our ears soon grew
accustomed to recognize and divine its presence. I do not refer to the
whistle of the tomtits, or the strange laughter of the woodpecker, the
evident lord of the place. I am thinking of a different people, against
whom the birds wage war.

[Illustration]

A great hum and murmur, sufficiently loud to drown the noise of a
brook, warned us that the forest was haunted by wasps. Already we had
discovered their fort, whence more than one endeavoured to lead us
astray, suspecting our steps, and obviously ill-disposed towards us.

In the very localities least frequented by the wasps, light, hoarse,
internal rustlings seemed to issue from the trees. Were these the
voices of their genii, their Dryads? No, indeed; but of their
mysterious enemies, the mighty populace of the shadows, which,
following up the veins of the trunk and penetrating its entire
extent, work out for themselves, with patient teeth, innumerable
ways and channels and galleries. Sometimes nearly a hundred thousand
_scolyti_[B] (for such is their name) are found in a single tree. The
sickly fir is at length reduced by their teeth to the condition of a
piece of delicate lace-work. Yet the bark remains intact, and deludes
us with the phantom of life.

[Footnote B: A genus of _Coleoptera_.]

How does the tree defend itself? Sometimes by its sap, which,
while preserving its strength, asphyxiates the enemy; but more
frequently it is assisted by a friend, a physician, from without--the
woodpecker--which carefully auscultates it, taps and strikes it with
its strong hammer, and with persevering ardour watches for and pursues
the nibbling colony.

Is this internal combat between the two lives, the animal and the
vegetable, really understood? Of this I cannot be sure, and there are
times when I think myself deceived.

[Illustration]

In that silence which was not silence, a something--I know not
what--assured us that the dead forest was in truth alive, and on the
point of breaking forth into speech. We entered it full of hope, and
believing that we should discover some secret. We felt certain that to
our inquiring spirit a great manifold Spirit was about to reply. Though
fatigued by the walk, and in an infirm state of health, I felt great
pleasure in the search I had undertaken in these pallid glooms. I loved
to see before me a person deeply moved, and enthusiastically smitten by
their great mysteries. Stick in hand, she advanced into this fantastic
twilight, interrogating the sombre forest, and seeking, as it were, the
Virgilian "golden bough."

I was about to quit the scene, and seat myself in a sunny opening,
when at length a more successful sounding in one of the ancient trunks
brought to light a world whose existence no one would have suspected.

At the summit of this trunk, cut off within a foot of the ground, you
could very easily distinguish the works wrought by the _scolyti_ and
weevils, the former inhabitants of the tree, in conformity to the
concentric arrangement of the sap. But all this belonged to ancient
history; a different condition of things now existed. These miserable
_scolyti_ had perished, having undergone, like their tree, the
energetic action of a great chemical transformation which excluded all
life.

All life, except one, and that the keenest--a consuming and burned-up
life, it seems--the life of those beings powerful under an infinitely
little form, in which one might have readily concluded that a black
flame, shining fitfully, had consumed all that was material, and
reserved only what was spiritual.

[Illustration]

The _coup de théâtre_ was violent, and the immense swarming had its
effect. A vivid and unwonted joy agitated the much-moved hand that had
made the happy discovery; and in proportion to the full revelation of
its greatness, a wild vertigo passed from the distracted people to
the author of this great ruin. The walls of the city fell down, and
revealed the interior of the edifice; innumerable halls and galleries
were laid bare; generally four to five inches in length, and about
half an inch in height,--a height certainly quite sufficient, and
even majestic, if we take into account the size of the members of the
community.

A true palace, or rather a vast and superb city; limited in breadth,
but to what depth may it not penetrate the earth? It is said that some
have been found which, perseveringly excavated, have numbered no fewer
than seven hundred stories. Thebes and Nineveh were insignificant!
Babylon and Babel alone might have sustained, in their audaciously
towering piles, a comparison with these shadowy Babels which
continually expanded in the abyss.

But more astonishing than the grandeur is the interior aspect of
these habitations: without, all damp, and mossy, and overgrown with
tiny cryptogams; within, an astonishing dryness, and an admirable
cleanliness--every partition firm though soft, just as if it had been
tapestried with cotton velvet, very heavy and lustreless. Is this
black velvet produced from the wood itself, after undergoing powerful
modification, or by an extremely delicate layer of microscopic fungi
which may have been established in the tree while it was still moist,
and before it received its all-powerful necromancers? The agent of the
transformation betrayed itself directly: each separate cell, if closely
smelt, betrayed the pungent odour of formic acid, by means of which the
busy race had effected the metamorphosis of its abode, had burned it
and purified it with its flame, had dried it and rendered it wholesome
with its useful poison.

[Illustration]

It is this acid also which, undoubtedly, had accelerated and assisted
the enormous and colossal labour, had opened the way to the tiny
efforts of those indefatigable sculptors whose chisels are their teeth.
Yet even in this case there can be no question but that it must have
occupied a considerable time. Successive generations had very probably
passed their lives in the tree, working always on the same plan and in
the same direction. The image of the projected and longed-for city--the
hope of creating a secure fortress, a noble and massive acropolis--had
for long years sustained the hearts of the courageous citizens. Ah,
what would life be worth if one laboured only for one's-self! Let us
look forward to the future. The first-comers who spent their lives
in the tree, and from their internal reservoir drew and exhausted the
juices that excavated it, could have enjoyed but for a very brief time
a habitation so melancholy, and so steeped, as yet, in pestiferous
damps and protracted rains; but they thought of future generations, and
reverenced posterity.

[Illustration]

Alas, I am much afraid that the sanguine dream is ended! It is not
that a child's stick, held by a young and womanly hand, has penetrated
to the very bottom of the structure carried so deeply into the earth;
but that the exterior defences, which protected and closed up the
whole, and kept off the rains, have been removed and scattered abroad.
And lo! the great autumnal floods pouring down from the Rhigi, Mont
Pilate, and the St. Gothard, the father of rivers,--floating above
the forests in heavy mists or descending in torrents,--will swamp for
ever the internal recesses. And what flame, or what burning life, can
the inhabitants oppose to these repeated invasions of the waters, to
rebuild their palace and purify it again?

Seated on a fir, I eyed it steadfastly, and as I gazed I dreamed.
Though accustomed to the fall of empires and republics, its ruins flung
me into an ocean of thought. A wave, and then another wave rose, and
throbbed in my heart. The verse of Homer hung upon my lips,--

"And even Troy shall see its day of doom."

What could I do for this ravaged world, this half-ruined city? What for
this great laborious insect race, which all living tribes pursue, or
devour, or despise, and which nevertheless reveals to us the strongest
images of unselfish love, of public devotion, and the social sense
in its keenest energy? One thing: to comprehend it,--to explain it,
if I could,--to pour light upon it, and supply it with a generous
interpretation.

[Illustration]

My wife and I returned home dreaming, and understanding one another
without speaking. What had previously been an amusement, a curiosity,
and a study, thenceforth became a Book.

[Illustration]




[Illustration]


III.

OUR STUDIES AT FONTAINEBLEAU.


I feel no surprise that our great initiator into the Insect World,
Swammerdam, recoiled in affright when the microscope first afforded him
a glimpse of it.

For the name of its inhabitants is, the Living Infinite.

Upwards of two hundred years men have laboured, simplifying in one
direction, and complicating in another. The excellent treatises written
upon this subject leave, among a multitude of partial illuminations, a
certain feeling of being dazzled. Such is the impression which their
study for some time produced upon us.

Ought I to flatter myself that I can render it clearer than my masters
have done? By no means. But I discovered, through the incident which
took place at Lucerne, and others of later date, that our enthusiastic
and sympathetic ignorance could penetrate further, perhaps, into the
meaning of the insect life than has been the lot of many scientific
classificators.

The thought pursued me during the winter, but I could not verify any
experiment at Paris; it was only at Fontainebleau that I worked out the
truly simple formula about to be submitted to the reader, and obtained
some tranquillity of mind, so far as this subject was concerned.

[Illustration]

The place admirably favoured the then condition of my soul. All the
painful circumstances of the time, by driving me back upon myself,
increased my concentration. We constituted for ourselves a perfect
solitude. Our chamber became for us an entire city. And outside
there was nothing but a ring of wood, then tolerably small, which we
traversed on foot.

This ring oppressed me a little in the great heats, when the sun shone
reflected on the sandstone. But in these dry hot days the thought
does not grow enfeebled. I could follow up and investigate mine with
sequence and perseverance, enjoying--what is rare enough in life--a
grand harmonious unity of ideas and sentiments, which I was by no means
anxious to vary, but rather to deepen.

I went forth alone at noonday, and walked some distance into the dull,
dumb, and sandy forest, which was without whisper and without voice.
I carried thither my theme, and trusted to attain its meaning in that
infinite of sand overlaid by an infinite of leaves. But how much vaster
that infinite of animated life, the abyss of imperceptible organisms
into which I was fain to descend!

All that Sénancour says of Fontainebleau is true so far as relates
to the vague dreamer who brings with him no prevailing thought.
Yes; the landscape "is generally on a small scale, dull, low, and
solitary without being wild." Animals are seldom met with, except in
a few kids whose number is easily counted. Birds are not numerous.
Few or no springs are visible; and the apparent absence of water
has a specially depressing effect on the Alpine traveller, who still
recalls the freshness of the innumerable fountains of the Alps, and
still has before his eyes the radiance of those delightful and sublime
mirrors--their lakes. There, all is clear and luminous in the waters
and the snows. Here, all is obscure. This small angle, sequestered as
it were from the rest of France, is an enigma. It shows you the dead
sandstones without a trace of life; it shows you, particularly to-day,
the newly-planted pines, which suffer nothing living under their shade.
To discover what lies concealed beneath this outer mask, you must have
recourse to the divining-rod, the hazel-wand. Revolve it, and you shall
find. But what is this divining-rod? A study or a love; any passion
which lights up the inner world.

[Illustration]

The power of this locality does not lie in its historical, any more
than in its artistic associations.[C]

[Footnote C: It contains, however, three notable things: one
magnificent, the Hall of Henry II.; one marvellous, the Little Gallery
of Francis I.; and one sublime, the four colossi, the incomparable
relics of a lost art, that of sculpture in sandstone.]

The chateau distracts one's attention from the forest by its
abundant variety of memories and epochs; but it fails to increase
the impression. Nature is the true fairy in this strange, sombre,
fantastic, and sterile region.

[Illustration: THE FOREST OF FONTAINEBLEAU.]

Observe that wherever the forest assumes an aspect of grandeur, either
through the extent of its vista or the loftiness of its trees, it
resembles all other forests. The truly magnificent towering beeches
of Bas-Bréau seem to me, in spite of their stately bearing and smooth
shining bark, a thing I have seen elsewhere. The place is original only
where it is low, gloomy rock; where it bears evidence of the struggle
of the sandstone, the twisted tree, the perseverance of the elm, or the
courageous effort of the oak.

[Illustration]

Many persons have remained here fascinated and enthralled. Coming only
for a month, they have lingered until death. To the enchanting scene
they have addressed the lover's speech to his beloved:--"Let me live,
let me die with thee!"--_Tecum vivere amem, tecum obeam libens._

It is a curious fact that every individual finds here what he most
delights in: Saint Louis, the Thébaïd of which he dreamed; while Henry
IV., who cared for nothing but pleasure, exclaimed, "My delicious
deserts!" The poor mystical exile, Kosciusko,[D] felt the attraction
of his Lithuanian forests, and here took root. A man of stone, of
flint,--the Breton Maud'huys,--saw here the image of his native
Brittany, and built up, stone upon stone, the most original book
written upon Fontainebleau.

[Footnote D: The Polish hero who unavailingly struggled to secure his
country's freedom, but was crushed by the power of Russia:--

"And Freedom shrieked when Kosciusko fell!"]

It is a region of power, which you cannot enter with impunity. Some
persons lose in it their wits, undergo a strange metamorphosis, and
like Bottom, in Windsor Forest, see themselves adorned with ass's ears.
For the forest is a _person_: has its lovers and its detractors--some
curse it, others bless it. A foolish dreamer wrote of it, on a rock
near Nemours, "I _will_ possess thee, cruel stepmother!" And her lover,
the old soldier Denecourt, who bestowed on her all that he had in the
world, called her "My adored!"[E]

[Footnote E: It is impossible to be grateful enough for all that M.
Denecourt has done; he has rendered the place accessible by everybody,
even the poorest, who are no longer in need of guides.--Author.]

[Illustration]

Some one has said to me: "Is she not the _Viola_ of Shakespeare,
with her dubious but always charming aspect; now a maiden, and now a
cavalier? Or his young page, Rosalind, after she appears as a laughing
damsel?" No: the contrasts are much greater.

For the fairy here has countless faces. She has the cold Alpine plants,
and yet she shelters the most delicate flora. Austere in winter and
spring, she terrifies you with the rugged rocks which, in autumn, she
conceals under a crimson mantle of foliage. She has at her disposal,
for a daily change, the delicate tissue of floating gauze which Lantara
never fails to spread over it in all his pictures. With her belt of
forest she arrests on every side the light mists, and gaily weaves
them into veils, and scarfs, and girdles; into all kinds of delicate
disguises. You would think the heavy masses of sandstone invariable;
yet they change their aspects, their colours--I was going to say their
form--every hour. The little chain, for example, known as the Rock of
Avon, had saluted us in the morning with the breath of the heather,
the cheeriest ray of the dawn, an enchanting aurora which tinted with
rose hues the sandstone; all nature seemed to smile, and to harmonize
with the innocent studies of a devout and poetic soul. When we returned
there in the evening, the capricious fairy had changed everything.
Those pines, which had welcomed us under their airy canopy, had
suddenly grown wild and fierce, and resounded with strange noises, with
lamentations of sinister augury. Those shrubs, which in the morning
had graciously invited the white robe to pause beside them and gather
their berries or flowers, now seemed to conceal in their copses an
undefinable something of ill omen--robbers, it might be, or sorcerers!
But greater still the transformation in those rocks, which had
courteously received us, and bidden us be seated. Is it the evening,
or is it a coming storm, which has changed them? I know not; but there
they are, metamorphosed into gloomy sphinxes, into elephants prostrate
on the earth, into mammoths, and other monsters of the old worlds which
have ceased to exist. They are now at rest, it is true; but are they
not about to rise? However this may be, the evening comes on apace; let
us advance. My wife presses close to my arm.

[Illustration]

Does not our forest deserve the name of the Shakespearian comedy, "As
You Like It"?

No; to deal justly with it, we must own that its entertaining
metamorphosis, and all its changes to the eye, are absolutely external.
Movable in its leaves and mists, fugitive in its shifting sands, it
has a firmer foundation than perhaps any other forest, and a power
of fixity which communicates itself to the soul, and invites it to
grow strong; to search out and seek within its own nature whatever it
possesses of the inscrutable. Do not linger too long over its fantastic
accidents. _Without_ it says, "As You Like It;" _within_, "Ever and for
ever."

[Illustration]

Its beauty is that of the profound, faithful, and tender heart, which
does not the less vary its exquisite grace, though it may daily repeat
the words of Charles d'Orléans:

"Who can ever weary of her?
 Still her beauty she renews."

These ideas occurred to me one day as, seated upon Mont Ussy, I
looked across Fontainebleau. I comprehended how, in this confined
and ordinary region--in this apparent chaos of rocks, and trees, and
sandstone--prevailed a tolerable degree of order, which necessarily
concealed within it a mystery not obvious at the first glance.

As a whole, it is almost a circle of hills and forests, all dry on the
surface; but the sandstone is very pervious, and the sand filtrates
with great facility. And the unseen waters, descend in all directions
to a great reservoir which occupies the depths.

Storms are frequent here, but do not spread very far. We may nearly
always expect them, for the forest detains and arrests them, preserves
for itself the wealth of suspended waters, transmitting them to the
lower grounds after they have been sifted through the leaves, the
woods, and the sands. All this occurs below, without the process ever
becoming visible.

[Illustration]

Dig, and you shall find.

There lies the charm, the vitality of the _genius loci_.

The word "genius" conveys too great an idea of fixity, and that of
"fairy" is more appropriate. Who shall describe the mystery of this
profound hidden basin? this simple and attractive delusion, which,
while promising only dryness, faithfully stores up underneath the
treasure of its waters?

An eminent Italian artist has given expression to it in the paintings
which adorn the Hall of Henry II. It is the _Nemorosa_, the Wood-Nymph,
with hands full of wild-flowers, hiding beneath a rugged rock, but
subdued and dreamy, and with eyes swimming tearfully.

In the course of our labours, and especially on days when fell a fine
soft rain, we frequently appreciated this sentiment. It prevailed
around us like a concentration of nature. In the deep silence we
could hear only our beating hearts, the pendulum of the clock, or the
occasional cry of the swallow passing above our heads.

Calmed, but not lulled asleep, with clearer brain and keener eye than
before, we penetrated further into the shadowy world of the atom, to
discover its actual nature; the light, and especially the love, which
is the true legitimate sovereign of this lower world; the tongue, the
eloquent voice, by which it appeals to the upper world.

[Illustration]




[Illustration]


IV.

OUR STUDIES AT FONTAINEBLEAU.

(_Continued._)


Even in its hours of silence, the forest occasionally finds a voice, a
sound, or a murmur, which recalls to you the remembrance of life.

Sometimes the laborious woodpecker, laboriously toiling at its task of
excavating the oak, cheers itself with its singular cry.

[Illustration]

Frequently the heavy hammer of the quarryman, falling and falling on
the sandstone, resounds in the distance with a hoarse, dull echo.

And finally, if you listen attentively, you catch a significant hum,
and see, at your feet, legions of ants,--countless populations, the
true inhabitants of the place, speeding over the withered and falling
leaves.

So many images are these of persistent toil, which blend with the
fanciful a serious gravity. Each in his own way digs and digs. And do
thou too pursue thy work, and exhume and stir up thy thought.

[Illustration]

It is an admirable place to cure you of the great malady of the
day--its shiftiness, its empty agitation. The time does not know its
own disease; men say that they are clogged and cloyed, when they have
scarcely skimmed the surface. They set out with the delusive notion
that the best of everything is superficial and external, and that it is
sufficient to put their lips to the cup. But the surface is frequently
froth. Lower down, and within, lies the elixir of life. We must
penetrate deeper, and mingle more intimately with things, willingly and
by habit, so as to discover their harmony, in which lies true happiness
and strength. The real misfortune, the moral misery, is our want of
concentration.

I love those spots which confine and limit the field of thought.
Here, in this narrow circle of hill and wood, every change is purely
external and wholly optical. With so many points of shelter, the
winds, necessarily, do not greatly vary. The fixity of the atmosphere
furnishes us with a moral basis. I am not certain that our ideas would
here be strongly stimulated; but he who comes with them fully aroused
may long preserve and cherish them, without any interruption of his
dream; may seize and relish all the outer accidents, as well as the
inner mysteries. The soul may here put forth its roots, and find that
the true, the exquisite sense of life, is not to skim the surface, but
to study, and probe, and enjoy the depth.

This spot admonishes thought. The sandstone, fixed and motionless
beneath the mobility of the leaves, is eloquent enough in its very
silence. Since when has it been planted here? Ah, what ages ago, since,
despite its hardness, the rain has succeeded in excavating it! No other
force has prevailed against it. Such as it was, even so it is; and thus
it seems to say to the heart, "Persevere!"

[Illustration]

Apparently it should be strong enough to exclude all vegetable life.
But the heroic oaks will not be denied, and, being condemned to live
there, have succeeded in defiance of every obstacle. With their
twisted roots, and with their strong talons that have seized upon the
rock, they too, after their fashion, eloquently exclaim, "Persevere!"
The invincible trees, struggling all the more bravely the greater
the resistance they meet with, have, on the unimpeded side, plunged
so much the more deeply into the bowels of the earth, and drawn
from it incalculable forces. One of them, the poor old giant named
_Charlemagne_, worn-out, undermined, thunder-stricken, after so many
centuries and so many trials, is still so vigorous in its loins, that
in a solitary branch it has all the appearance of carrying a great oak
with outstretched arms.

Between this sandstone and these oaks one may profit largely. Nor is
man, if you find him here at work, a less useful teacher. The valiant
quarrymen whom I encountered battling against the rock with monstrous
hammers which seem never made for the hand of man, I could willingly
believe to possess the resistant force of the sandstone and the iron
heart of the oak. And this is undoubtedly true, so far as concerns
the soul and the will. But the body has less power of endurance. Few
quarrymen live beyond forty years of age; and those first carried off
are invariably the most skilful and ardent at their work.

[Illustration]

All the life of the forest centres in the quarrymen and the ants.
Formerly it had the bees also. They were very numerous, and may still
be met with in the direction of Franchart. But they have greatly
decreased in numbers since the planting of so many pines and Northern
trees, which kill everything with their shade, and in many places have
exterminated the heather and the flowers. On the other hand, the yellow
ants, which prefer for their materials the prickles and catkins of
the pines, appear to prosper. No forest, perhaps, is richer in every
species of ants.

These, then, are the true inhabitants, the true soul of the desert; the
ants toiling in the sand, the quarrymen working in the sandstone. Both
are of the same race; the men are ants on the surface, and the ants are
men below.

I admired the resemblance in their destiny, in their laborious
patience, in their admirable perseverance. The sandstone is a very
refractory and rebellious substance, and often splitting badly,
subjects the poor workmen to severe disappointments. Those especially
who are forced by a protracted winter to return to the quarry before
the end of the bad weather, find the hard and yet porous blocks
excessively damp and half frozen. As a result, they have numerous
ill-wrought stones, and a mass of waste. However, they do not lose
their courage; and without murmuring recommence their painful toil.

[Illustration]

The ants teach us a similar lesson of patience. The breeders of birds
and game incessantly damage, overthrow, and carry away the immense
works which have occupied them for a whole season. Incessantly they
begin them anew with heroic ardour.

We constantly paid them a visit, and learned to sympathize with them
more and more. Their patient procedures, their active and concentrated
life, is, in truth, more like that of the artisan than the winged
existence of the bird which formerly occupied our attention. That free
inheritor of the day, that favourite of Nature, soars so high above
man! To what may I compare my long laborious career? I have, indeed,
caught glimpses of the sky, and sometimes heard the songs of the birds
above; but, on the whole, my existence, the indefatigable labour which
chains me to my task, much more nearly resembles the modest communities
of the ant and the bee.

At first sight, the labours of their comrades, the quarrymen, are not
very agreeable to contemplate. So many spoiled and badly quarried
stones, so many fragments, so much dust and sand, have in them nothing
attractive. It is but a field of ruin which is displayed before you.
But what does Nature think of it? To judge by the eagerness with which
the plants take possession of the sand, mingle with it, and convert
it into a soil for their use, Nature is happy enough to see all
this substance, which, while for thousands of years retained in the
sandstone, did not enter into circulation, returning into the mobility
of the Universal Life. That fortunate battle between man and the rock
draws, at length, the captive element from its long enchantment. The
grass seizes upon it; the tree seizes upon it; the animals seize upon
it. All this sand, in which the rock never fails to end eventually,
becomes permeable to the activity of a vast subterranean world.

[Illustration]

Nothing aroused in my mind a greater number of dreams, no spectacle
threw me back more directly upon myself. For I, too, through some
degree of poverty or sluggishness, I have long been rebellious like
this sandstone, upon which, frequently, nothing can make an impression,
or which, splitting cross-wise, yields but irregular, shapeless
fragments and useless refuse. It needed History, with its weighty
iron hammer, to disengage me from myself, to separate me from my own
obstacles, to shatter and release me.

A severe enfranchisement! What have I not lost of myself, in return for
the few stones I have contributed to the great monument of the future!
Sometimes, doubly stricken by the past and the present, I have felt as
if I were crumbling into pieces--what say I?--into powder, into dust;
and at times I have seen myself, as I see the bottom of yonder quarry,
a mass of sand and rubbish.

Nevertheless, it is through these elements, through an undefinable
sap hidden in the bosom of the flint, that all-powerful Nature has
worked out my renovation. With a little grass and heather binding up
what History and the world had crushed, she has said, smilingly: "You
creature, you are Time. I am Nature, the everlasting."

[Illustration]

Thus, then, observe the rough quarry, bristling with the _débris_ of
ages, which grows green, once more reproduces, and attires itself in a
garb of such foliage as it never knew before man applied the iron to
it. "A wild winter vegetation! Black firs! Melancholy birch-trees!" But
with all the gloominess mingles the white hawthorn blossom.

What I have so eagerly craved, and yearned for, in my long years of
silence, when I was as an arid block and a man of stone, was the fluid
nature of the sap and its capacity of expansion. My tardy youth longed
to dilate my lingering soul. Yesterday, I gave to the world "The Bird,"
an impulse of the heart towards light. To-day, the same force compels
me, on the other hand, to descend below the earth, and embark along
with you on the great living sea of metamorphoses. A world of mysteries
and gloom, it is true; but where, nevertheless, the most penetrating
light is thrown on the two cherished treasures of the soul--Immortality
and Love.

[Illustration]




Book the First.

METAMORPHOSIS.




[Illustration: 1.--TERROR AND REPUGNANCE OF CHILDHOOD.]


[Illustration]


CHAPTER I.

TERROR AND REPUGNANCE OF CHILDHOOD.[F]

[Footnote F: This fragment of a domestic journal was originally
intended for insertion in "The Bird." [It is from the pen of Madame
Michelet.]]


"Winter, summer, and nearly all the fine days of the year, had passed
since the departure of my father for Louisiana, from which he was not
fated to return. Our country-house had remained deserted. My mother,
full of sad presentiments, and fearing herself to revisit it, sent me
there, one afternoon, with my brothers, to gather some fruit.

"And I went,--cherishing, I must own, a kind of illusion, and almost
believing I should be received on the paternal threshold by the beloved
arms.

"Deeply agitated, I crossed the approach to the domain, and with a
spring arrived opposite the door which my father had so often opened
with that ineffable smile I still can see.

"A child, and yet already a young girl, at that age of the imagination
when dreams are so powerful, I opposed the obstinate need of my heart
to the certain fact. I waited a moment on the threshold with a strange
anxiety; the strength of my faith would fain have conquered the sad
reality. But the door remained closed.

"Then, with a trembling hand, I opened it myself to find at least
his shadow within. But that, too, had disappeared. An obscure world,
hostile to the light, had glided into that asylum, and I was, so to
speak, enveloped in it.

"His little black table--a poor family relic--and the shelves of his
bookcase creaked at intervals beneath the teeth of the worm. The
chamber had already put on an air of antiquity. Great motionless
spiders,--guardians, as it were, of the place,--had threaded and
tapestried the empty alcove. Woodlice and millipeds ran and clambered
hither and thither, seeking a refuge under the panelings.

"The strange and unforeseen physiognomy of the place afflicted me so
keenly that I fell back upon myself, and exclaimed, as the tears flowed
down my cheeks,--'O my father! where are you?'

"From that moment I could perceive nothing but the desolateness of the
scene; and everywhere, in the court, in the garden, I found the new and
silent guests who had taken possession of our places.

"Already the gathering mist of evening mingled with the last rays
of the sun, and the slugs, tempted by the warm damp air, emerged in
crowds from the leaves which strewed the garden-walks. They fared
forth, slowly but surely, to feast on the fallen fruit. Clouds of wasps
revelled in audacious pillage, tearing to pieces with their keen teeth
our finest peaches and most luscious grapes.

"Our apple-trees, formerly so productive, were covered with network
woven by the caterpillars, and offered us nothing but yellow foliage.
In less than a year they had grown aged.

[Illustration: THE CHILDHOOD'S HOME OF MADAME MICHELET.]

"I had never before been brought in contact with a world like this. My
father's vigilance, and still more successfully, the assistance of the
little birds, had preserved us from it. So, in my experience, and with
a heart overcome by the spectacle of so much ruin, I cursed those whom
one ought not to curse, because all creatures are from God.

"Later in life, but much later, I understood the designs of Providence.
When man is absent the insect ought to take his place, so that
everything may pass through the great crucible, to be renewed or
purified."


       *       *       *       *       *


Such is the fear, such the instinctive repugnance of the child. But
we are all children, and even Philosophy, despite its longing after
universal sympathy, cannot guard against similar impressions. The
apparatus of fantastic weapons with which the insect is usually armed
seems to it a menace against man.

Living in a world of strife, it is imperative that the insect should be
born in mail of proof, and the insects of the Tropics are frequently
terrible to the eye.

Yet a considerable number of these terrifying weapons, pincers, hooks,
saws, pikes, augers, screws, rollers, and dentilated teeth,--the
formidable arsenal which gives them the appearance of veterans setting
out for the battle-field,--prove, if we examine them rightly, to be the
pacific tools with which they gain their livelihood, the implements
with which they do their regular work. Here the artisan carries his
workshop with him. He is at once the workman and the manufacturer. What
should we say of our human operatives, if they marched ever bristling
with the steel and old iron they make use of in their labours? They
would appear to us very strange and monstrous, and would even fill our
minds with fear.

The insect, as we shall hereafter see, is a warrior through
circumstances, through the necessities of self-defence or appetite, but
generally he is before all and above all industrial. There is not a
single species which may not be classified according to its work, and
ranged under the banner of a guild of trades.

The great achievement of the artist, or, to use the language of our
ancient corporations, the test-work of this workman, by which he proves
himself to be a master, is the cradle. In the Insect World, as the
mother generally dies in giving birth to her child, it is important to
provide an ingenious asylum which shall protect and support the orphan,
and supply the mother's place. So difficult a work requires tools and
implements which seem to us inexplicable. This, which you compare to
a medieval poignard, to the subtly treacherous weapon of the Italian
bravo, is, on the contrary, an instrument of love and maternity.

For the rest, Nature is so far from sharing our prejudices, dislikes,
and childish apprehensions, that she seems specially to care for and
protect the gnawing species which injuriously interfere with the
economy of our small farms and plantations, but which, on the other
hand, lend valuable assistance in maintaining the balance of species
and keeping down the vegetable accumulation of certain climates. She
preserves with watchful anxiety the caterpillars which we destroy. In
the case of the oak-grub, she is mindful to glaze over or varnish its
eggs, so that, concealed under the withered leaf, and beaten by winds
and rains, they may safely brave the winter. The crawling worms make
their appearance clothed in and defended by a thick furry garb, which
deceives their enemies, until, transformed into moths, they fly to and
fro in happy freedom under cover of the night.

For some she invents still greater precautions. Essential agents,
undoubtedly, in the transformation of life, they possess, beyond all
others, the guarantees of existence which secure them, infallibly, an
immortality of race.

The grubs, for instance, alternately viviparous and oviparous, spring
into full life in the summer, that they may the more quickly set to
work, but are produced in autumn in the shape of an egg, that they may
the better endure the cold of winter. Finally, their generous mother
reserves for this beloved species an unheard-of gift,--that a moment of
love shall give them the fecundity of forty generations!

Creatures so highly privileged have evidently some task to execute,
some great and important mission which renders them indispensable, and
makes them an essential part of the harmony of the world. Suns are
necessary, but so also are gnats. Grand is the order of the Milky Way,
and no less so that of the bee-hive. Who knows but that the life of the
stars may be of minor importance? I see that some of them vanish, and
God dispenses with them. But no genus of the Insect World ever fails to
answer to the summons. If a single species of ants should disappear,
their loss would be serious, and cause a dangerous gap in the universal
economy.

[Illustration]




[Illustration: II.--COMPASSION.]


[Illustration]


CHAPTER II.

COMPASSION.

One day, into the studio of the painter Gros entered a pupil of his, a
handsome and careless young man, who had thought it clever to pin to
his hat a beautiful butterfly, which, having just been captured, was
still struggling painfully. The artist, indignant, broke out into a
violent passion. "What, wretch!" he cried, "is this your feeling for
the Beautiful? You find an exquisite creature, and can make no better
use of it than to crucify and kill it barbarously! Begone, begone, and
return here no more! Never again make your appearance in my presence!"

This speech will not surprise those who are acquainted with the great
master's vivid sensibility, and his reverence for the Beautiful.
What is more astonishing is that an anatomist, a man living with the
scalpel always in his hand--Lyonnet--should speak in the same sense,
and so speak in reference to insects which are to ordinary observers
the least interesting. That able and patient man has opened up, as we
know, an entirely new channel for science by his colossal investigation
of the willow-grub, from which we learn that the muscular development
of the insect is identical with that of the higher animals. Lyonnet
congratulates himself that he was able to bring his prolonged labours
to a conclusion without killing more than eight or nine individuals of
the species he wished to describe.

A noble result of study! In fathoming life by this persevering
toil, far from growing coldly indifferent, he became more intensely
sympathetic. The minute details of the infinitely little had revealed
to him the sources of the keen sensibility which Nature has hidden
everywhere. He had found it existing at the bottom of the animal scale,
and thus he acquired a due reverence for every form of life.

We are sometimes disquieted, repelled, and dismayed by insects exactly
in proportion to our ignorance. Nevertheless almost every species,
especially in our European climates, is perfectly harmless. But we
suspect the unknown; and we are apt to kill those with which we are not
acquainted, by way of acquiring knowledge.

I remember that, one morning in June, about four o'clock, when the
sun was already high in the heavens, I was aroused somewhat abruptly,
though still much fatigued and very sleepy. I was living in the
country, and my chamber, which faced the east, having neither curtain
nor shutter, the sun's rays fell full upon my bed. A magnificent
drone, I do not know how, had made its way into the room, and joyously
fluttered and buzzed in the sunshine. I grew weary of the noise. I
arose, and thinking he wished to sally forth, threw open the window.
But no; such was not his intention. The morning, though beautiful, was
very fresh and damp: he preferred to remain indoors, in a more genial
temperature, which dried and warmed him. Without, it was four A.M.;
within, it was already noon. He acted precisely as I should have done,
and would not depart. Willing to give him time, I left the window open,
and returned to my bed; but I could not sleep. The fresh air from
without entering into the room, my drone entered further and further,
and buzzed about and around. The obstinate and importunate guest
excited in me an angry feeling, and I started up, determined to expel
him by main force. A handkerchief was my weapon, but undoubtedly I made
use of it very unskilfully. I stunned, confused, and frightened the
drone; he whirled round and round in a dizzy fit, but thought less than
ever of quitting the chamber. My impatience increased: I pursued him
with greater, with too great impetuosity. He fell on the window-sill,
and rose no more.

       *       *       *       *       *

Was he dead, or stunned? I would not close the window, thinking that
in the latter case the air might revive him, and he would fly away.
Meanwhile, by no means satisfied with what I had done, I threw myself
on my bed. On the whole, it was his own fault. Why did he not escape?
Such was my first reflection; but afterwards I grew more severe in
self-judgment, and accused my impatience. So great is the tyranny of
man, he can endure nothing. Like all kings, this lord of creation is
impetuous, and at the slightest contradiction breaks out into a fury,
and kills.

Very beautiful was the morning; fresh, and yet, by degrees, growing
almost warm; a happy mixture of temperature, proper to that delightful
country and that season of the year: it was Normandy, and the month of
June. The peculiar characteristic of this month, distinguishing it from
all those that follow, is, that it gives birth to the innocent species
which live on vegetable food, but to none of the murderous races which
need a living prey,--that it breeds flies, but not spiders. Death has
not yet begun, and love reigns everywhere. All these ideas occurred to
me, but proved by no means agreeable; for at this blessed, sacred time,
when a universal confidence prevails, I had already _killed_: man alone
had broken the peace of God. The thought was very bitter. Whether the
victim was great or small, mattered but little; the dead was always the
dead. And it was without any serious occasion, without provocation,
that I had brutally disturbed the sweet harmony of Spring, and spoiled
the universal idyl.

While revolving all these thoughts, I glanced occasionally from my bed
towards the window, and watched if the drone did not stir a little, if
he were really dead. Unhappily he gave not a sign: his immobility was
complete.

This lasted for half-an-hour, or about three-quarters; then
suddenly--without, so far as I could see, the slightest preliminary
movement--my drone arose with a strong and steady flight, and without
the slightest hesitancy, as if nothing had befallen him. He passed out
into the garden, which by that time was thoroughly warmed and filled
with sunshine.

I confess that I found in his escape a happiness and a relief; but as
for my drone, he had never lost heart. I perceived that he had thought
in his tiny prudence that if, by the least sign, he had betrayed
his returning vitality, his executioner would have finished him.
Accordingly, he imitated death with wonderful fidelity, waiting until
he had quite recovered his strength and breath,--until his wings, dry
and warm, were fully ready to carry him away; and then, at one leap, he
was off, without saying _adieu_.

       *       *       *       *       *

It was during a journey in Switzerland,--in the land of the Hallers,
the Hubers, and the Bonnets,--that we began to study seriously; no
longer contenting ourselves with collections which only displayed the
exterior, but determined on examining the inner organs with microscope
and scalpel. Then also we committed our first crimes.

I have no need to say that this preoccupation, this emotion--far more
dramatic than one would have supposed--interfered with our journey.
The sublime, enchanting, and solemn scenes of Switzerland lost, no
doubt, their due power over us. But life--suffering life (and we were
compelled to make it suffer)--diverted our thoughts. The hymn or
eternal epopea of these infinitely great could scarcely vie with the
drama of our infinitely little organisms. A fly hid from us the Alps;
the agony of a beetle, which was ten days dying, veiled Mont Blanc from
our gaze; in the anatomy of an ant we forgot the Jungfrau.

It matters not; for who shall rightly determine what is really great
or little? Everything is great, everything important, everything equal
in the bosom of nature and the impartiality of universal love. And
where is it more perceptible than in the infinite travail of the little
organic world on which our eyes were fixed? To lift them towards the
mountains, or lower them towards the insects, was one and the same
thing.


EXTRACT FROM MADAME MICHELET'S JOURNAL.

"On the 20th of July, a very hot day, but freshened nevertheless by the
morning breeze which disported on the lake between Chillon and Clarens,
I went out for a walk alone, my husband remaining indoors to write.
The sun shot athwart our valleys of the Pays de Vaud, and poured his
full splendour on the opposite mountains of Savoy. The lake, already
illumined, reflected the sharp ridges of the rocks, whose base, clothed
in pastures, lends life and freshness to its borders.

[Illustration]

"By-and-by the sun turned, and the scene changed. A warm ray of light
penetrated beyond Chillon, the long defile of the Valais, illuminated
the pointed Dent du Midi, and coloured in vapour the summit of the
remote St. Bernard. But to this scene of glory I preferred the
morning hour, when our Montreux reposed in shadow. It was the hour
of divine service at its little church, whose terrace, half-way down
the slope, propped up by sharp acclivities, wooded, and therefore
obscure, pours out the crystal waters on the thirsty vineyards lying
below. Beneath the terrace a beautiful mossy grot, glittering with
stalactites, preserves a delightful feeling of freshness. The fane
above, surrounded by hospitable wooden seats; a small library (a second
temple), whence the vine-dressers borrow books; and, finally, a pretty
fountain, combine in a graceful little picture, austerely charming. At
morning especially, in the half-misty veil which foretokens a day of
heat, this beautiful spot has all the effect of a religious thought,
concentrating in itself, and yet extended over that immense panorama
which the mind embraces, admires, and blesses.

[Illustration]

"I frequently resorted thither, ascending the first slope of the
mountain, solitary, and enriched with flowers. I took with me a book,
and yet I never read. The prospect was too absorbing. Whether the
eye ranged afar over the level mirror of the lake, and the rocks of
Meillerie, with their forests, meadows, and precipices; or hovered
close at hand about the nest of Clarens and the low towers of Chillon;
or, finally, returned to the pretty villas, with their green lattices,
of our friends the physician and the pastor,[G] in whose company my
husband laboured;--I remained there in a kind of dream, and my heart,
deeply moved, felt the sweetness of a holy harmony.

[Footnote G: It was our good fortune to reside, while at Montreux--the
most beautiful spot on the wide earth--with a very estimable and rare
individual, whom I should have thought of Italian or Spanish birth, if
I had not known her to be a Genevese, and the sister of the able and
enthusiastic historian of Geneva. Next door lived an eminent physician,
of simple character, but all the more learned in natural studies.]

"But soon I discovered that I was not utterly alone. Bees, or drones,
which had also risen early, were already at work, seeking in the cups
of the flowers the honey distilled beneath the dew, penetrating into
the depths of the campanulas, or skilfully gliding into the mysterious
corolla of the charming Venus's Slipper. Brilliant cicindelas opened
the hunt after the gnats, while more unwieldy tribes sought their
livelihood at the bottom of the herbage.

"On this day, then, the 20th of July, allowing my glance to fall
mechanically at my feet, and withdrawing my eyes for a moment from the
too luminous picture, I saw with astonishment a scene which vividly
contrasted with this attractive and holy spot,--an atrocious warlike
struggle. The insect-giant which we call the stag-beetle, one of the
largest of European species, a black shining mass, whose horns bristle
with superb crescent-wise pincers, had seized upon a beetle of far
inferior size. Nevertheless, the two enemies being equally provided
with admirable defensive arms, after the fashion of the corselets,
armlets, and cuisses of our ancient knights, the struggle was long
and fierce. Both belonged to the murderous race which prey on little
insects,--were powerful lords in the habit of devouring their vassals.
Whichever had fallen victim in the fray, the Lilliputian people had
certainly applauded. However, the blind instinctive movement which
leads us, in such cases, to separate the combatants, induced me to
interfere; and with the point of my umbrella, skilfully, delicately,
and without wounding the two antagonists, I compelled the stronger of
the two to release its grasp."

       *       *       *       *       *

The captive thus secured was, without form of trial, adjudged to
undergo our investigations as a punishment for his fratricidal
voracity. Our system, however, is not to impale the insect,--a horrible
punishment and a pitiful spectacle which has no end; for a month
afterwards, ay, and more, you will see the poor transfixed wretches
writhing in agony. Ether generally kills them rapidly, and apparently
painlessly. Well, then, we _etherized_ our prisoner largely. In a
moment he spun round and fell: we thought him finished. An hour or two
passed, and lo! he was once more alive, once more upright on trembling
feet, and attempting to walk; he fell, and again he rose. But, to tell
the truth, his gait was like that of a drunken man. A child would have
laughed at it. We had no desire to laugh, being obliged to poison him
a second time. A stronger dose was accordingly administered; but in
vain,--he came again to himself. It was a curious circumstance; but
it certainly seemed as if this kind of intoxication, while weakening
and almost paralyzing the faculties of motion, had all the more keenly
excited the nerves, and what we may call the amorous faculties. The use
he sought to make of his vacillating step and last efforts was to join
a female of his species which we had found lying dead, and placed upon
the table. He felt her with his palpi and trembling arms. He contrived
to turn her over, and tumbled about (very probably he could not see) to
assure himself whether she was alive. He would not part from her: one
would have sworn that he had undertaken, though dying, to resuscitate
the dead. It was a fantastic, a gloomy, and yet, for one who knows at
heart that all nature is identical, a touching spectacle.

It afflicted us greatly; we attempted to shorten it by the help of the
ether, and to separate this Juliet from her Romeo. But the indomitable
male laughed at all our poisons, and dismally dragged himself along.
We shut him up in a large box, where he did not die until after a
considerable period, and incredibly large doses. His punishment--and,
reader, you may justly call it _ours_--endured for fully fifteen days.

This robust, enduring being, with his inextinguishable flame of life,
threw us into a prolonged reverie.

On our first dabbling in bloodshed, Nature had wished to show us, and
with a master's hand, the strange and unconquerable energy with which
she has endowed life. "Love is strong as death." Where do we find this
saying? In the Bible. Yes; and it is also the eternal Bible. For what
more powerfully consecrates existence, and renders it sympathetic,
reverend, and sacred? And how great a pity it is, then, to cut it short
at the divine moment when every being has its share of God!

We excused ourselves by saying that this insect, which lives six years
in a single night, could have spread its wings beneath the sky but two
months longer,--just long enough to perpetuate its race. We deprived
it, therefore, of a very little time--a month out of six or seven years.

Yes; but that month was the epoch to which all its life had tended.
Previously it had only vegetated; but then, it could really have lived
and reigned, powerful and joyous. Long an insect, in that hour it would
have become almost a bird, a son of the flower-enamelled earth and the
genial light. We had acted like the Parcæ, which delight in cutting the
thread of our lives at the very moment of happiness!

[Illustration]




[Illustration: III.--WORLD-BUILDERS.]


[Illustration]


CHAPTER III.

WORLD-BUILDERS.


There is a world under this world, above, below, and all around it, of
which we have no suspicion.

Occasionally, indeed, we catch a faint murmur, a sound, and thereupon
we say, "It is a trifle, it is nothing." But this nothing is the
Infinite.

The Infinite of the invisible life, the silent life, the world of night
and of the inner earth, of the shadowy ocean,--the unseen creatures of
the air which we breathe, or which, mingling in the fluids we drink,
circulate within us unperceived.

An immensely powerful world, which in its details we scorn, but which
at intervals affrights us, when it stands revealed before our eyes in
one of its grand unforeseen manifestations.

The navigator, for example, who at night sees the ocean shimmering with
lustre and wreathing garlands of fire, is at first diverted by the
spectacle. He sails ten leagues; the garland is indefinitely prolonged;
it stirs, and twists, and knots itself in harmony with the motions of
the wave; it becomes a monstrous serpent ever extending its sinuous
length to thirty, ay, and forty leagues. Yet all this is but a dance of
imperceptible animalcules! What are their numbers? At this question the
imagination starts back aghast; it perceives in the distance a nature
of gigantic force, of terrific wealth, but possessing little relation
to the other, the well-ordered, and, in a certain degree, economical
nature, of the higher life.

It is impossible to speak of insects or molluscs without naming these
animalcules, which seem to be their rough outline, and in the extreme
simplicity of their organism already foretoken, indicate, and prepare
for them. With a good microscope you can discern these miniatures of
the insect, which simulate their organism, and mimic their movements.
When you are able to distinguish the _Rotifers_, you think that in
the aggregations and in the tentacles of their mouth you recognize
them as little polypes. The _Rhizopods_, though almost imperceptible,
are furnished, nevertheless, with good solid carapaces, which are
equally as good a protection for them as their great shells are for the
molluscs, the oyster and the snail. The microscopic _Tardigradæ_ are,
in fact, closely connected with insects, and the _Acarina_ with worms.

What are these least of the little? Simply the architects or builders
of the globe which we inhabit. With their bodies and their remains they
have prepared the soil now echoing under our feet. Whether their tiny
shells be still distinguishable, or whether they have been decomposed
into chalk, they are not the less the foundation of immense portions of
our earth. A single bed of this chalk stretches from Paris to Tours;
that is, for fifty miles. Another, of enormous breadth, spreads over
all Champagne. Pure chalk, or Spanish white, which we find everywhere,
is composed of pounded shells.

And it is these most minute of organisms which have wrought the
grandest of works. The imperceptible rhizopod has built for itself a
nobler monument than the Pyramids; nothing less than Central Italy,
a notable portion of the chain of the Apennines. But even this was
too insignificant: the colossal masses of Chili, the prodigious
Cordilleras, which look down upon the world at their feet, are
the funeral monument wherein this impalpable--I had almost said
invisible-organism has interred the remains of its vanished race.

A bygone world, hidden beneath the present and upper world in the
profundities of life or the obscurity of time!

What might it not tell us, if God would give it speech, and permit it
to recall all that it has done or is doing for us! What just demands
might not the elementary plants, the imperfect animals whose dust
has fashioned for our use the fertile crust of the globe, that noble
theatre of life, address to us! "While you were still asleep," might
say the ferns, "we alone, by transforming and purifying the previously
irrespirable air, created after thousands upon thousands of years the
earth now blooming with the corn and the rose! We accumulated that
subterranean treasure of enormous coal-beds which warms your hearth;
and that one mass, among others, a hundred leagues in length, which
feeds the great forge of the world from London to Newcastle."

"We," the imperceptibles might say,--the obscure and unnamed
animalcules despised or ignored by man,--"we are thy guardians, have
laid out thy fields, and built thy dwelling-places. It is not the great
fossil rhinoceros or mastodon whose bones have made thy soil; it is
_our_ work--or rather, it is ourselves. Thy cities, thy Louvres, and
thy Capitols are constructed with our _débris_. Life itself in its
essence, in that sparkling beverage by which France diffuses joy over
all the earth, whence comes it? From arid hills where the vine thrives
in the white dust that once was _we_, and absorbs the concealed warmth
of our prior existences."

The demand made upon us would be a lengthened one; restitution
impossible. These dead myriads, having nourished with their lime the
various articles that form our sustenance, have passed into our very
being. Others also would put forth a claim. The very pebble, the hard
flint, once lived, and now nourishes life.

Great was the astonishment in Europe when a Berlin
professor--Ehrenberg--informed us that the silicious stone, so sharp,
rough, and brittle, the _tripoli_ with which metals are polished, is
neither more nor less than an aggregation of dead animalcules, an
accumulation of the shells of infusoria of a terrible diminutiveness.
So small is the creature I speak of, that it takes one hundred and
eighty-seven millions to weigh a grain.

[Illustration]

The labours of the unseen architects of the globe, admired by our men
of science in extinct species, travellers have discovered revived
in living species. They have surprised, in our own day, immense
laboratories in permanent activity, of beings invisible in themselves,
or apparently powerless, but really of boundless capacity of toil, if
we judge by its results. What death accomplishes for life, life itself
relates. Numbers of tiny organisms become by their present works the
interpreters and historians of their vanished predecessors.

These, like the latter, with their structures, or their _débris_,
build up islands in the sea, and construct immense banks of reefs,
which, gradually joining together, will become new lands. Without going
further than Sicily, we find among the madrepores, that cover its
coasts torn by volcanic fires, a little animal, the zoophyte, which
has accomplished a task man would never have dared to undertake. He
contrives to move forward by protecting his soft body with a shield of
stone which he incessantly secretes. Continuously developing the tubes
which in succession afford him shelter, he entirely fills up the empty
spaces left by the madrepores or corals, bridges over the intervals
between the reefs, and connects them with one another; finally, he
creates a passage in defiles previously impassable. In due time this
builder will have accomplished the colossal task of a causeway all
around the island in its circumference of a hundred and eighty leagues.

But it is more particularly in the vast Southern Ocean that these
works are prosecuted on a grand scale by the polypes of the lime,
the corallines, and madrepores of every kind; an animal vegetation
worthy of comparison with the labour of the mosses in a peat-moor,
which continue to flourish in their upper growth while the lower are
transformed and decomposed. Exactly like these vegetables, the polypes,
and even their production, the coral, while still soft and tender,
frequently become the nourishment of worms and fishes which feed and
browse upon them like our cattle, derive their sustenance from them,
and return them in the shape of chalk, without the slightest indication
of a previous existence! Recently English seamen have discovered at
the bottom of the sea this manufacture of chalk, which is incessantly
passing from the living into the inorganic condition.

But these destructive causes do not prevent the polypes from
imperturbably carrying on their gigantic labours, incessantly elevating
the islands and solid barriers which are so skilfully adapted to resist
the oceanic action. They divide the work among themselves according
to their species. The idlest execute their share in the quiet waters,
or in the great depths, remotest from the light; others, under the
sunshine, among the very breakers of which they eventually become the
masters.

Soft, gelatinous, elastic, adhering to their support, the stony and
porous mass; they deaden the fury of the boiling waters which would
wear out the granite, and split the rock into fragments.

Under the mild trade-winds which prevail in the tropic climates, the
sea would uniformly flow with a tranquil tide if it did not encounter
these living ramparts, which force it back upon itself, scatter its
waves in spray, and vex it with everlasting torment.

That the waters should assault them is their fate. But they inflict no
injury upon them; and in truth it is on their behalf they toil. Their
violence does not wear _them_, but it wears the reef, and detaches in
atoms the lime on which they live and with which they build. This lime,
absorbed by them and _animalized_, changes into a hundred sparkling,
living, active flowers, which are identical with our polypes, and form
quite an analogous world enamelling the ocean-bed.

On the margin of these islands,--which are generally circular, like a
ring,--accumulates a layer of vegetable wealth, which speedily grows
green, and embellishes itself with the only tree that can endure
salt-water, the cocoa-nut palm. This, then, is the _humus_; the
life which will for ever continue to develop. The fresh springs and
fountains will next make their appearance, invited and fed by the
vegetation.

[Illustration]

Such is the original type of a young world which in due time will be
inhabited. The cocoa-palm will have its insects; the birds will pause
on its boughs; men will gather its fruit. Wrecked ships and floating
timbers, propelled by the sea, will bring there after awhile tenants of
every kind.

Some of these islands, when extended, enlarged, and solidified, measure
not less than twenty-five miles in circumference. Many are larger
still; fertile, inhabited, and populous, like the Maldives.

The ambition of their architects might rest contented, you would think,
with these vast creations. But to insure their fixity, they have
increased their extent. The buttresses by which they strengthen their
work at the bottom of the sea being prolonged and elevated, expand
into banks, which link the isles to each other over an immense area.
Along the line of burning life, in the tropic zone, these indefatigable
builders have daringly intersected the sea and worked athwart its
currents, and already are arresting the courses of our navigators.

New Caledonia is now surrounded by a reef of 145 leagues in length. The
chain of the Maldive Islands measures 480 English miles. To the east of
New Holland stretches a bank of polypes over 360 leagues, 127 of these
without interruption. Finally, in the Pacific Ocean the mass known as
the Dangerous Archipelago is about 400 leagues in length by 150 in
breadth.

If they continue after this fashion, incessantly connecting their
various piles of submarine masonry, they will perhaps realize the
prophecy of Kirby, who discerned in the coral isles and reefs the
possibility of a new world--a brilliant and fertile world; and in the
course of centuries may accomplish the formation of a causeway, an
immense bridge, connecting Asia with America.

[Illustration]




[Illustration: IV.--LOVE AND DEATH.]


[Illustration]


CHAPTER IV.

LOVE AND DEATH.


Above the infinite elementary life,--that quasi-vegetable life in
which generation is but, as it were, a-budding,--begins the distinct,
individual, and complete organism whose strongly centralized electric
network of nerves is able to sympathize directly with the rapid energy
of its acts and resolutions.

However humble the insect may seem in appearance, it is from the first
independent of the immovable, expectant existence of all the inferior
races. It is born entirely free from that communistic fatalism which
merges the being of each in the life of all. It exists independently;
it moves, goes, comes, advances or returns, changes its determination
or its direction at pleasure, or in obedience to its wants, appetites,
and caprices. It suffices for itself; it foresees, provides, defends,
and boldly confronts the most unexpected chances.

In this, then, do we not discern, as it were, a first glimpse of
personality?

The individual stands out from the mass. He shows himself all at once
admirably provided with the instruments necessary for the support
and sustenance of the individual existence. He is born greedy and
_absorbent_. But this very absorbingness is exactly the service which
Nature expects of him. It is his mission to purify and disencumber
the world; to clear it of morbid or extinct animal matter, which acts
as an obstacle to the growth of life; to save the latter from the
consequences of its excessive fecundity, the danger of its abundance.

No other being, as we shall prove, exercises so great an influence
upon our globe; no other throws itself into the condition of general
existence with so vital an energy. But this extraordinary strength,
in such disproportion to the size, bulk, and weight of the insect, is
subject to a severe law; the rapid, absolute, and complete renewal, at
each generation, of the individual.

_Love implies death._ To engender and to beget is to die. He who is
born, by the very act of his birth kills.

This is a sentence common to all beings, but carried out upon none more
literally than upon the insect.

In the first place, it is death for the father to love. It is
indispensable that he should surrender all his powers, and exhaust the
best part of his vitality; that he should perish in himself, to revive
in him to whom he shall have transmitted his germ of resurrection.

And for the mother, too, in most of the insect species, the
condemnation is the same. She will love, give birth, and speedily die.
Love for her shall not have its prize and recompense. She shall not
see her sons. She shall not enjoy the consolations of death in seeing
herself survive in her image.

A great and harsh difference between this mother and the mothers
of superior animals! The woman--or the female of the mammal--as a
rule cherishes in her own body her beloved treasure, warms it with
her own flame, and feeds it with her love. How envious would be the
insect-mother, if she knew of this supreme maternal happiness! But
_she_ must seek of an ungenial nature, must demand of some other
being--tree, plant, fruit, or perhaps the earth itself--that it will
condescend to continue the work of her maternity. This is rigorous, but
it is not cruel. Let us look at it seriously. If death separate the
mother and the child, it is because they cannot live together; because
they are strongly sundered by the opposite conditions of life and
nutrition. The child, at first a lowly grub, larva, or worm, an obscure
miner, a concealed nocturnal worker, must for a long time continue
to feed upon the coarsest food, and sometimes even on death itself.
She, the mother, who, winged and transfigured, has mounted to a higher
life; and lives solely on the honied sweets of flowers,--how could she
accustom herself to the shades, and the useful but abject circumstances
in which her offspring grows strong? That which is salutary and vital
for the tenebrous child of the earth would be fatal to an aërial
mother, who has already fluttered in the warmth and genial light of
heaven.

[Illustration]

It is needful for the due development of the child that its mother
should provide it with a triple or quadruple cradle, and there deposit
it; not neglected, and without succour, but furnished with its first
aliment--an aliment light and fitted for its feebleness, which it can
find on its waking up into life. This done, she closes the door, seals
it, and voluntarily excludes and interdicts herself from returning
thither. Thenceforth she must cede her rights to the universal mother,
who shall replace her--Nature.

[Illustration]

That in such a cradle the child should live commodiously,--that from
its own body it should draw out a silky covering to line its plastic
prison,--that finally, when sufficiently strong, it should issue forth
under the influence of the heat,--this is self-explanatory, and we
admire without being astonished. But what really excites our wonder
is, that the mother,--a butterfly, or perhaps a beetle,--after the
numerous changes through which she has passed, after her numerous
sloughings, transitory slumbers, and metamorphoses, should remember,
for her offspring's behoof, the place or plant where formerly she
herself was nourished, and grew, and took her point of departure! It
is a marvel which confounds the mind. Those creatures apparently the
most heedless--the fly, or light-headed butterfly--at the moment when
approaching death brightens them with the radiance of love, collect, as
it were, their thoughts, and seem to revive their recollections. Then,
without lapse or error, they flee away; and lo! the plant which was
their own early residence, their birthplace, and their cradle, shall
again become their home, and protect their offspring!

All at once they show themselves prudent, foreseeing, and skilful.
To obtain an entrance to this asylum, they practise unknown arts and
display incredible address. How is this? What happens? Sometimes their
weapons of war, diverted to other uses, become instruments of love;
sometimes new and hitherto concealed apparatus,--frequently of an
extremely complex character,--make their appearance; and yet all for
this solitary act, for this single day.

A curious book has been written on the mechanism and infinitely varied
instrumentation with which insects are provided for the discharge of
the maternal duty. Their implements are often charming from their
precision, delicacy, and subtlety. It will suffice to particularize
that of the rose-bush aphis,--so well described by Réaumur, as a saw
whose two blades act in an inverse direction, and whose teeth are each
a set of teeth.

O unheard-of power of Love! Whether this divine workman prepares for
them their tiny tools, or whether he inspires them to fashion their own
by the effort and vehemency of the burning maternal desire, it matters
not: you see them duly fabricated, and acting when wanted in a wholly
unexpected manner.

It is a simple task for the tribes of sociable insects which labour
with the assistance and protection of a numerous republic; but it is
infinitely arduous and painful for the solitary mothers, who, without
auxiliary, spouse, or friend, undertake enormous enterprises, and
frequently raise constructions which might be the work of giants,--such
as the nest of the mason-wasp. One is lost in astonishment at the
amount of patience and strength of will required for so colossal an
edifice.

This excessive toil ages the mother in a few days. She wears herself
out, yet does not enjoy the fruit. Frequently the elaborate cradle
serves for another. Too frequently a usurping stranger seizes upon it,
profits by the meritorious work, and establishes there its progeny,
which will not only consume the provision of the rightful tenant, but
feed also on the unfortunate tenant himself!

Who will not bestow a glance of pity on this great work, and a result
of such uncertain character?

In the burning days of July, when the narrow belt of forests
surrounding Fontainebleau concentrated upon it the summer heats, we
were astonished at the incessant and continuous labour, despite the
indolence of the season, of a solitary bee which was ever going and
coming. Her indefatigable journeys always brought her near some vases
of camelias and rose-bays. I saw her, still fair and shapely, of a
beautiful brown mingled with black, returning, at regular intervals
of about five minutes, with woven fragments of leaves, which she
introduced through a deep aperture into the soil of the vase where she
had made her nest.

For three days she worked with undiminished ardour. There were no signs
that she took the least food: constantly at her work, she appeared to
have already abandoned all care for her own life.

Her preoccupation was so great and her activity so eager that we were
able to approach her very closely. Nothing frightened her; so that we
could establish ourselves at our ease near her little nest, and observe
her with as much patience as she herself brought to her work.

On the fourth morning we found the opening closed, and we saw her no
more. She had completed her task. Exhausted, but rejoicing at its
conclusion, she had retired undoubtedly to some obscure recess to await
her destiny.

We proceeded delicately to loosen the soil around the sides of the
vase, in order to examine into what she had done.

At the bottom, resembling in shape a couple of thimbles, lay two
cradles, and in these cradles two little ones. All the care had been
for them: so many young, so many cells.

Each was composed of six-and-twenty fragments of leaves. Réaumur, in a
similar nest, counted but sixteen. Six of these fragments, which closed
up the entrance, were perfectly round,--a remarkable fact, if we bear
in mind that the instrument which achieved the work was by no means
appropriate to it. Yet they were as accurately finished off as if done
by a punch.

The other portions of leaf, cut into ovals, and carefully placed one
upon another in due accordance with the contour of the nest, resembled
so many roofs designed by the indefatigable mother as a protection
against the wind and rain. At the bottom lay a little honey; the last
and tender legacy of the mother, bequeathed by her to those whom she
had abandoned for ever.

We shall enjoy the satisfaction of seeing them weave their winter
shelter. It will be pleasanter for them under our roof than at the
bottom of the vase. The mother's intentions will be carefully carried
out. Adopted, tended, and removed to Paris, the nymphs of Fontainebleau
will take, one fine morning in spring, their flight above our windows,
and, as young bees, will be able to gather, if not the honey of the
heather, at least that of the Luxembourg.

[Illustration]




[Illustration: V.--THE ORPHAN: ITS FEEBLENESS.]


[Illustration]


CHAPTER V.

THE ORPHAN: ITS FEEBLENESS.[H]

[Footnote H: _La Frileuse_,--literally, "The chilly one."]


We have told the easiest and pleasantest story to relate, the story
of the privileged creature for whom its mother has duly provided, and
who is nourished and clothed by her efforts. But many--in truth, the
greatest number--enter life destitute and necessitous. They fall naked
into the great world.

Poverty the audacious, necessity the ingenious, the severe internal
travail of hunger and desire, stimulate and develop the energetic
organs which come to their assistance.

What organs? The great Swammerdam, the martyr of patience, was
the first to distinguish them. With a piercing eye, examining the
newly-hatched egg,--that dubious foundation!--he seized the opening
lineaments of life, and marked in them the profound and decisive
characters which make the mystery of the insect. He saw the little
creature, with its gelatinous body, push forward its mandible or
jaws,--a distinct and complete organ, placed in front of the mouth, and
visibly intended to nourish and protect the still feeble being.

Behind this active apparatus he detected on the sides of the body a
passive apparatus, a series of tiny mouths or valves (the _stigmata_)
which await the air, and open to receive it.

Ingenious precautions! The orphan born completely naked, and launched
into life unprotected to undergo the most toilsome metamorphoses,
is rendered competent for the task only by eating greedily from the
moment of its birth, absorbing and devouring! It must eat always and
everywhere, even in the least respirable atmosphere, and in unhealthy
and deadly places. It is for this reason nature has endowed it with
a slower, and, if I may so speak, a more suspicious circulation and
respiration, than that of the superior creatures which live only
in pure air. In these creatures, as in man, the blood continually
flows to meet the air and be vivified by it. In the insect, on the
contrary, the protecting apparatus which guards its lateral mouths
are disposed in such a manner as to be able always to moderate, sift,
and, if need be, exclude, the invading atmosphere. One is overcome
with surprise by the infinite variety of the combinations designed
for this end, the numerous mechanical and chemical arts of the most
complicated character. To receive and yet not receive, to breathe
without breathing, to preserve the control of what must nevertheless
be a passive function, to trust and yet mistrust, to surrender and yet
protect, is the difficult problem which life here proposed to itself,
and of which it has found innumerable solutions. To give air to a
grub! Behold, arrogant humanity, which callest thyself the centre of
all things, the most laborious effort that has engrossed the powers of
nature!

Its circulation resembles that of the embryo in the bosom of its
mother. But how much less favourable the condition of the insect! The
foetus is in immediate contact with the world through the soft maternal
medium. The motherless insect embryo does not swim, like the other, in
a sea of milk. It is cradled in the rude mould of the universal life;
it travels therein at great peril, on the rude earth, from shock to
shock.

This fact the moderns have recognized,--_the insect is an embryo_. But
who would suppose that this very circumstance would doom it to death?
How rude a contradiction! An embryo launched into the thick of the
fray, to be the victim of all--of birds, and even of insects. An embryo
armed, it is true; and nothing is stranger than to see the soft grubs
brandishing their threatening jaws, while their feeble body, deprived
of all defence, is exposed on every side.

Flight offers them but few chances; their best protection is night.
And therefore they shun the light,--they live as they can under the
ground, in the wood, or at least beneath the leaf. If this be true of
the larvæ, the grubs, of what we call worms, we may say the same of the
insect. For its first period (that of the larva) endures a considerable
time, though its life as a nymph, and finally its third period, last
but a very brief while. Numerous species (May-bugs, stag-beetles, and
the like) have three to six years of a tenebrous existence, and only
three months under the sun.

Even the insects which live longest in the sun, like the bees and the
ants, work willingly in obscurity; are partial to the shadows of their
hives and ant-hills.

We may assert as a general rule that _the insect is the child of night_.

Most insects shun the day. But how can they avoid the air? Even in hot
countries, the contact of the variable atmosphere with a live nude
body, whose epidermis is not yet hardened, becomes infinitely painful.
In our severe climates, each breath of air must produce the sensation
of piercing arrows, of a million of fine needles. What would it be, O
Heaven, for a poor human foetus to issue, after a week or a fortnight,
from its mother's womb, and instead of peacefully undergoing the
transformations which strengthen it, to be subjected to them in a naked
condition and in open day? What would be its sensations on quitting its
soft asylum, and falling into the cold air? Yet such must be those of
the insect, when, soft, feeble, assailable, and penetrable everywhere,
still almost floating and gelatinous to the eye, it experiences the
cold, and the wind, and the shock of so many painful accidents.

Certain clothed species are a little better protected. Some are lodged
in the heart of a fruit. Others (bees and ants) form a protecting
community; but the immense majority are born solitary and naked.

Some of our readers, always well clothed and warmed, will say, I am
sure, that cold is an excellent thing, which stimulates the appetite
and strengthens the frame. But those who have been poor will very well
understand my preceding observations. For my part, recollections of
my childhood convince me that cold is, in all truth, a punishment;
you cannot get accustomed to it; its prolongation does not render its
effect less severe. How keen a joy I felt (in rigorous winters) at
each thaw which released me from my agitated, terrified, and uneasy
condition, and secured the happy re-establishment of the internal
harmony!

I do not deny, however, that cold may not be a powerful tonic, which
sharpens and braces up the mind, and draws from it fresh efforts of
invention. Cold, as well as hunger--and perhaps hunger especially--is
the great stimulus of the arts; hunger weakens, cold strengthens.

It is the powerful inspirer of infinite swarms of those chilly
creatures which seek before all things, as soon as they are born, the
means of covering themselves. They are not in want of food; nature
has everywhere prepared for them an ample banquet. All the vegetable
kingdom, and a great part of the animal, are at their disposal; they
might live tender and indolent, as the child sleeps at its ease on
the maternal placenta which nourishes its slothfulness. But the cold
irritates them; the cold damp air deadens and paralyzes their entrails;
finally, the light wounds them. They can enjoy no repose until they
have secured a shelter. In the lowest grade of life the smallest grub
becomes an artist, and by weaving, and spinning, and carving has soon
contrived a robe, and, as with a second skin over her too sensitive
epidermis, has covered her suffering nakedness. Happy she who finds
herself placed at the outset on a prepared soil, a cloth of warm
wool, a fine fur: she does not fail to make in hot haste, according
to our human fashion, a pretty paletot fitted to her figure; which,
nevertheless, she leaves a little loose, like economical mothers for
their young growing children, in whose case the garb too large to-day
will be tight and well-fitting to-morrow.

Those who on their birth come in contact with chill green leaves,
and their lustrous glaze, are still more industrious. They practise
arts which astonish the observer. Some raise enormous masses with
imperceptible cables, and by mechanical processes analogous to those
which were employed in removing and rearing the obelisk of the Place
de la Concorde. Others cut out figures purposedly irregular, which the
seam afterwards fits into its harmonious _ensemble_.

Every industrial corporation may be found represented in this little
world: tailors, weavers, felters, spinners, miners, and the like.
And in each corporation you meet with species working each after its
peculiar fashion, by the various processes appropriate to it.

The tailors work from a pattern. They mark out on the leaf a suitable
piece; which they remove, and lay upon another leaf; tack it, cut out
a second on the first model, and stitch them together. This done, with
their scaly head they flatten the ribs, just as the tailor smooths down
the seams with his iron. Then they line this coat, which they carry
about with them, with the very finest silk.

Others work in mosaic, others in marquetry and veneering. After having
woven the robe, they disguise it by artistically gluing to it a variety
of surrounding materials. The aquatic insects, for example, embellish
theirs with moss, lentils, mussels, or little snails.

The miners erect galleries between a couple of leaves, and roam about
in them, constructing places of exit and ingress in their subterranean
abodes.

The labour is great. But among all the species an admirable justice
prevails. Whoso works hard while a child, does little when an adult;
and _vice versâ_. The bee, which in the larva state is richly fed
by its parents, and always carried about and cradled, is destined
hereafter to an exceedingly laborious life.

On the contrary, another insect which, as a grub, has toiled, and
woven, and spun, will having nothing to do in its later life but
whisper love-phrases to the rose. I am speaking of Sir Butterfly.

For the great majority, hard work is for infancy, for the larva or
the grub; work twofold and excessive. On the one hand, the constant,
urgent, and pressing search after the food craved for by an immense
internal need; the necessity of recruiting and renewing its energies,
of restoring the inherited organs, and developing new ones.

The existence of these poor motherless creatures is divided between two
severe conditions: toil, and growth through disease.

For their moultings, or sloughings, are, in effect, a disease.

The painful moment having arrived for the little creature to change
its clothing, a clothing which clings to its flesh, it is seized with
illness, abandons its leaf, and creeps languidly to some solitary
asylum. If you saw it in such a soft, inert, and withered condition, so
different from its natural state, you would say it was on the point of
death. And many do, indeed, succumb at this laborious crisis.

Passive, and suspended to a branch, it waits until nature shall
complete its work,--until its epidermis be detached from the second
skin beneath, recalling it to all the energies of life.

It is then that you see the garb, which was formerly so brilliant, dry
up and harden like a thenceforth useless thing, carried hither and
thither by the wind.

But before it will yield and separate, the invalid, despite of its
weakness, must twist in every direction, and writhe, and swell, and
contract, and employ all the efforts of a being in its strongest
moments.

At length it has conquered; the old sheath is rent; and I see the
insect free, but bathed in sweat.

Do not touch it yet, for the slightest pressure will wound. Of this
it is aware, and lies perfectly motionless. It is pale, and almost
swooning; it must wait patiently, before beginning to move, till
its skin is less sensitive and its limbs are much firmer. Soon,
fortunately, it will be invigorated by its food; it feels a terrible
hunger, which restores its strength and prepares it for another
sloughing. Such is its destiny. It is condemned to deliver itself
continually in a series of _accouchements_, until it finally attains
its latest transformation.

If either the exertion or the pain inspire it with a transient gleam of
thought, it would say, on each painful occasion: "Now it is ended! I
have finished my task; I will rest in peace; this is my last change."
To which Nature would respond: "Not yet! not yet! Thou art not yet
engendered. What art thou? Nothing but a larva, a mask which is about
to fall."

What! A mask! and yet it wills and toils, strives and suffers, and
sometimes seems more advanced than will be the being produced from it!
So much industry and skill imprisoned in a skin which will immediately
dry up and be blown away by the breeze!

However this may be, it is seized one morning by an undefinable kind of
irritability and disquiet,--by a mysterious impulse which excites it
to undertake a new task. You would say that within itself another self
exists, moving, and stirring, and following up a distinct purpose, and
yearning to become--what? does it know? This I cannot assert; but after
awhile you may see it acting, and acting sagaciously, as if inspired by
a perfect knowledge. Its presentiment of the slumber which will shortly
seize upon it, paralyze its forces, and surrender it helplessly to all
its enemies, incites it to the sudden display of a novel activity. "Let
us work well! Let us work quickly! For soon I shall sleep soundly."

[Illustration]




[Illustration: VI.--THE MUMMY, NYMPH, OR CHRYSALIS.]


[Illustration]


CHAPTER VI.

THE MUMMY, NYMPH, OR CHRYSALIS.


Let us respect the childhood of the world. Let us pardon the early ages
for the consolations and hopes which they drew from the strange drama
represented by the Insect, the thoughts of immortality which grave
Egypt founded upon it. This drama tranquillized more hearts and wiped
away more tears than all the mysteries of Canopus or the revels of
Eleusis.

When the mourning widow, the eternal Isis, ever reproducing herself in
eternal anguish, was snatched from her beloved Osiris, she reposed her
hope of a future reunion on the sacred beetle, and hushed her sobs.

What is death? What is life? What is the awakening, or what the
slumber? Do you not see this little miracle, this dumb confidant of
the grave, which makes us the mock of destiny? It sleeps in the egg,
and afterwards sleeps again in the nymph. It is thrice born; and it
dies thrice--as larva, nymph, and beetle. In each of these existences
the larva or mask is the prefigurement of the succeeding existence. It
prepares, begets, and hatches itself. From the most repulsive sepulchre
it emerges sparkling. On the dust it shines; on the gray Egyptian
plain, in its season of aridity, it shimmers, and eclipses everything.
Its jewelled wing mirrors the all-powerful sun.

Where was it? In the foul shadow, in night and death. A deity has
summoned it forth, and will yet do much more for this beloved soul!
Sweet, tender ray! The hope was surely founded upon justice, on the
impartial love of the Creator of all life.

Accordingly, the widow draws from its death the brilliant pledge of the
future, and gives utterance to this woman's cry:--"Merciful Heaven!
do for my husband and for me what thou hast done for the insect. Do
not grant less to man; do not grant to my best-beloved less than thou
accordest to this brother of the gnat!"

       *       *       *       *       *

Has modern science swept away the ancient poesy? Has it completely
eliminated the miraculous from nature?

The inaugurator of this science, Swammerdam, has discovered that the
grub already contains the nymph; nay more, even the butterfly. In the
grub he has detected the rudiment of the wing and proboscis of the
future being.

This is not all. Malpighi saw the _nymph_ of the silkworm in its
virgin slumber, _already furnished with the attributes of its coming
maternity_,--containing the eggs which, as a butterfly, it would
fecundate.

And yet again, this is not all. Réaumur, in the oak-grub, _in a grub
scarcely a few hours old, found the eggs of the future butterfly_.
In other words, the infant insect, at that very stage when the grub
itself, as Harvey points out, is simply a mobile egg, already possesses
eggs and children.

It is the identity of three beings. It seems as if there could be no
intermediary deaths; one single life is continuously carried on.

All this seems clear, does it not? The ancient mystery has perished?
Man has discovered, in its fulness, the secret of things?

Réaumur does not think so; Réaumur himself, who has guided us so
far. In recording his observations he does not appear satisfied, and
confesses "that they still leave very much to be desired."[I]

[Footnote I: Réaumur, "Histoire des Insectes," tome i., p. 351.]

In truth, it is a thing to confound and almost to terrify the
imagination, to think that a grub, at the outset no bigger than a
thread, should include in itself all the elements of its moultings and
metamorphoses; should contain its triple, and even octuple envelopes;
nay more, the sheath or case of its _nympha_ and its complete
butterfly, all folded up one in another, with an immense apparatus
of vessels, respiratory and digestive, of nerves for feeling and
muscles for moving! A prodigious system of anatomy! first traced out
in complete detail in Lyonnet's colossal work on the willow-grub. The
twofold monster, endowed with a strong grub-stomach for the destruction
of innumerable hard leaves, will possess ere long a light and delicate
apparatus for extracting the honey of flowers. And yet the clothed
creature, which contains in its organism a complete silk-manufactory,
will almost immediately sweep away the complex system.

One knows the gentle manoeuvres by which nature conducts the young of
the higher animals from the embryonic existence to the independent
life, adapting the old organs to new functions. Here, this is not
done. It is not a simple change of condition. The destination is not
merely different, but contrary, with a violent contrast. Therefore,
instruments fitted for an entirely novel existence are required, and
the abolition and definitive sacrifice of the primitive organism.

The revolution, which for all other beings is so well concealed, is
here entirely thrown open. And we are enabled to scrutinize with our
eyes this astonishing _tour de force_ in numerous grubs which undergo
the great change in the light of day, suspended to the branch of a tree
by a silken cable.

The effort is worthy of our admiration and pity. To see yonder
nymph, short and feeble, soft and gelatinous, without arms or paws,
contriving, by the skill with which it expands and contracts its
rings, to escape from the heavy and rough machine which it was at
first, flinging aside its limbs, setting free its head, and--one hardly
dares to record the fact--throwing off its body, and rejecting many of
its principal internal organs!

[Illustration]

This little body, when it has thus escaped from its long heavy mask
(living, nevertheless, but a moment since, a life full of energy), will
dangle, and grow dry, and skilfully ascend to its silken fastening.
There it prepares to fix itself in its new "Me" as a nymph, while its
former "Me," tossed about by the wind, is speedily driven I know not
whither.

All is, and ought to be, changed. _The legs will not again be the
legs._ It will need lighter organs. What can the child of the air,
which can balance on the point of a blade of grass, do with those
coarse short feet, armed with hooks, vent-holes, and so many heavy
implements?

_The head will not be the head_; at least, the enormous apparatus of
mandibles will disappear, and also that of the muscles by which they
were energetically moved. All is thrown aside with the mask. A colossal
change! From a masticator the animal becomes a sucker. A flexible
proboscis emerges.

If anything in the grub appeared of a fundamental character, it was the
digestive apparatus. Ah, well! this basis of its being is no more. The
absorbing throat--the powerful stomach--the greedy entrails,--all are
suppressed, or reduced nearly to nothing. What would they avail the
new being which, in certain species of butterflies, dispenses with
sustenance, has no mouth but by agreement, and is so completely freed
from digestion that frequently it has not even an inferior orifice?
It abandons without difficulty its thenceforth useless furniture, and
expectorates the skin of its stomach!

This is grand and magnificent,--no spectacle is grander! For life
at such a point to change, to dominate over the organs, to rise
victorious, so entirely free of the ancient _Ego_! To those who have
revealed to us such a prodigy of transfiguration, from the bottom of my
heart I say, "Thanks!"

How marvellous the security in this being which abandons everything,
which unhesitatingly dismisses its strong and solid existence,
the complicated organism which just now was _itself_, its own
individuality! We call it its _larva_, its mask; but why? The
personality seems at least as energetic in the vigorous grub as in
the delicate butterfly. And, therefore, it is most indubitably its
individual being which it courageously leaves to shrivel up and perish,
to become--what? Nothing reassuring, nothing but a little, soft,
whitish substance.

Open the nymph soon after it has spun its cocoon: in its shroud you
shall find nothing but a kind of milky fluid, wherein you see, or
fancy you see, certain dubious lineaments. After awhile you may, with
a fine needle, separate these I know not what,--and figure to yourself
that they are the limbs of the future butterfly. A frightful lacuna!
For many species a moment occurs when nothing of the old any longer
appears, and nothing of the new as yet has come. When Æson, cut in
pieces, was thrown, in order to rejuvenate him, into the caldron of
Medea, you would have found, on groping there, the limbs of Æson. But
here there is nothing parallel.

Trustfully, nevertheless, the mummy surrounds its body with its bands,
docilely accepting the shadows, the inertness, and the captivity of
the sepulchre. It feels in itself a force, a _raison d'être_, a _causa
vivendi_,--a reason for living still. And what reason? What cause? The
vitality accumulated by its previous toil. All that, like a laborious
grub, it has accumulated, is its obstacle to death,--its incapability
of perishing,--the reason why it will immediately live again; and not
only live, but with a light and tender existence, whose facility is
proportioned exactly to the efforts which it makes in its anterior
condition of life.

Admirable compensation! When penetrating so deep down into life, I
expected to encounter certain physical fatalities. And I found justice,
immortality, and hope.

Yes, antiquity was right, and modern science is right. It is death, and
yet it is not death; let us call it if you will partial death. Is death
ever otherwise? Is it not a new birth?

Throughout my life I have remarked that each day I died and was
born again; I have undergone many painful strugglings and laborious
transformations. One more does not astonish me. Many and many times I
have passed from the larva into the chrysalis, and into a more complete
condition; the which, after awhile, incomplete under other relations,
has put me in the way of accomplishing a new circle of metamorphoses.

All this from me to me, but not less from _me_ to those who were
_still_ me, who loved me, or made me, or, so long as I lived, whom I
made. These, too, have been, or will be, my metamorphoses. Sometimes,
a certain intonation or gesture which I detect makes me exclaim:--"Ah!
this is a gesture or a tone of my father." I had not foreseen it,
and if I had foreseen it, it would not have occurred; reflection had
changed all; but, not thinking of it, I employed it. A tender emotion,
a holy impulse seized me, when I felt my father thus living in myself.
Are we two? Were we one? Oh! it was my chrysalis. And I--I play the
same part for those who shall follow me, my children, or the children
of my thought. I know, I feel, that besides the bases which I derived
from my father, my ancestors and masters, besides the inheritance
of artist-historian which I shall bequeath to others, germs existed
within me which were never developed. Another, and perchance a better,
man was within me, who has not arisen. Why were not the loftier germs
which might have made me great, and the powerful wings of which I have
sometimes felt myself possessed, displayed in life and action?

These germs, though put aside, remain to me; too late for expansion in
this life, perhaps, but in another,--who knows?

An ingenious philosopher has remarked that if the human embryo, while
imprisoned in the maternal bosom, might reason, it would say:--"I see
myself endowed with organs of which here I can make no use,--limbs
which do not move, a stomach and teeth which do not eat. Patience!
these organs convince me that nature calls me elsewhere; a time will
come when I shall have another residence, a life in which all these
implements will find employment. They are standing still, they are
waiting. I am but the chrysalis of a man!"

[Illustration]




[Illustration: VII.--THE PHOENIX.]


[Illustration]


CHAPTER VII.

THE PHOENIX.


The drama is complete. From the gray or blackish mummy which just now
lay before you dried and shrivelled, you see the new creature, the
resuscitated, the phoenix, blithely escaping, to shine resplendent in
all the glory of youth.

The very reverse of _our_ destiny: commencing with bright and butterfly
days, in later life we crawl and languish; while the insect commences
with years of gloom, and from a long life of obscurity emerges into the
youth in which it dies glorified.

Let us be present at this departure. The warm breath of spring has
awakened the plants; its banquet is prepared. More than one flower,
awaiting it, secretes its honey. It delays, because to-day that
impenetrable envelope which ensured its safety becomes for a moment
its obstacle. Enfeebled and fatigued by so great a transformation,
how shall it break through the too solid cradle which threatens to
suffocate it?

Some species--as, for example, the ants--experience so great a
difficulty, that the captive, probably, would never effect its release
but for the opportune assistance of some power which, from without,
hastens to extricate it, to deliver it (so to speak), and separate it
from the trammels of its swaddling-clothes. Fortunate difficulty! which
creates the bond between the two ages, attaches the liberator to the
child she has delivered, and herself begins its education and society!

But, for the majority of insects, the liberator is no other than
Nature. This mother, inexhaustible in tenderness and invention, gives
to the little one the key which will open the barrier, pierce the
prison, and introduce it to daylight and liberty.

"What key?--and how?" say you. "How can this soft and fluid being
contrive to seize upon a firm, compact tissue, frequently doubled and
immured by the alluvial accumulation of a protracted winter?"

The circumstance embarrasses _us_ greatly, but Nature is not troubled.
Means of the utmost simplicity suffice her; she eludes, and sports
with, the difficulty. The butterfly of the silkworm, for instance, at
the critical moment finds a file--where?--in its eye! This eye, with
numerous facets, has a fine diamond point, which files through and
severs the silken prison.

Another, the cockchafer, shut up underground, suddenly discovers that
it is a perfect mechanician. Of its whole body it makes a lever. Its
posterior extremity furnishes it with a strong-pointed auger. It sinks
solidly, anchors, and makes fast. From this _point d'appui_ it derives
an enormous force, and with its robust shoulders uplifts the heavy
clod, enlarges the aperture, finds at length the light, extends its
unwieldy apparatus of wings and wing-cases, and flies as a gnat.

Another deformed (or shapeless) miner, the mole-cricket, would never
reach the surface if, to reascend from the depth of the earth, it
had not two enormous hands, or rather two powerful rakes, which
open up its way. Though hideous, it is not the less sensitive to the
influence of spring, but it takes the precaution of never exposing its
strange figure save to the doubtful rays of the moon. Its plaintive
cry singularly affects the female; she yields to it, and makes her
appearance, but to return again into the night and confide to the
protecting shade the hope of her posterity.

A frail aquatic insect, the gnat, on this important day assumes the
daring mission of the navigator. It makes fresh use of its demitted
envelope, and turns it into a bark. In this it stands upright, extends
its new wings for sails, glides along the wave, and very frequently
without shipwreck reaches the shore; where, when dried, the same wings
will bear it off to the chase and the pursuit of pleasure. In an
hour it appears a complete master of all these novel arts. It is the
peculiarity of love to know without having been taught.

Love is winged. Mythology is perfectly in the right. This is verified
in the proper sense and without metaphor. In one brief moment, Nature
displays a restless anxiety to fly towards the beloved object. All
creatures rise above their own level, all mount towards the light, on
the pinions of desire. The internal fire is also revealed in glowing
colours. Every one decorates his person, every one wishes to please.

The butterfly apparently looks upon you with the great velvety eyes
which adorn its wings. Beetles of every species, like mobile stones,
astonish by their brilliant reflexes, their burning vivacities.
Finally, from the bosom of the shadows bursts the flame of love, naked
and unveiled, in flashing stars!

At such a moment it accomplishes the strangest transformations, and
from the humblest masks issue, in violent contrast, the superbest
individuals.

A dull larva of the morass, which lives only by stratagem, becomes
the brilliant amazon, the agile winged warrior, called Demoiselle
(_libellula_). It is the only creature of its tribe which expresses
the complete liberty of flight, holding the same rank among insects as
the swallow among birds. Who has not followed with attentive gaze its
thousand varied movements, its turns, and returns, and the infinite
circles which it makes with azure and emerald wings on the meadow or
over the waters? A flight apparently capricious; but not really so, for
it is a chase, a rapid and elegant extermination of myriads of insects.
What seems to you a pastime, is the greedy absorption with which this
brilliant creature of war feeds its season of love.

[Illustration]

Do not believe that these riches are simply the gifts of genial
climates; that these glittering festal garments which they assume
to love and die in are only the sheen of the sun, the all-powerful,
decorator, which with its rays intensifies the enamel and gems we
admire upon their wings. Another sun--a sun which shines for the
whole earth, even for the ice-regions of the pole--profits them far
more considerably. It exalts in them the inner life, evokes all their
powers, and, on the given day, calls forth the supreme flower. Yonder
scintillating colours are their visible energies which become speaking
and eloquent. It is the pride of a complete life, which, having
attained its climax, displays its energy in triumph, wishes to expand
and diffuse; it is the tradition of desire, the imperious prayer and
urgent appeal to the beloved objects.

In pale and temperate climates, you will meet with those brilliant
liveries which one would think belonged to the tropics. Who, under our
gloomy and variable sky, has not seen the sparkling Spanish fly? Even
in the fatal deserts where summer beams but for an instant, as if in
despite of the sun,--in despite of the poor and naked earth,--love
supports some beings of a sumptuous splendour, of opulent raiment and
rich decoration. Miserable Siberia sees the princes and great lords
of the Insect World simultaneously displaying their grandeur. The
tyrannical Russian climate cannot prevent enormous beetles, pitiless
hunters, fiercer than Ivan the Terrible, from appearing in green,
black, violet, or deep blue morocco, shaded with purple sapphires.
While some, usurping the ancient copes consecrated to the czars and the
porphyrogeniti, stalk to and fro in robes of purple, broidered with
Byzantine gold.

[Illustration]

In our neighbouring Siberias, I mean our lofty mountains,--under the
hailstorms, for instance, of the Pyrenean glaciers,--without being
discouraged by their rude blows, fly noble insects, of exquisite
appearance, the rosalia in a mantle of pearl-gray satin, spotted with
black velvet.

Among the lofty Alps, at the Grindelwald,--the formidable descent
where that glacier comes to us, and you may touch its _aiguilles_,
and its keen breath freezes you--I once admired a timid but touching
protestation of love. Among some miserable birches, martyr trees, which
undergo an eternal chastisement, a poor little plant, elegant and
delicate, persists in flowering, with a rose-hued blossom, but a violet
rose, not unworthy of the mournful region. The brother of this tragical
rose is a very tiny insect which, all feeble as it is, mounts higher
than any other species, and is found shivering among the lofty snows
of Mont Blanc. There, above you, is only the heaven, and, beneath,
the vast shroud of ice. The poetic creature has assumed exactly two
tints: the celestial blue of its wings, incredibly delicate, seems
lightly kindled with the white powder of the hoar-frost. The storms
and avalanches which overthrow the rocks awaken in it no sensations of
terror. Under the breath of the terrible giant, in his ice-bristling
beard and formidable frown, it, the little one, flies daringly, as if
conscious that this king of the everlasting winters would hesitate to
destroy the last winged flower of love which, in his realm of death,
preserves for him a reflection of heaven.

[Illustration]




Book the Second.

MISSION AND ARTS OF THE INSECT.




[Illustration: I.--SWAMMERDAM.]


[Illustration]


CHAPTER I.

SWAMMERDAM.


What was known of the Infinite prior to 1600? Nothing whatever.
Nothing of the infinitely great; nothing of the infinitely little. The
celebrated page of Pascal, very frequently cited upon this subject, is
the frank astonishment of a humanity so old and yet so young, which
begins to be aware of its prodigious ignorance, opens its eyes to the
Real, and awakens between two abysses.

No one forgets that in 1610 Galileo, having received from Holland a
magnifying lens, constructed the telescope, elevated it in position,
and saw the firmament. But it is less generally known that Swammerdam,
seizing, with the instinct of genius, on the imperfect microscope,
directed it to the lower world, and was the first to detect the living
infinite, the world of animated atoms! These great men succeeded one
another. At the epoch of the famous Italian's death (1632) was born the
Hollander, the Galileo of the infinitely little (1637).

An astounding revolution! The abyss of life was unfolded in its
profundity with myriads upon myriads of unknown beings and fantastic
organizations of which men had not even dared to dream. But the most
surprising circumstance is, that the very method of the sciences
underwent a total change. Hitherto men had relied upon their senses.
The severest observation invoked their testimony, and they thought that
no appeal could lie from their judgment. But now behold experiment
and the senses themselves, rectified by a powerful auxiliary, confess
that not only have they concealed from us the greater part of things,
but that, in those they have laid bare, they have every moment been
mistaken!

Nothing is more curious than to observe the very opposite impressions
produced by these two revolutions upon their authors. Galileo
before the infinite of heaven, where all appeared harmonious and
marvellously ordered, felt more of joy than of surprise; he announced
his discoveries to Europe in a style of the greatest enthusiasm.
Swammerdam, before the infinite of the microscopic world, seemed
overcome with terror. He recoiled before the spectacle of Nature at
war, devouring her very self. He grew perturbed; he seemed to fear
that all his ideas and beliefs would be overthrown: a melancholy and
singular condition, which, added to his incessant labours, shortened
his days. Let us pause awhile to dwell upon this creator of science,
who was also its martyr.

The eminent physician Boerhaave, who, a hundred years after
Swammerdam's time, published with pious care his "Bible of Nature,"
gave utterance to a surprising observation, which sets one a-dreaming:--

"He had an ardent imagination of impassioned melancholy, which raised
him to the sublime."

Thus, this surpassing master in all the works of patient inquiry, this
insatiable observer of the most minute details, who pursued Nature so
far into the imperceptible, was a poetic soul, a man of imagination,
one of those mournful spirits who groan after nothing less than the
infinite, and die because they fail to conquer it.

His was a remarkable combination of mental endowments which, at the
first glance, seem opposed to one another: a love of the great, and
a taste for the subtlest researches; a sublimity of aim, and that
obstinacy of analysis which would subdivide the atom, and yet never
cry, "Hold, enough!" But, in reality, are these qualities of so
contradictory a nature? By no means. Men whose hearts are filled with
the love of Nature will declare that they harmonize admirably. Nothing
great and nothing little. For the lover a simple hair is worth as much
as, frequently more than, a world.

He was born in a cabinet of natural history; and his birth decided his
destiny. The cabinet, formed by his father, an apothecary of Amsterdam,
was a pell-mell, a chaos. The child wished to arrange it, and drew up a
catalogue of it. A modest ambition led him from point to point, until
he became the greatest naturalist of the century.

His father was one of the zealot collectors who then became common
in Holland--insatiable treasurers of diverse rarities. It was not
with pictures--though Rembrandt was then in his glory--it was not
with antiquities, that he filled his house. But all that the ships
brought back from the two Indies of minerals, plants, fantastic and
extraordinary animals, he acquired at any cost, and heaped up in piles.
These marvels of the unknown world, contrasting by their splendour and
tropical magnificence with the gloomy climate which received them and
the pale sea of the North, aroused in the young Hollander's mind a
lively curiosity and a passionate devotion to Nature.

A very good Dutch painter has drawn a charming picture of the young
Grotius: a universal scholar at twelve years of age, surrounded by
folios, maps, charts, and all the appliances of learning. How much I
should have preferred that the same artist--or rather the all-powerful
magician, Rembrandt--had revealed to us the mysterious study, that
brilliant chaos of the three kingdoms, and the young Swammerdam
endeavouring to grasp the grand enigma!

The crowds and prodigious movement of Amsterdam favoured his solitude.
The Babylons of commerce are for the thinker profound deserts. In that
dumb ocean of men of mercantile activity, on the border of sluggish
canals, he lived almost like Robinson Crusoe in his island. Isolated
even in the midst of his family, who could not comprehend him, he
seldom emerged from his cabinet, and descended on the fewest possible
occasions into the paternal shop.

[Illustration]

His sole recreation was to go in search of insects in the little soil
which Holland offers above the waters. The melancholy meads, covered
with Paul Potter's herds, possess, in the moist warmth of the summer, a
great variety of animal life. The traveller is much impressed when he
sees the crane, the stork, and the crow, elsewhere hostile, reconciled
here by the abundance of their food, which they frequently hunt in
company on terms of perfect accord. Hence the landscape acquires a
peculiar charm. The cattle assume an air of placid security which they
do not elsewhere exhibit. The summer is short, and early assumes the
gravity of autumn. Man and Nature--all appears of a pacific character,
harmonized in a great moral sweetness and remarkable seriousness of
mood.

Enthusiastic collector as his father was, he grieved to see the youth
of Swammerdam thus employed. It had been his ambition to make of
his son a renowned minister who should shine in controversy, and an
eloquent preacher. But his son seemed daily to grow more dumb. The
chagrined father lowered his views from glory to money. In that golden
city, so feverish and so diseased, no career is more lucrative than
that of a physician. But here arose another difficulty. Swammerdam
threw himself heartily into his medical studies; but on condition that
he created them--as yet they did not exist. Therefore, the basis on
which he desired to rest them was the preliminary creation of the
natural sciences. How cure the sick man unless you understood the
healthy? And how understand the latter without studying side by side
the inferior animals which translate and explain disease? But can one
see into such delicate mysteries with the eye alone? Does not the
feebleness of the sense of vision lead us astray? The serious creation
of science would suppose a reform of our senses and the creation of
optics.

A veritable creation! Look at the microscope. Is it a simple spy-glass?
To the eyes which the instrument possessed, Swammerdam added two arms,
one of which bears the glass and the other the object. He himself
says, in reference to his more difficult investigations, "that he had
attempted to obtain the assistance of another person, but that such
assistance proved, in fact, an obstacle." It was for this reason that
he organized a dumb man of copper, a discreet servant ready for every
work; thanks to whom the observer disposes of supplementary hands and
numerous eyes of different degrees of power. In the same manner as the
birds expand or contract their visual organs, either to grasp objects
in a whole or to scrutinize with searching glance the smallest detail,
Swammerdam created the method of successive enlargement; the art of
employing lenses of different sizes and varying curvature, which permit
the observer to see _en masse_, and to study each separate portion, and
finally to survey the whole for the purpose of properly replacing the
details and reconstituting the general harmony.

Was this all? No. To observe dead bodies, time is required; but then
time robs us of them. Death, which seemingly conduces to study by its
immobility, is deceitful; it fixes the mask for a moment, and the
object beneath melts away. Now came a new creation of Swammerdam's.
He not only taught us to see and investigate, but he devised means
for our permanent investigation. By preservative injections he fixed
these ephemeral objects; he compelled time to halt, and forced death
to endure. The Czar Peter, who, a long time afterwards, saw in the
dissecting-room of one of Swammerdam's disciples the beautiful body,
supple and fresh, of a little child, with its exquisite carnation tint,
thought that the rose was living, and could not be prevented from
embracing it.

All this is soon said; but it was long to do. How many attempts! What
miracles of patience, of delicacy, of skilful management! In exact
proportion as one descends the scale of littleness, the insufficiency
of our means proves more and more embarrassing. We can touch nothing
without breaking it. Our large fingers will hold no more: they cast
a shadow, they throw obstacles in our way. Our instruments are too
coarse to seize upon such atoms; therefore we refine them. But then
how can we put the invisible point in an invisible object? The two
terms in sight avoid us. Only one single passion--the unconquerable
love of life and Nature, the undefinable, indescribable tenderness, a
feminine sensibility directed by a masculine, scientific genius--could
succeed in so great an aim. Our Hollander loved the tiny creatures. He
dreaded wounding them so much that he spared the scalpel. He avoided
as far as he could the steel, and preferred the firm but nevertheless
the delicate ivory. He fashioned in it infinitely small instruments,
sharpened by aid of the microscope, which would not work rapidly, and
compelled the student to make his observations with due patience.

His tender respect for Nature found its reward. While still a youth,
and a simple student at Leyden University, he had two strong holds upon
her in her highest and lowest manifestations. He was the first to see
and understand the maternity of the insect and the human maternity.
The latter subject, so delicate and yet so grand--in which he laboured
conjointly with his master at Leyden--I put aside: let us dwell upon
the former. He dissected and described the ovaries of the bee: found
them in the pretended "king;" and proved that she was a queen, or
rather a mother. In like manner he explained the maternity of the ant;
an all-important discovery, which revealed the true mystery of the
superior insect, and initiated us into the real character of these
societies, which are not monarchies, but maternal republics and vast
public nurseries, each of which raises up a people.

The most general fact in the life of insects, and the great law of
their existence, is the Metamorphosis. Changes which in other creatures
are obscure, are in them exceedingly conspicuous. The three ages of the
insect appear to be three creatures. Who would have dared to assert
that the grub, with its heavy luxuriance of digestive organs and its
great hairy feet, was identical with a winged and ethereal being, the
butterfly?

He dared to say, and by the most delicate anatomy he demonstrated, that
the larva, the pupa, and the butterfly represented three conditions of
the same individual, three natural and legitimate evolutions of its
life.

How did learned Europe welcome this novel science of metamorphoses?
That was the question. Swammerdam, young and without authority, without
any position in the academy or university, lived in his cabinet.
Scarcely anything of his works was published during his life, nor even
fifty years afterwards, so that his discoveries might circulate and
advantage all, rather than himself and his fame.

Holland remained indifferent. Eminent professors in the University of
Leyden were opposed to him; and took umbrage at the fact that a simple
student placed himself by his discoveries on a level with them, or even
above them.

The miserable and necessitous condition in which his father left
him was not calculated to recommend him greatly in a country like
Holland. In his costly labours he was supported by the generosity of
his friends. At Leyden it was Van Horn, his professor of anatomy, who
defrayed all his expenses.

At this epoch two illustrious academies were founded,--the Royal
Society of London and the _Académie des Sciences_ of Paris. But the
former, specially inspired by the genius of Harvey, a pupil of Padua,
turned its gaze towards Italy, and addressed its inquiries to the
distinguished and very accurate observer, Malpighi, who furnished at
its request the anatomy of the silkworm. I know not why the Englishmen
turned aside from Holland, and did not also interrogate the genius of
Swammerdam.

He was honoured only in France. It was here, in the neighbourhood of
Paris, that he made the first public demonstration of his discovery.
His friend Thévenot, the famous traveller and publisher of travels,
collected around him at Issy different classes of _savants_, linguists,
orientalists, and, before all, inquiring students of Nature. Such was
the origin of the _Académie des Sciences_. One might justly say that
the revelation of the illustrious Hollander inaugurated its cradle.

A Frenchman rescued from the hands of the Inquisition the last
manuscripts of Galileo. A Frenchman also--Thévenot--supported
Swammerdam with his purse and credit. He was desirous of establishing
him at Paris. On the other hand, the Grand-Duke of Tuscany invited him
to Florence. But the fate of Galileo was too strong a warning. Even in
France there was little safety. The mystic Morin was burned at Paris in
1664; the very year in which Molière performed the first acts of his
"Tartuffe." Swammerdam, who was then residing there, might have been
present at both spectacles.

He himself, notwithstanding his positivism, showed very singular
tendencies towards mysticism. The more deeply he entered into details,
the more eagerly did he long to reascend to the general source of love
and life; an impotent effort which consumed him. Already, at the age of
thirty-two, excessive toil, chagrin, and religious melancholy brought
him to the grave. From his early years he had suffered from the fevers
so common in Holland, that land of swamp and morass, and had not paid
due attention to them. He studied with his microscope every day from
dawn till noon; the remainder of the day he wrote. And for his studies
he preferred the summer days, with their strong light and burning
sunshine. Then he would remain, with his head bare that he might not
lose the smallest ray, frequently until deluged and bathed in sweat.
His eyesight grew very weak.

He was already in a feeble condition when, in 1669, he published in a
preliminary essay the principle of the metamorphosis of insects. He
was sure of being immortal; but so much the more in danger of dying
of hunger. His father thenceforth withdrew from him all assistance.
Swammerdam by his discoveries (as of the lymphatic vessels and hernias)
had very considerably promoted the progress of medicine, and even of
surgery; but he was not a physician. From a spirit of obedience he had
attempted to practise: he could not continue, and fell ill. He was now
without a home. His father shut up his house, retired to live with his
son-in-law, and bade Swammerdam provide for himself, and lodge where
he would. A wealthy friend had often solicited him to reside with him.
When expelled from the paternal roof, he made an effort to seek out
this friend and remind him of his offer; but he remembered it no longer.

Misfortunes now accumulated upon his head. Poor and infirm, and
dragging himself along the streets of Amsterdam with a large collection
which he knew not where to store away, he received another terrible
shock--the ruin of his country. The earth sunk under his feet.

It was the fatal year of 1672, when Holland seemed crushed by the
invasion of Louis XIV. Assuredly his fatherland had not spoiled
Swammerdam; but nevertheless it was the native home of science, of free
reason, the asylum of human thought. And lo! she sank, engulfed by the
hosts of the French; engulfed in the ocean which she had summoned to
her assistance. She lived only by committing suicide. Did she live?
Yes; but to be thenceforth no more than the shadow of her former
greatness.

[Illustration]

The infinite melancholy of such a change has had its painter and its
poet in Ruysdaël, who was born and who died in Swammerdam's time,
and, like him, at the age of forty. When I contemplate in the Louvre
the inestimable picture which that Museum possesses of him, the one
leads me to think of the other. The little man who followed the gloomy
route of the dunes at the approach of the storm reminds me of my
insect-hunter; and the sublime marine picture of the palisade in the
red-brown waters, chafing so terribly, and electrified by the tempest,
seems a dramatic expression of the moral tempests which poor Swammerdam
experienced when he wrote "The Ephemera"--"among tears and sobs."

The Ephemera is the fly which is born but to die, living a single hour
of love.

But Swammerdam did not enjoy that hour; and it seems as if he spent
his too brief life in a state of complete isolation. At the age
of thirty-six he was already drawing near his end. The depths of
imagination and universal tenderness in his nature could not be
alimented by the barren controversies of the age. In this condition
there accidentally fell into his hand an unknown work,--a woman's
book. This sweet voice spoke to his very soul, and somewhat consoled
him. It was one of the _opuscula_ of a celebrated mystic of that age,
Mademoiselle Bourignon.

Poor as was Swammerdam, he undertook a pilgrimage to Germany, where she
resided, and went to see his consoler. He found in the journey a very
real assistance in escaping at the least from his contention with the
_savants_, his rivals, in forgetting every collision, and in remitting
to God alone his defence and his discoveries.

He longed to withdraw himself into a profound solitude. For this
purpose it was necessary he should dispose of the dear and precious
cabinet on which he had spent his days, in which he had enshrined
his heart, and which had at length become a portion of himself. He
must tear himself from it. At this cost he calculated that he would
obtain a revenue sufficient for his wants; but the very loss and
separation he longed for he could not undergo. Neither in Holland nor
in France could buyers be found for the cabinet. Perhaps the wealthy
amateurs, who think of nothing but empty _éclat_, did not find in it
the glittering species which give us a child's pleasure. The great
inventor's collection offered things more serious: the logical order
and arrangement of his discoveries; that eloquent and living method
which had guided his genius to new achievements. Alas! it perished,
scattered abroad.

Having been for a long time ill, in 1680, either through weakness, or
a disgust for life and men, he shut himself up, and would not go out
any more. He bequeathed his manuscripts to his faithful and life-long
friend, whom, when dying, he himself styled the "incomparable,"--the
Frenchman Thévenot. He died aged forty-three.

What really killed him? His own science. The too abrupt revelation
wounded and seized upon him. If Pascal saw an imaginary abyss opening
before him, what would happen to this Dutch Pascal, who saw the real
abyss and the limitless profundity of the unexpected world? It was not
a matter of a decreasing scale of abstract greatnesses or of inorganic
atoms, but of the successive envelopment and prodigious movements of
beings which are the one in the other. For the little we see, each
animal is a tiny planet, a small world inhabited by animals still
more diminutive, which in their turn are inhabited by others very
much smaller. And this, too, without end or rest, except from the
powerlessness of our senses and the imperfection of optical science.

All men now began to fathom, and incessantly toil in, that infinity
which the hand of Swammerdam had opened up to them. From that time
Europe laboured therein with diverse aims. Leuwenhoek, precipitating
himself upon it, discovered and conquered new worlds. The Italian
positivist, Malpighi, showed perhaps the highest boldness. He proved
that the insect has a heart--a heart which beats like man's. One has
not far to go to endow it also with a soul. Swammerdam, who was living
then, was terrified by the fact. He drew back affrighted from the
declivity; he wished to keep his footing, and was fain to doubt the
existence of the heart.

It seemed to him that the science to which he had given the first
impulse, which he had launched on the flood of his discoveries, was
conducting him to something great and terrible which he shrank from
seeing: like one who, adrift on the enormous sea of fresh water which
dashes headlong in the Niagara Falls, perceives himself impelled by a
calm but invincible and mighty movement--whither? He will not, and he
dare not, think!

[Illustration]




[Illustration: II.--THE MICROSCOPE.]


[Illustration]


CHAPTER II.

THE MICROSCOPE:--HAS THE INSECT A PHYSIOGNOMY?


Armed with that sixth sense which man has achieved for himself, I can
move forward, at pleasure, in any direction. It is in my power to track
out, to reach, to compute the spheres, and gravitate with them in
their vast orbits. But I feel much more strongly attracted towards the
other abyss--that of the infinitely little. In its atoms I discover an
intensity of energy which charms and astounds me. And I myself, what am
I but an atom? Neither Jupiter nor Sirius, those enormous globes at so
great a distance from, and possessing so little sympathy with me, will
teach me the secret of terrestrial life. But these, on the contrary,
surround and press upon me, injure me or lend me their assistance. If
they are not of my own kind, they are at all events associated with me.

Ay, fatally associated.

And yet I cannot fly from them: swarms haunt the very air which I
breathe,--what do I say? float in the fluids of my body. It is my
interest to know them. But my sovereign interest is to escape from my
deplorable and wretched ignorance, and not to quit this world until I
have peered into the infinite.

Full of such ideas, I addressed myself to one of the philosophers of
the present day who have made the greatest and most successful use
of the microscope,--the celebrated Dr. Robin. Under his direction, I
purchased from the skilful optician Nachet an excellent instrument, and
planted myself before my window on a very beautiful day.

I have said it,--the microscope is much more than a mere magnifying
glass. It is an aid, a servant who has hands to supplement your
own--eyes, and movable eyes, which by their changes enable you to
see an object at a suitable magnitude, and either in detail or as a
whole. One perfectly understands the all-absorbing attraction which it
exercises; however great the fatigue it causes, one cannot separate
one's-self from it. Its _début_, as we have seen, was signalized by
its slaying its creator, Swammerdam. How many workmen has it not
since deprived, if not of life, at least of sight? The first of the
two Hubers became blind at a comparatively early age. The illustrious
author of the great work on the cockchafer, M. Strauss, is nearly so.
Our pallid but enthusiastic Robin is already on the same descent, but
pursues his studies without pause. The seduction is too potent. Who can
renounce the truth, after once beholding it? Who can willingly return
into the world of errors wherein men exist? Better not to see at all,
than always to see things falsely.

Behold me, then, face to face with my little man of copper. I lost not
an instant in interrogating the oracle. And its first and somewhat
rough reply respecting the two objects I presented was:--

One was the human hand, white and delicate,--the left hand, the idler,
and that of a person who did no work.

The other, a spider's foot.

To the naked eye the former object seemed agreeable enough; the other,
a tiny, obscure blade, of a dirty brown, and somewhat repulsive.

In the microscope the effect was precisely the opposite. In the
spider's foot, easily cleansed of a few downy spots, appeared a
magnificent comb of the most beautiful shell, which, far from being
dirty, by its extreme polish was rendered incapable of being soiled;
everything glided off it. This object would seem to serve two ends:
that of a very delicate hand, through which the spinner, in rising or
descending, suffers its thread to glide; and that of a comb, with which
the attentive labourer holds its stuff, while at work, in the required
position, until the woven threads--more like a cloud--grow firm and
strong, are dried by the air, and no longer fall back floating and
wavy, but useless.

As for the human hand, the part exposed under the microscope
seemed, even with the smallest lens, a vague and immense substance,
incomprehensible through its very coarseness.

Even with a medium lens, of only twelve or fifteen times magnifying
power, it seemed to be a yellowish, reddish tissue, coarse and dry,
ill-woven,--a kind of wiry taffeta, in which each mesh was irregularly
puffed up.

Nothing could be more humiliating!

This pitiless judge, pitiless even in its treatment of the flowers,
behaves with terrible severity towards the human flower. The freshest
and most charming will act wisely in not attempting the experiment.
She would shudder at herself. Her dimples would deepen into abysses!
The light down of the peach which crowns her beautiful skin with the
bloom of delicacy would show like rough thickets, or rather like savage
forests.

After my first experiment, I felt that the too truthful oracle not
only altered our ideas of proportion, but of appearances, colours,
forms--transfiguring everything, in fact, from the false to the true.

Let us be resigned. Whatever the organ of truth may tell us, I thank
it, and I will welcome it though it declare me to be a monster. But
such is not the case. If it change with some severity our notions
of the surface, on the other hand it reveals to us worlds of truly
unbounded beauty beneath it. A hundred things in anatomy which seem
horrible to the unassisted sight, acquire a touching and impressive
delicacy, and a poetical charm which approaches the sublime. This is
not the place for discussing such a subject. But a mere drop of blood,
of a brickdust-red by no means agreeable to the naked eye, heavy,
thick, and opaque, if you look at it when dry, under the magnifying
glass, presents to you a delicious rose-bloom arborescence, with
delicate ramifications as fine and subtle as those of the coral are
coarse and dull.

But let us keep to our insects. Let us select the most miserable--the
wonderfully little butterfly of the clothes-moth, that dirty white
butterfly which seems the lowest of created beings. Take only his wing.
Nay, far less, only a little dust, the light powder which covers his
wing. You are astounded at seeing that Nature, exhausting the most
ingenious industry in order that this offcast of creation may fly
at his ease, and without fatigue, has scattered over his wing, not
dust, but a multitude of tiny balloons. Or, if you prefer it, so many
parachutes, most convenient instruments for flight, which, when opened,
sustain the little aeronaut without fatigue and for an indefinite
period; which, as they are more or less expanded, enable it to rise or
sink; and when folded up, permit of its remaining quiet. The least of
the butterflies, thus supported, has a faculty of flight as unlimited
as the noblest bird of heaven.

One grows keenly interested in these curious apparatus, which have
anticipated our human inventions. One observes their strange and
surprising modes of action, as one would observe the inhabitants of
another planet, if he were miraculously transported thither. But what
one most yearns to see, what one burns to detect, is some reflection
from _within_, some gleam of the torch which is concealed in their
inner existence, some appearance of thought. Have they a physiognomy?
Can I seize in their strange visage any trace of an intelligence which,
judging by their works, so closely resembles our own? Of the expression
which touches me in the eye of the dog, and of other animals related
to me, shall I detect nothing in the bee, the ant, in those ingenious
beings, those creators, which accomplish so many things the dog cannot
accomplish?

A clever man once said to me: "As a boy I was very partial to insects;
I searched about for caterpillars, and made a collection of them. I
was especially curious to look in their faces, but never succeeded.
All that I could distinguish was confused, dull, melancholy. This
discouraged me. I left off making collections."

I was but a child in this new study; that is, I was fresh to it, and
curious. My special anxiety was to interrogate the countenance of the
dumb little world, and to surprise there, in default of voice, the
silent thought. Thought? At least, the dream, the obscure and floating
instinct.

I addressed myself to the ant; an humble being in form and colour,
but endowed with a prodigious amount of social instinct and of the
educational capacity; not to speak of its quickness of resource, of
the promptitude with which it confronts perils, and chances, and
embarrassments.

I take then an ant of the commonest species--a neutral ant--one of the
workers who are relieved from the wants of love, and in whom therefore
the sex, diminished to a minimum for the advantage of labour, develops
so much more powerfully its extraordinary instinct; who alone perform
all the diverse trades of the little community, and are purveyors,
nurses, architects, and inventors.

I selected a very fine, serene, and luminous day--not luminous with the
glare of summer, but the calm radiance of autumn (1st September 1856).
I was alone, in a state of perfect silence and repose, and in that
complete forgetfulness of the world which is so rarely obtained. After
the manifold agitations of the past and present, my heart for a moment
was at peace.

Never was I more ready to hear the mute voices which do not address
themselves to the ear, to penetrate in a calm and benevolent spirit
the mystery of the little world which on every side surrounds us,
and yet has hitherto remained out of our reach and apart from our
communications.

Alone with my ant, armed with a tolerably good lens, with a magnifying
power of twelve, I placed it delicately on a large sheet of fine white
paper which covered nearly the whole table.

With the microscope I could have seen but a part and not the whole. A
very considerable enlargement would also have exaggerated the merely
secondary details--such as the scanty hairs with which the ant is
provided. Finally, its mobility would not have suffered me to keep it
in the focus of the microscope; but the lens, as easily shifted as
itself, followed it in all its motions.

Not, however, without some difficulty. It was lively, alert,
disquieted, and impatient to quit the table. I was looking at it in
the middle of the sheet, when it was already nearly at the edge. I was
obliged to _etherize_ it a little, so as to stupefy it, and render it
less uneasy.

It appeared very clean, and highly varnished. Though a neuter, and
not a female, its belly was rather large, and was joined to the chest
by two small swellings. From the chest the head, which was strong and
nearly round, detached itself cleanly and distinctly.

This head, seen as it were _en masse_, resembled a bird's. But instead
of a beak it had a circular prolongation, in which, on attentive
examination, I detected the reunion of two tiny crescents joined at
the point. These were its teeth, or mandibles, which do not operate
like ours, from above to below, but horizontally and sideways. The
insect employs its mandibles for the most widely different purposes;
they are not only its weapons and instruments of mastication, but the
tools it uses for every art, supplying the place of hands in masonry,
plastering, carving, and in lifting and transplanting burdens which are
frequently of enormous weight.

It was well for it that its body was wrapped in a complete coat of
mail. The ether affected it but slightly, and only stupefied it. After
a moment's immobility it partly recovered, and made a few movements
like those of an intoxicated person, or as if it were affected with a
fit of vertigo. It seemed to say, "Where am I?" and endeavoured to make
out the ground where it was walking, the great sheet of white paper. It
attempted a few tottering steps, tumbling first on one side and then on
the other. It carried before it a couple of instruments which at first
I took to be feet, but which I found, on more careful inspection, were
wholly different.

They sprang from a point near either eye, and, like the eyes, were
evidently instruments of observation. These antennæ, as they are
called, long, delicate, yet robust, and vibrating at the slightest
touch, are fleshy, articulated in twenty pieces, and disposed one
in another. They form an instrument admirably adapted for feeling
and groping. But it is useful in many other ways: by means of it the
ants transmit in a second very complicated advices, as, for instance,
when they change their course and retire, or suddenly take a wholly
different road; evidently they have a language like that of the
telegraph. This supposed marvellous organ of touch is more probably
a species of hearing apparatus, and so mobile that it quivers at the
slightest vibrations of the air, and feels every wave of sound.

       *       *       *       *       *

The perfect accord of every movement of the delicate and subtle tactile
and telegraphic apparatus, the strong head, in fine, which seemingly
_thinks_, completed the illusion. Its attitudes, its gropings, its
efforts to obtain a knowledge of the situation, showed precisely
what we should have been under similar circumstances. Shakespeare's
Queen Mab, in her nut-shell chariot, occurred to my mind. And more,
the chronicles of the Hubers; those impressive and almost terrifying
narratives which would lead us to believe that the ants are far
advanced in a knowledge of good and evil.

       *       *       *       *       *

It turned its back upon me obstinately, as if it dreaded to see its
persecutor. It looked upon me as a horrible giant, and, despite its
semi-intoxicated condition, made constant and energetic efforts to
escape me, and place itself in security.

I brought it back very softly and cautiously. But I could not make
it show me its face. Its antipathy and its terror, undoubtedly, were
too powerful. I therefore decided to take hold of it with a small
pair of pincers, and to keep it on its back, using as little pressure
as possible. The pressure, though light, acting on the small lateral
orifices (or stigmata) through which it breathes, was infinitely
painful, to judge from the resistance it offered. With its minute claws
and mandibles it held the pincers so firmly that I could hear the air
vibrate with every motion. I hastily profited by the painful position
in which I had placed my ant; I looked it in the face.

That which is most disconcerting, and gives it a peculiar appearance,
are the teeth or mandibles placed outside the mouth, and springing, one
on the right side, the other on the left, in a horizontal direction, so
as to meet together: ours are vertical. These projecting teeth seem to
offer battle, though, as I have said, they are also used for pacific
purposes, and _serve as hands_.

Behind the teeth may be seen several little threads or palpi at the
entrance of the mouth; which are, in reality, the _little hands of the
mouth_,--feeling, and handling, and turning over whatever is brought
there.

In front emerge the antennæ, the _other_ hands; but these are set
externally, are mobile and susceptible to an excess,--in a word,
_electric hands_.

Behind the head, at the chest, commence the paws or feet, two in front
of great dexterity, and rightly named by Kirby the arms.

An apparatus of such complexity, placed in the fore part of the body,
cannot fail to obscure and overcloud its physiognomy. What would be the
case with our own, if from our eyes and mouth six hands started, to say
nothing of those which proceed from the shoulders, and of four others
placed lower down?

The whole is intended for action and defence. The face which the insect
shows is its resisting skull, its bony case, which cannot move. This
frames, encloses, and fixes the eyes, which are also immovable; but,
being exterior and multiple, motion is not necessary: those of the ant
are divided into fifty facets, which reveal everything to it either
in front or rear. Thus, then, its sight is admirable, but it cannot
_look_. No external muscle sets the mask in motion. And, therefore, it
has no physiognomy.

But, in compensation, its pantomime was extremely expressive,--I may
even say, very pathetic. On discovering that it was so feeble and
incapable of walking, it did exactly what prudent and sagacious man
would have done, and attempted to recover its energies by the very
means which we should have employed. It commenced a methodical friction
of its entire body, from above to below. Seated like a little monkey,
it skilfully made use of its arms or anterior feet in such a manner as
to rub its back and side. Occasionally it returned to its head, took
it between its two hands, as if it would fain have shaken it clear of
the fatal intoxication which rendered it so little able to provide
for its own safety. One would have said it was questioning itself,
collecting its thoughts, and saying, as we do after a bad dream, "Is it
true, or is it false?--Poor head!--Alas! what ails thee, then?"

At that moment I felt that we were living in two worlds, and that there
were no means of understanding each other. How could I reassure it? My
language, that of the voice; its, that of the antennæ. Not one of my
words could obtain access to the electric telegraph which served as its
organ of hearing.

The continuous bony case which envelops its body isolates the insect
from us, and conceals us from the insect. It has a heart which beats
like ours; but we cannot see its pulsations beneath its thick coat of
mail. It does not even command that wordless language which touches us
in so many dumb beings. It is wholly wrapped up in mystery and silence.

It breathes, or rather imbibes air, through the sides, not through the
face or head. No palpitation or respiratory movement can be detected in
it. Therefore, how should it speak, how complain? Of all our languages
it has not one; it makes a sound, but does not possess a voice.

Is the fixed and immovable mask, thus condemned to perpetual silence,
that of a monster or a spectre? No. After watching its movements,
its numerous actions indicative of reflection, its arts so much more
advanced than those of the larger animals, we are not unwilling to
believe that in this head exists a personality. And from the highest to
the lowest in the scale of life, we recognize the identity of the soul.

[Illustration]




[Illustration: III.--THE INSECT, THE AGENT OF NATURE.]


CHAPTER III.

THE INSECT AS THE AGENT OF NATURE IN THE ACCELERATION OF DEATH AND LIFE.


The insect has not my languages. He neither speaks by voice nor
physiognomy. In what manner, then, does he express himself?

He speaks by his energies.

1st. By the immense destructive influence he exercises on the
superabundance of Nature, on a swarm of lingering or morbid lives which
he hastens to sweep away.

2nd. He speaks also by his visible energies, especially in the moment
of love, his colours, his fires, his poisons (many of which are among
our therapeutic agents).

[Illustration]

3rd. He speaks by his arts, which might fecundate our human inventions.

This is the subject of our second book.

Let us first attack the point where he wounds us most, and seems
the auxiliary of death: his immense, ardent, and indefatigable work
of destruction. Let us contemplate him in history, and begin at the
remotest epoch.

       *       *       *       *       *

In answer to our littlenesses, our disgusts, our terrors, to the narrow
and egotistical judgments which we bring to bear upon such subjects, we
must recall the great and necessary reactions of Nature.

It has not advanced with the order of a continuous flood, but with
refluxes and recoils back upon itself, which have enabled it to compass
a perfect harmony. Our short-sighted survey, frequently arrested by
these apparently retrograde movements, grows alarmed, takes fright, and
misconceives the character of the whole.

It is peculiar to the Infinite Love, which is continuously creating, to
raise every created thing to the Infinite. But in this very infinity,
it stimulates a creation of antagonisms which shall reduce the extent
of the preceding. If we see it produce monstrous destroyers, be sure
that they are destined, as a remedy and a repression, to check some
monsters of fecundity.

The herbivorous insects have had the task of keeping under the alarming
vegetable accumulations of the primeval world.

But these herbivora exceeding all law and all reason, the insectivorous
insects were created to confine them within limits.

The latter, robust and terrible, the tyrants of creation by their
weapons and their wings, would have been the conquerors of the
conquerors, and have driven to extremities the feebler species, if,
above all the insect world and its weak powers of flight, had not risen
on mighty wing a superior tyrant--the Bird. The haughty libellula was
carried off by the swallow.

By these successive agencies of destruction, however, production has
not been suppressed, but restrained, and the species balanced in such
wise that all endure and live. The more a species is pruned, the more
fertile it becomes. Does it exceed? Immediately the superabundance is
equilibrized by the new fecundity which is given to its destroyers.

Ye men of this lingering epoch,--sons of the lean and sober
West--brought up in the little, close, carefully tended, pared, and
picked gardens, which you call "wide cultivation,"--enlarge, I pray
you, your conceptions; extend them, and endeavour to imagine something
greater than these petty corners, if you would comprehend anything of
the earth's primitive forces; of the abundance and superabundance which
she displayed when, soaked with warm mists, her bosom heaved with the
glow of her first youth.

The hotter countries of our present globe still show something of this
profusion, though in a pale decay. Africa, which over the greater
portion of its area has lost its waters, preserves as a souvenir in
its happier zones that enormous and swollen herb, or herbaceous tree,
the baobab. The inextricable forests of Guiana and Brazil, in their
labyrinthine chaotic confusion of wild plants which, without rule or
measure, envelop and choke the colossal trees, corrupt them, and bury
them in their _débris_, are but imperfect images of the great ancient
Chaos. The only beings impure enough to endure its impurity and breathe
its deadly exhalations, are great-bellied reptiles, unwieldy frogs,
green caymans, and serpents swollen with filth and venom. And such
would have been the inhabitants of earth. Unable to draw breath in the
horrible suffocation, she could never have given forth that pure air in
which man alone can live.

Accordingly, from on high pounced down the bird, and, plunging into the
gulf, carried back to the sky on the tops of the lofty forests some
one of these monsters. But its incessant struggle would have been vain
against their abominable fecundity, if, from below, myriads of nibblers
had not lightened the accumulation, cleansed the frightful lairs, and
thrown open to the arrows of the sun the filth under which earth was
panting. The humblest insects accomplished the gigantic work which made
earth inhabitable: they devoured chaos.

"Small means," you say, "and great results! How could these little
beings come to the aid of an infinity?" You would not cherish the
doubt, if you had been ever a witness of the awakening of the
silkworms, when, one morning, they are hatched with that vast hunger
no abundance of leaves can satisfy. Their proprietor has supposed
himself in a position to content them with a rich and beautiful
plantation of mulberry-trees; but it counts for nothing. You supply
them with forests, and they still ask for more. At a distance of twenty
or thirty yards you hear a strange uninterrupted buzzing; a murmur
like that of brooks incessantly flowing, and incessantly grinding
and wearing out the pebbles. Nor are you mistaken: it is a brook, a
torrent, a boundless river of living matter, which, under the grand
mechanism of so many minute instruments, sounds, and resounds, and
murmurs, passing from the vegetable life to that of insects, and softly
but invincibly bases itself on animality.

To return to the primeval age. The most terrible destroyers, the most
implacable assailants, which penetrated the lowermost rottenness of
the great chaos, which at a higher level delivered the tree from the
pressure of its parasites, and finally mounted to its branches, and
brightened up the livid shadows,--these were the benefactors of species
yet to come. Their uninterrupted work of unconquerable destruction
reduced within reasonable limits the excess in which Nature was almost
lost. They opened up splendid, free, and unencumbered spaces; and the
monsters, banished from the gulf where they swarmed, grew more and more
barren, and by that great revelation of the forest were exposed to the
child of Light,--the Bird.

A profound agreement and genial fellowship were established between
the latter and his protagonist, the child of Night, the Insect, which
had thrown open the abyss, and delivered into his power the enemy.
Consider, moreover, that in proportion as an exuberant nourishment
fortified and exalted the insect, when its blood was intoxicated by so
many burning plants, a ferocity previously unknown prevailed, and the
fiercer and bolder species no longer limited themselves to undermining
the _retreats_ of the monsters, but attacked the _monsters_ also.
Stings, augers, cupping-glasses, trenchant teeth, sharpened pincers, an
arsenal of unknown and as yet unnamed arms, came into existence, were
elongated and whetted for assault upon the living matter. They were
needed. They proved to be the lancet which cut the putrescent sore of
the rising world. This latter had nourished and multiplied the feebly
animalized myriads of torpid worms and pale-blooded larvæ, a ghastly
and also the lowest life, which gained by passing through that burning
crucible of keen existence, the superior insect-race.

[Illustration]

I know nothing upon earth which seems stronger, firmer, more durable,
and more formidable than those miniature rhinoceros-like cuirassiers,
which traverse earth as quickly as the great mammal traverses it
heavily and slowly. The carabi, the galeritas, the stag-beetles,
which carry with so much ease armour far more formidable than that
of the Middle Ages, reassure us only by their size. Here strength is
relatively formidable. Were a man proportionally strong, he might take
in his arms the obelisk of Luxor.

Vast energies of absorption, concentrating in these insects enormous
foci of forces, translated themselves into the light by the energies of
colour. To these, in species where life was more elevated, succeeded
the moral energies. The superbly barbarous heroes, the _scarabæi_, were
exterminated by the modest citizen-species, the ants and bees, in which
the secret of beauty was harmony.

Such is the whole history of insects. But to whatever height our
inquiries may conduct us, let us not mistake the point of departure,
--the useful nibblers and miners, which have elaborated and prepared
the globe.

Is their work terminated? By no means. Immense zones remain in what
may still be called an ancient condition, condemned to a terrible and
unwholesome fecundity. In the centre of America the richest forests of
the world seem ever to repel the approach of man, who enters them only
to die. His arms, enfeebled by fever, have not even strength enough to
collect their treasures. If a tree fall across his path, it becomes an
insurmountable obstacle to the indifferent adventurer. He turns aside,
and you may trace his circuit through the tall herbage. Fortunately
the termites do not recoil so easily. If they find themselves
confronted by a tree, they do not avoid it, do not turn its flank.
They attack it bravely in the front, set to work as many labourers as
are necessary--millions, perhaps: in two or three days the tree is
devoured, and the road open.

       *       *       *       *       *

The great law of nature, and in these countries the law of safety, is
the rapid destruction of everything decaying, languishing, stagnant,
and therefore injurious; its ardent purification in the crucible of
life. And that crucible is, before all things, the insect. We must not
blame its fury of absorption. Who thinks of accusing the flame? The
flame is worthy of reproach only when it does not burn. And, in like
manner, that living fire, the insect, is created to devour. Necessity
demands that it should be eager, cruel, blind, and of an implacable
appetite. It can have no sobriety, no moderation, no pity. All the
virtues of man and of superior beings would be nonsense which one
cannot even imagine. Can you conceive of an insect with the sensibility
and tenderness of the dog? which should weep like the beaver? which
should nourish the aspirations and poetry of the nightingale? or,
finally, the compassionateness of man? Such an insect would be
incapable; thoroughly unfit for its profession as the anatomist,
dissector, and destroyer--we may say, more justly, the universal medium
of nature, which, precipitating death by suppressing long periods of
decay, in this way accelerates the brilliant return of life. Thus
disembarrassed and free, it says, with a savage pleasure, "No maladies,
no old age! Shame upon all decay! Hail to eternal youth! Let every
creature die which lives beyond a day!"

       *       *       *       *       *

Observe that the furious eagerness of the winged insects, which seem to
be the agents of death, is frequently a cause of life. By an incessant
persecution of the sick flocks, enfeebled by hot damp airs, they ensure
their safety. Otherwise they would remain stupidly resigned, and hour
after hour grow less capable of motion, gloomier and more morbid in
the bonds of fever, until they could rise no more. The inexorable spur
knows, however, the secret of putting them on their legs; though with
trembling limbs, they take to flight; the insect never quits them,
presses them, urges them, and conducts them, bleeding, to the wholesome
regions of the dry lands and the living waters, where, growing
discontented, their furious guide abandons them, and returns to the
pestilent vapours, to its realm of death.

In the Soudan, in Africa, a little insect, the Nâm fly, directs
with a sovereign authority the migrations of the flocks. In the dry
season it rages against the camel; it audaciously ventures into the
ear of the elephant. The giant is resistlessly driven forward by its
winged shepherds, to escape the fires of the south, and to seek the
fresh winds of the north. On the other hand, the oxen, through its
management, remain with their Arab master peacefully in the genial
southern pastures.

The most terrible of insects--the great Guiana ants--are valued
precisely for their devouring power. Without them, no effectual means
would exist of thoroughly cleansing the homes of man of all the
obscure broods which infest the shadows, and swarm in the timbers and
framework, in the most imperceptible crevices. One morning the black
army appears at the door of the house: an army of sanitary inspectors.
Man retires, gives place to them, and evacuates his dwelling. "Enter,
ladies; come and go at your pleasure; make yourselves quite at home."
It would not be safe for the owner to remain, since it is a law with
these scrupulous visitors to leave no living thing in the track of
their march. In the first place, every insect,--the largest as well as
the minutest,--and their eggs, however well-concealed, perish. Then the
smaller animals--frogs, adders, field-mice;--none escape. The place
is thoroughly cleansed, for the smallest remains are conscientiously
devoured.

The great spiders of the Antilles, without piquing themselves on
accomplishing a work of purification so terrible and so complete,
labour nevertheless very industriously to secure the cleanliness of
human habitations. They will not suffer any disgusting insect to exist.
They are excellent servants--much cleaner than the slaves. Therefore
men value them, and purchase them as indispensable domestics. Markets
exist where spiders are regularly bought and sold.

       *       *       *       *       *

In Siberia, the spider enjoys the consideration to which it can
everywhere put forward so many claims. That region of the farthest
North, whose very brief summer is not the less infested with gnats and
flies, finds a benefactor in the useful insect which industriously
hunts the swarms for man's advantage. Its consummate prudence, its
superior ability, its prescience of atmospheric variations and climatic
phases, have so exalted the idea which the Siberians have formed of it,
that many of their tribes refer the creation of the world to a gigantic
spider.

[Illustration]




[Illustration: IV.--THE INSECT AS MAN'S AUXILIARY.]


[Illustration]


CHAPTER IV.

THE INSECT AS MAN'S AUXILIARY.


A hunter of small birds, in an ingenious academical memoir, gives
utterance to the following paradox: "Their recent multiplication is the
cause of the disease in the vine and the potato."

How should this be? The disease, which first broke out in September
1845, is produced, says the author, by microscopic animalcules and
parasitical vegetation previously destroyed by the insects. But these
insect-protectors of agriculture perished, devoured by birds, in 1844.
The fatal law passed in the May of that year, for the protection of the
birds, must have multiplied them to such a degree, that the insects,
driven out and destroyed by them, could no longer afford to our plants
the succour which defended them against their invisible enemies.

This hypothesis, supported with much wit and ability, and apparently
grounded on facts and dates, rests wholly on one basis, and if it
fails, crumbles to the ground.

It supposes that the birds have been efficaciously protected by the
law, and that, in twelve years, they have been so able to multiply as
to become masters of the field, the tyrants and exterminators of the
useful insect-species, and that, in fine, the latter have unfortunately
almost disappeared.

To this three replies may be given:--

1st. The birds have _not_ multiplied. We must not go for the truth
to the _Bulletin des Lois_ (the Statute-book), but to fowlers and
bird-catchers. And they reply:--"So many birds have been destroyed
since the enactment of the law for their benefit, that in certain
countries sport has actually become impossible, because there are no
more to kill."

In Provence, in the very localities where the gnats are insupportable
(and the birds, therefore, most precious),--in the Camargue,--the
sportsmen, in default of edible birds, now kill the swallows. They
place themselves on the watch at the points where the winged legions
pass in files, and slaughter several victims at one discharge.

       *       *       *       *       *

2nd. The insects have by no means been destroyed by the birds. Ask
of the agriculturists what species has disappeared. Let them search
ever so keenly, and they will not find that a solitary species has
diminished. On the contrary, in the years referred to we have seen them
increase, and grow, and flourish, and nothing prevents them from making
war at their pleasure on the invisible animalcules.

Not an insect-species is wanting; but, on the contrary, some careful
observers tell us, in their books on Hunting or Natural History, that
numerous species of birds will soon become extinct.

       *       *       *       *       *

3rd. Birds are not, as the author of the memoir calls them,
"unintelligent assassins." Far from this, they kill by preference
the most injurious insects. The time at which they carry on a really
murderous war is when they are feeding their young. But what do they
feed them with? With very few insectivorous insects; the latter, armed
and mailed--carabi and stag-beetles--covered with metallic scales,
equipped with hooks and pincers, of an indestructible vitality, would
be a horrible food for the young of the warbler, who, before such a
provision, would assuredly take to flight. This is not the kind of
aliment the sagacious mother seeks for her offspring; but soft and, as
it were, milky insects, fat and succulent larvæ, fine little tender
caterpillars,--all herbivorous, fructivorous, and leguminivorous
animals; exactly those which do the greatest mischief in our fields and
gardens.

Accordingly, the great labour of the bird against the insect precisely
coincides with the labour of the husbandman.

For the rest, we are far from saying, as the author referred to makes
us say, that the bird is the sole purifier of creation. One must be
blind, and indeed senseless, not to see that he shares this mission
with the insect. The action, too, of the latter is undoubtedly more
efficacious in the pursuit of a world of living atoms, which the
insect, whose eyes are microscopes, detects and pounces upon in
numerous obscure corners, inaccessible to the bird. The bird, on
the other hand, is the essential purifier of everything demanding
long-sightedness and the power of flight,--as, for example, the
frightful clouds of invisible animalcules which float and swim in the
air, and therefore pass into our lungs.

As a rule, the equilibrium of species is desirable. All are more or
less useful. We willingly join with the author of the paper referred
to in the wish that those insects which prey upon the smaller species
might be specially distinguished and spared. The peasant destroys them
indiscriminately, without knowing that by killing, for instance, the
dragon-fly (or _libellula_)--the brilliant murderess which slays a
thousand insects daily--he is helping the latter: becomes the auxiliary
of the insects, the preserver and propagator of the enemies which
devour his substance. The terrible cicindela does not fly so high, but
with its crossed daggers, or rather the two scimitars which serve it
for jaws, accomplishes a swift and almost incredible havoc among the
smaller insects. Take care, then, and respect it. Do not listen to
the child who is dazzled by the beauty of its wings, nor, to please
him, impale on the needle-point your admirable insect-hunter, the
efficacious auxiliary of the agriculturist!

[Illustration]

The carabi,--immense warrior-tribes armed to the very teeth, and
displaying an ardent activity beneath their heavy coats of mail,--are
the true guardians of your fields; and day and night, without holiday
or repose, protect your crops. They themselves never touch the smallest
blade or seed. Their sole occupation is to capture thieves, and they
ask for no other reward than the thieves' bodies.

Others toil underground. The innocent lobworm, which pierces and
stirs up the soil, gets ready in a marvellously excellent manner the
muddy and clayey earths which are deficient in evaporation. Others,
in company with the mole, hunt far down in the depths the cruel enemy
of agriculture, the horribly voracious larva of the destructive
cockchafer, which, for three years, has been preying on the roots
beneath the surface.

The insectivorous insects put forth undeniable claims to the protection
of man, whose allies they are. But even among the herbivora there are
useful destroyers of harmful plants. The useless, pungent, and in every
sense disagreeable nettle, which scarcely a single quadruped will deign
to touch, fifty species of insects, in fellowship with ourselves,
labour to destroy.

       *       *       *       *       *

A very beautiful class of insects, some rich in outward garb, and
others in intelligence, are the _Necrophori_, which render us the
important service of clearing away all dead matter from the soil.
Nature, which finds them so useful, has treated them truly as her
favourites, honouring them with splendid costumes, and making them both
industrious and ingenious in the discharge of their functions. It is a
remarkable circumstance that, notwithstanding their sinister office,
they are far from being wild, but are very sociable if the need arises,
and understand how to unite their forces, combine their energies, and
act in concert. In brief,--these honest undertakers and grave-diggers
are the brilliant aristocracy of the insect nation.

It is evident that Nature's ideas are not the same as ours. She loads
the most useful with rewards, whatever the nature of their work. For
instance, the _Geotrupes_, which clears away the dung, is clothed in
sapphire in payment of its service. The celebrated _Coleopteron_ of
Egypt, the sacred _Ateuchus_ of the tombs,[J] appears glorified with an
emerald aureola.

[Footnote J: The _Ateuchus sacer_, or Sacred Scarabæus of the
Egyptians.]

Who shall describe all the services rendered by these scavengers? Yet
we are not just in our dealings with them. It happened to me, one
April, when I was about to transplant to my garden some dahlias which
had passed the winter in the orchard, to discover that the humidity of
the air of Nantes, and the compact and imporous clayey soil, had rotted
the tubers. A bevy of insects were at work upon them, and usefully
engaged in purging this shocking centre of dissolution. The gardener
was very indignant, and ready enough to accuse them of the evil which
they were endeavouring to remedy.

The enemy of damp gardens, the snail (_Helix_), is pursued by an
insect,[K] the _Drylus_, which lies in wait for it, and, the better
to hunt it up, mounts on its back, and makes it carry him, seizes a
favourable opportunity, and on the snail re-entering its shell, enters
also, lives with it and upon it. A snail lasts him about a fortnight.
Then he passes on to another and a larger, and then to a third still
larger. He requires three in all. In the third, as he is about to
change into a pupa, the drylus makes the place clean, and, to sleep
conveniently, seizes on the substantial house of the enemy which has
nourished him.

[Footnote K: The larva of the _Drylus flavescens_.]

There could be no more useful task than to enlighten the peasant
on the distinction that ought to be made between insects useful to
agriculture and insects which are noxious; or those which may be turned
to advantage in various sciences,--and especially in Chemistry,--which,
it is probable, will yet discover unexpected resources in beings
endowed with so copious and intense a vitality. In this respect, a
very honourable work of initiation has been undertaken by the eminent
naturalist who has so skilfully organized the museum at Rouen. All his
pupils have preserved a grateful recollection of their teacher; and
it is to one of them I owe the following summary of an original and
instructive lecture on the Insect as Food.

     "A prejudice much to be regretted, and a ridiculous
     fastidiousness, has debarred our Western peoples from one of the
     richest and most exquisite sources of nourishment. What right
     have they who devour tainted game, and unclean birds,--what right
     have the lovers of the oyster, that slimy mollusc, to reject the
     nourishment supplied by the Insect World?

     "Burgundy has the good sense to profit, without any feeling
     of silly disgust, by the excellent mollusc which peoples its
     vineyards,--I mean the snail,--which is very good with butter and
     salads, and a dish as wholesome for the chest as it is agreeable
     to the mouth and profitable to the stomach.

     "A celebrated _savant_--Lalande--dared to take a step further in
     advance, and to venture upon the caterpillar, rising thus another
     step above our prejudices. It is to him we owe our knowledge of
     the fact that the caterpillar tastes like almonds, and the spider
     like hazel-nuts. He addicted himself to the latter, which he found
     more delicate."--I should think so. In every sense, the spider is
     a superior being.

     "Many insects are so nutritious and savoury that they have been
     specially selected by ladies as a diet likely to renew their life,
     beauty, and youth. The Romans of the Later Empire recovered the
     ample outlines of the Cornelias of the Commonwealth by the use of
     the _Cossus_.[L] The sultanas of the East, of those voluptuous
     lands where love seeks the rounded, swelling figure, make their
     slaves bring them a supply of _Blaps_,[M] and idling in their
     gardens, to the music of leaping fountains, imbibe from the
     succulent insect an eternal youthfulness.

     [Footnote L: The Goat-Moth Caterpillar.]

     [Footnote M: The women of Egypt, it is said, eat the _Blaps
     sulcata_ cooked with butter.]

     "In Brazil, the Portuguese extracts from the Malalis of the
     bamboo, when the tree wears its nuptial flower, a kind of fresh
     butter for the table; and eats the ants in sweetmeats, at the
     moment that their wings uplift them on the breeze like an
     aspiration of love.

     "But generally the insect, apart from its real value, has been
     hunted by the peasants whose tillage it destroyed. It plundered
     them of their food, and, in revenge, they themselves have fed
     upon _it_. The terrible locust, whose vast increase has so often
     imperilled the East, has been, on that very account, the more
     eagerly pursued and devoured by the Orientals. The story runs that
     the Caliph Omar, when seated at his family table, observing a
     locust alight there, read inscribed upon its wing:--'We hatch nine
     and ninety eggs; if we laid a hundred, we should devastate the
     world.'

     "Fortunately the locust is the manna of Asia. Who does not know
     that the prophets, musing in the caves of Carmel, ate nothing
     else? The Mohammedan anchorites adopted the same _régime_. One day
     a person said to Omar:--'What think you of locusts?' 'That I would
     fain have a basketful.' Soon afterwards the supply failed him. It
     was with difficulty his servant found a single insect; whereupon
     he, delighted and grateful, exclaimed, 'Allah is great!'

     "Even at the present day locusts are sold throughout the East,
     and are eaten in the café as a dessert and a delicacy. Ships are
     loaded with them, and they are bought and sold by the cask.

     "Here, then, we have insects exceptionally nutritious and
     substantial. What prevents us from making use of them? What
     scruple hinders us from active and useful reprisals against them?"

At this part of his discourse, the orator found his audience,
consisting mainly of intelligent Norman peasants, wrapped in deep
attention, as at those points of the debates of the British Parliament
when the accustomed cry arises of "Hear! Hear!"

He had foreseen such a moment; and having loaded his table with some of
the insects most dreaded by agriculturists, he seized them, crunched
them, and swallowed them gravely, with this strong speech, which will
not be without fruit:--"They have eaten us: let us eat them!"

[Illustration]




[Illustration: V.--A PHANTASMAGORIA OF LIGHT AND COLOUR.]


[Illustration]


CHAPTER V.

A PHANTASMAGORIA OF LIGHT AND COLOUR.


If the insect does not and will not speak to us, are we to suppose that
it does not express the burning intensity of the life within it?

No living creature reveals itself more clearly; though only from itself
to its kind, from insect to insect. They are bound up in themselves;
are a sealed world, which has no outward expression, and no language
except for its own members.

For all ordinary purposes, an electric telegraph exists in their
antennæ. But the great, the eloquent language is manifested among
them towards the close of their existence,--for one brief moment, it
is true,--a moment announcing the approach of death, yet the grand
festival of love.

They speak through the rare attractions with which they are
invested,--through the wing, the flight, the airy existence,--through
the fancy which possesses them (says good Du Tertre) of becoming
birds. They speak through their brilliant hieroglyphics of colours and
fantastic designs, their strange coquetry of extraordinary toilets.
They speak in their very lustre, and some species reveal their inner
flame by a visible torch.

[Illustration]

They lavish with royal magnificence their last days. And wherefore
should they economize, when to-morrow they die? Break forth then, O
life of splendour! Sparkle, ye gold and emeralds, and sapphires and
rubies! And let that incandescent ardour, that torrent of existence,
that cataract of profuse radiance, be poured out in one common, rapid
flood!

There is not space in our museums for the proper display of the
prodigious, the unbounded variety of decoration with which Nature
has, mother-like, sought to glorify the hymeneal of the insect and
to emparadise its nuptials. A distinguished amateur having had the
patience to show me in due succession genus after genus, species after
species, the whole of his immense collection, I was astounded--in
truth, I was stupefied--almost terrified by the inexhaustible energy--I
was going to say fury--of invention which Nature displayed. I was
overcome--I closed my eyes, and begged for a truce; my brain was
dizzied and blinded, and became confused. But she, she would not
let me go; she inundated and overwhelmed me with beautiful beings,
with fantastic beings, with admirable monsters, with wings of fire,
and cuirasses of emerald, clad in a hundred kinds of enamel, armed
with singular apparatus--no less brilliant than formidable; some in
embrowned steel, shot with yellow--others in silken hoods, embroidered
with black velvet; these with fine dashes of tawny silk on a rich
mahogany ground; those in pomegranate-coloured velvet lit up with gold;
others in luminous, indescribable azures, relieved by jet-black beads;
and others, again, bright in metallic streaks alternating with heavy
velvet.

It was as if they wished to say:--

"We in ourselves are the whole of Nature. If she perishes, we shall
enact a drama, and personate all her creations. For if you look for
rich furry garb, behold us here in mantles such as a Russian czarina
never wore. Do you wish for feathers? behold us radiant in plumage
which the humming-bird cannot equal; or if you prefer leaves, we can
imitate them so as to deceive your eye. Even wood--in fact, all kinds
of substances--there is nothing which we cannot imitate. Take, I pray
you, this little twig, and hold it in your hand,--it is an insect!"

Then I was fairly conquered. I made a humble reverence to a people so
redoubtable; with a burning brain I issued from the magic cave; and
for a long time afterwards the sparkling scintillating masks danced
and whirled around me, pursuing me, and maintaining on my retina their
wild, strange revel.

And yet I had seen them only in cases and in boxes, as dead as
in nature they were ardent and restless. What would have been my
impression if I had seen them alive, and in motion,--especially in the
burning climes where they abound and superabound,--where everything is
in harmony with them,--where the air, the water, the flora, impregnated
with prolific flames, rival the keen ardour of the animal hosts in the
madness of love, of production precipitated and incessantly renewed by
impatient death?

The American forests of Brazil and Guiana are the formidable furnaces
in which the great exchange of life is uninterruptedly carried on. The
fantastic faëry of the vegetable kingdom is in accord with that of the
animated forces. Savage, harsh, and plaintive cries--not songs--form
the woodland concert. Strange voices of birds, in the woods and the
savannahs, relieve each other,--hoarse and vibrating, but regular,
as if to mark the hours. They are the clock of the desert. Some by
day, others by night; and perfectly distinct also at each of the three
periods of the day,--morn, and noon, and evening. They disquiet the
traveller, inasmuch as they reproduce our human voices or sounds, and
seem ironical or mocking. One cries, another whistles, another sighs.
This strikes like an alarm, that like a hammer, while a third imitates
the tones of a bagpipe. The vast plains re-echo the mighty voice of the
cariama. And that of the serpent-conqueror, the courageous kamichi,
harsh and strong, echoing over the marshes, makes the savage tremble,
for he thinks he hears the spirits passing.

At evening, with the song of the grasshoppers, the croaking of the
frogs, the shriek of the owls, and the lamentations of the vampires,
mingles the howl of the apes; until a hiss, which seems drawn from a
wounded bosom, silences all, and spreads a universal terror, because it
indicates the presence of the sharp-clawed prowler, the swift jaguar.

In these forests there is nothing to reassure you. Yonder green and
peaceful waters, whence ever and anon proceeds the sound of half-choked
sighs,--you place your foot upon them, and with terror discover that
they are solid! that the surface is composed of great alligators, with
their greenish backs resembling breadths of moss or aquatic herbs! Let
a living creature appear, and immediately they raise their heads and
put themselves in motion; you behold the strange assemblage rise from
the slime in all their horror! But is this all?--Even these monsters
which reign on the surface have their tyrants over them. The piranha,
or razor-fish, as swift as the cayman is unwieldy, severs with its
saw-like teeth the latter's tail, and carries it off before it can
wheel round. The cayman, nearly always, mutilated in this manner, would
perish, if its cuirass did not prevent its enemy from dissecting it.
The same terrible anatomist, with a flash of its scalpel, cuts down as
it passes the bird which skims the waves. Aquatic birds which have been
wounded by it are frequently caught. And what, then, of the quadrupeds?
The most powerful are devoured. A horrible combat is waged without
pause in the deep waters,--in the waters living and overflowing with
life, but with death also,--where is realized to the letter a rapid
and furious suicide of Nature,--Nature devouring in order to re-create
itself!

[Illustration]

The insects in fury and beauty are worthy of this scene. The exalted
vitality, revealed among the gadflies and the mosquitoes, by their
thirst of blood, is shown in other species by their enchanting colours,
their caprices of design, their singularities of form, which either
astonish us or terrify. The _Buprestis imperialis_, proud of its green
cuirass powdered all over with dust of gold, seems to have passed
through the bowels of the metalliferous earth, and enriched itself on
the way. The _Buprestis chrysochlorus_, of a yellower green, flutters
to and fro like a mounted gem. The _Arlequin_ of Guiana,--a gigantic
mower, armed with tremendous antennæ and prodigious legs to traverse
the innumerable obstacles offered by the tall herbage,--is marked with
black commas on a yellow ground, with inexplicable hieroglyphs,--a
being doubly strange and doubly enigmatic. It singularly reminds us
of the texture of Indian stuffs, where, for the sake of harmonizing
colours not usually brought side by side, the artist traces a number of
wavy and broken lines, which soften and blend them into complete accord.

Those gentle and social insects, the butterflies, covering the
banks with their winged tribes, transform the whole prairie into an
enchanting flowery carpet. The butterfly of butterflies, the glorious
butterfly of Brazil, of a rich azure lit up by shifting gleams, softly
hovers, in the warm hours, above the waters crowned by the imperial
dome of the blossomy forests. A pacific and splendid creature, it seems
the innocent king of all the puissant nature. Others, scarcely less
beautiful, follow in its train; and ever and ever more the glorious
host, in floating azure, follows the current of the stream.

Such, then, are the tongues of Love; for the boundless rainbow of all
these colours is simply its varied expression. And for what purpose, if
love itself ought to appear without an intermediary?

Already, in our colder lands, the timid glow-worm, motionless under the
hedgerow, suffers its little lamp to shine and guide through the night
the lover to his love.

In Italy it moves to and fro, and its flame has acquired wings. I was
much struck by it, at the hot springs of Acqui, in Piedmont, where
sulphur everywhere prevails; the wild dance of the tiny lights seemed
stimulated by the fires lurking in the entrails of the earth. In Brazil
the very leaves overflow with phosphorus. How should aught be wanting
for the illumination of the bridal-joy of the insect? That marvel,
under the tropics, glitters everywhere and enchants everything. Two
hundred species are known, which Nature has gifted with the poetic
faculty of breathing forth flame, and charming their great festival
with the poesy of light.

A graceful German lady, Mademoiselle Mérian, having been transplanted
to these zones of fire, has related in naïve language the alarm which
she experienced on seeing their insect wonders. The daughter and
grand-daughter of excellent and laborious engravers, herself an artist
and of well-informed mind, she has produced, in Latin, Dutch, and
French, an admirable and picturesque work on the Insects of Surinam.
The learned lady, in an exemplary life of misfortunes and virtues, had
but one weakness (who has not one?)--the love of Nature. She quitted
Germany for Holland, attracted by its unique and brilliant collections
of the treasures of the two worlds. Then, as these did not suffice her,
she visited Guiana, where she painted for several years. She combined
in the same picture,--an excellent method,--the insect, the plant on
which it lives, and the reptile which lives on the insect. Thoroughly
conscientious, she sought out and posed her formidable models, of
which, nevertheless, she was much afraid. Once, when the Indian savages
had brought her a basket of insects, she was sleeping after her work.
But in her chaste slumber she was disturbed by a strange dream. She
thought she heard a harp, a melody of love. The melody grew inflamed;
it was no longer a song, but an intoxication. All the room seemed
filled with fire. She woke, and found her dream was true. The basket
was the lyre, the basket was the volcano. She quickly saw that the
volcano did not burn. The captives were fire-flies (_fulgores_); their
song was an epithalamium, and their flame the flame of love.

       *       *       *       *       *

In the tropical countries the stranger generally travels by night to
avoid the heat. But he would not dare to enter the populous shadows of
the forest-depths, were he not reassured by the luminous insects which
he sees dancing and fluttering in the distance, and anon planted on
the neighbouring bushes. He takes them for his companions, and fixes
them in his shoes, partly to show him the path, and partly to keep off
serpents. And when the morning breaks, he gratefully and carefully
replaces them among the thickets, and restores them to their amorous
work. There is a pretty Indian proverb: "Carry away the fire-fly, but
return it to the place from which thou carriedst it."

Who can fail to be affected by their flame? It follows the movement
of life, it flares and wanes in cadence with the ebb and flow of our
respiration; it beats in exact accord with the rhythm of our heart. It
expands or contracts in harmony with it, and the trouble of its emotion
agitates also that tremendous torch.

What lies at the bottom? the visible desire, the effort to please and
to be loved, translated in a hundred different manners by the eloquence
of light. One, of an unrivalled blue, with a head of rubies, outvies
with its scintillation the red-hot coal. Another, of a more melancholy
cast, plunges into a sombre red. A third, of flame-coloured yellow,
fading and passing into green, seems to express the languors, swoons,
and storms of the violent loves of the South.

The ardent daughter of Spain, rendered more impassioned by the American
sky, puts her hand on the creature of the flame, and seizes upon it as
her own. She makes it a talisman, a jewel, and a victim. Burning, she
places it on her burning bosom, where it must soon perish.

There is no purpose to which she does not turn it. By a triumph of
audacious coquetry, linking the insects with silk, or imprisoning them
in gauze, she wreathes the animated flames in glowing necklaces, and
rolls them around her waist in girdles of fire. The queens of the ball
are crowned with an infernal diadem of living topazes, of throbbing
emeralds, which flicker or gleam (through suffering or love?). A
brilliant but funereal decoration, of sinister magnetism, whose charm
is enhanced by a sentiment of death. They dance; the waning flame
associates its tender gleams with the languishing glances of a deep
black eye. They dance; without end and without reason, without pity or
remembrance of the amorous light dying and fading on their bosom, and
having no power to say: "Replace me where you captured me!"

[Illustration]




[Illustration: VI.--THE SILKWORM.]


[Illustration]


CHAPTER VI.

THE SILKWORM.


"The ideal of the human arts of spinning and weaving,"--said to me one
day a Southerner (a manufacturer, but a man of imagination),--"the
ideal which we always follow is a woman's beautiful hair! Oh, how far
are the softest wools or finest cotton from approaching it! At what an
enormous distance does all, and ever will all, our progress leave us!
We drag ourselves onward, a long, long way in the rear, and enviously
regard that supreme perfection which Nature daily realizes as a mere
matter of pastime.

"That delicate, yet strong and tenacious hair, vibrating with an
exquisite sonority which goes from the ear to the heart, and yet withal
so soft, warm, luminous, and electrical--is the flower of the human
flower.

"Men fruitlessly dispute respecting the merits of colour. What does
it matter? The brilliant black contains and promises the flame; the
blonde displays it with the splendours of the Golden Fleece. The sunny
brown appropriates the very sun, makes use of it, blends it with its
mirages, floats, and undulates, and incessantly varies in its streaming
reflexes, now smiles with light, now deepens into gloom, always
deceives, and, whatever we may say, deceives us most delightfully.

"The principal, the infinite effort of human industry, has combined
all possible means for the improvement of cotton. Between the Vosges
and the Rhine, the rare agreement of capital, machinery, the arts of
design, and the chemical sciences, has produced those splendid Indian
products of Alsace, to which England herself does honour by purchasing
them. Alas! all this cannot disguise the original poverty of the
ungrateful tissue which men have so richly embellished. If the woman
who in her vanity clothes her form in these materials, and thinks
her beauty heightened by them, would loosen her tresses about her,
and unroll their waves over the indigent richness of our most sheeny
cottons, what would occur? How they would be humiliated!

"Sir, we must own the truth; there is only one thing worthy of being
placed side by side with woman's hair. Only one manufacturer can
contend against it. That manufacturer is an insect,--the modest
silkworm."

       *       *       *       *       *

A peculiar charm attends the labours of the silkworm; it ennobles
everything which surrounds it. In traversing our rudest provinces,
the valleys of the Ardèche, where all is rocky,--where the mulberry
and the chestnut seem to dispense with earth, to live upon air and
pebbles,--where low stone houses sadden the eyes by their gray
tints,--everywhere I saw at the door, under a kind of arcade, two
or three charming brunettes, with ivory teeth, who smiled on the
wayfarer, and continued spinning their silken gold. The wayfarer said
to them in a low voice, as the carriage bore him away:--"What a pity,
innocent fairies, that the gold may not be for you! That instead of
being disguised with a useless colour, and disfigured by art, it does
not retain its natural hue, and shine on the person of its beautiful
spinners! How much better the royal tissue would become you than the
_grandes dames_!"

A mere glance at the silkworm convinces you that it is no more a native
of Europe than any other sweet thing. All that is soft and exquisite
springs from the East. Our West, that hardy soldier, blacksmith,
and miner, is good only to dig. It is good mother Asia, disdained by
her rude son, who has bestowed upon him the treasures which seem to
concentrate the essence of the globe. With the Arab horse and the
nightingale, she has given him coffee, and sugar, and silk,--the
revivifiers of existence and the true ornament of love.

When silk first arrived at Rome, the empresses felt that previously
they had been no better than plebeians. They compared it, as far as its
soft lustre was concerned, to the pearls of the Orient, paying for it,
without haggling, the price of pearls and gold.

China esteemed it of such high value, that, to preserve the monopoly,
she inflicted the penalty of death on any persons who dared to export
the silkworm. It was only at the utmost peril, and by concealing it in
a hollow cane, that men succeeded in carrying it to Byzantium, whence
it passed to the West.

In the Middle Age, the age of indigence and barren disputes, when
wool was the luxury of the rich, and the poor wore serge in winter,
no attention was paid to silk, and its manufacture was exclusively
confined to Italy.

It is the gold of the silkworms of Verona which, in Giorgione, at the
mighty outcome of the Venetian art, and in the strong Titian, the
master of masters, enriches with a ruddy radiance their beautiful
blondes and brunettes, the sovereign beauties of the world.

On the other hand, in an age of decadence, when Spain and Flanders had
waned, the melancholy artist who preferred to paint the beauty which
years had marked,--the fading flower,--the fruit too early pierced
and unnaturally ripened,--Van Dyck, clothed with white silk, like a
consoling beam of moonlight, his languishing and drooping signoras.
Under the soft folds of their satins they still trouble hearts with
vain dreams and regrets.

The woman who possessed the secret of preserving her charms to the
last decline of old age, whose cypher everywhere inscribed teaches
us that Love can conquer Time, Diana de Poitiers, in her profound
art, did exactly the opposite of what our imprudent ladies do, who,
incessantly changing, as if to amuse the passer-by, leave no trace
upon the soul, and produce no permanent impression. She permitted the
Irises to delectate themselves with their fugitive rainbow; but, like
the celestial Dian, always wore the same costume, black or white, and
invariably of silk.

[Illustration]

It was to please her that Henry II. wore the first pair of silk
stockings, and the fine silken close-fitting vest, which indicated
all the gracefulness of a muscular yet slender figure. We know
how ardent an enthusiasm Henry IV., at a later period, showed in
promoting the growth of the silk-manufacture, planting mulberry-trees
everywhere,--along the highways, in the market-places, in the courts of
his palaces, and even in the gardens of the Tuileries. Coloured silks,
for decoration and furniture, and silks with flowered designs, were
soon afterwards manufactured at Lyons, which provided all Europe with
them.

Shall I say it, however? These coloured and ornamented silks do not
by any means produce a great and profound effect. Silk in its natural
state, and not even tinted, is in much more intimate sympathy with
woman and beauty. Amber and pearls, the latter slightly yellow, with
rich falls of lace, the latter not too yellow, are the only suitable
accompaniments of silk.

For silk is a noble and in nowise pretentious attire, which lends
a subdued charm to the exuberant liveliness of youth, and clothes
declining beauty with its most tender and touching radiance.

A genuine mystery attends it which is not without attraction. Colour
or gloss? Cotton has its peculiar gloss, and, when fitly prepared,
often acquires an agreeable freshness. Silk is not properly glossy, but
luminous,--with a soft electrical light, which harmonizes naturally
with the electricity of the woman. A living tissue, it embraces
willingly the living person.

       *       *       *       *       *

Oriental ladies, before they foolishly adopted our Western customs,
wore but two kinds of stuff: underneath, the real cashmere (of so fine
a texture that a large shawl might be passed through a ring); and
above, a beautiful tunic of silk of a pale blonde, or rather straw
colour, with a gleam or flash of magnetic amber.

These two articles were less garments than friends,--gentle
slaves,--supple and charming flatterers: the cashmere warm, caressing,
and pliant, enfolding the bather lovingly when she emerged from her
bath; the silk tunic, on the contrary, light and aërial, only not too
diaphanous. Its blonde whiteness agreed most admirably with the colour
of her skin; one might indeed have very justly said that it had imbibed
that colour through its constant intimacy and accustomed tenderness.
Inferior to the skin, undoubtedly, yet it seemed related to it; or
rather it became in the end a part of the body, and, as it were, melted
into it, like a dream which informs our whole existence, and cannot be
separated from it.

[Illustration]




[Illustration: VII.--INSTRUMENTS OF THE INSECT.]


[Illustration]


CHAPTER VII.

INSTRUMENTS OF THE INSECT: AND ITS CHEMICAL ENERGIES, AS IN THE
COCHINEAL AND THE CANTHARIDES.


Have I insisted too much upon my theme? No; I have reached its very
depths, its most important details.

Silk is not a particular, but a general view or aspect of it, for
nearly every insect produces silk.

Hitherto we have dealt with only one kind of silk,--that of the bombyx,
and indeed that of a species of bombyx which is not very fertile. Let
us hope that the meritorious Society of Acclimatization will introduce
here the Chinese bombyx (_Attacus_), which lives on the dwarf oak,
whose strong and cheap silk might be used as clothing for the poor.
All classes thenceforth might wear a material warm, light, impervious,
solid; and not only so, but beautiful, brilliant, and noble. Such a
change would be equivalent, in my eyes, to the general ennoblement and
transfiguration of the people.

Réaumur long ago asserted that numerous chrysalides would furnish a
beautiful silk. The spider would yield a substance both delicate and
tenacious,--as witness the admirable veil of spider's silk preserved in
the Paris Museum.

The delicate Arachne, whose light thread resembles a fleecy
cloud,--which is nevertheless so strong, as it issues from the
spinnerets,--Arachne is pre-eminently the spinner. But, as a general
rule, the insect is the weaver, and wholly devoted to that feminine
art. I was about to say, the insect is a woman.

In our vocabulary "feminine" means feeble; but in the Insect World
it is the synonym of strength and energy. It is,--as is the case
with maternity everywhere,--it is for the purpose of defending and
nourishing the child, of provisioning the cradle in which the orphan
will remain alone,--it is for this purpose specially that the insect is
a warrior, and furnished with formidable weapons.

As far as concerns the instruments which pierce, and cut, and saw, the
insect, in spite of all our progress, is perhaps a little in advance
of man to-day. The instinct of maternity, the need of providing for
its child--the future orphan--the protecting shelter of the hardest
bodies, has evidently inspired it to make extraordinary efforts for the
development and refinement of its tools. A few, in their fantastical
character, have as yet no analogues in any of our factories.

Long before Réaumur organized the thermometer, the ants, for the
protection of their delicate, hygrometrical, and susceptible
eggs, divided their habitations into a series of thirty or forty
stories,--lowering or raising the tiny creatures to the degree of
warmth, dryness, or humidity, which the temperature of the day and of
the hour of the day rendered necessary. Thus they formed an infallible
thermometer, on which one might rely with as much certainty as on that
of the philosophers.

In the comparisons between human and insect industry, the differences
which we remark belong not so much to the methods as to the speciality
of their wants and situation. The insect aptly varies the application
of its arts. For example: the spider which, in its network-trap,
improvised every day, lightens its work by a mixture of gluing and
spinning, follows quite a different process in the important labour of
fabricating the soft, warm, and durable cocoons which are intended to
receive its young. The nest would seem to be partly spun and partly
felted, like the majority of birds' nests.

We know that from the water-spider man derived the idea of the
diving-bell; but it is _not_ generally known that an ingenious Norman
peasant has succeeded in imitating perfectly the operations of the
larva of the syrphes, which, by means of an extremely prolonged
respiratory apparatus, preserves a communication with the pure and
wholesome air, even while working at the bottom of the most putrid
waters.

It seems, then, that in the Insect World exist a complete pharmacy,
chemistry, and perfumery. Have our sciences been sufficiently attentive
to this fact? The potent vitality which gives an extraordinary force
to the muscles of such tiny creatures, seems also to endow their
liquids with active properties and burning energies which the large
animals do not possess. Many, for defensive purposes, are gifted with
caustic secretions--which they eject the moment you approach--or
with fulminating powders. Others with poison, which flows as soon as
the sting has been thrust in. Some possess, in addition, an art of
magnetizing or etherizing their enemy; and others, like certain ants
which work in damp, woody places, season their abodes by burning them,
as it were, with potent formic acid.

       *       *       *       *       *

The entire genus of the _Cerambyx_ (or Long-horned Beetle) exhale a
strong, rose-like odour, which is smelt at a distance, is lasting, and
endures after the creature's death. Even among the Carnivora, ay, and
among the Coprophagi, we meet with perfumed insects, or, at all events,
with insects which, when in danger of being captured, endeavour to
deceive you, or implore pity, by emitting agreeable odours.

Others shine with admirable colours. The deep reds of the Nopal Coccus
have furnished the purple of kings.

By a skilful mixture, we also obtain from the cochineal the
pre-eminently gay and radiant colour, carmine, with its innumerable
tints and rosy shades.

A sovereign art with the insect is to carry on its sting, and
concentrate at a particular point, the liquids which flow in the plant,
in the living being. It is the very art of irritation. Its applications
are innumerable in medicine and industry; tints, paintings, varied
ornaments, a hundred fantastic and beautiful things come to us from
the sting of the galls, the excrescences and gibbosities which they so
skilfully raise.

The cochineal insect, while engaged in extracting by this process from
exotic vegetables the envelope of solid green in which it will spend
its prolonged period of rest, furnishes us with the red of reds, the
scarlet of lake, which will colour varnishes, and wax, and a multitude
of objects.

In health or illness, the stings of insects upon the living flesh are
violent irritants for disturbing or re-establishing the course of life.
In these there is nothing mediocre. A few, without sting, burn you by
their internal acridity.

Who has not seen on the dusty plain, before the thirsty harvest, the
cantharides, with its emerald enamel, abruptly crossing the footpath
with a wild and agitated movement! Burning elixir of existence, where
love transforms itself into a poison,--it is not with impunity that
we make use of it medicinally. That medieval pharmacy, which was so
dangerous to man, is not without peril, it seems, for the animals
themselves. A very intelligent but eccentrically ardent cat, which
I kept for a long time, among its other caprices of violence loved
to hunt the cantharides. It seemed attracted by the acridity of the
beautiful insect, as the moth is by the flame. It was an intoxication.
But when, hunting it through the flowers, she had seized and crushed
her dangerous victim, the latter appeared to take its revenge.

The inflammable feline nature, stimulated by the fiery sting, broke
out in cries, in excesses of fury, in strange leaps and bounds. She
expiated her orgie of fire by terrible sufferings.

But, on the contrary, another insect, the bamboo-worm, or _malalis_,
provides you, if you first remove its head, which is a deadly poison,
with an exquisite cream, the sweet and soporific influence of which,
say the Brazilian Indians, lulls love asleep. For two days and nights,
the young maiden who has tasted of it, crouching under the blossomy
tree, feels all the more powerfully in her soul the depth of the virgin
forests, and the mystery of those fresh glades which have never seen
the sun, nor echoed to the step of man, nor known any intruder but the
lonely great blue butterfly. And yet she is not alone: love quenches
her thirst with the most delicious fruits.

[Illustration]




[Illustration: VIII.--THE STUDY OF THE INSECT.]


[Illustration]


CHAPTER VIII.

ON THE RENOVATION OF OUR ARTS BY THE STUDY OF THE INSECT.


The Arts properly so called, the Fine Arts, should profit much more
than the Industrial, by the study of insects. The goldsmith and the
lapidary would do well to seek in them models and instruction. The
soft insects, the flies, specially possess in their eyes truly magical
irises, with which no casket of gems can bear comparison. In passing
from one species to another, and even, if I mistake not, from one
individual to another, new combinations may be observed. Remark that
the flies with brilliant wings are not always the most richly endowed,
as far as their optical organs are concerned. Take the dull, gray,
dusty, odious horse-fly, which lives on warm blood; its eye, to the
magnifying-glass, offers the strange faëry spectacle of a mosaic of
jewels, such as all the art of Froment-Meurice has scarcely invented.

If you descend still lower, insects which do not live, like this fly,
upon living but upon dead matter, ordure, and decomposition, astonish
us by the richness of their reflections, which our enamel ought to
endeavour to reproduce. The dunghill beetle, an ungainly black insect
if we look only at the upper part of its body, is, underneath, of a
deep sapphire-blue which no kingly diadem ever equalled! And what shall
we say of the son of the dead, of the Egyptian scarabæus,--a living
emerald, but far superior to that jewel in the gravity, opulence, and
magic of its lustre? The imagination is impressed, and one does not
feel astonished that a people so tender and devout, so in love with
death, so full of the dreams of eternity, took for a symbol the little
miraculous animal,--a burning jet of life springing from the grave!

A certain skill in examination, and a choice of day and of light, are
necessary. You cannot properly study the insect of the tropics and that
of our colder climates on the same day or at the same hour. The former
should be examined only in favourable weather, under a pure sky and
a strong sun,--a vivid and genial ray, analogous to the light which
bathes it in its own country. The other, frequently uninteresting to
the naked eye, but of great beauty under the microscope, may reserve
its grand illuminating effects for the evening, or for artificial
light. Little is promised by the cockchafer, at first sight so coarse
and prosaic in appearance. Yet its scaly wing, when submitted to the
focus of the microscope, and well lighted up beneath the little mirror,
so that it is seen by transparency, presents a noble winter stuff, a
dead leaf, where meander veins of a very beautiful brown. And in the
evening it becomes quite another thing: the yellowish part of the scale
has got the best of it, and in the light shines forth like gold--(a
poor comparison!)--the strange, magical gold of paradise, which we
dream of for the walls of the heavenly Jerusalem, or for the robes of
light worn by saints and spirits before the Throne! A sun softer and
tenderer than the orb of day, and one which, we know not why, charms
and affects the heart.

A strange mirage! And yet nothing but a cockchafer's wing!

Perhaps it may next be an insect which neither by day nor night,
neither to the naked eye nor under the microscope, could excite a
feeling of interest; but if you take the trouble to lift up, with a
delicate and patient scalpel, the laminæ which compose the thickness
of its scaly wing, you will find there, in most instances, a variety
of unexpected designs, sometimes vegetable curves,--sometimes airy
ramifications,--sometimes angular striated figures, like hieroglyphics,
which remind you of certain Oriental languages; and compose, in truth,
a genuine necromancer's book, that can neither be referred to, nor
compared with, any known form.

[Illustration]

These singular characters, while strongly attracting the eye and
disquieting the mind, are fully worthy of the interest they excite.
What they express, and give utterance to, in their emphatic language,
is the circulation of life. Some are tubes through which the air enters
the wing, and distends it for flight; others are tiny veins where
circulate the powerful liquids that endow the imperceptible organism
with its colours and its energy.

The most attractive forms are living forms. Take a drop of blood, and
submit it to the microscope. This drop, as it spreads, rewards you with
a delightful arborescence,--with the delicacy and lightness of certain
winter trees, when revealed in their actual figure, and no longer
encumbered with leaves.

Thus, Nature's infinite potency of beauty is not limited to the
surface, as antiquity supposed. It does not trouble itself about
human eyesight, but labours for its own behoof, and on its own work.
From the surface to the interior, it frequently increases in beauty
as in depth. It invests with surpassing loveliness things which are
absolutely hidden, and which death alone can unveil. Sometimes, as if
to contradict and confound our ideas, it clothes in ravishing forms the
organs which, from our point of view, accomplish the vilest functions.
I am thinking of the exquisite beauty and delicate tenderness of that
coral-tree which incessantly pours out the chyle of our intestines.

       *       *       *       *       *

To return to the insects: beauty abounds in them both externally and
internally. One need not search far in order to discover it. Take an
insect, not very rare, which I constantly meet with on the sandy soil
of Fontainebleau, in localities well open to the sun. Take--but not
without precaution, for it is well armed--the brilliant cicindela. Even
to the naked eye it is an agreeable object; but under the microscope it
appears to be perhaps the richest and the most varied which art could
study. These are truly surprising creatures! Each individual differs;
all are enamelled, and decorated to an excess, without resembling one
another. In each, if taken and separately studied, new discoveries may
be made.

It is the ardent and murderous hunter of other insects, and endowed
with formidable weapons,--having for its two anterior mandibles a
couple of sickles which close in upon one another, and transfix
deeply, on both sides, their unfortunate victim. Its rich and living
aliment apparently communicates to the cicindela its glowing colours.
Its entire body is embellished with them. On the wings, a changeful
besprinkling of peacock's eyes. On the fore parts, numerous meanders,
diversely and softly shaded, are trailed over a dark ground. Abdomen
and legs are glazed with such rich hues that no enamel can sustain a
comparison with them; the eye can scarcely endure their vivacity. The
singular thing is, that beside these enamels you find the dead tones
of flowers and the butterfly's wing. To all these various elements add
some singularities, which you would suppose to be the work of human
art, in the Oriental styles, Persian and Turkish, or as in the Indian
shawl, where the colours, slightly subdued, have found an admirable
basis; time having gradually lent a grave tone to their sweet harmony.

[Illustration]

Frankly, is there aught approaching such a degree of excellence in our
human arts? How great the necessity that, in their apparently fatigued
and languid condition, they should gain life and strength from these
living sources!

In general, instead of going straight to Nature, to the inexhaustible
fountain of beauty and invention, they have solicited help from the
erudition, the history, and the antiquity of man.

We have copied ancient jewels; sometimes those of the barbarous peoples
which first procured them from our own merchants. We have copied the
old robes and the stuffs of our ancestors. We have copied, especially,
the painted-glass windows of Gothic architecture, whose colours and
forms have been selected hap-hazard, and transplanted to objects
utterly discordant and unsuitable,--as, for instance, to shawls!

If we were desirous of comprehending and rehabilitating these ancient
windows, we might have taken a lesson from the enamels of certain
scarabæi. Seen beneath the microscope, they present very analogous
effects, simply because they possess the same elements of beauty. The
thirteenth century glass-windows (you may see them at Bourges, and
especially in the Museum of that city) were double. The light therefore
remained in them, did not pass through them, gave them the magical
effects of precious stones. And of a similar character are those insect
wings composed of numerous leaves, between which you may detect, with
the microscope, a network of mysterious hieroglyphics.

Gothic, so little in harmony with either our wants or our ideas,
has passed out of our furniture, but it still lingers in the
shawl-manufacture; a rich and costly industry, which, having once
adopted the fantastic method of imitating in opaque wools those windows
whose transparency was their special merit, can hardly emancipate
itself from the bondage.

Men have not consulted women. In order to weave complex designs, heap
up a medley of arches and oriels, and condemn our wives to carry
churches on their backs, men have provided a heavy groundwork of the
stoutest wools; the whole being despatched from London and Paris to be
servilely woven by the Indians who have unlearned their own arts.

       *       *       *       *       *

Our intelligent Parisian merchants, who have reluctantly followed in
the path traced out for them by the great producers, may very well
escape from these _rich_ and heavy styles. Let some one lose patience,
and turning his back on the copyists of antique absurdities, go to
Nature herself in search of advice,--to the great insect collections
and the conservatories of the Jardin des Plantes.

       *       *       *       *       *

Nature, being feminine, will tell him that if he would fitly decorate
his sister in the soft and airy tissue of the ancient cashmere, he must
delineate thereupon--not the towers of Notre-Dame,[N] but a hundred
charming creatures--that little, but, if you will, very common marvel
of the cicindela, in which all styles are combined;--or the purple
scarabæus glorified in its lily;--or the emerald chrysomela, which this
very morning I found sensually reposing at the bottom of a rose.

[Footnote N: Notre-Dame is the metropolitan cathedral of Paris.]

Do I mean that you should copy these? Not at all. I should call these
living creatures, in their robe of love, from which they derive all
their charm, an animated aureola, which cannot be translated. We must
be content to love and contemplate them, to draw our inspiration from
them, to convert them into ideal forms, and new rainbows of colours,
and exquisite posies of blossoms. Thus transformed, they will become,
not what they are in Nature, but fantastic and wonderful,--as the child
who pants for them sees them in its slumber, or the maiden yearning
after a beautiful attire, or as the young pregnant wife when dreaming
of them in her hours of longing.

[Illustration]




[Illustration: IX.--THE SPIDER.]


[Illustration]


CHAPTER IX.

THE SPIDER--INDUSTRY--THE STOPPAGE.


Before we pass on to those insect communities with which the latter
portion of this volume will be occupied, let us speak here of a
solitary individual.

Higher, and yet lower, than the insect, the spider is separated from it
by its organization, but connected with it by its instincts, wants, and
food.

A being strongly specialized in two particulars, it is excluded from
the great classes of the animal kingdom, and stands isolated, as it
were, in creation.

In the fertile countries of the tropics, where game abounds, it lives
with its fellows. Some are said to weave around a tree one immense
net, common to all, whose avenues they guard in perfect agreement.
Nay more: having frequent occasion to deal with powerful insects, and
even little birds, they co-operate in the hour of peril, and lend each
other, as it were, a helping hand.

But this gregarious mode of living is wholly exceptional, confined to
certain species, and peculiarly favoured climates. Everywhere else the
spider, through its organism and the fatality of its life, assumes the
character of the hunter, of the savage, who, living upon uncertain
prey, remains envious, mistrustful, exclusive, and solitary.

But remember that it does not resemble the ordinary hunter, who gets
quit with his journeys, his exertions, and his activity. The spider's
hunt costs it dearly, if I may venture to say so, and demands an
incessant outlay. Every day, every hour, it must draw from its own
substance the essential element of the network which is to provide it
with food and renew that substance. Accordingly, it starves in order to
nourish, and exhausts in order to recruit itself; it grows lean on the
dubious hope of afterwards growing fat. Its life is a lottery, remitted
to the risk of a thousand unforeseen contingencies. Hence, it cannot
fail to develop into an unquiet creature, sympathizing but coldly with
its kind, in whom it sees possible competitors,--in a word, it is a
fatally egotistical animal. And were it not so, it would perish.

The worst of it is, as far as the poor creature is concerned, that it
is profoundly ugly. It is not one of those which, ugly to the naked
eye, are rehabilitated by the microscope. The overwhelming speciality
of its career has the effect, as we see among men, of attenuating one
limb, exaggerating another, and prevents anything like harmony: the
blacksmith is frequently a hunchback. In the same manner the spider
is pot-bellied. Nature has sacrificed everything to its function, its
wants, and the industrial apparatus which will satisfy those wants. It
is an artisan, a rope-maker, a spinner, and a weaver. Do not look at
its figure, but at the product of its art. It is not only a spinner,
but a spinning-mill.

Concentrated and circular, with eight feet around its body, and eight
vigilant eyes in its head, it causes astonishment by the eccentric
prominency of its enormous belly. An ignoble feature, wherein the
careless observer reads the result of gormandising! Alas, it is just
the contrary! This big belly is its workshop, its magazine, the pouch
where the rope-maker carries in front of it the material of the thread
which it winds and unwinds; but as it fills this pouch with nothing but
its very substance, it enlarges only at the expense of itself, and by
dint of extreme sobriety. And you shall often see it, though emaciated
in every limb, retaining full and expanded the treasure which is the
indispensable element of its labour, the hope of its industry, and its
only chance of a future. A true type of the man of industry! "If I fast
to-day," it says, "I shall eat perhaps to-morrow; but if my material
runs short, all is over,--my stomach must rest and fast for ever!"

My first relations with the spider were nothing less than agreeable.
In my poverty-blighted childhood, while I toiled alone (as I have
said in my book on "The People") in the then ruinous and desolate
printing-office of my father, the temporary workshop was in a kind of
cellar, sufficiently well lighted,--being a cellar in the boulevard
where my family resided, but on the ground-floor so far as concerned
the adjoining street. Through a large grated window the mid-day sun
obliquely lighted up the sombre case where I put together my little
leaden letters. There, at the angle of the wall, I distinctly perceived
a prudent spider, which, supposing the stray sunbeam would bring some
imprudent fly for its breakfast, drew near my case. This sunbeam,
falling not in its corner but nearer me, was a natural temptation to
invite its closer approach. In spite of my innate disgust, I admired
the progressive ratio of timid, slow, and prudent experiment by which
it ascertained the character of him to whose mercy it virtually
confided its very existence. It watched me closely with all its eight
eyes, and propounded to itself the problem, "Is he, or is he not, an
enemy?"

Without analyzing its figure, or very clearly distinguishing its
eyes, I felt that I was observed and watched; and apparently this
observation, in the long run, proved favourable to me. By the instinct
of work, perhaps (which is very great in its species), it perceived
that I was really a peaceful labourer, and that I was busy, like
itself, in weaving my cobweb. However this may be, it abandoned its
stratagems and precautions with a quick decision, as if adopting an
adventurous and somewhat perilous step. Not without grace it descended
upon its thread, and planted itself resolutely on our respective
frontier--the edge of my case, favoured, at that moment, with a golden
ray of the sickly sun.

I was divided between two sentiments. I confess that I did not
relish so close an intimacy,--the figure of such a friend pleased
me but little; on the other hand, this prudent and observant being,
which certainly did not lavish its confidence, seemed to say to me:
"Wherefore should I not enjoy a little of thy sun? So different in
nature, we have nevertheless arrived together from our necessitous toil
and cold obscurity at this sweet banquet of light. Let us take heart,
and fraternize. This ray which you permit me to share, receive it from
me, and preserve it. In another half century, it will kindle up your
winter."

As the little black fairy said this in its own language, whispering
low, very low--in fact, it could not be lower (for it is thus that
fairies speak)--I marked the effect of it vaguely, and it slumbered in
my mind. The circumstance, however, was recalled for a brief while some
years ago; and again, after a long interval, it has been revived on
this very day, when for the first time I record and explain it.

On the former occasion, after a domestic affliction, I was spending my
holidays in Paris, and I went daily alone to walk in my little garden
in the Rue des Postes. My family were in the country. Mechanically I
remarked the beautiful concentric stars which the spiders had woven
round my trees, and which they repaired and remade incessantly with
a laudable industry, giving themselves immense trouble to preserve
my small stock of fruits and grapes, and relieving myself from the
importunity of flies and the stings of gnats. They reminded me of
the black domestic spider which, in my childhood, had entered into
conversation with me. These latter were very different. Daughters of
air and light, always exposed, always before the eyes of men, without
other shelter than the surface of a leaf, where they may easily be
captured, they are unable to cultivate the reserve or diplomacy of
my old acquaintance. All their work, is visible, all their little
mystery open to the wind, and their persons at everybody's discretion;
they have no other protection than what may be afforded them through
compassion, or in consideration of a well-understood interest in the
positive services which they render.

Those which suspend their nests to the branches of trees, like those
which suspend them to our windows, display an evident design to place
themselves in the wind, where a current of air may waft the insects
to them, or in the path of a ray of light in which the gnat may float
and whirl. The web does not fall vertically, for such a position would
restrict it to one current; the spider, like an able seaman, gives it a
great obliquity, and thus secures a couple of currents, or even more.

From the extremity of its belly, four screw-plates or tubercles, which
can be drawn in or out (like telescopes), eject by their movement a
very little cloud, that increases in size from minute to minute. This
cloud is composed of threads of an infinite tenuity; each tubercle
secretes a thousand, and the four, by combining together their four
thousand threads, make the unique and tolerably strong thread of which
the web is woven.

Mark well, that the threads of the intelligent manufacturer are not
all alike, but of different strength and quality according to their
destination. Some are dry for warping, others viscous for gluing. The
tissues of the nest intended for the reception of the new-born are of a
cottony material, while those which will enwrap the cocoon containing
the eggs possess all the resistant power necessary for the safety of
the latter.

When the spider has produced a sufficient quantity of thread to
undertake a web, it voluntarily glides from an elevated point,
and unwinds its skein. There it remains suspended, and afterwards
reascending to its starting-point by the assistance of its tiny
cordage, moves towards another point; and continues to trace in this
manner a series of radii all diverging from the same centre.

The skein stretched, it is busied next in weaving the woof by crossing
the thread. Running from radius to radius, it touches each with its
tubercles, which fasten to it the circular border. The whole is not a
compact tissue, but a veritable network, so geometrically proportioned
that all the meshes of the circle are invariably of the same size.

[Illustration]

This web, woven out of itself, living and vibrating, is much more
than an instrument; it is a part of its being. Itself of a circular
form, the spider seems to expand within this circle, and prolong the
filaments of its nerves to the radiating threads which it weaves. In
the centre of its web lies its greatest force for attack or defence.
Out of that centre it is timid; a fly will make it recoil. The web is
its electric telegraph, responding to the lightest touch, and revealing
the presence of an imperceptible and almost imponderable victim; while,
at the same time, being slightly viscous in substance, it retains the
prey, or delays and entangles a dangerous enemy.

In windy weather, the continual agitation of the web prevents it from
giving an account of what transpires, and the spider then remains at
the centre. But usually it keeps near its machinery, hidden under a
leaf, that it may not terrify its victims, or fall a prey to any of its
numerous foes.

Prudence and patience, rather than courage, are its characteristics.
Its experience is too great, it has undergone too many accidents and
misadventures, it is too much accustomed to the severities of fate, to
indulge in any surpassing audacity. It is afraid even of an ant. The
latter, often a mischievous individual, a restless and rugged rodent,
and afraid of nothing, frequently persists in exploring the strange
woof, of which it can make nothing. The spider accordingly gives
way to it,--whether it fears the acid of the ant, which burns like
aquafortis, or whether, like a good artisan, it calculates that a long
and obstinate struggle will cost it more time than will the manufacture
of another web. Therefore, without yielding to the slightest
susceptibility of self-love, it allows the ant to strut about, and
takes up its post a little further off.

[Illustration]

       *       *       *       *       *

Every animal lives by depredation. Nature is ever devouring itself;
but the prey is not always sought and merited by a patient industry
deserving of respect. No being, however, is so much the plaything of
fate as the spider. Like every good workman, it has a twofold value: in
its work and its person. An infinity of insects--the murderous carabus,
or the _libellula_, an elegant and splendid assassin--have only their
bodies and their weapons, and spend their lives joyously in killing.
Others possess secure and easily defended asylums, where they have
cause to fear few dangers. The field-spider has neither the one nor the
other advantage. It is in the position of the respectable operative,
who, through his small and ill-guaranteed fortune, attracts or tempts
cupidity or insolence. The lizard from below, the squirrel from above,
hunt the feeble hunter. The inert frog darts at it the viscous tongue,
which glues it and renders it immovable. It is the felicity of the
swallow, in her graceful circle, to carry off, without injuring, the
spider and his web; and all birds look upon it as a great dainty or
an excellent medicine. The nightingale, faithful, like all great
singers, to a certain hygiene, prescribes for herself, as an occasional
purgative, a spider.

Even if she be not swallowed up herself, if the instrument of her
trade is destroyed, the consequences are the same. Should the web be
undone blow upon blow, a somewhat protracted fast renders it unable to
secrete a fresh supply of thread, and it soon perishes of hunger. It is
constantly confined in this vicious circle:--

To spin, it requires food;

To feed, it must spin.

Its thread, for the spider as for the Parcæ, is that of destiny.

We once made the experiment of removing three times running a spider's
web. Three times, in six hours, it replaced it, with admirable
patience, and without abating one jot of hope. The experiment was a
cruel one, and we now reproach ourselves for it. We meet with too many
poor unfortunates, whom accidents of this kind have thrown out of work,
and who are thenceforth too exhausted to resume their industry. One
sees them, like living skeletons, attempting fruitlessly a different
trade, in which they succeed but poorly, and mournfully envying the
long legs of the field-spiders, which gain their living by incessant
travelling.

When people speak of the eager gluttony of the spider, they forget that
it must either eat a double quantity, or soon perish: eat to recruit
its body, and eat to renew its thread.

Three circumstances contribute to wear it out: the ardour of incessant
work, its nervous susceptibility--which is carried to an extreme--and
its twofold respiratory system.

For it has not only the passive respiration of the insect, which
receives, or submits to, the air introduced through its stigmata;
it has also a kind of active respiration, analogous to the play of
the lungs in the higher animals. It takes the air and masters it,
transforms and decomposes it, and incessantly renews it. If you do
but examine its movements, you feel that it is something more than an
insect; the vital glow traverses its frame in a rapid circulation; the
heart beats very differently from what it does in the fly or butterfly.

But its superiority is its peril. The insect braves with impunity the
strongest odours and mephitic miasmas. The spider cannot endure them.
Instantly affected by them, it falls into convulsions, struggles,
and expires. I saw this incident one day at Lucerne. Chloroform,
whose action the stag-beetle had endured for fourteen days without
succumbing, immediately--at the first contact--overpowered the spider.
Yet the victim was a large one, and I found it engaged in eating a
gnat. I wished to experiment, and poured on it a single drop. The
effect was terrible. Nothing more pitiful could be seen in a case of
human asphyxia. It tumbled over, raised itself, and then swooned; all
its supports failed it, and its limbs appeared disjointed. One thing
was very pathetic--that in this supreme moment the fecundity of its
bosom became apparent; in its agony, its tubercles sent forth their
little cloudy woof, so that you might have believed it to be working
even in death.

I felt oppressed, and in the hope that the fresh air would perhaps
revive it, I placed it on my window-sill; but it was no longer
_itself_. I know not how the effect was produced; but it seemed to have
melted away, and nothing of it remained but its skeleton. The vanished
substance had left but its shadow, which the wind bore away to the
neighbouring lake.

[Illustration]




[Illustration: X.--THE HOME AND LOVES OF THE SPIDER.]


[Illustration]


CHAPTER X.

THE HOME AND LOVES OF THE SPIDER.


The spider greatly surpasses all other solitary-living insects. It not
only possesses its nest, its ambush, its temporary hunting-station;
it has (or, at least, certain species have) a regular house, a house
of a very complex description: a vestibule, and a sleeping-chamber,
and a mode of egress in the rear; and, finally, a door which is a very
triumph of art, for it closes of itself, falling back by its own weight.

The door! It is this which is wanting even in the grand cities of the
bees and the ants; these industrial republics have never hitherto
attained to so lofty a climax.

The ants have just reached the point at which most of our African
tribes have halted. Every evening they shut up their dwelling-places
with immense labour--renewed daily--and by a little, unsubstantial
lattice-work, which does not relieve them from the necessity of
planting sentinels. It is true, however, that these great, valiant, and
well-armed peoples have no fear of invasion, and, like Lacedæmon, need
neither walls nor ditches. Their proud intrepidity has set limits to
their industry.

On the other hand, the poor artisan which lives by itself, and is
always exhausted by the incessant toil of spinning and weaving, cannot
rely upon its valour. It has need, in certain countries and under
certain alarming conditions, of profound ingenuity, and has discovered
this little miracle of prudence and combination, which eclipses both
the savage and the insect. I do not refer to the great animals, none of
which, except the beaver, are very industrious.

In the neighbourhood of Lucerne we for the first time saw the house
of the spider (the _Agelena_). It was a kind of sheath, and very well
made, with a vestibule facing the south, which expanded outward like a
funnel. This exterior portion, forming a little sunny retreat, was the
snare and the citadel. The lady of the house stationed herself quite
at the bottom of the funnel; but behind this very bottom, at the lower
extremity of the case or sheath, was constructed a back apartment,
small and very secure, in a white substantial cocoon. In this she
trusted so completely, that while we detached the silken cables which
moored the entire edifice to the bush, she made no attempt to escape.
We had neither destroyed nor damaged, but simply detached the dwelling,
and on the day following we found it repaired and moored to the bush on
every side. The exposure was no longer so favourable; but, undoubtedly,
the workman, in an advanced season of the year (in September, and under
the Alps), did not possess the resources for recommencing this grand
summer-work.

In the Brazilian forests a little spider has its case suspended exactly
in the centre of its web; and thither it hurries at the slightest
approach of danger, and has no sooner entered, says Swainson, than the
door suddenly closes behind it by a spring.

But the masterpiece of the genus is seen, especially in Corsica, in
the laborious _Mygale_. Its residence is a kind of well, industriously
walled round, with smooth and polished sides, and a double tapestry,--a
coarse strong hanging on the earthward front, and a fine satiny hanging
in the interior. The orifice of the well is closed by a door. This door
is a disc, much larger at the top than at the bottom, and let into
a groove in such a manner as to shut hermetically. The disc, which
is not more than three lines thick, contains, nevertheless, thirty
double woofs, and between the woofs intervene the same number of coats
or layers of earth,--so that the entire door is really composed of
sixty doors. Here, in truth, is a miracle of patience; but observe,
too, the ingenuity,--all these doors of network and earth clamp into
one another. The thread-doors at one point are prolonged to the wall,
fastening the door to the wall as by a hinge. This door opens outwardly
when the spider raises it to go forth, and closes by its own weight.
But the enemy might eventually succeed in opening it. This has been
anticipated. On the side opposite the hinge some small holes are worked
in the door; to these the spider clings, and becomes a living bolt.[O]

[Footnote O: See the works of Audouin and Walckenaër.]

What would happen if this astonishing artisan, placed in peculiar
and trying circumstances (like the bees under Huber's experiments),
were called upon to vary its art and devise a novelty? Could it do
so? Has it the intelligence, the resource, and, at need, the power of
innovation which the superior insects display under certain conditions?
It would be worth while to make the experiment. This, at all events, is
certain, that the simple _Epeiras_ (our garden-spiders) know very well,
when deprived of the necessary space for extending their geometrical
curtain, how to construct one of irregular design, decreasing in
proportion to the restrictions of their area.

Experiments, moreover, are difficult. The spider is so nervous, that
the fear which makes it an artist can also paralyze and utterly
confound it. Its web alone gives it courage. Out of its web, everything
makes it tremble. In captivity, having no web, it actually flees before
its prey, and has not the resolution to confront a fly.

Its miserable condition of passive expectancy fully explains its
character. To wait, while acting, running, fighting, is to cheat both
time and hunger; but to remain there immovable, to be unable to stir
from fear of alarming your prey, to watch it coming nearer and nearer
but eventually escaping, and to suffer from an empty stomach! To be
a witness of the endless, heedless dances of the fly, which, in the
sunbeam, amuses and balances itself for hours without responding to
the avid prayers of the tempter which whispers, "Come, little one!
Come, my darling!" is a terrible punishment, a series of hopes and
disappointments.

[Illustration]

It pursues its gay measure, and thinks nothing of the sufferer.

The fatal inquiry, "Shall I dine?" returns, and lacerates its bowels.
Then comes the more ominous reflection: "If I do not dine to-day, no
more thread! And far less, then, may I hope to dine to-morrow!"

From all this results a suffering, restless, but prodigiously wary and
attentive being, which detects not only the slightest contact, but
the slightest noise. The spider is only too sensitive. A very little
disturbance seems to overthrow its self-control. It apparently faints;
you see it suddenly fall from its position, struck down by fear.

       *       *       *       *       *

This sensitiveness, as you will readily believe, is especially
displayed in the spider's maternal condition. However miserable and
avaricious in its nature, it is tender, liberal, and generous towards
its young. While the birds of prey--the winged hunters which have so
many resources--drive away their young at a very early age, look upon
them as greedy competitors, and force them by blows of their beaks to
dwell afar from the domain which they reserve as their own, the spider
is not contented with carrying its eggs in the cocoon, but, in certain
species, nourishes them when living and greedy, guards them, bears them
on its back; or else she makes them walk, holding them by a thread;
if danger threatens, she draws in the thread, they leap upon her, and
she saves them. If she cannot do so, she will perish. Some there are
which, rather than abandon their offspring, will suffer themselves to
be swallowed up in the gulf of the ant-lion. Others, of a slow species,
which, when unable to save them, make no effort to escape, but allow
themselves to be captured also.

Their nests are frequently masterpieces. At Interlaken, in Switzerland,
I have admired their long soft tubes, warm in the interior, and
well-lined,--externally, disguised with much skill by an artistic
pell-mell of small bits of leaf, tiny twigs, and fragments of gray
plaster, so as to melt perfectly into the colour of the wall supporting
them. But this was nothing in comparison with a work of art which I
have here at Fontainebleau.

On the 22nd of July 1857, I discovered in an outhouse a very pretty
round basket, about an inch across, made of all kinds of materials,
and, as it had nothing to fear from rain, without any cover. It was
very gracefully suspended to a beam by some elegant silken threads,
which I should call little hands, such as are possessed by the climbing
plants. Within, brooding on its eggs with a constant incubation, might
be seen a spider. It never stirred, except, perhaps, for a moment at
night, in quest of food. Never was there any animal so timid. At the
gentlest approaches fear made it fly, and almost fall. Once when we
disturbed it a little abruptly, it was seized with such an excess of
terror that it did not recover for an entire day. It sat for six weeks,
and, but for these perturbations, would perhaps have remained much
longer.

An admirable mother,--an ingenious and delicate artist,--before all
things a female,--a female nervous and timid to the highest degree,
this strange sensitive creature explained to me perfectly the very
opposite sentiments with which the spider inspires us,--those of
repulsion and attraction. We start away from it, and yet we draw near
to it. It is so coarse, and yet, at the same time, so prodigiously
sensitive! It breathes as we do. And the delicate tubercle which
secretes its silk, like a milky cloud (as the microscope shows us), is
the most feminine organ which exists, perhaps, in nature.

Alas, it is alone! Except a few species (mygales) in which the father
renders some assistance to the mother, it expects no help. The male,
after its moment of love, becomes, indeed, an enemy. Cruel consequences
of misery! It perceives that its children are capable of furnishing
it with food. But the mother, who is bigger than he, makes a similar
reflection,--thinks that the eater is eatable,--and frequently crunches
her spouse.

These atrocious events never happen, I am confident, in climates where
ease and abundance do not deprave their natural disposition. But in our
well-peopled countries, with game very rare, and competition of extreme
violence, these unfortunates act towards one another like the wretched
castaways on the raft of the _Medusa_.

A cruel tyrant, the stomach, dominates over all nature, and vanquishes
even love. Passion, in an anxious and restless being like the spider,
is very mistrustful. At the height of his devotion, the lean and feeble
male dares only approach the majestic lady with a timid reverence and
the utmost reserve. He advances, he retires, he watches; he seems
to ask himself if he has at all succeeded in subduing the haughty
creature. He resorts to the timid methods of a slow magnetism, and
especially to an extreme patience. He puts little faith in the first
signs, and does not willingly yield his confidence. And, finally, when
the adored object shows herself sensible of his sincerity, and grows
ardent in her expansion of soul, he does not so wholly trust in her
but what he will escape, and fly with all his speed, at some sudden
impulse, and under the influence of an indescribable panic.

       *       *       *       *       *

Such is the terrible idyl of the dusky lovers of our ceilings. Among
our garden-spiders less suspicion seems to exist. Nature softens
hearts, and rugged industrialism itself grows smoother in rustic
life. We see some upon our trees which behave tolerably well to their
husbands, and do not too often remember that they are competitors in
the chase. They permit them to reside in the same locality, although
a little apart, and keeping them at a distance. A light partition
separates them. The princess consents that he may live under her roof,
and on the ground-floor, while she lives on the first story,--keeping
him below and in subjection, so that he may not presume to think
himself the king, but only the _prince consort_, and the _husband of
the queen_.

       *       *       *       *       *

Have they any sympathies beyond their own race? So some authorities
have asserted, and I believe it. They are isolated from us far less
than the true insects. They live in our houses, have an interest in
knowing us, and seem to observe us. They pay great attention to voices
and sounds, and have a marvellous perception of them. If they have not
the insect-organs of hearing (which would seem to be the antennæ), it
is because they are _all antennæ_. Their excessive vigilance, and the
nervous irradiation which makes itself felt everywhere among them,
endow them with the keenest receptivity.

       *       *       *       *       *

Much has been said about the musical spider of Pellisson. Another and
less-known anecdote is not less striking. One of those little victims
which are trained into virtuosi before they are ripe of age,--Berthome,
illustrious in 1800,--owed his astonishing successes to the savage
confinement in which he was forced to work. At eight he astounded and
stupefied his hearers by his mastery of the violin. In his perpetual
solitude he had a comrade whom no one suspected,--a spider. It was
lodged at first in a quiet corner, but it gave itself license to
advance from the corner to the music-stand, from the music-stand to the
child, even climbing upon the mobile arm which held the bow. There, a
palpitating and breathless amateur, it paused and listened. It was an
audience in itself. The artist needed nothing more to fill him with
inspiration and double his energy.

Unfortunately the child had a stepmother, who, one day, introducing an
amateur into the sanctuary, saw the sensible animal at its post. A blow
from her slipper annihilated the auditory. The child fell swooning to
the ground, was ill for three months, and died,--heartbroken!

[Illustration]




Book the Third.

COMMUNITIES OF INSECTS.




[Illustration: I.--THE TERMITES, OR WHITE ANTS.]


[Illustration]


CHAPTER I.

THE CITY IN THE SHADOWS: THE TERMITES, OR WHITE ANTS.


M. de Prefontaine (cited by Huber, in his work on "The Ants") relates
that, when travelling in Guiana, he saw a party of negroes besieging
certain fantastic edifices which he calls ant-hills. They did not
venture to attack them except from a distance, and with firearms;
having first taken the precaution, moreover, to dig a little trench and
fill it with water, to check the progress of the beleaguered army and
drown its battalions, if they adventured a sortie.

These edifices are not the habitations of Ants, but of Termites,--quite
a different species of insect; which are found not only in Guiana, but
in Africa, New Holland, and in the prairies of North America.

A host of travellers have described them. But the standard and most
instructive authority is that of Smeathman, which now lies before
us, enriched with excellent plates. The drawings are taken from the
termite-hills of Africa.

Figure to yourself a mound of earth, about twelve feet high (some have
been discovered measuring twenty), which, from a distance, might easily
be mistaken for a negro's hut. Approach it, and you will at once detect
that it is the product of a higher art. Its curious form is that of a
pointed dome; or, if you like, of an obtuse and preponderating obelisk.
For support, the dome or obelisk has four, five, or six cupolas from
five to six feet high; and against these are propped up below some
small bell-like structures, nearly two feet in elevation. The whole
might well be taken for a kind of Oriental cathedral, the principal
spire of which had a double cincture of minarets, decreasing in height;
the said whole being of extreme solidity, and composed of a compact
clay, which, when burnt, makes the best bricks. Not only may several
men stand upon it without injury, but even the wild bull's station
themselves on its summit as sentinels to watch, through the high
grasses of the plain, that the lion or panther does not surprise the
herd.

Nevertheless, this dome is hollow, and the inferior platform which
supports it is itself supported by a semi-hollow construction formed by
the junction of four arches (two to three feet in span),--arches of a
very substantial design, being pointed, ogival, and in a kind of Gothic
style. Lower still extends a number of passages or corridors, plastered
spaces which one might call saloons, and finally, convenient, spacious,
and healthy lodgings, capable of receiving a large population; in
brief, quite a subterranean city.

A broad spiral passage winds and rises gradually in the thickness of
the edifice, which has no opening, no door, no window; the vomitories
are disguised and at a distance, terminating afar in the plain.

It is the most considerable and important work which displays the
genius of insects; a labour of infinite patience and of daring art. We
must not forget that these walls, which time has hardened, were very
friable at first, and always crumbling. To raise this Titanic edifice
to such a height, a continuity of effort was absolutely requisite, and
a succession of provisional constructions, demolished one after the
other when they had served their purpose. The masons commenced with the
exterior pyramids, a foot and a foot and a half in height; then with
those of the second rank. But the latter being solid and indurated,
they intrepidly undermined their base to make room for the passages,
the windows, and the spiral staircase. The same operation was carried
out beneath the dome, which was excavated with great labour, and in
such a manner that the great hollow vault, in conjunction with its
lower platform, rested on the narrow vaults of the four arches forming
the centre and foundation of the edifice.

Observe that this dome is self-sustaining, and that its substructions,
strictly speaking, would amply suffice for its support; the lateral
pyramids being only its not indispensable auxiliaries. Here, then,
we find the principle of a true, honest, and courageous art, which,
relying on itself and its calculations, requires no assistance from
external supports, and needs neither props nor buttresses. It is
exactly the system of Brunelleschi.

Who has carried the art to such a climax? We must own that it is the
supreme of usefulness. The sharpened dome, the belfries or needles,
are admirably arranged so as to resist the terrible rain-storms of the
tropics. The dome keeps off the water, and assists it to flow away
rapidly. If it cracked, the platform on which it leans would throw
the water, as from a roof, on to the exterior _enceinte_, which would
carry it to the ground. Hollow like a kiln, it quickly gets warmed, and
absorbs the heat; duly communicating it to the subterranean passages to
hatch the eggs, and promote the comfort of a race which, being wholly
naked, prefers an elevated temperature.

       *       *       *       *       *

It is a masterpiece of art, precisely because it is a masterpiece of
utility. The beautiful and the useful admirably harmonize. Now one
would wish to know who _are_ these astonishing artists: we hardly dare
to confess that they are the objects of our entire contempt.

Various names have been bestowed upon them; among others, that of
termites: and again, that of wood-ants,--a designation not very
accurate, for the ants are their enemies, and their body, being
exceedingly soft, is exactly the opposite of the dry hard body of the
ant.

They have been also called wood-lice; and they seem, in truth, a soft
and feeble kind of vermin, which are crushed without resistance.
Magnificent jest of God, who loves to exalt his humblest creatures! The
Memphis, the Babylon, the true Capitol of the insects, is built--by
whom? By lice! Though their luxury of jaws, and their four stages of
teeth, make them admirable rodents, nevertheless, if we except their
_élite_, the soldiers, they have no important weapons. Their teeth,
made to gnaw, are powerless in combat. The destiny of the termites is
plain; spite of the formidable names which have been given to their
species (_bellicosus_, _mordax_, _atrox_), they are simply _workers_.

Every other insect is stronger than they are; or at least harder,
better protected, and more completely armed. All, especially the ants,
hunt them, and devour them by myriads. Birds greedily pursue them; the
poultry-yards absorb them in frightful quantities. All (even man, who
cooks them) find them of an agreeable taste; and the negro can never be
satiated with them.

They work without seeing their work. They have no eyes, at least none
which are visible. Very probably, the darkness in which they live
destroys their ocular organs, as is the case with a species of duck
found in the subterranean lakes of Carinthia. The rare species of
termites which venture forth into the daylight have very conspicuous
and perfectly formed eyes.

The darkness and the persecution to which they are exposed under the
light, seem to have developed their singular industry. Against that
world of day which shows them so bitter a hostility, they have built,
as they have been able, this little world of the shadows, in which they
exercise their arts. They issue forth only in search of food, and the
gum and other substances of which they make their magazines.

Their attachment is extreme for these cities of darkness. They defend
them obstinately. The first blow that is given each resists in his own
fashion; the workmen plastering the interior with a kind of mortar
which closes up the holes, the soldiers attacking the assailants and
drawing blood with their sharp pincers, clinging to the wound, and
suffering themselves to be crushed rather than let go. A naked man
(like the negro) shrinks under these bites, grows discouraged, and is
conquered.

If you still persist, if you penetrate, you admire the palace, its
circuits, its corridors, its aërial bridges, the halls or saloons where
the population lodge, the nurseries for the eggs, the caves, cellars,
or magazines. But, above all, search to the centre. There lurks the
mystery of this little world; there is its palladium, its idol,
incessantly surrounded by the cares of an enthusiastic crowd. A strange
and shocking object, which is not the less obeyed, and visibly adored!

It is the queen, or common mother, frightfully fecund, from whose body
issues an uninterrupted flood of about sixty eggs per minute, or eighty
thousand eggs per day!

You can conceive of nothing more fantastic. These strange creatures,
which we compare to vermin, have nevertheless their moment of supreme
poesy, their hour of love; for a moment their wings uplift them, and
almost immediately they sink. The couples thus bereft, having neither
refuge nor strength, and no means of resistance, are a prey for all the
insects,--a manna upon which they straightway throw themselves. The
working termites, which have neither love nor wings, endeavour to save
a couple of the victims, welcome them,--weak, and fallen, and wretched
as they are,--and make them monarchs.

They remove them to the centre of the city, and establish them in the
saloon on which all the apartments and corridors abut. There they
are revived, recruited, and nourished day and night; and the female
gradually assumes an enormous size, until in body and stomach she is
two thousand times larger than her natural condition,--though, by a
hideous contrast, the head does not increase. For the rest, immovable,
and therefore captive, the doors through which she entered have become
infinitely too narrow to admit of the egress of such a monster.
Accordingly, there she will remain, pouring out, until she splits
asunder, that torrent of living matter which the termites day and night
collect, and which, to-morrow, will be the People.

This soft and whitish-looking creature, a stomach rather than a being,
is at least of the size of the human thumb: a traveller pretends to
have seen one as large as a crab.

The bigger she is, the more fertile, the more inexhaustible, this
terrible mother of lice seems the more enthusiastically worshipped by
her fanatical vermin. She appears to be their ideal, their poetry,
their ecstasy. If you carry them off, with a fragment, a ruin of the
city, you may see them, under a glass shade, instantly set to work to
build an arch for the protection of the mother's venerated head, to
reconstruct her royal hall, which will become, if the materials be
sufficient, the centre and basis of the resuscitated community.

I am not astonished, let me add, at the extravagant love which they
show towards this instrument of fecundity. If every other race did not
jointly labour to destroy them, this truly prodigious mother would make
them masters of the world,--nay, what do I say?--its only inhabitants.
The fish alone would survive; but the insect world would perish. It
suffices to remember that the queen-bee takes a year to accomplish
what the termite mother accomplishes in a day. Through her means they
would swallow up Everybody; but they are feeble and savoury, and it is
Everybody which swallows up them.

When the species of termites which live and dwell in the woods
unfortunately approach near our habitations, there is no means of
arresting their ravages. They work with a truly incredible vigour and
rapidity. They have been known in one night to eat their way through
the leg of a table, then through the thickness of the table itself,
descending through the leg on the opposite side.

The reader can easily imagine the effect produced by such toil as this
on the joists and framework of a house. The worst of it is, that a long
time may elapse before their ravages are detected. We continue to rely
upon supports which suddenly, one fine morning, crumble away; we sleep
peacefully under roofs which to-morrow will cease to exist.

The town of Valencia, in New Grenada, undermined by the subterranean
galleries these insects have excavated in the earth, is now literally
suspended upon their dangerous catacombs.

We have ourselves seen, at Rochelle, the formidable beginnings of the
ravages they executed in the timber-work of a quarter of the town where
they were introduced by foreign ships. Whole buildings are found eaten
up, though apparently sound,--all the wood hollowed and tunnelled,
even to the banisters of the staircase: do not rest upon them, or they
will yield and give way under your hand. These terrible nibblers seem
willing, however, to confine themselves to one district of the town,
and not to invade the remainder. Otherwise, this historical city,
important still through its marine and its commerce, would be reduced
to the condition of Herculaneum and Pompeii.

[Illustration]




[Illustration: II.--INSECTS AT WORK.]


[Illustration]


CHAPTER II.

THE ANTS:--THEIR DOMESTIC ECONOMY--THEIR NUPTIALS.


The ants enjoy a superiority over all other insects, inasmuch as they
are less specialized by their mode of life, their nourishment, and the
instruments of their industry. Generally, they adapt themselves to
all conditions, and work in all climates; nor in all Nature do more
energetic agents in purification and cleansing exist. They are, so to
say, the factotums of Nature.

The termites, at least the majority of them, work in the darkness,
under the earth; the ants both above and below.

Like the termites, they build, at least in tropical countries, the
most remarkable edifices,--domes under which their chrysalides enjoy
the warmth of the sun without being injured by its scorching rays.
But these are not fortresses; the ants have no need of them; for in
the tropical regions they are the sovereigns and tyrants of all other
beings. The exterminating _carabi_, the invading _necrophori_, which
play among us, as insects, the _rôle_ of the eagle and the vulture,
scarcely venture to make their appearance in the burning latitudes
where the ants hold sway. Everything which lies on the earth's surface
they immediately devour. Lund, in his _Mémoire sur les Fourmis_, says
that he had scarcely time to pick up a bird which he had seen drop. The
ants were already on the spot, and had seized upon it. The sanitary
police is performed by them with an implacable and energetic exactitude.

The great ants of the South are much more savage than our European
species; and feeling themselves sovereigns and mistresses, feared by
all, dreading none, they march forward imperturbably, without suffering
any obstacle to divert their course. If a house stand in their way,
they enter, and all that is alive within it--even the enormous,
venomous, and formidable spiders, ay, and small mammiferous animals
also--is devoured. Men give place to them. And if you cannot quit your
house, you have reason to fear their invasion. Once, at Barbadoes,
a long column was seen defiling for several days in formidable
numbers. All the earth was black with them, and the torrent poured
forward straight in the direction of the houses. They were crushed
by hundreds, without heeding their losses; myriads were destroyed,
but they continued to advance. No wall, no ditch, was of any service;
water even could not arrest their progress: for it is known that they
construct living bridges, by fastening on to one another in clusters
and garlands. Fortunately, the plan was adopted of sowing the ground in
advance of them with numerous tiny volcanoes, small heaps of gunpowder,
which were fired at intervals beneath them, and exploding, swept away
whole files, and dispersed the rest,--covering them with fire and
smoke, and blinding them with dust. This scheme proved successful.
At least, the ants turned aside a little, and moved in a different
direction.

       *       *       *       *       *

Linnæus calls the termites the scourge of the two Indies; and we might
equally well bestow this appellation on the ants, if we considered only
the havoc they commit among the labours and cultivation of man. In a
few hours they strip a large orangery, denuding it of every leaf. In a
single night they devastate a field of cotton, manioc, or sugar-cane.
Behold their crimes! Their virtues? they destroy to a still greater
extent all things that might prove hurtful to man, and but for them
certain countries would be uninhabitable.

       *       *       *       *       *

As for our European species, I cannot see that they do the slightest
harm, either to man, or to the plants he cultivates. Far from it, they
deliver him from an infinity of little insects. I have frequently seen
long files of them, with each carrying in his mouth a very small grub
as a contribution to the food stores of the republic. Such a picture
should ensure them the benedictions of every honourable agriculturist.

The mason-ants, which work in and entirely under the earth, are
difficult to observe. But the "carpenters" may be easily followed, at
least in the upper part of their constructions. The cupola of their
edifice being subject to dilapidation, they are constantly under a
necessity of repairing and re-excavating it. With the small amount of
soil which they make use of, they mix the leaves and spines of the
fir, and the catkins of the pine. If they meet with a bent; twisted,
and knotty twig, it is a treasure; they employ it as an arcade, or,
better still, as an ogive; for the pointed arch is the most solid.
The numerous avenues which lead to the surface spread out in radii
like a fan; they start from a concentric point, and extend to the
circumference. The mass of the edifice is divided into low but spacious
apartments. The largest is in the centre and under the dome; it is also
the most elevated, and destined, apparently, for public communications.
There, at all hours, you will find a knot of busy citizens, who, by
the rapid contact of their antennæ (a kind of electric telegraph) seem
to relate to one another the news, and exchange opinions or mutual
directions. It is a kind of forum.

There is nothing more curious than to observe the various occupations
and movements of this great people. While some, as purveyors, go in
search of grubs, hunt insects, or collect materials, others, sedentary
in their habits, attend entirely to domestic cares and the education
of the young. An immense and an incessant occupation, if we may judge
from the continual movement of the nurses round the cradles. Let but a
raindrop fall, or a single sunbeam penetrate, and a general stir takes
place, a general removal of all the children of the colony, and this
with an ardour which never wearies. You may see them tenderly taking up
the big children--which weigh as much as themselves--and transferring
them from stage to stage, to rest them in a convenient position.

This scale of heat, extending over forty degrees, what is it but a
thermometer?

But more remains. The cares of alimentation, of what one might call
"suckling," are much more complicated than among the bees. The eggs
must receive a nourishing humidity from the mouth of the nurses. The
larvæ take the beakful. And the young one which has worn through its
husk and become a nymph, would not have strength enough to emerge
from it if the attentive guardians were not at hand to open the husk,
release the little tenant, and initiate it into the light. In the
artificial ant-hills, which we have procured for the sake of closer
examination, we have even succeeded in observing a circumstance which
Huber regrets he had been unable to discover.

Some light movements which the infant communicates to its
swaddling-clothes give warning that its hour is come. We took great
pleasure in watching the nurses seated upon their hind limbs like
little motionless, upright fairies, plainly discerning under the silent
veil the first yearning for liberty.

As in every superior race, the young comes into the world weak, and
frail, and incapable of effort. Its first steps are so infirm that
at every movement it falls upon its knees. It requires, as it were,
to be kept in leading-strings. Its great vitality is only shown by
an incessant demand for food. Therefore, when the heat is great, and
numerous swaddling-husks must be opened daily, the new-born are all
lodged in the same part of the city.

[Illustration: NEST OF RUSSET ANTS.]

One day, however, I saw a young ant thrust forth its head, still
somewhat pale, at a gate of the city, then step across the threshold,
and march along the summit of the ant-hill. The escapade, however, was
not long permitted. A nurse encountering the fugitive, seized it by
the top of its head, and conducted it gently towards a neighbouring
entrance.

The child resisted; it suffered itself to be dragged along, and on
the way coming in contact with a small piece of wood, profited by it
to stiffen itself, and exhaust its conductor's strength. The latter,
always keeping its temper, let go for a moment, executed a flank
movement, and then returned to the charge, until its nursling, tired
out, was compelled to yield obedience.

As soon as the young are strong enough, they have to be brought
acquainted with the interior labyrinth of the city, the suburbs, the
avenues which lead to the outer world, and the neighbouring roads. Then
they are trained to hunt, are accustomed to provide for themselves, to
live hap-hazard and upon little or any kind of food. Temperance is the
basis of the whole commonwealth.

The ant, not being fastidious, but accepting all descriptions of food,
is from this very cause the less anxious, restless, and selfish. It is
very wrong to call it a _miser_. Far from being so, it seems solely
intent upon multiplying in its city the number of its co-partners.
In its generous maternal care of those whom it has not begotten, in
its solicitude for those little ones of yesterday which to-day become
young citizens, originates a feeling quite novel and very rare among
insects,--that of fraternity. (See the works of Latreille and Huber.)

The obscurest and most curious point of their education is,
undoubtedly, the communication of language, which reminds the observer
of the forms of freemasonry. It enables them to transmit really
complicated directions to their legions, and to change in a moment the
march of a whole column, the action of an entire populace.

This language principally consists in the touch of the antennæ, or in
a light collision of the mandibles. They urge (or perhaps persuade) by
blows of the head against the thorax. Finally, they sometimes carry
off the auditor, who makes no resistance, and transport him to some
designated place or object. In this case, which undoubtedly is both
difficult to believe and explain, the convinced auditor unites with
the other, and both together carry off other witnesses, which in their
turn perform upon others--the number continually increasing--the same
operation. Our parliamentary phrases, "to carry away the crowd," "to
transport the hearer," are by no means mere metaphors among the ants!

To this lively gesticulation they join many other scarcely explicable
movements,--such as cavalcades, in which they march mounted one upon
another, exchanging gay defiances and light blows upon the cheeks.
Then they rear themselves upright, and contend by couples, seizing
upon a leg, a mandible, or an antenna. Naturalists have spoken of
these as their pastimes, but I know not what to think. Among so busy,
and obviously serious a family, this gymnastic exercise has perhaps a
hygienic object which we do not understand.

       *       *       *       *       *

We had so well managed our prisoners that they had become habituated
to their new domicile, and toiled under our eyes as they would have
done in their own city. They rebuilt for themselves a small town in
miniature, with gates whose number they carefully augmented, especially
on very hot days, for the purpose of giving air to their little ones,
whom they took care to place near the openings.

In the evening they conscientiously proceeded, according to their
invariable custom, to shut up the gates, as if always afraid of some
nocturnal invasion of idle vagabonds. A spectacle of deep interest,
which we frequently took occasion to enjoy in front of the great
swarming ant-hills.

Nor could there be a more varied picture; on all sides, and at great
distances, you might see them coming in long files, each bearing some
little article,--one a long straw, another a pretty pine nut-cup, or
(according to the country) a black needle-like leaf of the fir-tree.
These, like little woodcutters returning at close of day, brought back
imperceptible bundles of twigs; others, which seemed empty-handed,
were but the more heavily loaded, having just taken prisoners some
wood-lice, which they carried home for the evening meal of the little
ones.

At the approaches of the City, the points where the ascent commenced,
it was a pleasure to see the vigour, the zeal, and the ardour
with which they dragged up such heavy materials. If one let go,
exhausted, two or three others succeeded. And the joist or beam, full
of animation, and apparently alive, gradually ascended. Skill and
foresight supplied the want of strength. If checked at any particular
point, they turned and advanced in a somewhat different direction,
ascending a little higher than was necessary; then they let down the
weight exactly over the opening which they wished to conceal; a quick
light movement made the mass pirouette, and it fell into its place.

[Illustration]

Numerous problems in statics and mechanics were solved by a felicitous
audacity and with a great economy of effort. By degrees all was
secured. The vast dome, embracing with a soft and delicate curve a
great nation of workers in its lawful repose, offered nothing to the
sight, neither door nor window, and appeared to be a simple heap of
tiny fragments of fir. Do I mean that all slumbered in full confidence?
It would be wrong to think so. A few sentinels wandered to and fro; at
the lightest touch of a switch, or the rustle of a leaf, the guards
would issue forth, perambulate the exterior of their city, and when
reassured would re-enter, but, undoubtedly, to continue their watch,
and remain upon duty.

       *       *       *       *       *

The most surprising scene at which any one can be present is a marriage
of ants.

Of all follies, as everybody knows, the worst are those of the wise.
The honourable, economical, and respectable republic accordingly
presents (one single day yearly, it is true) a prodigious spectacle--of
love? of madness?--we do not know, but certainly of vertigo, and
to speak plainly, of terror. M. Huber saw in it the appearance of a
national holiday. What a holiday! And what a scene of intoxication! But
no; nothing human can give an idea of this boiling effervescence.

I watched it on one occasion, between six and seven o'clock in the
evening. The day had been one of heavy showers and warm gleams of
light. The horizon was lowering, and yet the air calm. It was Nature's
pause before resuming her storms of rain.

Upon a low sloping roof I saw descend quite a deluge of winged insects,
which seemed stunned, confused, delirious. To describe their agitation,
their disorderly movements, their somersaults and shocks to arrive
more quickly at the goal, would be impossible. Many rested, and loved.
The greater number whirled round and round without stopping. All were
so eager to live, that their very eagerness proved an obstacle. This
feverish desire produced a feeling of alarm.

A terrible idyllic poem!

It was impossible to make out what they wished. Were they enjoying
a festival of love? Were they devouring one another? Right through
this distraught multitude of _fiancés_ who had lost their senses
passed other and wingless ants, which threw themselves without mercy
on the most embarrassed individuals, bit them, and treated them so
severely, that we thought we could see them crunching the lovers.
But no! They wanted nothing more than to force them to obey, and to
recall them to their senses. Their vivid pantomime was the counsel of
prudence translated into action. The wingless ants were the wise and
irreproachable nurses, who, having no children, bring up those of the
others, and bear all the burden of the toil and management of the city.

       *       *       *       *       *

These virgins maintained a surveillance over the amorous and slothful,
and rigidly inspected the marriage-festival as a public act, which,
every year, renews the nation. Their natural fear was lest the winged
fools should be wooed and won elsewhere, and create other tribes,
without any thought of the parent community.

Numbers of the winged ones submitted, and allowed themselves to
be carried below towards their country and virtue. But many tore
themselves away, and flew afar, obedient only to the dictates of love
and caprice.

It was an astonishing vision, a fantastic dream, which can never be
forgotten.

In the morning nothing remained as a memorial of the excesses of the
preceding evening, except the fragments of some severed wings, in which
no one could have divined the trace of a unique _soirée d'amour_.

[Illustration]




[Illustration: III.--THE ANTS: THEIR FLOCKS AND THEIR SLAVES.]


[Illustration]


CHAPTER III.

THE ANTS:--THEIR FLOCKS AND THEIR SLAVES.


When I learned for the first time, from the pages of Huber, the strange
and prodigious fact that certain ants keep slaves, I was greatly
astonished--as everybody has been by this singular revelation--but I
was especially saddened and wounded.

What! I turn aside from the history of man in search of innocence. I
hope at least to discover among the brute creation the even-handed
justice of nature, the primitive rectitude of the plan of creation.
I seek in this people, whom I had previously loved and esteemed for
their laboriousness and temperateness, the severe and touching image of
republican virtues--and I find among them this thing without a name!

What a joy, what a triumph for the partisans of slavery, for all the
friends of evil! Hell and tyranny, laugh ye, and make merry! A black
spot is revealed in the brightness of Nature.

I had flung aside Huber, and no book had ever seemed to me more
hateful. Pardon, illustrious observer! your grandfather and your father
had enraptured and charmed me. The first of the clan--Huber, the great
historian of the bees--has inspired with new warmth the religion of
man, and lifted up his heart. But Huber of the ants has broken mine.

It was, nevertheless, a duty to resume my perusal of his work, and
examine it more attentively. An immoral, a Machiavellian, and a
perverse insect is worthy of investigation.

But, in the first place, let us make a distinction. A portion of these
pretended slaves may only be cattle.

It is enough to look at the ants, thin to an excess, brilliant, and
varnished, to conclude that they are the driest and most parched of
beings. Their singular acridity has been established by chemical
researches, and science has contrived to extract the mordant formic
acid from their bodies. Sometimes, when they are in peril, they hurl
it at their enemies like a venom. Not a few species employ it in
drying, blackening, and almost burning the trees where they establish
their abodes. Is not a substance so corrosive for others equally
dangerous to themselves? I should be tempted to think so, and to this
extreme acridity should attribute their greediness for honey and other
lubricating substances. I submit my hypothesis to the consideration of
the scientific.

The ants of Mexico, in a specially favoured climate, have two classes
of workmen,--one charged with the duty of seeking provisions; the
other, inactive and sedentary, entrusted with the work of elaborating
them, and making out of them a kind of honey for the common nourishment.

The ants of our temperate climates, for the most part incapable of
making honey, satisfy their imperative need of it by licking the
honey-dew found upon certain grubs, which, without labour, by the mere
fact of their organization, extract saccharine juices from all species
of plants. The transmission of this honey to the ants is effected
quietly, and, as it were, by mutual agreement.

It operates by a kind of titillation or gentle traction, such as we
exercise upon the cow. These grubs, placed at the extreme limit of
animal life--viviparous in summer, oviparous in autumn--are very humble
creatures, and prodigiously inferior in intelligence to the ants. The
magnifying-glass reveals them to the observer as always bent, and
always engaged in feeding. Their attitude is that of the cattle. They
are, in truth, the milch-cows of the ants; and that they may always
profit by them, the latter frequently transport them to their ant-hill,
where they live together on admirably good terms. The ants take great
care of the grubs, superintend the incubation, and nourish the adults
with their favourite vegetables.

In situations where great difficulty would be experienced in
transporting and installing them, they empark them on the ground
by throwing up around their field of pasture a fence of twigs and
cylinders of earth. This may justly be termed the grazing-field, the
_chalet_ of the ants; which repair to it at certain hours to milk
their herds, and sometimes carry their young thither for the easier
distribution of the food. I am frequently present, especially in the
evening, at these Dutch-like scenes, which have hitherto found no Paul
Potter among the ants to depict them.

Observe that these grubs, whether transported to the ant-hill or
emparked on their favourite feeding-ground, possess the inestimable
advantage of having their safety guaranteed by the redoubtable
republic. The "lion of the grubs" (as a small worm is called), and
other wild beasts, if they dared approach the herd, would feel very
cruelly their strong mandibles and burning formic acid.

So far, then, we have no reproach to make; the grubs are cattle, and
not slaves. The ants do exactly what we do; they make use of the
privilege of superior beings, but exercise it with more gentleness and
management than does man.

But we now come to a more delicate consideration. There are two
kinds of ants, of a tolerable size, but otherwise of no peculiar
distinction, which employ as servants, nurses, and cooks, certain
small ants endowed with more skill and ingenuity.

This strange fact, which ought apparently to change our ideas of animal
morality, was discovered early in the present century. Pierre Huber,
the son of the celebrated observer of the manners and habits of bees,
walking one day in a field near Geneva, saw on the ground a strong
detachment of reddish-coloured ants on the march, and bethought himself
of following them. On the flanks of the column, as if to dress its
ranks, a few speed to and fro in eager haste. After marching for about
a quarter of an hour, they halt before an ant-hill belonging to the
small black ant, and a desperate struggle takes place at its gates.

A small number of the blacks offer a brave resistance; but the great
majority of the people thus assailed flee through the gates remotest
from the scene of combat, carrying away their young. It was just these
which were the cause of the strife; what the blacks most justly feared
was the theft of their offspring. And soon the assailants, who had
succeeded in penetrating into, the city, might be seen emerging from it
loaded with the young black progeny. It was an exact resemblance of a
descent of slave-dealers on the coast of Africa.

The red ants, encumbered with their living booty, left the unfortunate
city in the desolation of its great loss, and resumed the road to
their own habitation, whither their astonished and almost breathless
observer followed them. But how was his astonishment augmented when, at
the-threshold of the red ants' community, a small population of black
ants came forward to receive the plunder, welcoming with visible joy
these children of their own race, which, undoubtedly, would perpetuate
it in the foreign land.

This, then, is a mixed city, where the strong warrior-ants live in a
perfectly good understanding with the little blacks. But what do the
latter? Huber speedily discovered that, in effect, they do everything.
They alone build; they alone bring up the young red ants and the
captives of their own species; they alone administer the affairs of the
community, provide its supplies of food, wait upon and nourish their
red masters, who, like great infant giants, indolently allow their
little attendants to feed them at the mouth. No other occupations
are theirs but war, theft, and kidnapping. No other movements in the
intervals than to wander about lazily, and bask in the sunshine at the
door of their barracks.

The most curious circumstance is, that these civilized helots really
love their great barbarous warriors, and carefully tend their children,
gladly and cheerfully perform their tasks of servitude, and, more,
encourage the extension of their slavery and the abduction of the
little blacks. Does not all this wear the appearance of a free adhesion
to the established order of things?

And who knows but that the joy and pride of governing the strong and
tyrannizing over their tyrants, may be for the little blacks an inner
liberty--an exquisite and sovereign freedom--far superior to any
pleasure they could have derived from the equality of their native
country?

Huber made an experiment. He was desirous of observing what would be
the result if the great red ants found themselves without servants, and
if they would know how to supply their own wants. He thought, perhaps,
that the degenerate creatures might be inspired and uplifted by the
maternal love which is so strong among the ants.

He put a few into a glass case, and with them some _nymphs_.
Instinctively they began to move them about and to cradle them
after their fashion; but soon discovered (big and robust as they,
nevertheless, were) that the weight was too much for them; they
accordingly left them on the ground, and coolly abandoned them. In
truth, they abandoned themselves. Huber put some honey for them in a
corner, so that they had nothing to do but to take it. Miserable the
degradation, cruel the punishment with which slavery afflicts the
enslavers! They did not touch it; they seemed to know nothing; they had
become so grossly ignorant and indolent that they could no longer feed
themselves. Some of them died from starvation, with food before them!

Huber, to complete the experiment, then introduced into the case one
black ant. The presence of this sagacious helot changed the face of
things, and re-established life and order. He went straight to the
honey; he fed the great dying simpletons; he dug a hole in the ground,
placed in it the eggs, prepared the incubation, watched over the
nymphs (or _maillots_), and restored to life and happiness the little
people, who, becoming industrious in their turn, seconded the efforts
of their nurse. Felicitous influence of genius! A single individual had
re-created the city.

The observer then understood that with such a superiority of
intelligence these helots might, in reality, wear the chains of
servitude very lightly, and perhaps govern their masters. A persevering
study proved to him that such was, indeed, the case. The little blacks
in many things carry a moral authority whose signs are very visible;
they do not, for example, permit the great red ants to go out alone on
useless expeditions, and compel them to return into the city. Nor are
they even at liberty to go out in a body, if their wise little helots
do not think the weather favourable, if they fear a storm, or if the
day is far advanced. When an excursion proves unsuccessful, and they
return without children, the little blacks are stationed at the gates
of the city to forbid their ingress, and send them back to the combat;
nay more, you may see them take the cowards by the collar, and force
them to retrace their route.

These are astounding facts; but such as they are, they were seen by our
illustrious observer. He could not trust his eyes, and summoned one of
the greatest naturalists of Sweden--M. Jurine--to his side, to make new
investigations, and decide whether he had been deceived. This witness,
and others who afterwards pursued the same course of experiments, found
that his discoveries were entirely accurate.

Yet--shall I dare to confess it?--after all these weighty testimonies
I still doubted. Let me say, I _hoped_ that the fact, without
being absolutely false, had not been correctly observed. But on a
certain occasion I saw it--with my own eyes saw it--in the park of
Fontainebleau. I was accompanied by an illustrious philosopher, an
excellent observer, and he too saw exactly what I saw.

It was half-past four in the afternoon of a very warm day. From a
pile of stones emerged a column of from four to five hundred red or
reddish ants, precisely the same colour as the wing-cases of the
gnat. They marched rapidly towards a piece of turf, kept in order by
their sergeants or "pivot-men," whom we saw on the flanks, and who
would not permit any one to straggle. (This is a circumstance known to
everybody who has seen a file of ants on the march.) But the novel and
astonishing thing to me was, that gradually those who were at the head
drew near to each other, and advanced only by turning; they passed and
repassed the whirling crowd, describing concentric circles; a manoeuvre
evidently fit to produce enthusiasm, and to augment energy,--each, by
contact, electrifying himself with the ardour of all.

Suddenly the revolving mass seemed to sink and disappear. There was no
sign of ant-hills in the turf; but after a while we detected an almost
imperceptible orifice, through which we saw them vanish in less time
than it takes me to write these words. We asked ourselves if it was an
entrance to their domicile; if they had re-entered their city. In a
minute at the utmost they gave us a reply, and showed us our mistake.
They issued in a throng, each carrying a nymph on its mandibles.

From the short time they had taken, it was evident that they had a
previous knowledge of the localities, the place where the eggs were
deposited, the time when they were to assemble, and the degree of
resistance they had to expect. Perhaps it was not their first journey.

The little blacks on whom the red ants made this _razzia_ sallied out
in considerable numbers; and I truly pitied them. They did not attempt
to fight. They seemed frightened and stunned. They only endeavoured to
delay the ravishers by clinging to them. A red ant was thus arrested;
but another red one, who was free, relieved him of his burden, and
thereupon the black ant relaxed his grasp. In fine, it was a pitiful
scene for the blacks. They offered no serious resistance. The five
hundred red ants succeeded in carrying off nearly three hundred
children. At two or three feet from the hole, the blacks ceased to
pursue them, abandoned all hope, and resigned themselves to their fate.
All this did not occupy ten minutes between the departure and the
return. The two parties were very unequal. It was evidently a facile
abuse of strength,--very probably an outrage often repeated,--a tyranny
of the great, who levied a tribute of children from their poor little
neighbours.

[Illustration]

Let us now endeavour to understand this shocking and hideous fact.
It is peculiar to certain species; it is a particular incident, an
exceptional case, yet related on the whole to a general law of the
life of the ants. Their societies are founded on the principle of the
_division of labour_, and the _speciality of functions_. The ant-hill,
in its normal state, comprehends, as we know, three classes:--

1st. The great multitude, composed of laborious virgins, who confine
themselves to the love of the children of the commonwealth, and perform
all the work of the community;

2nd. The fecund females, feeble, soft, and, unintelligent; and,

3rd. Some little shrivelled males, who are born only to die.

The first class is, in truth and reality, the people. But in this
people you find two industrial divisions, two great bodies of workmen.
The one executes all the more arduous tasks, such as the transportation
of heavy burdens, and the far and perilous hunt after provisions,--and,
at need, carry on war. The other, nearly always at home, receives
the materials, superintends the domestic economy, and undertakes the
principal duty of the republic,--the education of the young.

The two corporations, that of the purveyors and warriors,--that of the
nurses and tutors,--are, in every tribe, of unequal size, but identical
in species, colour, and organization.

Between the big warriors and the little industrials the moral equality
seems perfect. If there were any difference, we should say that the
class of the little ants, who build up the city and train up the
people, is the more important, the life, genius, and soul of the state;
the one which of itself could, at need, constitute the republic.

M. Huber has discovered two species (the red-brown and red) who do
not possess this essential class, this fundamental element of the ant
communities. It would not surprise us if the accessory or warrior
class were wanting. But here, in reality, it is the basis which we
find deficient,--the vital foundation,--the _raison d'être_. We are,
therefore, not so much astonished at the depraved resource by which
these red ants subsist, as at the monstrous lacuna which compels them
to adopt it.

There is a mystery in the matter which we cannot at present explain,
but which would probably be cleared up if we could arrive at a
knowledge of the general history of the species, its changes, and
migrations. Who does not know the modification effected in animals,
both externally and internally, in their forms and their manners, by
the displacements they undergo? Who, for example, would recognize
the brother of our bull-dog--of the St. Bernard--of the giant dog of
Persia, which could strangle lions--in that abortion, the Havannah dog,
so weak and frail, that even in a torrid climate Nature has clothed it
with a thick fleece, which conceals it, and converts it into an enigma?

The animal, when transplanted, may become a monster.

The ants also may have had their revolutions, their moral and physical
changes, in proportion, as the globe, everywhere becoming inhabitable,
has favoured their migrations. Several species, in the beautiful
American climates, have preserved the honey-making industry; our own
are ignorant of it, and are compelled to have recourse to the grubs;
thence arises an art and a progress,--the art of breeding, preserving,
and pasturing cattle.

Some species may have advanced, others retrograded. And it is thus I
should explain the kidnapping habits of the red ants. Probably they
belong to expatriated and demoralized classes--fragments of decayed
communities which have lost their arts,--and which could not live but
for this barbarous and desperate method of slavery. They no longer
possess the artistic and teaching class, without which all peoples
perish. Reduced to a military career, they could not live two days if
they did not take unto themselves _souls_. Therefore, that they may not
perish, they carry off the little black souls, which tend them, it is
true, but also govern them. And this not only in the city itself, but
in its external relations,--deciding or adjourning their expeditions,
and regulating their campaigns; while the red, far from regulating the
affairs of peace, do not seem even to comprehend them.

Singular triumph of intelligence! Invincible power of genius!

[Illustration]




[Illustration: IV.--EXTERMINATION OF THE COMMUNITY.]


[Illustration]


CHAPTER IV.

THE ANTS:--CIVIL WAR--EXTERMINATION OF THE COMMUNITY.


It is the tyrant's punishment that he could not, even if he would,
easily deliver his captive. So long as my nightingale sings, I know
that he cares little for his cage, and I bear his captivity lightly;
but when the time of song has gone by, I share his melancholy, and the
question again and again recurs to my mind, "How can I release him?" He
no longer knows how to fly; in truth, is almost without wings. If I set
him free, he would perish before he had gone two steps. The liberties
which he takes at Paris in a large chamber, and here, at Fontainebleau,
in a small garden, are, really, of but little importance. He does not
profit by them; almost always remains concealed in a gooseberry-bush,
dreaming and listening. The strains he hears,--the lively songs of the
warblers, the voices of love and, maternity,--augment, I believe, his
sadness; so much so, that here, in the open air, under the blue sky,
enjoying a relative degree of freedom, he loses his appetite, and will
eat no longer. We bethought ourselves of giving him his natural diet,
and of feeding him with the insects on which he lives in the woods. But
here is another difficulty. Who would not shrink from hunting after
and carrying living victims to be devoured? We preferred to give him
insects _in futuro_, the eggs of insects, and inert sleeping nymphæ. We
carried on a traffic in them at Fontainebleau, where our aristocratic
pheasants, a feudal race, do not deign to eat anything but ants' eggs.

On the evening of the 8th of June, there was brought to me from the
forest a great clod of earth, mixed with dry twigs, and especially with
tiny _débris_ of the Northern trees, such as the needles of the firs,
or little prickly leaves resembling thorns.

In the midst, the inhabitants pell-mell, of every size and grade, eggs,
larvæ, nymphæ, diminutive artisans, great ants, which seemed to be
warriors and defenders; finally, a few females which had just assumed
their wedding garments, the wings which they wear for the moment
of love. Thus it turned out to be a very complete specimen of the
republic, varied, but well distinguished by one identical sign,--all
this brownish-coloured populace having on their corselets a dull red
spot. As for the classes and professions of the ants, they were easily
characterized by their very habitations, notwithstanding the general
confusion. They were carpenter-ants, of the species which prop the
upper stories of their buildings with timber framework.

Though their situation was so completely altered, my ants were in no
wise prostrated. They continued their different tasks, of which the
principal was, to protect the eggs and nymphæ from the action of a too
powerful sun.

The general commotion had flung them out of their subterranean cradles,
and exposed them on the surface. The little ants busied themselves
actively in rectifying the disorder. The great ones went and came, and
circled about a great earthen vase which contained the dismembered
fragment of the republic. They marched with a firm step, and recoiled
before no obstacles. We could not frighten them. If we placed in their
way any impediment,--a bit of twig or our finger,--they crouched upon
their loins, manoeuvred with great address their tiny arms, and patted
us like a young kitten.

In their revolutions around our vase, they encountered upon the sand
some ashy-black ants which had taken possession of our garden, and
constructed underneath its soil a large establishment. The latter do
not have recourse to timber, but build in masonry,--cementing the earth
with their saliva, and drying and seasoning it with their formic acid.

The spot was rendered peculiarly agreeable to them by its rose trees,
apple and peach trees, which furnished them with abundant herds of
gnats, that they might extract honey-dew for themselves and their
little ones.

The rencontre was not very friendly. Though among the big carpenters
were some ants of a sufficiently diminutive stature, they wholly
differed from the black through their long legs and the red-spotted
corselet. They were pitiless. Perhaps they suspected the blacks had
been sent out as spies, to explore the ground, and lay snares for the
emigrant colony which had just been disembarked. At all events, the big
carpenters slew the little masons.

The act was followed by terrible and wholly unexpected results. Our
vase was unfortunately placed near an apple-tree covered with those
woolly grubs which are the despair of the gardener and the joy of the
ants. Our masons had just taken possession of the precious sugary herd,
and encamped themselves in the very roots of the tree, within reach of
the invaluable booty. There they were, under the ground, a complete
nation, an infinite number.

The massacre took place about twelve o'clock. At a quarter past eleven,
or a little later, all the black legions were warned, aroused, erect,
and ascending from their subterraneous habitations, poured out through
every gate. The sand was hidden beneath the long black columns; our
paths were all alive. The sun, shining full upon the little garden,
stimulated and burned up the multitude, which only quickened their
pace. Living always underground, they have necessarily a very
susceptible brain. The furious heat, and especially their fear lest the
invading giants should pounce upon their families, impelled them to
confront death unflinchingly.

And a death which seemed certain; for each of the big carpenters, as
far as size and thews were concerned, was well worth eight or ten of
the little masons. At the first collision we saw a big ant fall upon a
brown dwarf, and annihilate it at one blow.

The masons, however, had the advantage of numbers. But what of
that? Suppose the front ranks were checked in the assault, and
perished,--then the second, then the third,--if the army, still
advancing, did but furnish the enemy with new victims? Such was our
apprehension. All our fear was for the little aborigines of our
garden, disturbed by that invasion of a foreign people which we had
brought upon them,--a people ill-bred and brutal, which, without
any provocation, had marked their first arrival by slaughtering the
inhabitants of the country.

But it must be acknowledged that we had compared only the material
forces of the two armies, and had not taken into account their moral
strength.

We recognized at the first onset an astonishing amount of skill and
intelligence on the part of the little blacks. By sixes, they seized
upon one of their gigantic opponents, each holding and neutralizing
a claw; then two leaped on its back, and firmly grasped its antennæ,
until the giant, bound in every limb, was reduced to an inert body. It
seemed to lose its senses; to grow dull and stupid; no longer to be
conscious of its enormous superiority of strength. Others then rushed
to the attack, and, without incurring any danger, stabbed him above and
below.

The scene, regarded from a near point of view, was frightful. Whatever
admiration the little ones merited for their heroic courage, their
fury made one shudder. It was impossible to see without a feeling of
pity these poor garotted giants, dragged miserably to and fro,--fired
at from right and left,--floating as in an open sea on these billows
of rage and impetuosity,--blind, powerless, and incapable of
resistance,--like lambs beneath the butcher's knife.

       *       *       *       *       *

We longed to separate them. But how was it to be done? We were in
the presence of infinity. A man's strength was nothing when tested
against such multitudes. We might have proceeded to the extremity of
a universal deluge,--a moment's _noyade_[P]--but even this would have
proved insufficient. They would not have let go their death-grasp; and
when the torrent had flowed by, the massacre would have continued. The
sole remedy, and an atrocious one--worse even than the evil--would
have been to have burned alive, with a wisp of flaming straw, the two
contending hosts, the conquerors and the conquered.

[Footnote P: The wholesale drownings which took place at Lyons during
the Reign of Terror were known as _noyades_.--Translator.]

We were particularly struck by the fact that, after all, it was only a
very few of the big ants that were garotted and captured; and that if
those which remained free had fallen upon the assailants, they might
easily have wrought a frightful carnage, their action being so rapid,
and one blow inflicting death. But no such idea occurred to them.
They ran hither and thither in a panic of fear, and rushed into the
very throes of danger, into the thickest press of the hostile masses.
Alas, they were not only vanquished, but seemed to have lost their
senses! While the little ants, feeling themselves at home, on their
native soil, showed so firm a front, the gigantic foreigners,--without
any stake in the ground,--a desperate fragment of an annihilated
city,--wholly ignorant of the country whither they had been
transplanted,--recognized that everything was antagonistic to them,
that a snare was hidden at every step, that no refuge was open to their
scattered forces. Ah, woful condition of a people whose fatherland has
perished, and who have lost their gods!

       *       *       *       *       *

Yes, I excuse them. We ourselves were almost terrified at the sight
of those legions of death,--that formidable army of little black
skeletons which had all escaladed the earthen vase, and in that
confined region, choked and burning, crowded and furious, mounted one
upon another. As the discomfiture of the giants became a thing assured,
horrible appetites were revealed among the blacks. An opportune moment
arrived. It was a dramatic stroke! In their mute but terribly eloquent
pantomime, we heard this cry: "Their young ones are fat!"

The gluttonous army of the lean threw themselves on the children. The
latter, belonging to a superior race, were sufficiently heavy; and
more, their oblong nymph-like envelope, round and smooth, offered no
points of vantage. Two, three, four little blacks, by combining their
efforts, succeeded, though not without difficulty, in carrying a single
one of these up the smooth sides of the earthen vase. Then they came
abruptly to a terrible resolve,--to seize upon the _maillots_, to bear
off the naked children. It was no easy matter, for the little one clung
stoutly, and its interwoven limbs were, so to speak, soldered together;
in such wise that this violent and sudden development could only be
effected by severe wounds,--in fact, by quartering them. The black ants
then carried them off, torn and palpitating.

At the commencement of this kidnapping of children, we had expected
to see some such spectacle as a _razzia_ of slaves, which is only too
common among both men and ants. But we now understood that something
more was meditated. In drawing them cruelly from their outer coat,
which is to them the very necessity of life, it became too evident that
their captors cared very little whether they lived or did not live. It
was for their flesh they seized them; as a tender prey for the young
ones they had left at home, the fat children being delivered up alive
to the furious appetites of the lean!

To understand the horror of the scene, you must know the true nature
of the large eggs of the ants,--improperly called eggs, but in reality
their nymphs or chrysalides,--diminutive organized ants which, under a
thin veil, strengthen their tender, delicate, and still soft existence.
They remain in this envelope for the purpose of accomplishing a
progress of successive solidification and colouring.

The very fine and wonderfully soft web which they weave for themselves
is, as we know, of a dull white, lightly shaded with a delicate yellow,
which, when stronger, turns into a nankeen tint. Open it shortly
before the emergence of the perfect insect, and you find a being of
exactly the same colour, all folded and rolled up in itself like the
human embryo in its mother's womb. When stretched out, the aspect of
the future ant is easily recognized, but it singularly differs from it
in character: the head is quite innocent; lift up the antennæ, which,
in this condition, resemble ears, and the young white head reminds
you of that of a little white rabbit. The eyes alone,--two black
points,--marked with sufficient prominency, indicate the next stage of
colouring. For the rest, there is nothing to forewarn you that this
little, weak, and denuded animal, so touching and so interesting, will
become in a few days the black being so full of energy, so keen with
life, so fierce in blood, which will traverse the earth in a fury of
labour and burning activity.

One comprehends that in this stage of existence the milky and succulent
nymphs of the ants will prove a very appetizing dish for the bird, and
for the infinite number of creatures which hunt them greedily.

I have dissected only one nymph in the last days of its nymph-period,
and when near its time of hatching. But that one was sufficient. The
sight (seen through a lens of twelve times magnifying power) was very
painful. The being was completely formed, and already black on the
belly, yellow on the corselet. The head was intelligent, like that of
an old ant, but pale, and changing from yellow to black. Still weak
and heavy, and seized, as it were, with vertigo, it rolled from right
to left, and from left to right, with a singular effect of somnolence
and pain. You might have supposed it to be saying: "Ah me! so soon!
Why hast thou called me so cruelly, before the proper hour, from my
soft cradle to the harsh drudgery of life? But it is all at end for
me!" It struggled nevertheless to confront the unknown chances of its
novel situation, and to disengage its trammelled limbs. The antennæ
were already perfectly free, and stirred about in their anxiety to
discern the new world; this cerebral organ revealed very plainly
the disquietude and agitation of the brain. Its greatest perplexity
arose from its failure to release its two arms (or anterior limbs).
It laboured violently to do so. They were glued to the body by an
indescribable something which might be called a pale blood, and one
sweated to see the poor little creature, already prudent and timid,
unable to complete its offensive arrangements, and to extricate
(apparently to snatch or pluck away) its two bleeding arms.

I have explained this at some length, in order to make the reader
understand the passionate interest felt by the ants in the little
balls which, to our eyes, seem so insignificant. Beneath its soft and
transparent tissue they feel the infant palpitating under its two
touching forms,--the creature, denuded and innocent, which dreameth
still--the creature already formed and intelligent, perceiving
everything, but incapable of self-defence, and, before it sees the
light, disturbed by all the fears and agitations of existence.

       *       *       *       *       *

The most painful shock for the young of the insects is the sudden
cold; at least, the nudity, the exposure to the air and light. This
is so antipathetic and painful to them, that in certain species it is
the source of their arts and their most ingenious devices. The eggs
and nymphs of the ants in their tiny transparent swaddling-robe,--and
still more the larvæ which are deprived of it,--feel with an excessive
sensibility every atmospheric variation. Hence the delicate and
continual attentions of their nurses in carrying them from place to
place, in translating them from one to another of the well-contrived
steps of their thirty or forty stories, in protecting their dear little
chilly charge from cold, damp, or excessive heat. A degree more or less
means for it life or death.

It is a cruel and tragical change for these children of love,
spoiled hitherto with excessive indulgence, and tended with greater
care than any princess, when they are abruptly deprived of their
garments,--stripped, with blows from pincers, teeth, and claws,--and
despoiled by the hands of the executioner. Suddenly exposed to the
burning sun, dragged hither, pushed thither, rolled over all the
roughnesses of a coarse sandy soil,--sensible, infinitely sensible,
in their new condition of nakedness, to the shocks, blows, and rude
somersaults which their violent enemies do not spare them!

In towns captured by a furious enemy, it has happened that the tombs
of the dead have been desecrated. But here, we behold the exhumation of
the living,--the despoiling of innocent and all vulnerable creatures,
poor bits of skinless flesh, to whom the very lightest touch had been a
sufficient agony!

This immense execution upon the population and their young was hurried
over so rapidly, that at three o'clock in the afternoon nearly all was
ended; the city was sacked and depopulated in every corner, and its
future beyond all hope of a resurrection.

We thought that some fugitive might still be lurking in concealment;
that perhaps the conquerors would abandon the desert if we transported
them, with the destroyed city, into a paved coach-yard outside the
garden; that then would awake in them the remembrance of their family,
to whom, moreover, they could carry nothing more to be devoured. Our
expectation was realized.

On the morning of the 10th of June we saw them scattered along all the
roads which led towards their dwelling-place, at the other end of the
garden. But the destiny of the vanquished seemed accomplished. The dead
and silent city was nothing but a cemetery, where, with the exception
of a few scattered bodies, could only be seen some dead wood, some
old pods of Northern trees, and their gloomy _aiguilles_ (pines and
once-green firs), not less dead than the city itself.

I confess that such a vengeance, so disproportionate to the act
which was its cause or pretext, excited in me a strong feeling of
indignation, and my heart, changing sides, was completely alienated
from those little black barbarians.

So, observing that some of them, still implacable, were promenading
among the ruins, I sent them rudely flying over its walls (that is, the
edges of the vase). In vain it was gently pointed out to me that these
blacks had been provoked, that they had shown the greatest courage,
having braved so great a peril that their destruction might almost have
been predicted. They were cruel and savage but heroic tribes, like the
Iroquois, the Hurons, the revengeful heroes who formerly peopled the
forests of the Mississippi and Canada. These reasons were good, but
did not calm me. I felt too keenly the enormity of the crime. Without
wishing to annihilate them, I confess that if these ferocious blacks
had chanced to come under my foot I should not have turned aside.

The unfortunate empty vase continually reminded me of what had
occurred, and held me as by a spell. On the evening of the 11th we
were still seated on the ground before it, with our chin in our hand,
completely absorbed in thought. Our gaze plunged into its depths. We
persisted in longing for a sign of life to appear upon its perfect
immobility, a something which might still say that all was not
finished. This firm resolve seemed to have the potency of an evocation,
and as if our desires had recalled to daylight some miserable spirit
of the widowed city, one of the victims which had escaped made its
appearance, and hurried headlong away from the field of death. And we
perceived that it carried a cradle.

Night came, and it was in a completely strange locality, surrounded by
enemies. A few holes, which one might mistake for places of refuge,
were precisely the mouths opening into the Inferno of the blacks. The
unhappy fugitive, with its misfortune increased by the burden of its
infant, ran distractedly, and without knowing whither. I followed it
with my eyes and heart, until the darkness concealed it from me.

[Illustration]




[Illustration: V.--THE WASPS.]


[Illustration]


CHAPTER V.

THE WASPS: THEIR FURY OF IMPROVISATION.


When the wasp on a summer's day enters at the window, with its loud,
aggressive, and menacing _zou! zou! zou!_ everybody is on his guard.
The child trembles, the mother suspends her work, even the husband
lifts his eyes: "Insolent, impudent intruder!" and he arms himself with
a handkerchief.

Meanwhile, the superb insect, having flown into every corner, and cast
around the room a rapid and scornful glance, departs with a loud noise,
not condescending to notice the unfriendly welcome accorded to him.
His only reflection has been this: "A paltry house! Not a fruit, not a
spider, not a fly, not the smallest bit of meat!"

Then he makes a descent on the shop of the country butcher: "Butcher,
my custom is yours. I am desirous of dealing with you. Do not hesitate,
foolish miser. Cut me a good slice of meat, and I will pay you for it;
I will kill all your flesh-flies. Let us agree to be friends. We are
both born to kill."

The slow dull animals of the genus _Man_ are much scandalized at the
proceedings of the wasp. It acts, it does not talk. But if it deigned
to speak, its apology would be simple. A word would suffice. It is
the being on whom Nature imposes the terrible destiny of suppressing
time. We speak of the ephemera which lives a few hours: the period is
sufficient for a creature that does nothing. The true ephemera is the
wasp. In a brief six months' summer (not more than four months of full
activity) it has to accomplish, not only the cycle of the individual
life--to be born, to eat, to love, to die--but, what is far more
onerous, the cycle of a prolonged social life, the most complicated
which any insect is required to perform. What the bee leisurely
elaborates in several years, the wasp must realize immediately. Much
more than the bee! For the latter makes its honeycombs in a completed
house (the hive, the hollow of the rock, the trunk of a tree); but the
wasp must improvise without as within, the ramparts of the city no less
than the city itself.

Four months to create everything, to make and unmake a people, and a
people of lofty organization!

Learn, ye idle races which mutter that in fourscore years ye have no
time, learn to despise it. It is a purely relative affair. There is
never any time for the flat-bellied snail, were it to crawl through
centuries. There is always time for heroic activity, firm will, and
resolute energy.

The wasp dies. Its city of thirty thousand souls, improvised by
a revolution, as by a thundering stroke of genius and courage,
subsists as a testimony to its labours. Solid, eminently substantial,
conscientiously wrought, and seemingly intended for eternity!

       *       *       *       *       *

Let us note the starting-point.

A miserable fly, which in winter has survived the destruction of its
race, issues all a-dust from its hiding-place. Thank Heaven, it is
the spring-time! Does it seek to enjoy the sun? No, it will not allow
itself a day's repose. What is its first duty? To love with a rapid and
burning love, to go straight to its goal, to seize and take up as it
passes that vital force which will create an entire people. Love on the
wing,--no delay,--everything made to bear on the great social aim!

Savage and alone, with its idea and its hope, this mother of the
future commonwealth creates in the first place its citizens, some
thousands upon thousands of labourers. You have already learned that
among insects every worker is a female. These too are workers, but the
harsh necessities of toil suppress in them their sex. They love with a
lofty devotion. The austere virgin looks for no other spouse than the
community.

The chain of ardent labour is continued from the mother to her
daughters. Her task was to beget: it is theirs to build. The fury
of improvisation is the same in them, however, as it was in her.
According to the region and the climate, the tribe, the species,
and the work vary. Here they will excavate underground the cave in
which they construct their edifice, isolating it from the soil, and
preserving it from damp. There they suspend it in the air, and build it
of strong coarse pasteboard to defy the heaviest rains. To make this
paper or pasteboard, they hasten to the forest, where they select some
thoroughly prepared wood, which has been long soaking, and has been
already steeped by Nature just as we steep flax. Then within, with a
strong sharp tooth (for theirs are not the graceful probosces of bees
intended to kiss flowers), they gnaw, and tear, and loosen, and sever
the rebellious filaments, pound them into pulp as we do the linen rags,
and knead them with a heavy tongue. After the paste has been mixed
with a viscous and adhesive saliva, it is spread out into thin layers.
With teeth closed like a press, the work is completed. The elementary
substance of the pasteboard is prepared.

A second industry now commences. The paper manufacturer is transformed
into a mason. It has not the beaver's tail to serve as a trowel, but
with the American wasp a sort of palette on the leg serves the same
purpose. The operation is not the same here as in Guiana. The mason
of Cayenne, having built up the walls, has only to suspend to them a
succession of floors or platforms, following in that dry hot land the
type of our human habitations. But the European mason, working with
pasteboard, in a damp climate, where even in the summer heavy rains
are frequent, adopts a different plan: _a house within a house_, a
hive completely isolated from the envelope which encloses it. This
is the most successful device for an ardent and chilly people, whose
life-flame needs careful guarding.

As it is without, so it is within. As the house, so too the inhabitant.
We men are not yet sufficiently acquainted with the influence exercised
upon our moral dispositions by our habitations. This duplication of
walls, this potent envelopment of a people so completely shut up under
its strong twofold enclosure, largely contributes to the unity of the
commonwealth.

Observe another singularity: shall we call it a trivial one? No; to
the serious observer it is of importance. The city has two gates;
its people enter by the one, and pass out by the other, so that no
confusion can take place, and no collision between the ingressing and
egressing crowds. This plan is adopted by all people who economize
time, and wish to transact their business expeditiously. In London,
the rule is the same as with the wasps: on the one side those who are
coming, on the other those who are going; each person keeps to the
right; these take one footpath, those another. No such impediment
is met with in the Strand as the idlers of our Rue Vivienne, who
incessantly convert themselves into a serious obstacle, and swim
laboriously in the confusion they create.

       *       *       *       *       *

But to return to our subject.

What is the object of these constructions? Is this robust being,
endowed with such an intensity of vital force, more afraid of the air
than numbers of delicate insects,--than the nervous spider, which
has only a house of thread, or even lives under a leaf? Therein lies
the lofty mystery of life for the higher insect. It is this which
stimulates the universal genius of the ant either above ground or
under ground. It is this which inspires the activity, the persevering
toil and economy of the bee. What, then, is it? The _love of the
future_,--the yearning to perpetuate and eternize that which one loves.
All their love centres in their offspring.

[Illustration]

To love the child and the future; to toil in view of time and of that
which as yet is not; to exhaust their vitality and die of work, that
posterity may have less cause to labour,--a noble ideal, assuredly, of
society, wherever it may be. One can well understand it in those who
have time before them, and a life to make use of, like men and bees.
But that this insect which has no time, which perishes in the evening,
should love the time that will never be its own, should immolate its
little life for the sake of the life that is to come, should devote to
the child of to-morrow its solitary day, is a sacrifice peculiar to the
wasp: it is original and sublime!

There is not a minute to lose; and the mother incessantly increases the
burden. Besides the female workers, she produces some few males who
do not work, whose little and very brief function scarcely prevails
as an excuse for their inactivity. Among those tragical and serious
insect-races, Nature, as if to divert herself a moment by a comical
distraction, has made the poor little males ordinarily squat and
obese, innocent little Falstaffs, who are guarded like a seraglio of
unimportant servants. The caricature is complete in the case of the
male bee, which, alleging that it neither knows how to glean abroad nor
to build at home, passes the time in humming before its bee-hive (like
our young cigar-smoking idlers).

Among the wasps life is so tense, burning, and keen, that the
very males, slothful as they may be, dare not abandon themselves
to complete indolence. Yonder ladies, who do not jest, and who
have stings of which the males are deprived, might look upon their
idleness sourly, and stir them up with dagger-thrusts. So they have
conceived the idea of working without work; they have the air of
doing something,--a small part of the domestic labour, cleaning, and
sweeping. If any one dies, the ceremony of interment provides them with
a pretence; with the effort of carrying a slight weight they sweat and
groan, and several put their shoulders together. In a word, they are
very ridiculous. And I am confident that their terrible companions
laugh at them.

Theirs truly is an onerous undertaking. Twenty or thirty thousand
mouths to feed, is a very extensive household. If they were only gifted
with the prudent activity of bees, their community would perish of
famine. What they need is a violent, furious, murderous rapidity,--all
the appearances of an immense gluttony,--all the love and devotion
which Sparta had for the art of thieving. But the secret of their
power, which is plainly discernible in them if we observe them but
a moment, is their magnificent insolence, their superb contempt for
all other beings, and their firm conviction that the whole world is
their inheritance. If we consider, it is true, their wonderful energy,
compared with which lions and tigers are mere races of sheep,--and
their prodigious yearly effort of improvisation,--and, finally, their
absolute devotion to the public welfare,--we shall not find in all
nature creatures relatively of greater power, nor which possess a
clearer right to value themselves highly.

Our modern minds, however, find a difficulty in admiring the violence
of the antique virtues. Their boundless love of the commonwealth is
pushed to an almost criminal excess. Who has not marked with how
ferocious an ardour they hunt the bees! Yet certain species of wasps
can make honey; but only in fine climates, which, knowing no winter,
allow the wasps an interval of peaceful labour. Here the case is
different. Their life, cut short in six months, compels them to resort
to measures of cruel simplicity. Honey is needed for their children.
Thereupon they attack the bee, and take it prisoner; with their pliable
body, whose waist is a mere thread, they so curve the extremity as
to stab the prisoner underneath with their deadly sting; when thus
stricken, the wasp saws it with three strokes of its teeth, and leaves
the head and corselet to palpitate for some time longer, while the
belly, filled with honey, the barbarian carries off as a gift for its
young.

It feels no remorse. The death of others apparently does not cause a
pang to this creature, which knows that it too will die to-morrow.

What do I say?

Our virgins of Tauris do not wait until Nature lays upon them her
heavy hand and the ignoble leaden shroud of winter. They have borne
the sword; they will die by the sword. The republic ends in a general
massacre. The children, recently, ay, and still, so dear, are slain;
dilatory children whom cold and want would kill to-morrow; their
sisters, aunts, and affectionate nurses securing them at least the
advantage of dying by the hands of those who love them. This latter
gift, a speedy death, is freely bestowed on numerous unfortunates who
had no thought of soliciting it,--on little useless males, even on
young workers who were born late, and cannot boast of a constitution
sufficiently strong to resist the winter.

Let it not be said that the heroic race of wasps is ever seen to
request the humiliating hospitality of the smoky roofs of man, and, for
the sake of living a little longer, to expose its melancholy remains
in the shambles of a spider's web! No, children! No, sisters! Die! The
republic is immortal. Some one of us, favoured by the yearly miracle
and great lottery of Nature, will be called upon to recommence the
entire work. And if but one remains, it is enough. Should the world
perish, a single true heart would suffice to re-create it.

[Illustration]




[Illustration: VI.--THE BEES: A TOMB AT PÈRE-LACHAISE.]


[Illustration]


CHAPTER VI.

"THE BEES" OF VIRGIL.


All modern writers have triumphed over the ignorance displayed by
the poet Virgil in his fable of Aristæus, who draws life out of the
womb of death, and causes his bees to spring from the entrails of
immolated bulls.[Q] But, for myself, I have never laughed at it. I
know, I feel, that every word of this great sacred poet has a weighty
value, an authority which I would designate as that of an augur and
a pontiff. And the fourth book of the _Georgics_, particularly, was
a holy work, issuing from the inmost recesses of the heart. It was a
pious homage rendered to sorrow and to friendship; an eulogium on the
proscribed Gallus, Virgil's dearest friend. This eulogium, undoubtedly,
was struck out by the prudent Mæcenas; and Virgil then substituted his
Resurrection of the Bees: a song full of immortality, which, in the
mystery of Nature's transformations, embodies our highest hope, that
death is not a death, but the beginning of a new life.

[Footnote Q: The passage to which Michelet refers is found in the
fourth book of the _Georgics_, and is thus translated by Dryden:--

   "The secret in an easy method lies:
    Select four brawny bulls for sacrifice,
    Which on Lycæus graze, without a guide;
    Add four fair heifers yet in yoke untried:
    For these, four altars in their temple rear,
    And then adore the woodland powers with prayer.
    From the slain victims pour the streaming blood,
    And leave their bodies in the shady wood:
    Nine mornings thence, Lethean poppy bring,
    T' appease the manes of the poet's king:
    And, to propitiate his offended pride,
    A fatted calf and a black ewe provide:
    This finished, to the former woods repair.
    His mother's precepts he performs with care;
    The temple visits, and adores with prayer.
    Four altars raises, from his herds he calls,
    For slaughter, four the fairest of his bulls;
    Four heifers from his female store he took,
    All fair, and all unknowing of the yoke.
    Nine mornings thence, with sacrifice and prayers,
    The powers atoned, he to the grove repairs.
    Behold a prodigy! for, from within
    The broken bowels, and the bloated skin,
    A buzzing noise of bees his ears alarms,
    Straight issue through the sides assaulting swarms;
    Dark as a cloud they make a wheeling flight,
    Then on a neighbouring tree, descending light:
    Like a large cluster of black grapes they show,
    And make a large dependence from the bough."
]

Would he have descended to the empty pleasure of inserting a popular
fable in that consecrated portion of his poem which had been occupied
by his friend's name? I will never believe it. The fable, if it be
one, must necessarily possess some serious foundation, and a truthful
side. We are not dealing here with the worldly poet, the urbane singer,
like Horace, the elegant favourite of Rome. It is not the charming
improvisatore of the court of Augustus, the gay and indiscreet Ovid,
who betrays the loves of the gods. Virgil is the child of Earth,
the pure and noble figure of the old Italian peasant, the religious
interrogator, the reverently simple interpreter of the secrets of
Nature. But he may be mistaken in his words,--that he may have
ill-applied the names,--this is not impossible; but so far as the
facts are concerned, it is an entirely different matter: whatever he
describes, I firmly believe he saw.

An accident threw me into the way of understanding the poet's
intention. On a certain memorable day, my wife and I repaired to the
cemetery of Père-Lachaise, to visit before winter the burial-places of
my family, the tomb which reunites my father and his grandson. This
latter had been born to me in the very year which terminated the first
half of the present century, and I had named him Lazarus in my devout
hope of the Awakening of the Nations. I had imagined that I saw upon
his countenance a gleam, as it were, of the strong and tender thoughts
which throbbed in my heart at that last moment of my teaching. Oh,
vanity of human hopes! This flower of my autumn, which I yearned to
animate with the potent vitality that had been of too tardy development
in myself, disappeared almost in the act of birth. And there was
no help but to deposit my child at the feet of my father, who had
already been four years dead. Two cypresses which I then planted in
that ill-omened nook of clay have acquired in the brief interval an
extraordinary growth. Two, nay, three times taller than myself, they
clothe their vigorous branches with a young, rich foliage which ever
points towards heaven. If, with an effort, you lower them, they rear
themselves again, in all their pride and strength, flourishing with a
marvellous pith, as if they had drank from the earth where I planted
them the precious treasure of my past and my unconquerable aspiration.

While revolving these thoughts I ascended the hill, and before arriving
at the tomb, which is situated in the upper alley, I made this
observation,--that though I had on so many occasions frequented this
melancholy and beautiful spot, having been in earlier life the most
assiduous visitor of the dead, I had scarcely ever seen any insects
in the Père-Lachaise. Hardly even at the great epoch of the flowers,
when everything is covered with bloom, and numbers of the old deserted
sepulchres are embowered in roses, I had not remarked that animal life
abounded there as it abounds elsewhere. Very few birds, and very few
insects. Why? I could not say.

While making this reflection, we had finished climbing the hill; we
stood in front of the tomb. And there, with admiration, with a species
of astonishment, I found a surprising contradiction of what I had just
been saying.

About a score of very brilliant bees hovered above the little
garden-plot,--which was narrow as a shroud, stripped of bloom and bare
of flowers, and saddened by the influence of the season. In the whole
cemetery remained only the last autumnal flowers,--some withering
and half-leafless Bengal roses. The spot where we stood, full of new
buildings, masonry, and plaster, was an Arabia Deserta. Finally, on the
tomb, towards the head of the grandfather, flourished only a few sickly
white asters, and over my child the cypresses. It must needs have been
that these asters, in their cold clayey soil, nourished either by the
whispers of the air or the spirits of the earth, treasured up a modicum
of honey, since the little gleaners resorted thither for their harvest.

       *       *       *       *       *

I am not superstitious. I believe in but one miracle, the constant
miracle of the Providence of Nature. I experienced nevertheless how
powerfully the mind may be affected by a lively surprise of the heart.
I felt an emotion of gratefulness at the sight of the mysterious little
creatures animating this solitude, whither, alas! I myself came but
rarely. The increasing absorption of my work, in which day pressed upon
day,--the palpitating flame of the forge where one forges more and more
quickly, in the doubt whether one will be living to-morrow,--all this
kept us further from the tombs than in the days of our dreamy youth. I
was much affected by seeing my place supplied. In my absence the bees
peopled and vivified the spot, consoled, and perhaps rejoiced my dead.
My father may have smiled on them in his kindly indulgence; they may
have been the happiness and first delight of my child.

Selfish motives could not have led them thither; there was so little
for them to take. Nevertheless, when we suspended to the cypress-boughs
the garlands of _immortelles_ we had brought with us, they were curious
enough to ascertain if there was any treasure in the new flowers. The
hard, prickly corolla soon repulsed them, and sent them back to the
faded asters. I felt very sad, and said to them:--"Late, very late, my
friends, you come, and to the tomb of the poor! Why am I not able to
recompense you with a banquet of friendship, which should sustain and
warm you during the first cold breezes, already blowing on these icy
heights, so exposed to the northern wind!"

As if they had understood me, their movements afforded an exact reply.
Some I saw, with their little limbs skilfully bent forward, rubbing
their backs in the sun; they longed to absorb into every vein its
genial radiance. They made the most of that brief hour when the sun
revolves too quickly; one scarcely feels it before it has gone! Their
significant gesture plainly said:--"Oh, what a cold morning we have
had! Let us make haste! In less than an hour commences the equally
inclement evening, the frozen night,--nay, who knows? the winter! and
then our death is at hand."

They were still full of life, however; marvellously trim and bright,--I
may even say radiant,--under their illuminated wings, all shot with
gold. I never saw more beautiful insects; insects more clearly inspired
by a higher life. One thing embarrassed me; namely, that they were
too handsome, and too shining, inasmuch as they did not wear their
industrial attire, their velvety coat, their pincers, and their
brushes. And, finally, I discovered another circumstance: that they had
not the four wings of the bee, but only two.

I perceived my mistake. It was these insects which had deceived Virgil.
Like myself, he thought them bees, and so he erroneously called them.
Réaumur confesses that for a moment even he was deceived by them.

But the fact related by Virgil is not inaccurate. We can understand how
keenly it would impress the minds of the ancients, and how they would
see in it a type of resurrection. They seem the daughters of death. Of
the three ages of their existence, they spend the first in morbid and
deadly waters, fatal to all other creatures, which permit the escape of
the residuum of life in dissolution; with ingenious tenderness, Nature
there preserves them, maintains them alive, and enables them to breathe
in the very midst of death.

Their second period is passed under the earth,--in the shades,--where
they sleep their chrysalis-like slumber.

But when once they have quitted the place of sepulture, they are fully
compensated for their previous abasement; a light aërial life, exempt
from the bee's incessant toil, and glorified by golden wings, such
as the latter never boasts of, is bestowed upon them, with the gift,
moreover, of gentle manners. Innocent, and without stings, they live
their season of love under the sun and among the flowers. Far from
blushing at their origin,--these noble Virgilian bees!--they do not
disdain the flowers of the cemetery, they keep company with the dead,
and for the living collect that honey of the soul,--the hope of the
future!

[Illustration]




[Illustration: VII.--THE BEE IN THE FIELDS.]


[Illustration]


CHAPTER VII.

THE BEE IN THE FIELDS.


"When the plant attains to the flower, the climax of its
existence,--when it assumes its symmetrical outlines, its perfumes,
its colours, and a certain degree of animal irritability,--it emerges
from its condition of isolation, and connects itself more closely
with the great Whole. But it remains fixed in one place, without any
reciprocation of love. The animal, on the contrary, is movement itself,
and manifests its joy in living by its capricious mobility. Then the
captive plant casts a glance of amicable confidence on the animal's
life of freedom, offers it the abundance of its substance, and for sole
reward expects that it will achieve its fecundation. Then, too, as an
elder brother might do, the animal assists the plant, and affords it in
its dependent state the succour of liberty. But, for this purpose, the
animal must be completely free, I would say winged, bound up with the
vegetable life which was its kindly nurse. Behold the insect, love's
messenger and mediator to the plants, their propagator, and the zealous
instrument of their fertilization.

"With a maternal care, the plant provides a place in its own body where
the insect's egg may be developed. It nourishes the young larva which
as yet is incapable of action, but which, in due time, emerging from
its vegetation in the egg, will move freely to and fro, and seek its
own sustenance. The creative fecundity of the plant easily replaces
whatever the insect has extracted from it; and thus both animal and
plant harmoniously attain to the climax of existence.

"The animal, from its low sphere of nutrition, rises to a more elevated
sphere, the pure need of motion, and the pursuit of love. The plant,
it is true, does not soar so high; but its flower is a bright dream of
a higher state of being,--a dream which, though fugitive, proceeds, by
means of its fruits, to secure the conservation of the species. The
blossoming plant and the winged insect reach, as if by concert, an
analogous development, manifested by their colours, their beautiful
symmetrical forms, and their refinement of substance. Papilionaceous
flowers, for instance, might almost be called insects-become-plants.

"This harmonic existence marches forward with the same rhythm as the
moments of the day. Each flower to whose juice an insect is assigned
expands at the hour when its life is most intense, and shuts at the
hour of its repose. Thus they feel their unity; love attracts them
one towards the other. Here the plant plays the part of the female,
the fixed basis of creation, absorbed in nature. The insect resembles
the tiny male who frees himself from earth and curvets in the air;
recalled, nevertheless, by the plant to the oneness of the terrestrial
whole. It is a winged anther, which diffuses life among the flowers."[R]

[Footnote R: Burdach, bk. ii., c. 3.]

What the wind accomplishes hap-hazard, flinging abroad in capricious
showers the generative elements, the insect performs through love,--the
direct love of its species, the _in_direct and confused love of the
amiable auxiliary which welcomes and nourishes it, which will hereafter
nourish also its eggs and continue its maternal work. Its action,
therefore, is not external and superficial, like that of the wind;
it is internal and penetrating. The ardent, curious insect will not
suffer itself to be checked by the light and trivial obstacles with
which vegetable modesty surrounds the threshold of its mysteries; it
boldly dashes aside the veil, and enters into the inmost economy of
the flower. It seizes, it pillages, and it carries away, assured that
all it does will be approved. The flower, in its powerless expansion,
rejoices only too keenly in the deeds of these thievish liberators,
who will transport its desire whither it would fain transport itself.
"Take," she says, "and take yet more!" The insect then exhausts its
utmost effort; each of its hairs becomes a tiny magnetic dart, which
attracts and wishes to attract. Would that it might be enveloped in
these points, and over all its surface (like the lightning conductor)
concentrate this treasure of vegetable electricity! Such is its
aspiration. An aspiration realized in the higher insect, in the
bee, which bristles everywhere with a magnetic apparatus,--the bee,
predestined by the tools peculiar to it, both to its little individual
industry of honey-making, and to the grand, general, universal industry
of the fecundation, of plants.

It is an admirable creature, and what the great physiologist has just
said of the loves of the flower and the insect applies particularly
to it; except with this notable distinction on the part of the bee,
that it robs the flower only of that noble luxuriance of life which it
lavishes upon love. The bee does not establish its cradle in the plant
that the young may thence derive its sole sustenance, and gradually
devour its nurse. Instead of depositing its egg, and exposing it to
the hazards of the vegetable existence, as the butterfly does with
its future caterpillar, the bee economizes the plant, and, without
attacking it, borrows from it the precious materials which its art
works up into palaces of alabaster, amber, or of gold, where its
children will in due time repose.

The innocency of the bee is one of its lofty attributes, no less than
its miraculous art. Its sting is simply a defensive and indispensable
weapon, not against man-with whom, of its own accord, it does not
wage war--but against the cruel wasps, its terrible enemies. The
bee, on the other hand, injures none. It does not live by death; its
inoffensive life does not demand the sacrifice of other lives. It
stimulates innumerable existences; it vivifies and fecundates them.
There is no uncultivated desert, no wild, bare region which it does not
animate,--where it does not infuse fresh vigour into the languishing
vegetation, urging the plants to bud, watching over and inspecting
them. It reproaches them with their slothfulness; and as soon as they
open to the influence of love-these poor dumb virgins!--it establishes
between them the requisite interpreters, carries off in its murmurs
their pollen and perfume, and harmonizes the aromas which are their
blossoms of thought.

This process begins in the month of March. When an uncertain but
already potent sun reawakes the sleeping sap, the tiny flowers of the
fields, the wild violet, the Easter-daisy of the sward, the buttercup
of the hedgerow, the precocious gillyflower, expanding, perfume the
air. But their expansion lasts only for a moment. Barely open at
noon, by three o'clock they fold themselves up again, and veil their
shivering stamens. In this brief interval of gentle heat you may see
a little wan-looking creature, completely clad but very chilly, which
also ventures to unfurl its wings. The bee quits its city, in the
knowledge that the manna is ready for it and its little ones.

A little matter then, it is true, but most cradles are empty at this
epoch. The great fecundity of the mother bee still lurks concealed in
her bosom. The regular and rapid incubation, which might suffice to
create a world, will not commence until a much later period,--the sunny
time of May.

How admirable is this agreement! Most of the shivering flowers, like
the shivering bee, wait a more equable season before they bare to the
sun their corolla, too delicate to endure the caprices of April.

It is pleasant to watch the intercourse between these charming
creatures. The docile flower inclines and yields to the insect's
unquiet movements. The shrine which it had closed against the winds,
and the inquisitive glance, it opens to the beloved bee, which,
impregnated by it, speeds afar on her message of love. The delicious
precautions which Nature has taken to veil from profane eyes the
mysteries enacted therein, do not delay for a moment the audacious
seeker, who is completely at home, so to speak, and has no fear of
being considered an intruder. One flower, for example, is protected by
a couple of petals which join together in the form of an arch (as, for
instance, the iris on the border of the waters, which in this manner
defends from the rain its delicate little lovers). Another, like the
sweet-pea, dons a kind of helmet, whose vizor must be lifted by its
suitor.

[Illustration]

The bee takes its stand at the bottom of these recesses worthy of the
fairies, covered with the softest tapestry, under fantastic pavilions,
with walls of topaz, and roofs of sapphire. Paltry comparisons these,
for they are borrowed from dead gems, while the flowers live, and feel,
and desire, and wait. And if the happy conqueror of the little hidden
kingdoms,--if the imperious violator of their innocent barriers, the
insect, mingles and confuses everything, they readily whisper its
pardon, overwhelm it with their sweetnesses, and load it with their
honey.

There are favoured localities, and there are happy hours, where and
when the bee, while gathering its harvest, accomplishes--chaste
toiler!--myriads of marriages. On the coasts, for example, and in
the immediate neighbourhood of the savage sea, where one would
hardly expect to meet with such pacific idyls, should there be but
one shadowy, secure, and warm recess, Nature never fails, in the
warm and humid mildness of that maternal retreat, to create a little
chosen world; and there the flower distils to the bee its sweetest
nectar,--there the bee assuages the impetuous yearning of the flower.

Genial, bland, and still is the hour which precedes the evening.
Caressed by the last rays of the sun, whose warmth it preserves
within its bosom, besprinkled in its corolla by the light and already
radiant mist, the flower becomes conscious of two lives and a twofold
electricity; it is urged to love, and it loves! The stamens blaze
forth, and scatter abroad their cloud of incense. Then at that charming
and sacred hour let the mediatrix come; let the Samaritan bee appear!
Let her collect the sweet odours dispersed by the evening breeze; let
her redivide them with wise forethought, giving here and taking there!
The blossoms are no longer solitary; through the agency of the bee, the
meadow has been converted into a society where all understand and all
love each other, initiated into the hymeneal rites by their friendly
little high-priest.

It is not a less important duty for the bee to rise at an early hour
and be present at the moment when the flower--which has slumbered
under the penetrating dew (exhaled by its divine master, father, and
lover, the sun)--awakes, and recovers its consciousness. Struck by
the sympathetic beam, it no longer resists; it gives up the softened
essence of its choicest sweetness; it becomes, as it were, a tiny
fountain, which distils honey drop by drop. Opportunely comes the bee;
its work here is very nearly completed: the sweet treasure, finely
prepared in that hour of perfection, will entail but little labour. It
bears it off to its children: "Eat; it is the soul of the blossom."

But in the noonday heat will she remain inactive? The burning sun and
dry air have withered up the blossoms of the plain. But those of the
woods, sheltered by the fresh cool shades, present their cups brimming
over; those of the murmurous brooks, and silent and deep marshes, are
then instinct with vitality. The forget-me-not dreams, and weeps tiny
tears of nectar. Even the white water-lily, in her pale virginity,
yields a rare treasure of love.

"Night does not injure the bee, but cold is extremely harmful. Such is
her conscientiousness, that, in order to avoid losing a day's labour in
our brief summers, she takes too little heed of the sudden returns of
winter, of the sharp caprices of the north wind, which sometimes visit
us on the finest days. Insects of inferior intelligence, but also less
industrious, perfectly understand the secret of escaping its influence.
In their prudent idleness they say to one another, 'Tomorrow! Let us
keep holiday!' And they patiently wait for one, or two, or more days,
until the wicked spirit of the north has abandoned its evil mood. But
those who have charge of souls, and a large family to maintain,--those
who know that a mild winter may chance to keep their offering awake,
and, accordingly, famished, will hesitate before they take a single
day's repose.

"And, therefore, on the cold mornings of a June not less bleak than
March, they do not fear to rush boldly into the fields. But they are
more valiant than robust; the cold catches them, and I have known them
drag their limbs to my windows, faltering and half-paralyzed. They have
made no attempt to escape; they have suffered themselves to be taken
prisoners. They were in a scared condition; still bearing the signs of
their courageous and indefatigable work, impregnated with the dust of
flowers, and their little, baskets loaded and overloaded with pollen.
They seemed to say:--'We are no sluggards. On the contrary, in the cold
hours of morning, when many are still asleep, we have already completed
a day's work. But, alas, the times are so hard, and the north wind is
so keen! Behold us half-frozen. A moment's hospitality, I pray you.'

"Who would not respect the misfortune of such blameless and over-eager
workers? I lent them not only a roof, and the warmth of an apartment
closed to the wind and open to the sun, but immediately improvised for
them a friendly repast. Where? At the bottom of a sugar-basin.

"The chilly creatures, having revived at a genial beam their lost
warmth, and restored to a good condition all the little electric world
of hairs with which they bristle, began the exploration of their
temporary prison, and were agreeably surprised to find the crystal a
dining-hall. With a good appetite, seating themselves at the table,
they attacked a fragment of sugar, and sucked up with their proboscis
all the sweetness they could find. When they had finished their
repast, and were completely restored, were fluttering to and fro,
demanding the way out, I set them free, without causing them to lose
one moment of a day already far advanced. With a rapid flight, charmed
by the noonday sun, they returned to their occupations, distinctly
humming:--'Farewell, madam, and many thanks!'"

[Illustration]




[Illustration: VIII.--THE BEES AS ARCHITECTS.]


[Illustration]


CHAPTER VIII.

THE BEES AS ARCHITECTS: THE CITY.


If the wasp's nest resemble Sparta, the bee-hive is the veritable
Athens of the Insect World. There, all is art. The people--the
artist-élite of the people--incessantly create two things; on the one
hand, the City, the country,--on the other, the Universal Mother, whose
task it is not only to perpetuate the race, but to become its idol, its
_fetish_, the living god of the community.

The bees share with the wasps, the ants, and all the sociable insects,
the disinterested life of aunts and sisters,--laborious virgins, who
devote themselves entirely to an adoptive maternity.

But from these analogous peoples the bee differs in the necessity it is
under of creating a national idol, the love of which impels it to work.

All this has been long misunderstood. It was at first supposed that
this State was a monarchy, _that it possessed a king_. Not at all; the
king is a female. Thereupon one is driven to say, _This female is
a queen_. Another error. Not only does she not govern, or reign, or
control, but in certain conjunctions she is governed, and sometimes
even placed in private confinement. She is at once something more and
something less than a queen. She is an object of legal and public
adoration; I should say legal and constitutional, for this adoration is
not so blind but that the idol, in some cases, as we shall see, may be
treated very severely.

"Then, at bottom, the government will be democratic?" Yes; if we
take into consideration the unanimous devotion of the people, the
spontaneous labour of everybody. No one commands. But, nevertheless,
you can clearly see that in every higher work an intelligent body of
the _élite_, an aristocracy of artists, takes the lead. The city is
not built or organized by the entire people, but by a special class, a
kind of guild or corporation. While the mob of bees seeks the common
nourishment abroad, certain much larger bees, the wax-makers, elaborate
the wax, prepare it, shape it, and skilfully make use of it. Like
the medieval freemasons, this respectable corporation of architects
toils and builds on the principles of a profound geometry. Like those
of the old days, they are _the masters of the living stone_. But our
worthy bees are far more deserving of the title! The materials which
they employ they have made, have elaborated by their vital action, and
vivified with their internal juices.

Neither the honey nor the wax is a vegetable substance. Those little
light bees which go in quest of the essence of the flowers bring it
back already transformed and enriched by their virginal life. Sweet and
pure, it passes from their mouth to the mouth of their elder sisters.
These, the grave wax-makers, having received the aliment vivified and
endowed with the charming sweetness which is, as it were, the soul
of the race, elaborate it in their turn, and communicate to it their
own peculiar life,--solidity. Wise and sedentary, they work up the
liquid into a sedentary honey, a honey of the second quality, a kind of
reflected honey. This is not all: the substance twice elaborated, and
twice penetrated with animal juice, they incessantly moisten with their
saliva, when using it so as to render it softer for working, but more
tenacious afterwards.

Was I wrong, then, in saying that this construction is truly one of
"the living stones"? There is not an atom of the materials which is not
three times impregnated with life. Who shall say of yonder hive whether
the flower or the bee has furnished the greater part? The latter has
certainly contributed an important share. Here, the home of the people
is the people's substance and visible soul; from themselves they have
extracted their city, and their city is, in truth, themselves. Bee and
hive, it is one and the same thing.

But let us observe them at work.

Alone, in the centre of the still empty and to be created hive, the
learned wax-maker advances. From beneath its wings it delicately
extracts a thin slab of wax, and conveys it to its mouth, where it is
well kneaded and pounded, and drawn out into the shape of a ribbon.
Eight strips are in this wise furnished, wrought, and absorbed; and the
result is eight little blocks, which the bee lays down as the first
beams of the future edifice, the foundations of the new city.

Others continue the work without moving too far from the place where it
was begun. If any unintelligent labourer does not follow the prescribed
plan, the mistress-bees, experienced and accomplished, are on the spot
to detect any error, and immediately remedy it.

In the solid mass, well placed and skilfully squared, where such
numbers have harmoniously deposited their contribution of wax, an
excavation must now be made, and some degree of form attained. A single
bee again detaches herself from the crowd, and with her horny tongue,
teeth, and paws, she contrives to hollow out the solid matter like a
reversed vault. When fatigued she retires, and others take up the work
of modelling. In couples they shape off and thin the walls. The only
point to be remembered is a skilful management of their thickness. But
how do they appreciate this? Who or what warns them the moment a stroke
too much would break an opening in the partition? They never take the
trouble to make a tour of their work and examine it from the other
side. Their eyes are useless to them; they judge of everything by their
antennæ, which are their plumb-line and compass. They feel about, and
by an infinitely delicate touch recognize the elasticity of the wax,
perhaps by the sound it renders, and determine whether it is safe to
excavate it, or whether they must stop short, and not push their mining
operations further.

The building, as everybody knows, is destined to serve two ends. The
cells are generally used in summer as cradles, in winter as magazines
of pollen and honey,--a granary of abundance for the republic. Each
vessel is closed and sealed with a waxen lid, a _clôture_ religiously
respected by all the people, who take for their subsistence only a
single comb,--and when that comb is finished pass on to another, but
always with extreme reserve and sobriety.

It has been said and repeated that the construction is absolutely
uniform. Buffon goes so far as to pretend that the cell is but the
identical form of the bee, which posts itself in the wax, and by the
friction of its body, a blind manoeuvre, obtains an impress of itself,
a hollow, an identical cell. A baseless hypothesis, which the least
reflection would show to be improbable, even if observation did not
contradict it.

In reality, their work is extremely various, and diversified in
numerous different ways.

In the first place, the combs are pierced in the centre by corridors
or little tunnels, which do away with the necessity of traversing two
sides. Economists in everything, the bees are specially economical of
time.

Secondly, the form of the cells is by no means identical. They prefer
the hexagon,--the form which is best adapted to secure the greatest
possible number of cells in the smallest area. But they do not
slavishly bind themselves to this form. The first comb which they
attach to the framework would cling to it very insecurely, and only
by its projecting edges, if it were composed of six-sided cells. They
therefore make it with five sides only; and fashion it of pentagonal
cells with broad bases, which attach themselves solidly to the wood on
a continuous line. The whole is agglutinated and sealed, not with wax,
but with their gum, or _propolis_, which, as it dries, becomes hard as
iron.

The great royal cellules, or cradles of the future mothers, which may
be seen by the side of the combs, are not six-sided, but of the form of
an oblong egg,--which secures the royal favourites considerable ease,
and a great facility of development.

Finally, you may, with a little attention, detect important
differences among the ordinary hexagonal cells, though at the first
glance they all seem alike. They are small for the industrious
gleaners, larger for the artistic wax-makers, and largest for the
males. This size is generally obtained by means of a little rounded
fragment which is deposited in the bottom, and renders it slightly
circular,--I was about to say pot-bellied (_ventru_). As the house,
so the tenant; the male will come into the world a squat, obese
figure,--predestined to this form by that of its cradle.

Thus, of their own accord, they vary the configuration and extent of
the cellules. And they vary them yet more, according to the obstacles
they encounter. If room be denied them, they reduce the size of their
hexagons in due proportion and with extreme address. This fact Huber
verified by some ingenious experiments. He bethought himself of
deranging their operations by placing, instead of wood, a plate of
glass against the wall of the hive where they were building up their
cells. From the distance they saw this smooth shining crystal, to
which nothing could be fixed; and taking their measures accordingly,
they curved their cake in such a manner that it went past the glass
and joined on to the wood. But, to carry out the alteration, it became
necessary to change the diameter of the cells; to enlarge that of the
convex portion, and diminish that of the concave. A delicate problem!
and yet it was readily solved by the skilful architects.

In mid-winter, says Huber again, in their season of inertia, an
over-heavy slab of wax fell away, but was checked _en route_ by the
cakes beneath. An avalanche seemed imminent! But the bees invented
buttresses and barriers in strong mastic, which, supporting the
fallen cake and propping up the sides of the hive, prevented the
dangerous ruin from dragging down the inner edifice. Then, to prevent
the occurrence of similar misfortunes, they created some novel
architectural works in the shape of flying buttresses, bulwarks,
pillars, cross-beams, and the like.

_Novel!_ Ay, this is a sufficient refutation of Buffon's theory. That
machines or automata could invent, is a thing not easily explicable.
Yet the sovereign authority of this great dictator of natural history
would have prevailed, perhaps, over facts and over observation, if,
towards the close of the last century, the bees themselves, by an
unforeseen stroke, had not definitively cut the Gordian knot.

It was about the epoch of the American, and shortly before the outbreak
of the French Revolution. An unknown creature then made its appearance
over all Europe,--of a frightful figure,--a great strong nocturnal
butterfly, marked very plainly in tawny-gray, with a hideous death's
head. This sinister being, which none had seen before, alarmed every
countryside, and seemed an omen of the most terrible misfortunes.
Yet, in truth, those who were terrified by it had brought it into
Europe. It had come in the grub condition with its natal plant, the
American potato,--the fashionable vegetable which Parmentier extolled,
Louis XVI. protected, and which spread in all directions. The savants
baptized the insect with a somewhat horrifying name--the _Sphinx
Atropos_.

And terrible indeed _was_ this new creature, but only for the honey.
Of this it was remorselessly greedy, and to attain it was capable of
everything. A hive of thirty thousand bees could not daunt it. In the
depths of night, the rapacious monster, profiting by the hour when the
approaches to the city are less carefully guarded, with a gloomy but
subdued sound, as if stifled by the soft down which covers it (and all
other nocturnal insects), invaded the hive, swooped down on the combs,
devoured and plundered, gutted and destroyed the magazines, and slew
the infant bees. In vain they awoke, and flew to arms; their sting
could not penetrate through the soft elastic padding which clothed the
sphinx,--like the cotton armour worn by the Mexicans in the days of
Cortez, and impenetrable by Spanish weapons.

Huber meditated on the best means of protecting his bees against this
shameless brigand. Should it be by gratings, or doors? And how? He
could not determine. The most skilfully devised barriers have always
the inconvenience of impeding the great movement of ingress and egress,
which takes place at the threshold of the hive. Their impatience
regarded as intolerable the obstructions, which could not fail to
embarrass them, and against which they might break their wings.

One morning, Huber's faithful assistant, who seconded him in his
experiments, brought information that the bees themselves had already
solved the problem. In different hives they had conceived and
attempted various systems of defence and fortification. Here they
constructed a wall of wax, with narrow loopholes, through which the
_great_ enemy could not pass. There, by a more ingenious expedient,
without creating a single impediment, they built up some inter-crossing
arcades at the gates, or tiny cloisters one behind the other, but
running in different directions,--that is to say, to the void left by
the first corresponded the substance of the second. Thus was secured
a number of openings for the impatient buzzing crowd, which might go
in and out as usual, with no other difficulty than that of moving in
a slightly zigzag fashion. At the same time, a complete barrier was
obtained against the great and _big_ enemy, which could no longer
enter with expanded wings, nor even glide uninjured through the narrow
corridors.

It was the _coup d'état_ of the brute creation, the revolution of the
insects, executed by the bees, not only against their plunderers,
but against the calumniators who had denied their intelligence. The
theorists who had refused to believe in it, the Malebranches and the
Buffons, were compelled to own themselves beaten. They had to adopt the
reserve of eminent observers, like Swammerdam and Réaumur, who, far
from questioning the genius of insects, furnish us with numerous facts
in proof of its flexibility, of its rising to the measure of great
dangers, of its scorn of routine, and of its power to make unexpected
progress under certain circumstances.

[Illustration]




[Illustration: IX.--THE BEES: ON THE WING.]


[Illustration]


CHAPTER IX.

HOW THE BEES CREATE THE PEOPLE AND THE COMMON MOTHER.


In the life of the bees, all things are brought to bear on the welfare
of the infant. Let us see, then, this object of love. Let us see what
is lying at the bottom of the cell; her who has just been created, the
little virgin of toil.

She is born in a condition of singular purity; so much so that she is
not even provided with the organ of the inferior necessities. On a
delicate mixture of honey and flower dust, which is constantly renewed,
you see nothing at first but a comma, then a C, a spiral. But she
already lives, is organized, and active; so that on the eighth day,
like a skilful spinner, she weaves her network of metamorphosis.

Her nurses, that she may enjoy a complete repose at the sacred moment,
take the precaution to close up her cell; erecting over it a little
dome, velvety, and of a tawny colour. For ten days she is a nymph,
enveloped in a veil of exceeding whiteness and great delicacy, through
which you can discern a miniature of mouth, eyes, wings, and feet.
Twenty-one days suffice for her development. Then she scratches an
opening in the little dome, and thrusts through it her head; next,
with her fore-feet resting on the rim, she strenuously endeavours to
disengage her whole body. It is a great effort; but the honey is close
at hand to recruit her energies. At the first cell she falls in with
she plunges into it her proboscis, and initiates herself into life.

She is still humid, gray, and very weak. So she hastens to get dry in
the sun, to harden her soft and rumpled wings. There she is welcomed by
her numerous kinswomen, who stroke and lick her amorously, and bestow
on her a maternal kiss.

No creature is more richly endowed with implements, or more obviously
intended for an industrial speciality. Each organ reads her its lesson,
and informs her what she has to do. Lighted by five eyes and guided by
a couple of antennæ, she carries in front, projecting beyond her mouth,
an unique and marvellous instrument of taste,--the proboscis, or long
external tongue,--which is of peculiar delicacy, and partly hairy that
it may the more readily absorb and imbibe. Protected, when at rest, by
a beautiful scaly sheath, the proboscis puts forth its fine point to
touch a liquid; and this point wetted, draws it back into its mouth,
where lies the internal tongue, a subtle judge of sensation, and the
final authority.

To this delicate apparatus add some coarser attributes which indicate
their own uses: hairs on every side to catch up the dust of the
flowers, brushes on the thighs to sweep together the scattered harvest,
and panniers to compress it into pellets of many colours. All these
conjoined form the insignia of her trade.--Go, my daughter, and become
a reaper!

Thou wilt desire nothing else, and thou wilt be fit for nothing else.
The fairy virgins who prepared thy cradle, and feed thee daily, will
bring thee up to be what they have been. Sober, laborious, and sterile,
they practise a rigid economy; in them and in thee they maintain
the pure flame of virginity by fasting, or at least by very scanty
nourishment, while they banquet splendidly the future mother, though
still a child, and are lavish towards the numerous, and, for the most
part, useless tribe of males.

It is here we reach the fundamental strata of the City, the aristocracy
of devotion and intelligence. The wax-makers, or bee-architects, if
they consulted the wishes of the living queen, would never train up
an heiress to her throne. She is blindly jealous, and as soon as the
successor is born would have her put to death. They do not listen.
Those firm sage heads, remembering that we all die, take counsel on the
necessity of perpetuating the race. And, accordingly, by the side of
the cells, or close little cradles which receive all the children of
the republic, they build some spacious chambers, fifteen, nay, twenty
times larger, in which the ordinary egg, favoured by the conditions
of ease and liberty, may enlarge and develop at will all its natural
faculties. The more certainly to ensure the superior growth of the
chosen egg, they prodigalize upon it a stronger and more generous food,
which shall give full liberty to its sex, and endow it with fecundity.
Such is the efficacy of this potent liquor, that if the nurses
accidentally let fall a drop or two on the neighbouring cradles, the
little bees, rejoicing in the chance, participate in the queen-mother's
fecundity, although in an inferior degree.

                                 Madam,
Kings I have made, but never willed to be one.
[J'ai fait des rois, madame, et n'ai pas voulu l'être.]

This dramatic line perfectly characterizes the disinterestedness of
these prudent nurses. They bestow all the world's gifts on their
favourite,--a beautiful and ample habitation, a superior regimen, and
that paradise of women--motherhood!

To the others, on the contrary,--to their sisters, who are born
resembling them,--narrow cradles, coarse food, incessant work, and
pain! These will go into the fields to sweat for the people and the
mother; those, confined at home, will build incessantly, and attend to
the young. No recreation is allowed to them; I do not think they have,
like the ants, fêtes and gymnastic games. Their entire feast will be
labour (from which the queen-mother is excused). To one alone they
give love, and for themselves preserve nothing but wisdom.

       *       *       *       *       *

The characteristic attribute of this child of grace, of whom the whole
multitude is enamoured, is certain beautiful long legs of gold, or
rather of transparent amber, of a gilded yellow. This rich colour lends
nobility to her belly, and is also found on the edge of her dorsal
rings. Elegant, _svelte_, and noble, she is freed from the drudgery of
dragging the industrial apparatus which overloads the worker,--brushes
and panniers. Like all the bees, she carries a sword,--I mean the
sting,--but never uses it except in a personal combat; nor has she many
occasions, being so surrounded, beset, and overwhelmed with an excess
of love.

This mother is very timorous, a trifle is sufficient to terrify her;
at the slightest danger she takes to flight, and conceals herself at
the bottom of the hive. Her head is not very large, and the unique
function which so distinguishes her, is not one of those which tend
to expand the brain. The others have more opportunity of acquiring
knowledge and varying their accomplishments. The little gleaners gather
a wide experience Of the country and of life. The bee-architects,
who, moreover, attend to a thousand unforeseen domestic affairs, are
compelled to think and develop their intelligence. The mother has but
two duties to fulfil.

On a sunny day in spring, about three hours after noon, she issues
forth, and out of a myriad males or more she selects a spouse, carries
him off a moment on her wings, and then rejects him, mutilated; he does
not survive his felicity. She re-enters her hive, and all is ended. She
is impregnated for four years, the ordinary term of her existence. No
loves can be briefer or more chaste. All her toil, by day and night,
without distinction of season,--except for three months of lethargy in
rigorous winters,--is to lay eggs everywhere, and without cessation.
She flies from cellule to cellule, and in each deposits an egg. Nothing
more is required of her. She was born for this destiny, and her people
prosper in proportion to her fecundity. If she fell barren, all would
languish,--as well as the activity, the labour, and the love which
every one bestows upon her. The sentiment displayed towards her is
not so much of a personal character as the idea of utility, of the
preservation and perpetuity of the people, which very visibly prevails.

This mother, say our authors, has a somewhat giddy head. Like all
individuals who have nothing to do, she is volatile and capricious.
At the end of a year's incubation and sedentary life in the depths of
the hive, a desire seizes her for the open air, to see a little of the
world, to visit new countries. She has, nevertheless, a more serious
motive than they say. She sees the spacious chambers which are being
built for the young mothers who will replace her. She feels that her
rivals are concealed there, and grows fiercely jealous. Incessantly she
prowls around, and but for the assiduous guard which protects them, and
keeps her away, she would dart her sting through the thin partitions.
Conceive, then, what must be her rage when the young captives, ignorant
of her fury and their danger, make imprudent efforts to escape from
their cradles, hum and sing aloud their little cicala song, which
is peculiar to the mother of the bees, and so clearly announces to
the queen the presence of the pretenders? The foresight of the bees,
which, to guard against all accidents, has thus reared up the young
mothers, involves them then in difficulty. A frightful combat impends,
a wholesale massacre; the old queen-mother, were she allowed, would not
spare one of those odious females. Separation is preferable to civil
war. The aged sovereign, agitated and distraught, runs everywhere, and
seems to say: "Let those who love me, follow me." She raises a song of
departure, and all labour is suspended.

Determined to follow her, numbers of the bees make the necessary
preparations, and eat a supply of food which will last them several
days. The excessive agitation is manifested by a sudden change of
temperature; from 28° C., the heat of the hive mounts up to 30° or
32°,--a condition of things intolerable to the bees, for to respire
easily is a peculiar feature of their organization. In the extreme
heat they are all bathed in sweat. Therefore they must either set out
or die. The mother sallies forth, and they rush headlong after her.
They buzz and whirl for a moment round the abandoned home, and then
dart a little further away, describing in the air the most fantastic
and incredible flights. The air is darkened with them. At length some
settle upon the branch of a neighbouring tree, then numerous others
take their places, along with the queen. They cling to one another, and
droop downwards in a large cluster. Tranquillity is re-established. The
other bee communities having taken the alarm, and fearing the invasion
of the fugitives, have guarded their gates, and reinforced their
ordinary posts; but now, seeing them settled, they breathe freely, and
return to their occupations.

[Illustration]

Meanwhile some prudent and faithful messengers are despatched from
the cluster to examine the neighbouring localities best adapted for
a new establishment. M. Debeauvoys was the first to observe this act
of prudence, this special and prudent mission of inspection for the
information and guidance of the new colony. A hollow tree, or a cavity
in the rock, protected from the north wind, and near a brook where they
can conveniently drink, are the conditions which weigh most with our
prudent emigrants. A hive fully prepared and already furnished with
honey they do not regard with indifference. They are very decisive in
their movements, being directed by an excellent sense.

Shall we affirm that they have quitted without regret the native land
where they toiled so successfully? And that, having once forsaken it,
they think of it no more? By no means. The mother especially,--"giddy"
as they call her,--has her fancies for return, and twice--nay,
thrice--persists in going back, carrying with her the too devoted
colony.

What would befall if, in these home-visits, she found herself face to
face with the new queen whom the non-emigrating people have substituted
in her place? There would be a combat. And this, too, happens without
emigration, when, spite of all the efforts that are made to prevent
her, a young mother, having forced her way through the wall of her
apartment, reveals to the old queen the detested object of her
jealousy. A duel then infallibly takes place. However, as each knows
the other to be armed with a mortal dart, their natural cowardice would
moderate their fury, and limit the struggle to a few harmless shocks,
and an innocent wrestle, like the pugilistic display of paid athletes.
But the people who gather round and look on from a near point of view
are very grave, and mean the affair to be so. Division in the community
would be the greatest of all evils. Moreover, they are so economical
and temperate for themselves, so parsimonious for others, that they
take into consideration, I am sure, the enormous cost that would
result from the establishment of a couple of queens. Each one of them,
royally nourished as they are, is a serious trouble to the republic.
The State would be ruined if it had to pay a double budget. Therefore
one of them must die. And hence arises a strange spectacle, completely
characteristic of the singular spirit of this people: the object of
adoration, recently gorged, and brushed, and caressed,--if she recoil,
is led back to the combat, is impelled and driven into it, until one
of the two antagonists contrives to leap upon the other, and from its
bended and superjacent abdomen plunges into the latter's entrails the
irremissible poignard.

Unity is thus secured. The survivor, who, if conquered, would have been
flung aside without regret, now that she is victorious becomes the idol
and living deity of the commonwealth; but let her remember, on the
express condition of perpetuating the people and proving continuously
prolific.

Let us suppose a deplorable misfortune,--that every mother has
perished. What then becomes of the orphaned world? Does it fall, as
some have asserted, into complete demoralization? Does such a calamity
entail a furious anarchy, a universal pillage of the people by the
people themselves? By no means, says M. Debeauvoys. A few hours of
trouble, pain, wrath, and apparent delirium follow. The bees flutter
to and fro in great agitation, and suspend their work; for a moment
they even neglect the nurslings. But a people so grave and dignified
at bottom soon resume their dignity, and remember what they owe to
themselves. The mother is dead? Long live the mother! We know how to
create another. What we were yesterday, so are we to-day.

The last will be first. They turn to the youngest child of the people,
who has barely opened her shell, who has not had time to undergo the
confinement of a narrow cradle, who has not yet grown lean on the
scanty fare of an artisan. This fare is not honey, but merely the dust
of flowers which naturalists call _bees' bread_. Those who have been
previously fed upon poorer fare will remain little; they no longer
possess the faculty of transformation.

But this young bee, so soft and so tender, will become whatever you
will; and in order that she may develop into a true female, a bee of
love, and a prolific mother, what is necessary? Liberty. Let them
provide her with a vast cradle where her young life may float, and
agitate, and develop, at ease. It will cost three cradles destroyed
to provide for hers, and the lives of three infants, who will perish
before birth; but what matter, if in a year she supplies the nation
with ten thousand?

The consecration of the mother of the people is that living nourishment
which the people extract from themselves, and in which they mingle
their bee-sweetness with the balmy essence of the flowers. A strong and
noble nourishment, rich in the intoxicating perfume of aromatic herbs,
richer in the virginal love concentrated upon it by thirty thousand
sisters for the behoof of the marvellous child who belongs to them all.

On the third day the child sees its cradle extended by an ornament
intended to make it still freer,--a pyramid reversed. On the fifth only
do they seal it up, to the intent that she may sleep peacefully, and
accomplish her metamorphosis in peace. And then the anxiety increases.
They guard the beloved sleeper who will be to-morrow the common soul,
and will inspire by her love the labours of the people. They guard
her, and they wait upon her, but with the haughty dignity of a people
who adore only their own handiwork, chosen by them, nourished by them,
created by them, and to be unmade by them. It is their pride that at
need they know how to create a god.

[Illustration]




[Illustration: CONCLUSION.]




[Illustration]




Conclusion.


The bee and the ant reveal to us the lofty harmony of the insect.

Both, in their high intelligence, are of superior rank as artists,
architects, and the like. The bee is more, a geometer; the ant is
before all remarkable as an educator.

The ant is frankly and strongly republican, having no need of a living
and visible symbol of the community, lightly esteeming and governing
with sufficient rudeness the soft and feeble females who perpetuate
the race. The bee, on the other hand, more tender apparently, or less
reasoning and more imaginative, finds a moral support in the worship of
the common mother. For her community of virgins it is, so to speak, a
religion of love.

Among both the ants and bees maternity is the social principle; but
fraternity also takes root, flourishes, and springs to a glorious
stature.

Our book, begun in a profound obscurity, terminates in a fulness of
light.

To form a correct judgment of insects, you must examine and estimate
their achievements and their societies. If their organization rank
so low as has been said, so much the more are they to be admired for
accomplishing such noble works with such inferior organs.

[Illustration]

Observe that the most advanced works are executed by those (as, for
example, the ants) who have no special implements to facilitate them,
but must supply the want by skill and invention.

Were they not so diminutive, what consideration we should extend to
their arts and labours! Comparing the cities of the termites with the
cabins of the negro, the subterranean galleries of the ants with the
little excavations of our Tourangeaux of the Loire, how we should
dwell on the superior skill of the insects! Is it stature, then, which
changes your moral judgments? What are the proportions which will merit
your esteem?

       *       *       *       *       *

Let us add, that if this book do not modify the opinion of the reader,
it has greatly modified our own. This, in the course of our labour,
has undergone a considerable change. We thought we were going to study
things, and found them _souls_.

Close daily observation, initiating us into their ways and habits,
developed in our minds a sentiment which animated our study, but also
complicated it,--respect for their persons and lives.

"What say you? An ant's existence? Nature holds them cheaply, renews
them incessantly, prodigalizes lives, sacrifices them to one another."

[Illustration]

Yes, but because she makes them. She bestows life and withdraws it; has
the secret of their destinies, and that of the compensations in the
course of possible progress. But as for us, we have no power over them,
except to make them suffer.

       *       *       *       *       *

This is a grave reflection. We are not talking here of any childish
sensibility. On the contrary, neither children nor men of science
cherish any such feeling. But a man--man accustomed to reason with
himself and estimate his acts--will not lightly deprive any creature of
that gift of life which it is utterly out of his power to confer on the
most insignificant. This consideration impressed us strongly. And at
first a person, a woman, more impressionable and more scrupulous than
myself, who had come hither with the design of making a collection of
the insects of Fontainebleau, hesitated, deferred the task; and then,
having interrogated her conscience, felt compelled to renounce it.
Without uttering a word of censure upon scientific collections, which
are absolutely indispensable, it is certain that we ought not to find
a pastime in death. Note that many of these creatures are much less
important in form and colour than by attitude and movement, which
cannot be preserved at the extremity of a pin!

Our first discussion of this kind was in reference to the fate of
a very remarkable butterfly (a sphinx, if I mistake not), which we
caught in a net to examine for a moment. I had admired it for several
days, coming and going among the flowers,--not, like most of its race,
flying hap-hazard, but choosing them discreetly, and then, with a very
fine, very long and arrowy proboscis, sucking by small sips, and very
quickly withdrawing, as if acted upon by a steel spring. The movement
was one of incomparable grace, of coquettish sobriety; just as if it
said: "Enough for to-day,--enough! But, to-morrow!" I have never seen
anything more graceful.

It is only a gray butterfly, and not at all remarkable. Who that sees
it dead would divine that, in charming nimbleness, it is the favourite
of Nature, in which she has exhausted all her grace?

We opened the net. And not long afterwards we had the pleasure of
seeing the same butterfly, which, in bad weather, came one evening to
take shelter with us, and found a resting-place in our chamber. In the
morning, wishful to enjoy the sunshine, it flew away.

       *       *       *       *       *

I ought to add, moreover, that all the shipwrecked unfortunates of
the latter end of autumn, guided by a very sure but very surprising
instinct, willingly came to our house,--some on a temporary visit,
others to remain with us. A young bullfinch, in a bad condition,
and who had evidently met with more than one adventure, arrived all
bewildered, and even on the first day ate from our hands. The same
thing happened with a still more miserable creature,--a little tiny
red-tail, which had been barbarously deprived of its head-feathers that
it might be sold for a nightingale. This creature, so ill-treated by
men, which might justly have been afraid of them, not only took at the
very first the seed from our hands and lips, but would not sleep except
on the mistress's finger.

As for insects, their domestication is impossible. But many,
nevertheless, seem able to live with man, to appreciate peaceable
people and mildness of character. Last winter, two pretty red
lady-birds had taken up their residence on our table, among our books
and papers, which were being constantly moved about. What to give them,
we knew not; they passed the whole season without eating, or appearing
to receive any injury. The warmth of the apartment seemed agreeable to
them.

       *       *       *       *       *

A strong September wind is now blowing, and, this very day, has cast
in upon us a beautiful reddish-coloured caterpillar. Though she had
not come of her own accord, but in spite of herself, we felt that we
ought to respect misfortune. We did not know from what plant she had
been torn, but supposed from her motions that she had been carried away
at the moment she had begun to spin. We presented her with a variety
of leaves; but none of them pleased her taste. She moved to and fro,
displaying an extraordinary agitation. We supposed she wished to find
rest upon a branch, but the rain fell in torrents. As many caterpillars
and larvæ work underground, we brought it some earth. But this, too,
was useless. Thinking she might like a web at a time when she was
engaged in weaving, we placed her on the lace-work of a cushion which
lay in the window; but the lace was cold and coarse, and did not please
her. Moreover, the wind, the little wind which entered, would have
cruelly frozen her during a whole winter. Finally, by a feminine marvel
of intuition, we concluded that, since she was about to weave silk, she
would like the silk-velvet lining of our microscope.

Plainly, it was the very thing she herself would have chosen. Installed
in the evening, by the morning she had made herself at home in this
soft, warm, and sheltered place. She had already spun, and hastily
extended her threads to right and left, as if fearing she might be
disturbed. Then, during the day, her work having been respected, she
saw that she had miscalculated her measurements, and that her cocoon
was too short; she destroyed a third of it, to resume the fabric from
that point on better proportions.

Behold, then, microscope, and scalpel, and all our instruments
expelled. What could we do? The confiding animal had taken up a
position at our fireside, and would not withdraw from it. Life had
driven out Science. Grave study, wait! for awhile thou art adjourned.
During the winter we respected the sleep of the chrysalis.

[Illustration]




[Illustration: Illustrative Notes.]




[Illustration]




Illustrative Notes.


NOTE 1.

_The Meaning of this Book._--It has sprung wholly from the heart.
Nothing has been given up to the intellect, nothing to systems. We have
abstained from entering into scientific disputes.

If the following formula should seem to you too systematic, pass over
it. We have not sought to embody a dogma in it. We would only simplify,
if possible, the point of view, and place it in the reader's power to
embrace the whole significance of the book.

The point of departure is violent. It is the gigantic and necessary
war waged by the insect upon all morbid or encumbering life that might
prove an obstacle to life. A terrible war, an infernal toil, which,
ensures the safety of the world.

This powerful accelerator of the universal passage should destroy like
fire. But to secure the sharpness of action such a mission requires,
it is necessary that its own transformations be accelerated, its life
compressed; that from love to death, and death to love, it revolve
in a burning circle. However brief may be this circle, it cannot be
accomplished but at the cost of painful metamorphoses, which resemble a
series of successive deaths.

Among most insects, marriage means the death of the father; maternity,
the death of the mother. Thus the generations pass away without knowing
one another. The mother loves her daughter, anticipates her birth,
often immolates herself for her sake, but will never see her.

This cruel contradiction, this harsh denial which Nature opposes to the
most pathetic aspirations of love, apparently inflames and irritates
it. It gives everything unreservedly, knowing that it is for death.
It draws from it two powers; on the one hand, unheard _tongues of
light and colour_, ravishing phantasmagorias, in which love is not
translated, but expands in rays, and pharos-fires, and torches, and
burning sparks. It is the appeal to the rapid present, the lightning
and the thunder of happiness. But the love of the to come, the
foreseeing tenderness for that which not yet is, is expressed in
another fashion by the astonishingly complex and ingenious creation of
a storehouse of implements, whence all our mechanical arts have derived
their most perfect models. Usually this grand apparatus of tools serves
but for a day; it enables them at the moment they forsake the orphan to
improvise the cradle which shall continue the mother, shall perpetuate
the incubation when the mother ceases to exist.

But how? Must she indeed perish? Can there be no exception to the
pitiless law? In hot climates, especially, many mothers may survive.
What if these mothers united together to deceive destiny, by
associating so many brief existences in one common and lasting life in
which their children should find an eternal mother?

How shall we elude death?--Let us create society.

The society of mothers. The insect is essentially a female and a
mother. The male is an exception, a secondary accident,--frequently,
too, an abortion, a caricature of an insect.

The dream of the female--maternity, and the safety of her child--the
preservation of the future--leads her to create the community, which
secures her own safety.

This society can only perpetuate itself by ensuring its existence
against the season of sterility. Hence results a need of accumulation.
Hence proceed labour and economy.

But Nature, eluded by the effort and the toil,--I was going to say,
the virtue,--does not lose its rights. Beaten on the one side, on the
other it reacts upon the commonwealth, and grievously oppresses it.
This self-protecting society, while rescuing immense multitudes from
death and prolonging the common existence, multiplies the mouths to be
fed, and is often overloaded. If its members would not die of famine,
they must live on a very scanty regimen, must preserve alive a limited
number of fertile females, and condemn the majority, or nearly the
whole of the females to celibacy. Reared for virginity and labour,
sterilized from the cradle in their maternal powers, they are by no
means of barren intellect. The extinction of certain faculties seems to
strengthen the others.

Such is the institution, ingeniously severe, of aunts or adoptive
mothers. With too little sexual feeling to desire love, they possess
enough to wish for children, to love and adopt them. They are both less
than mothers, and more than mothers. Should invasion or ruin befall
the hive or the ant-hill, the true mothers consult their own safety in
flight; the devoted aunts or sisters know no other thought but that of
saving the children.

Elevated by this factitious maternity and disinterested love above
itself, the insect surpasses all other creatures,--even those which,
like the mammals, are evidently superior in organization. It teaches us
that organism is not everything, and that there is a potency in life
which acts strongly beyond the range and in despite of the organs.
Those species which, like the ants, have no special instruments to
facilitate their work, are invariably the most advanced.

The noblest work of the world, the most elevated goal to which its
inhabitants tend, is the community,--by which I mean a society strongly
consolidated. The only being, besides Man, who seems to reach this
goal, is undoubtedly the Insect.

No other creature approaches it. The most sublime and charming, the
Bird, is, through these very qualities, also the most individual. Its
society is the family; its community, the nest; its associations are
only collocations of nests for the sake of security. Those mammals
which, approach us so nearly, and impress us so strongly by their
advanced organisation,--I mean, the beaver,--show wonderful powers
of combination for the execution of their task; but, when the work
is done, they retire to their own houses and families, isolated by
the very tenderness of their domestic affections. The assembly of the
beavers is, as it were, a colony of builders and engineers, where each
one lives apart; but they are not citizens, and it is not a city.

       *       *       *       *       *

The city is only to be found in the insect world. Separated from man by
many degrees in organism, the insect approaches him more closely than
any other being in the supreme work of his life,--which is, to live for
the many. It has not those touching signs of close relationship which
render the higher animals so interesting to us. It has no blood; it has
no milk. But I recognize it as akin by one loftier attribute: it has
the social sense.

       *       *       *       *       *

An ignorant dogmatism had long asserted that the very perfection
of these insect-societies depended on their automatism. But modern
observation has proved, that if the conditions are varied, and
unforeseen obstacles and difficulties placed in their way, they
confront them with vigour and calm sense, and with the resources of an
unfettered ingenuity,

It is a world of _method_, which, at need, can show itself
_unrestrained_.

A world which, presently, in its original mission of combat and
destruction, seemed to us an atrociously fatal force; but which
afterwards, by the influence of its maternal devotion, became a world
of social harmony, preaching a lofty morality.

But is _maternity_ all? No; the community of life introduces the insect
to the threshold of a still higher rank of sentiments. Even among those
which are isolated--among the necrophori, for example, and the pilulary
scarabæi--_fraternal_ co-operation has a beginning. They render mutual
services, and fly to the assistance of one another, co-operating in
certain works. Among the sociable insects the feeling is carried to a
considerable height; the bees feed one another, mouth to mouth, and
stint themselves to supply their sisters. A very safe, and by no means
romantic observer, saw an ant dressing the wound of another ant which
had lost an antenna, by pouring on it some honey-dew to close it up and
protect it from the air.

See now how far we have advanced from our starting-point, where the
insect appeared to us a pure voracious element, a machine of absorption.

A great, a sublime metamorphosis, more marvellous than that of the
moultings and transformations which guided the egg, the grub, the
nymph, to the assumption of wings.

It is a world strange to man, but singularly parallel to our own,
though having no mutual mode of communication. We invent scarcely
anything which has not previously--though for a long time unknown to
us--been invented by the insect.

What have the great animals discovered? Nothing. Apparently their
warmth of life, and their red blood, obscure their mental light.

On the contrary, the insect world, free from a heavy apparatus of flesh
and blood intoxication, more subtly sensitive, and moved by a nervous
electricity, seems a frightful world of spirits.

Frightful? No. If terror sit at the threshold of science, safety is
found in its _penetralia_. At the first glance the living energy of
the invisible may startle us; and with a shudder of alarm we may
contemplate in the animalcule the likeness, some flashes of the
individuality, or a certain undefinable something which seems like a
counterfeit, of man.

These gleams, which so troubled the great Swammerdam, and made him
recoil with dread, are precisely the circumstances that give me
encouragement. Yes; all see, all feel, and all love: a miracle truly
religious! In the material infinite which deepens under my eyes, I
recognize, for my reassurance, a moral infinite. The individuality
hitherto claimed as a monopoly by the pride of the chosen species, I
see generously extended to all, and conferred even upon the least. The
gulf of life would have seemed to me deserted, desolate, barren, and
godless, had I not everywhere discovered the warmth and tenderness of
the Universal Love in the universality of the soul.

[Illustration]


NOTE 2.

_Our Authorities._--In a book which puts forward no scientific
pretensions, the book of an unlearned writer dedicated to unlearned
readers, we do not hesitate to confess that our method of study was
very indirect. If we had commenced with subtle classificators or minute
anatomists, or with dry manuals of instruction, perhaps we should
have been checked at the first step. But we approached this science
on its attractive side--through the great historians of the insect,
who have united the delineation of its habits with the description
of its organs. Our mind had received a strong and decisive blow (if
we may so speak) from the hooks of the two Hubers on the Bees and
the Ants. The impression was so great, that thereafter we read with
interest what one does not usually read continuously, Réaumur's six
quarto volumes of _Mémoires_--an immortal book, which must always be
a standard authority. Neither the contemptuous reaction of Buffon,
nor the anatomical works, of superior exactness on special points,
which have since been produced, should cause it to be forgotten.
Réaumur was, as it were, the central point of our studies, and from
him we went back to the illustrious masters of the seventeenth
century, Swammerdam and Malpighi; next, we descended to those of the
eighteenth, the Lyonnets, Bonnets, and Geers; finally, to our modern
writers, Latreille, Duméril, Lepelletier, Blanchard,--to the fertile
and audacious school of the Geoffroy Saint-Hilaires and the Audouins,
gloriously supported by Ampère and Goethe. While profiting by the noble
treatises which sum up the main results of the science, like those
of Lacordaire, we by no means neglected the admirable monographs of
the present, century,--those of Léon Dufour (scattered through the
_Annales des Sciences Naturelles_, and other collections), the grand
work of Walckenaër on the Spiders, the colossal labour of Strauss
on the Cockchafer--a monument of the first class, which can only be
compared to Lyonnet's treatise on the Caterpillar. As for details drawn
from travellers, we shall hereafter have an opportunity of referring
to them. We shall also acknowledge our debt to foreign writers,--to
Kirby, Smeathman, Lund, and others. For the anatomy of the insect, as
for general anatomy, we cannot too strongly recommend the admirable
and usefully enlarged specimens prepared by our excellent master, Dr.
Auzoux.

[Illustration]


NOTE 3.--Book i., Chap. iii.

_On Insect Embryos, Invisible Animalcules, Infusorias as the
Predecessors or Forerunners of the Insect, &c._--The work of the
_vermets_ has been observed, in Sicily, by M. de Quatrefages.--As for
the microscopic fossils, the infusorias, &c., their great _coup de
théâtre_ has been Ehrenberg's discovery. See his _Mémoires_ in the
_Annales des Sciences Naturelles_, Second Series, vols, i., ii., vi.,
vii., viii. In volume i., p. 134, for 1834, he specifies the point at
which Cuvier left the science, and how much his discovery has added to
it.

Upon the living world, upon the processes at present in operation
for the creation of little spheres, on those humble constructors who
accomplish such great things, we owe all our information to the English
voyagers, the Nelsons,[S] the Darwins, and others. They are minute and
very simple observers, generally timid in their assertions, which have
been of the boldest character, they having seen the very heart of the
mystery, and caught Nature in the act. Read Darwin (whose researches
have been most ably summed up by Sir Charles Lyell) for information on
the prodigious manufacture of chalk, divided alternately between the
fishes and the polypes, which are building up islands with it, and will
soon construct continents.

[Footnote S: "Nous devons tout aux navigateurs Anglais, aux Nelson, aux
Darwin," etc.]

England alone, that immense _poulpe_ whose arms enfold the earth, and
who incessantly _feels_ and examines it, could observe it thoroughly in
its distant solitudes, where at its ease it continues its everlasting
procreation. The great theories formerly advanced in explanation of the
cataclysms, epochs, and revolutions of the earth, will lose, perhaps,
something of their importance. For we know now that everything is in a
state of constant change.

Does Europe perceive that quite a complete literature has sprung from
Great Britain in the last twenty years? I describe it as an immense
commission of inquiry into the condition of the globe, undertaken by
the English. They alone could do it. And why? Because other nations
_travel_, but only the English _reside_. They daily recommence at all
points of the earth the life-study of a Robinson Crusoe: and this
is done by a crowd of isolated observers, led abroad by commercial
speculation, and hence so much the less systematical in their inquiries.

[Illustration]


NOTE 4.--Book i., Chap. iv.

(_Love and Death._) _On the Female Apparatus._--Réaumur,--and, in fact,
every writer,--has admired the manner in which the weapons of war
become the instruments of maternal love. M. Lacase, in a very beautiful
thesis, the result of independent observations, and a continuation of
the analogous works of an eminent master, Léon Dufour, has treated this
subject with great anatomical preciseness. An original and important
point of his labour is, undoubtedly, his demonstration, conformably
to the views of Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire, Serres, Audouin, and others,
"that the very various armours which prolong the abdomen imply the
modification, or even the sacrifice, of one or two of its posterior
rings." Thus Nature apparently operates upon a fixed, amount of
substance, only increasing one part at the expense of others, which are
shortened or transformed.

[Illustration]

[Illustration]


NOTE 5.--Book i., Chap. v.

_The Chilly Offspring of the Insect._--"But," the reader will exclaim,
"what labour! How terrible a law of continuous efforts to be imposed
on young beings, as yet but ill provided with tools, and without, that
superb arsenal of implements which at a later stage we admire in the
insect. How protracted are the means devised for their defence, which
would be much sooner accomplished if they were born less soft, a
little firmer, and somewhat less impressionable."

Yes; but in that case they would be just so far unfitted for the
essential circumstance which ensures their development. Nature
wishes them to be soft, ay, and very soft, that they may more easily
undergo the moultings and painful changes which are imperative upon
them,--which moultings, if the insect-substance were hard, would
inflict upon it the most severe injuries. By instinct they are aware
of this, and dread extremely lest their bodies should harden. The
_processionary_ caterpillars, for example, though covered thickly with
hair, conceal themselves from the sun under ample curtains. And they
are also mindful to issue forth only in the evening, when the damp and
misty air may preserve their salutary humidity.


NOTE 6.--Book i., Chap. vii.

_The Appearance of the Perfect Insect._--The anatomy of the insect
has been the theme of one of the greatest disputes of our time. Some
one having visited Goethe, soon after the French Revolution of July
1830:--"Well, well," inquired the illustrious sage, "have they settled
the question?" And as the traveller seemed to think he referred to the
political question, "Oh, it is something of far greater importance!"
said Goethe; "I refer to the great duel between Cuvier and Geoffroy."

The world took part in it. Strauss and others remained faithful to
Cuvier. The great physicist Ampère, in an anonymous article inserted in
the first volume of the _Annales des Sciences Naturelles_, adopted the
opinions of Geoffroy, Audouin, and Serres, and even expressed them with
a juvenile audacity that these anatomists, in their modesty, had not
displayed.

All the complex details of their proceedings had been extracted and
prepared [by Madame Michelet] for the present volume with a patience
and persevering love such as could be inspired only by a true and
tender religion of Nature. Barbarian that I am, I must sacrifice this
arduous labour, which, perhaps, would not be much relished by the
public to whom I address myself.

The place which the insect occupies in the animal creation is very
clearly defined in Lacordaire's excellent _résumé_:--"Equal to the
vertebrates in the energy of its muscular fibre, scarcely inferior to
them in the organization of its digestive canal, superior even to the
bird by the quantity of its respiration, it falls below the molluscs
through the imperfection of its system of circulation. Its nervous
system is less concentrated than that of many of the crustacea."
(Lacordaire, vol. ii., p. 2.)

Has the insect a brain? It is a disputed question. The nervous
apparatus which, in the molluscs, has not found, so far, a centre,
tends, it is true, in the insect, towards centralization. Two
longitudinal strings of nerves, which run through the entire length
of the body, abut on the nerves of the head, which are not massed
as in the higher animal. In the wasp, however, has been discovered
a firm, whitish substance, strongly resembling the brain. But this
would seem exceptional. Even in the head of insects remarkable for
their intelligence, you will find only simple nervous ganglions, not
differing in any respect from those which compose the two threads.

This inferiority of organization does but render more surprising the
superiority of the insect in art and sociability to all other animals,
even to the principal mammals (with a single exception). Here at the
highest point of the ladder, there at the lowest, it occupies, on the
whole, a middle place; and is, as it were, in the scale of existence,
an energetic mediator between life and death.

[Illustration]


NOTE 7.--Book ii., Chap. i.

_Swammerdam._--We refer to the inaugurator and martyr of our science,
the creator of the instrument which has enabled men to follow up
his discoveries,--a great inventor in many senses,--specially for
the preparation of anatomical specimens. The reader should study
his _Biblia Naturæ_, in Boerhaave's edition, ornamented with fine
illustrations (two vols. folio), and not in the incomplete French
abridgment, published in the _Mémoires_ of the Academy of Dijon, which
gives the scientific results, but no trace of the man.

We do not undertake to write the history of Entomology. A good
abridgment will be found at the end of M. Th. Lacordaire's
_Introduction à l'Entomologie_.

[Illustration]


NOTE 8.--Book ii., Chap. iv.

_The Insect as Man's Auxiliary._--The ingenious work which I here
confute, and which, assuredly, cannot be read with gratification, is
entitled,--_Les Insectes, ou Réflexions d'un amateur de la chasse aux
petits oiseaux_, par E. Gand, _Lecture faite à l'Académie d'Amiens_
(26th December 1856).

A remark which I make a few pages further on, in reference to the
necessity of a popular teaching of natural history, well deserves
to gain attention. The wealth and morality of the world would be
doubled if this teaching could be universal. M. Emile Blanchard's
important work, _Zoologie Agricole_ (in folio, 1854), gives the very
useful history of the principal insects injurious to our ordinary
or ornamental plants. M. Pouchet, in his excellent _Mémoire_ on the
Cockchafer, enumerates the principal authors who have described the
destructive insects. The United States Congress has entrusted to Mr.
Harris the preparation of a history of them.

[Illustration]


NOTE 9.--Book ii., Chap. v.

_Light and Colour._--My description of tropical climates is borrowed
from a large number of travellers,--Humboldt, Azara, Auguste,
Saint-Hilaire, Castelneau, Weddell, Charles Waterton, and others. For
Brazil and Guiana, I have been greatly indebted to the exceeding
courtesy of M. Ferdinand Denis, whose knowledge of those countries is
so perfect.

Paris possesses several fine collections of insects, besides that of
the Museum. One of the best-known is Doctor Bois Duval's (lepidoptera).
An establishment exclusively devoted to the sale of insects may be
found at No. 17 Rue des Saints-Pères. The magnificent collection to
which I refer on page 176, is that of M. Douë, who most readily showed
it to us, and explained it with infinite complaisance.

The anecdote which concludes chapter xii. (_The Ornament of Living
Flames_) is related, in reference to the women of Santa Cruz in
Bolivia, by the always accurate Dr. Weddell. The Indian phrase,
"Replace it whence thou borrowedst it," is recorded by Waterton.

[Illustration]


NOTE 10.--Book ii., Chap. viii.

_Renovation of Human Arts by Study of the Insect._--Who has not seen
that for a long time the art of decoration has made no progress, does
but incessantly repeat itself? When a particular subject has lasted
ten years, men think to rejuvenate it with a few variations. In a life
of half a century I have several times seen this rotation of fashion,
which would appear singularly monotonous if we did not possess in so
high a degree the gift of forgetfulness.

The decorative art, instead of seeking its renovation in the things
of old, would profit greatly by drawing its inspiration from the
infinity of beauties distributed throughout Nature. They abound and
superabound:--

1st, In the highly accented forms of tropical plants. Ours only produce
their effect in masses, and on a grand scale.

2nd, In those of a great number of the lower animals, radiata,
and others; in many of the little floating molluscs, living and
imperceptible flowers, the design of which, when enlarged, might
suggest some very original ideas.

3rd, In certain parts of the most despised creatures; as, for example,
in the eyes of the fly.

4th, In the forms, designs, and colours one detects in the thickness
of the living tissue; as, for example, on lifting with the scalpel
the strata of the wing-sheath of the beetles. Nature, which has so
embellished the surface, has hidden, perhaps, still more beauty in
the depth. Nothing is finer than the vital fluids, when seen in the
mobility of their circulation, and in the delicate canals where
that circulation is accomplished and defined. They speak to us less
eloquently, and impress us less forcibly by the splendour of the
glittering leaves among which they circulate, than by the expressive
forms in which we divine the mystery of their life. These are their
visible energies.

[Illustration]


NOTE 11.--Book ii., Chaps. ix. and x.

_The Spider._--These two chapters are mainly the result of our own
observations. We have profited, however, by several authorities;
especially by the capital and classical work, the grand labour
of Walckenaër,--which is of importance both for the description,
classification, and moral history of the Spiders.

Azara tells us that in Paraguay the natives spin the cocoon of a great
orange-coloured spider fully an inch in diameter. Sir George Staunton,
the English ambassador to China, in his "Travels in Java" (vol. i., p.
343) informs us that the epeiras of Asia weave such stout webs that
they can only be cut with a sharp-edged instrument; at the Bermudas,
their webs are capable of arresting the progress of a bird as big as a
thrush (Richard Stafford, _Coll. Acad._, ii., p. 156).

Doctor Lemercier, our learned bibliographer, has lent to me (from his
personal collection) a rare and very clever _brochure_ by Quatrefages
on the hygrometrical sensibility of spiders, on their prescience
of variations of the temperature--which we might very well turn to
advantage--and on the skilful exposure of their webs.

The formation of their beautiful and poetical autumn-webs, which are
called _Virgin's Threads_, is very clearly explained by Des Étang, in
the _Mémoires de la Société Agricole de Troyes_, for 1839.

In reference to the spider's most terrible enemy, the ichneumon, some
curious details are given in the fourth volume of the _Memoirs_ of the
American Society. In order to preserve it for its little ones, it does
not kill its victim, but, if one may so speak, etherizes it by pricking
it, and distilling into the wound a venom which apparently paralyzes it.

My remarks on the terror of the male in his amorous advances are based
upon those of De Geer, and Lepelletier, in the _Nouveau Bulletin de la
Société Philomathique_, pt. 67, p. 257.

Finally, the master-work of the spider, the ingeniously
constructed house and door of the _Mygale_ of Corsica, has been
completely described and drawn by an observer whom one can trust
implicitly,--Audouin (followed by Walckenaër, and others).

[Illustration]


NOTE 12.-Book iii., Chap. i.

_The Termites._--The beautiful illustrations of Smeathman would merit
reproduction, and the translation of his book (ed. 1784), now very
rarely met with, ought to be reprinted. The interesting additional
details collected by Azara, Auguste, Saint-Hilaire, Castelneau, and
others, might be added, so as to make a complete monograph.

[Illustration]

It is by no means a matter of slight import to recognize that the true
and grand principle of art, so long misunderstood in the Middle Ages,
has been always followed to the very letter by creatures of so low an
order, in their surprising constructions.

The fact I have related in reference to the subterranean mining of
Valencia by the termites, will be found in Humboldt's "Travels in
Equinoctial America."

As for La Rochelle, read the interesting chapter in M. de Quatrefages'
_Souvenirs d'un Naturaliste_.


NOTE 13.--Book iii., Chap. ii.

_The Ants._--The migrations of the tropical ants, say Azara and
Lacordaire, sometimes last over two or three days. They are to be
compared in continuousness and frightful numbers only to the clouds
of pigeons which, in North America, obscure the sky for several
days in succession (see Audubon). Lund (_Annales des Sciences
Naturelles_, 1831, vol. xxiii., p. 113) gives a curious picture of
these ant-migrations. They are terribly warlike, and the Americans
amuse themselves by opposing in a duel the _visiting ant_ (Atta) to
the _Araraa_ ant. The latter, though the weaker, prevails through the
potency of its poison.

As for our European ants, my brother-in-law, M. Hippolyte Mialaret,
transmits to me a curious fact, which, I believe, has not before been
observed. He gave them a medley of various kinds of grain,--wheat,
barley, rye,--which they employed in their buildings. Having opened the
ant-hill, he found the grains carefully classified, and distributed on
different stories,--wheat, for example, on the second, barley on the
third,--the different kinds being nowhere mixed.

An excellent Italian dissertation by M. Giuseppe Gené would induce one
to believe Huber mistaken in his assertion that the mother ant can by
her unaided self found a community. After her fecundation she retires
into a corner, where she plucks off her wings, and waits. There some
prowling ants discover, feel, and recognize her, her and her eggs sown
on the ground, with much prudence and even visible mistrust. Afterwards
they explore the country round about with an infinite circumspection,
always coming back to the mother, and hesitating long before they
decide. At length, their numbers increasing, they definitively adopt
her, and set to work.

The indomitable perseverance of the ants is celebrated in a beautiful
Oriental legend of I know not what Asiatic prince,--Tamerlane, I
believe. Beaten and defeated several times in one campaign, he was
seated, almost despairing, in the depth of his tent. An ant mounted the
side. Several times he made it drop, but it invariably reascended. He
was curious to see how long it would persevere, and twenty-four times
threw it to the ground without discouraging it. Then he grew tired,
and moreover he was full of admiration. The ant conquered. So he said:
"Let us imitate it. We too will conquer as the ant has done." But for
the ant, the hero had missed the Empire of Asia.

[Illustration]


NOTE 14.--Book iii., Chap. iii.

_Flocks of the Ants._--Nearly every plant nourishes grubs, which are
embellished with the most varied, and frequently the most dazzling
colours. The rose-tree aphis, when I examined it through a microscope,
seemed to me of a very pleasant bright green. Thrown on its back, it
displayed a very big belly, and a very small ungainly head, which
appeared to be neither more nor less than a sucker, while it agitated
all its limbs. On the whole, I took it to be an innocent creature,
which should inspire no repugnant feeling. One can understand how the
ants absorb the honey-dew upon its body. (See Bonnet and others, in
reference to their prodigious fecundity.)

[Illustration]


NOTE 15.--Book iii., Chap. v.

_The Wasps._--Before speaking of this terrible species, in which,
perhaps, we see revealed the loftiest energy of nature, I ought to
have spoken of its modest neighbour, the drone. Réaumur, who is not
sufficiently known as a writer, and who frequently displays much
grace of style, says, very pleasingly, that the poor drones, in their
rough little societies, when compared with the royal communities of
the wasps and bees, are mere rustics or savages, and their nests so
many hamlets, but that we find a pleasure, even after having visited
great capitals, in resting our eyes on the simplicity of villages and
villagers. (Réaumur, _Mémoires_, vol. vi., p. iii. preface, and p. 4
text.) Notwithstanding their simplicity, the drones are industrious,
and have their characteristic manners and virtues. The poor males, so
despised elsewhere, are more happily employed here in a society where
the lofty speciality of art, not being so strikingly developed in the
females, proves less humiliating; they are almost the equals of their
spouses, who do not massacre them, as the wasps and bees do their
destined husbands.

[Illustration]


NOTE 16.--Book iii., Chap. viii.

_The Wax-making Bees. An Aristocracy of Artists._--I here follow,
in the main, the authority of M. Debeauvoys, in his _Guide de
l'Apiculteur_ ("The Bee-keeper's Manual"), ed. 1853. In this little
but important book he has made the all-important distinction which
escaped Huber's notice, and separated the great wax-making architects
from the little gleaners and nurses. But I ask his permission to trust
rather to M. Dujardin on the general character of the bees. They are,
undoubtedly, choleric, and of a very dry temperament; the liqueurs and
perfumes of the flowers excite them, and compel them frequently to
quench their thirst. But in themselves they are sufficiently gentle,
and can even be tamed. M. Dujardin, having renewed every day the
provisions of a poor hive, was readily recognized by the bees, who flew
towards him, and ran over his hands without stinging him. The annual
destruction which they consummate of their males is a common law with
them; the wasps, and other necessitous tribes, living in dread of
famine at the epoch when the flowers disappear. In America they are
looked upon as the sign of civilization. The Indians see in the bee the
type of the white race, and in the buffalo the precursor of the red.
(Washington Irving, "Tour in the Prairies.")

The bees, as sisters and aunts, remind one of the Germany of
Tacitus:--"The aunt is there held in higher esteem than the mother." It
must have resembled a country of bees.

M. Pouchet, whom I have already cited several times, has been
good enough to furnish me with a very interesting anecdote of the
mason-bees:--

"In Egypt and Nubia, which I traversed some few months ago, these
hymenoptera and their buildings are so abundant that the ceilings of
certain temples and those of some hypogea are entirely covered with
them, and they absolutely mask the sculptures and hieroglyphics. These
nests frequently form there a succession of layers; and in certain
localities they are superimposed one upon another in sufficient
numbers to form a kind of stalactite suspended to the vaulted roofs
of the monuments. In their construction the bee makes use of Nile mud
only; and when she has deposited therein her progeny, she seals them
up with a delicately wrought cover, which the young bee, after having
undergone its various metamorphoses, lifts off and flies away. But
these nests are often broken up by a species of lizard, which, by means
of its singularly sharp nails, climbs to the ceilings. There it wages
incessant war against the mason-bees while they are building their
nests, or rather it may be seen crashing through the walls to devour
their young progeny."

[Illustration]


NOTE 17.--Conclusion, p. 337.

_A Feminine Intuition._--A great question of method which the future
will clear up, is, to know how far woman will one day master the
sciences of life, and to what extent the study of these sciences will
be shared between the two sexes. If sympathy for animals, long and
patient tenderness, the persevering observation of the delicatest
objects, were the only qualities which this study demanded, it
would seem as if woman ought to make the best naturalist. But the
life-sciences have another and a far gloomier aspect, which repels and
affrights; and it is so, because they are at the same time the sciences
of death.

However, in this very century, the grand and leading discovery,
all-important for the knowledge of the higher insects, belongs to a
maiden, the daughter of a scientific naturalist of French Switzerland,
Mademoiselle Jurine. She has found that the bee-workers, who were
thought to be _neuters_ (of neither the one nor the other sex), were
really females, attenuated by their exceedingly narrow cradles and
inferior regimen. Now, as these workers form nearly the whole people
(except five or six bred as queens, and a few hundred males), it
follows that the hive of twenty or thirty thousand bees is female. Thus
the predominance of the feminine sex, the general law of insect life,
has obtained its supreme confirmation. There are _no neuters_; neither
among the bees, nor the ants, nor all the superior tribes of insects.
The males are a small exception, a secondary accident. I feel able to
assert that, on the whole, _the insect is female_.

Mademoiselle Jurine's discovery has also revealed to us the true
character of the maternity of adoption, an admirably original
characteristic of these insects, and the elevated law of
disinterestedness and sacrifice which is the ennoblement of their
communities.

An undoubtedly inferior, but still distinguished merit to that of
accomplishing great discoveries, is that of representing animals to us
by pen or pencil in their true forms, their movements, and the general
harmony of the things with which they are associated. No art seems to
belong more naturally to woman. A woman has commenced it.

The illustrious Audubon has won just admiration for his representation
of the bird in its complete harmonies, its animal and vegetable
medium, on the plants which feed, near the enemy which assails
it. But it has been too generally forgotten that the model of his
harmonious paintings, which present us with so true a picture of life,
was furnished by a woman, Sybille de Mérian. Her handsome volume
(_Métamorphose des Insectes de Surinam_, folio, in three languages, ed.
1705), was the first in which this admirable method was invented and
skilfully applied.

She is called "_Mademoiselle_," though she was married. The name of
"_dame_" was in her time still restricted to women of noble birth. And
she remains "Mademoiselle;" is never cited except under her maiden
name. Her books, from their pure science and great perseverance, give
one the idea of a person lifted above the world of persons, and wholly
devoted to art and nature.

I have dedicated to her a word or two, but without speaking of her
life. A native of Bâle, the daughter, sister, and mother of celebrated
engravers, and herself an excellent painter of flowers upon velvet,
she long resided at Frankfort and Nurenberg. She experienced great
misfortunes, her husband being ruined and having separated from her.
She then sought refuge in a mystical society, analogous to that which
had formerly consoled Swammerdam. The religious spark of the new
science, _the theology of insects_, as a contemporary terms it, here
produced a strong impression on her mind. She was acquainted with
Swammerdam's great idea, the unity of metamorphoses, and with that
which Malpighi had flung in the face of astonished Europe in his book
on the silkworm: "Insects have a heart."

What! they have a heart, like us! Which, like ours, throbs and stirs
at the impulse of their desires, their fears, or their passions!
How touching an idea! How well adapted to influence a woman!--But is
this a fact? Many long denied it, but doubt has been impossible since
the truth was demonstrated in 1824 in M. Strauss's treatise on "The
Cockchafer."

Madame de Mérian, then, started from the silkworm. But her curiosity
and artistic eagerness embraced everything. Contrasted with her dull
and sombre Germany, Holland, with its rich American and Oriental
collections, appeared to her like the great museum of the tropics.
There she established herself, and with her pencil made its collections
her own. Those faëry cemeteries, glittering with the beauty of the
dead, did but whet in her the desire to investigate life in the region
where it most luxuriates. At the age of fifty-four she set out for
Guiana; and, during a two years' residence in its dangerous climate,
collected the drawings and paintings which were to inaugurate art in
natural history.

In this branch of labour, the stumbling-block of the artist, who is an
artist and nothing more, is that he may do very well, but make Nature
coquettish, add the pretty to the beautiful, and flourish those graces
and daintinesses which secure for a scientific treatise the favour of
fashionable ladies. Nothing of this kind is discernible in the work
of Sybille de Mérian, but on every page a noble vigour, a masculine
gravity, a courageous simplicity. At the same time, a close inspection,
especially of the illustrations coloured by her own hand, discovers
in the softness, breadth, and fulness of the plants, their lustrous
and velvety freshness,--the tones either dead or enamelled, and, as it
were, flowered, which the insects offer,--the tender, conscientious
hand of a woman who has laboured upon the whole with a reverence
inspired by love.

We have seen (p. 180), in our chapter on the _Fire-Flies_, the
astonishment of the timid German in a world so new, when the savages
brought her its living materials,--venomous herbs, lizards, and snakes,
and fantastic serpents. But the very strangeness of this nature, the
emotions of the painter trembling before her models, the restless
attention with which she sought to seize the changeful physiognomy
and mysterious manners, while keenly agitating her heart, did but
awaken her genius. Never satisfied by her representations of fugitive
realities, she believed she could make each insect properly known only
by painting it under all its forms (caterpillar, nymph, butterfly). And
this not contenting her, she placed beneath it the vegetable on which
it fed, and by its side the lizard, serpent, or spider which fed upon
_it_. Thus, the mutuality and exchange of nature was clearly shown; you
saw clearly that formidable circulation, which, in tropical climates,
is so rapid. Each of those fine plates, so harmonious and so complete,
instructs not only by its truthful details, but inspires a profound
sympathy with life, which is a very different and much more valuable
teaching.

One thing strikes me, which, however, this love explains. She has
painted side by side those creatures which devour one another. They
draw close together, each faces its antagonist, and you conclude that a
frightful duel is imminent. But she has generally concealed the tragic
struggle. She has shrunk from painting death.

How much more terrible would have been her task had she advanced
further, had she opened and dissected her models, and forced her
feminine pencil to the lugubrious painting of anatomical detail!

And here we recognize the precise limit at which women are arrested in
the study of the natural sciences. They are incapable of confronting
it on _both_ sides. Michael Angelo has finely said:--"Death and life
are but one. They are the work of the same master and the same hand."
But women do not submit. Between them and death no compact is possible.
This is very easily understood; they themselves _are_ life in all its
prolific charm. They are born to give it. Whatever breaks the charm is
a horror to them. Death, and especially pain, are not only antipathic,
but almost incomprehensible. They feel that only happiness and joy
should attend upon woman. Pain inflicted by a woman's hand appears to
them very justly as a horrible contradiction.

In the natural sciences there are three things they may master, the
three things of life: the _incubation_ of the new being,--that is, the
tenderness of its earliest care; the _education_, the _nourishment_
(to speak as our fathers did) of the young adults; finally, the
_observation_ of manners, and the subtle intelligence of means of
inter-communication with all species. By the aid of these three woman's
arts, man may conciliate and gradually appropriate the inferior
species, and even many of the insect species. To them belong entirely
the arts of domestication. If childhood were less cruel, or at least
not harshly insensible, it might share these womanly cares. For Woman,
as a soft and tender child, full of pity, is the mediator of all nature.

But as for death, as for pain, as for the lights which science draws
from them, do not speak of them to Woman. Here she halts, leaves you on
the road, and will go no further forward.

She asserts--and the assertion may appear of some real weight, even to
the sedatest minds--that science, of late years, has marched by two
contrary roads: on the one hand, demonstrating by the study of manners
and of organs that animals are not a world apart, but far more like
ourselves than had been generally supposed; and on the other, when it
has so clearly proved their great resemblance, and consequently their
capacity of suffering, it ordains that we shall inflict upon them the
most exquisite and most cruelly protracted agonies.

Science, on this terrible side, closes itself more and more against
women. Nature, while inviting them to penetrate it, checks them at
the same time by their excessive tenderness of feeling, and by the
reverence for life with which she herself has inspired them.

Of all creatures, insects seemed the least worthy of being trained (or
domesticated). They were sought only for their colours. Nevertheless,
whoever sees in the pursuit nothing but a simple pleasure, will perhaps
reflect for a moment when he learns that impaled insects frequently
endure their torture for whole years! (See Lemahoux, and, particularly,
the excellent _Bulletin de la Société Protectrice des Animaux_,
September and October 1856.)

       *       *       *       *       *

In proportion as women understand the maternal instincts of the
creatures I have described, their infinite tenderness, and their
ingenious prevision for the objects of their love, it will become
impossible for mothers to immolate _these_ mothers, and put them to the
torture!


Last Words.

The originating sentiment of the studies of which this book is the
outcome, is also that which induced their suspension. Their primary
attraction was found in Huber's revelation, in his vivid manifestation
of the individuality of the insect. But that which at the first
glance had seemed so paradoxical and incredible, was discovered, when
verified, to fall below the reality. The spectacle of so many labours
and efforts for the common good, the sight of all these meritorious
existences, imposes a duty upon our conscience, and renders it more and
more difficult to treat as a _thing_ the being which wills, and toils,
and loves!

[Illustration]




[Illustration]




Analysis of Subjects.


INTRODUCTION.

I. THE LIVING INFINITE.

  The writer is moved by the voices of the Insect World, 17
  Which leads him to reflect on its infinite numbers, 18
  He refers to his loving study of the Bird, 19
  But the Bird had a language; has the Insect?, 19
  In many respects, it is an enigma which Man cannot read, 20
  The Insect, however, has much to plead in self-defence, 21
  And between it and Man the interpreter must be Love, 22


II. OUR STUDIES AT PARIS AND IN SWITZERLAND.

  How the writer was assisted by his wife in his study of the Insect, 23
  Woman is well adapted for such a study; and why?, 24
  Her tact, delicate touch, and fine perception fit her for microscopical
    investigations, 24
  The writer seeks a retirement near Lucerne, 25
  The surrounding scenery is described, 26
  And he bursts into a glowing panegyric on the Alps, 27
  He discourses on the communion between Nature and the human soul, 28
  This leads him to a description of a forest scene, 29
  In which he recognizes the presence of the insect life, 30
  A constant conflict is maintained between the insect and the plant, the
    latter being aided by the bird, 30
  In the forest, then, lurks a hidden world, 31
  The interior of an ant-hill is suddenly revealed, 32
  And the effects become visible of the formic acid, 33
  Reflections suggested by the ruined ant-hill, 34


III. OUR STUDIES AT FONTAINEBLEAU.

  The writer resolves to attempt an explanation of the Insect World, 36
  For such a task Fontainebleau offers peculiar facilities, 37
  A description is given of the characteristics of the place, 38
  It has had a peculiar charm for many illustrious men, 41
  Its individuality is distinct, 42
  In the course of a day it presents various changes, 43
  Yet throughout all a certain sameness is preserved, 44
  This is expressed by the "genius loci,", 45
  The voices of the forest, 46
  Its suitability as a place for reflection, 47
  Its suggestiveness; the very oaks enforce a lesson of perseverance, 48
  Its life centres in its quarrymen and its ants, 49
  The contrast between their several labours, 50
  Nature and the Individual, 51
  The writer enters upon the composition of the present book, 52


BOOK THE FIRST.--METAMORPHOSIS.


CHAPTER I.--TERROR AND REPUGNANCE IN CHILDHOOD.

  Extract from a Journal written by Madame Michelet, 57
  In which she describes a visit to the home of her childhood, 58
  Painful impressions produced by the ravages of the insect, 59
  The writer comments on the repugnance with which the insect is viewed by
    childhood, 60
  This repugnance is not shared by Nature, 61
  Which protects and facilitates it in its work, 62
  On account of its vast importance, 63


CHAPTER II.--COMPASSION.

  The artist Gros reproached a young man for cruelty towards a
    butterfly, 67
  Lyonnet, the naturalist, equally insisted on tenderness towards even
    the lowest forms of life, 68
  The writer records his adventure with a drone, which he thought he had
    killed, in a moment of petulance, 69
  His happiness on seeing the insect revive, 70
  Begins to study the insect seriously on a Swiss tour, 70
  Another extract from Madame Michelet's Journal, 71
  In which is described the author's retreat at Montreux, on the shore of
    the Lake of Geneva, 72
  In one of her walks she observes a combat between a stag-beetle and a
    beetle of inferior size, 73
  The stag-beetle is captured for the purpose of examination, 73
  Effect produced upon it by the vapour of ether, 74
  Regret expressed at having terminated its existence, 75


CHAPTER III.--WORLD-BUILDERS.

  The world _outside_ the terrestrial world, 79
  The world of the infinitely little; the architects of ocean, 80
  The immense works accomplished by the lower organisms, 81
  They build up reefs, banks, islands, 82
  The manufacture of chalk described, 83
  How a coral-island is gradually developed, 83, 84
  Examples of the labours of the coral animals, 85


CHAPTER IV.--LOVE AND DEATH.

  Above these organisms in the scale of creation comes the insect, 89
  Its individuality is explained; its mode of reproduction, 90
  The insect-mother dies in producing her offspring, 91
  But with extraordinary sagacity has provided for its support and
    protection, 92
  Examples given of this wonderful maternal provision, 93
  The labours of the mother-bee explained, 94
  Reference to the "Nymphs of Fontainebleau,"  95


CHAPTER V.--THE ORPHAN: ITS FEEBLENESS.

  The insect enters upon life naked and necessitous, 99
  But all its wants have been carefully anticipated, 100
  Night, however, is the great protection of the embryo, 101
  How it endeavours to guard against cold, 102
  In its necessities originate its various industries, 103
  After a time comes its season of trial, 104
  Of which it exhibits a marvellous presentiment, and for which it
    assiduously prepares, 105


CHAPTER VI.--THE MUMMY, NYMPH, OR CHRYSALIS.

  The meaning of the insect to the ancient Egyptians, 109
  The beetle was regarded as a symbol of Eternity, 110
  Has modern science swept aside the ancient poetry? 110
  That it is not so, is shown by Réaumur's discoveries, 111
  Which show us the marvellous changes the insect undergoes, 112

  And how in each stage of growth the next is prefigured, 113
  However numerous or great the changes, the individuality is
    preserved, 114
  A future life is provided for, as in the case of the human embryo, 115


CHAPTER VII.--THE PHOENIX.

  Out of gloom and obscurity emerges light, 119
  The metamorphosis takes place, but the insect is not at a loss, 120
  Nature furnishes each species with all its needs for the new life, 121
  Its vital intensity is revealed by the brightness of its colouring, 122
  Insects of gay attire are found in every region, 123
  Even among the snows of the Alpine peaks, 124


BOOK THE SECOND.--MISSION AND ARTS OF THE INSECT.


CHAPTER I.--SWAMMERDAM.

  The secret of the Insect World first discovered by Swammerdam, 129
  A comparison instituted between him and Galileo, 130
  His early years, his favourite occupations, and his collections of
    insects, 131, 132
  To assist him in his investigations he invented the microscope, 133
  His patient labours rewarded by great discoveries, 134
  Yet in his own country he was not honoured; it was in France that his
    work met with due appreciation, 135
  Ardent devotion to science brings on premature decay, 136
  Dark clouds overcast his later years, 137
  He died at the age of three and forty, 138
  His work is carried on by Leuwenhoek and Malpighi, 139


CHAPTER II.--THE MICROSCOPE: HAS THE INSECT A PHYSIOGNOMY?

  In the infinitely little lurks a great attraction for man, 143
  Hence its study should be systematically undertaken, 144
  Michelet applies himself to his microscope, 145
  And examines the structure of an insect's wing, 146
  Next, he studies the organization of the ant, 147
  He describes what he saw, 148
  A complex apparatus, both for action and defence, 150
  What it is which separates us from the insect, 151


CHAPTER III.--THE INSECT AS THE AGENT OF NATURE IN THE ACCELERATION
OF DEATH AND LIFE.

  The language of the insect in its immense energy, 155
  A glance is directed at the order of Nature, 156
  And it is shown that all forms of life must be kept within certain
    limits, 156
  Hence, one race preys upon another, and all Nature is a scene of
    incessant combat, 157
  In this work of destruction, and purification, the Bird and the Insect
    play an important part, 158
  The Coleoptera bring their surprising energies to the task, 159
  The insect-tribes are therefore great sanitary agents, 160
  The great Guiana ants afford an illustration, 161
  And the beneficent labours of the spider have secured the respect of the
    Siberians, 162


CHAPTER IV.--THE INSECT AS MAN'S AUXILIARY.

  The want of insect-labour induced the potato disease, 165
  Such is the dictum of an author, who thinks that the multiplication of
    small birds has been destructive to insect-life; but no such
    multiplication of birds has taken place, nor any such destruction of
    insects, 165, 166
  The Bird and the Insect are the joint purifiers of creation, 167
  Some species of insects should be carefully preserved, 167
  A sketch is given of their multifarious labours, 168
  Of the services rendered by the scavenger-insects, 169

  Of the value of certain insects as food, 170
  As, for instance, in the case of the locust, 171
  The law of retaliation illustrated, 172


CHAPTER V.--A PHANTASMAGORIA OF LIGHT AND COLOUR.

  How does the insect express its intensity of vital force? 175
  In various ways, but specially through its glowing hues, 176
  Which are displayed with a profusion that astonishes and almost overcomes
    the observer, 177
  But are not inconsistent with an ingenious mimicry, 177
  A diversion is made to the tropical forest, 178
  Where the insect life is seen in its most splendid developments, 179
  Like winged flames they haunt the leafy shades, 180
  The fire-fly lights up the gloom, and also furnishes woman's beauty with
    a living ornament, 181, 182


CHAPTER VI.--THE SILKWORM.

  The exquisite structure of a woman's hair enlarged upon, 185
  What can compare with it? Only the silkworm's thread, 186
  Peculiar charm attending the silkworm's labours, 186
  And the preciousness of the silken product, 187
  Something is said about the use of silk in Mediæval France, 188
  And on its excellence and fitness as a garment for Beauty, 189


CHAPTER VII.--INSTRUMENTS OF THE INSECT: AND ITS CHEMICAL ENERGIES,
AS IN THE COCHINEAL AND THE CANTHARIDES.

  Hitherto the writer has treated only of the silk of the bombyx, 193
  He now commends the culture of other silk-spinning species, 194
  And is led to speak of the ingenious instruments with which insects are
    provided, 194
  And of their general powers and properties, 195
  Something is said about their weapons, 196
  And the malalis is spoken of, 197


CHAPTER VIII.--ON THE RENOVATION OF OUR ARTS BY THE STUDY OF THE INSECT.

  The Fine Arts would profit by a close study of the insect, 201
  Much might be learned, for instance, from the cockchafer's wing, 202
  Nature is full of suggestive beauty, 203
  Observe the enamels of the cicindela, 204
  And those of the scarabæi, 205
  Instead of copying from antique absurdities, go then to the
    insect-collector's cabinet, 206
  And its treasures will inspire the artist with new ideas, 207


CHAPTER IX.--THE SPIDER--INDUSTRY--STANDING STILL.

  We come to the consideration of the spider, 211
  Whose life is a lottery, and which is branded with ugliness, 212
  It is, however, the type of the persevering worker, 213
  An anecdote in illustration of its character, 214
  Its web, and the mode of its construction, described, 215
  Prudence and patience the characteristics of the spider, 216
  All animals live by prey, and the spider has its foes, 217
  Its existence is confined within a narrow circle, 218
  And is easily terminated, 219


CHAPTER X.--THE HOME AND LOVES OF THE SPIDER.

  Admirable construction of its web, 223
  A glance at the retreat of the Agelena, 224
  Still greater ingenuity is shown by the Mygale, 225
  In the web lurks the weaver, always expectant, 225
  A sensitive being, and subject to fancies of terror, 227
  In his moments of love he is timorous and suspicious, 228
  How he is affected by musical sounds, 229


BOOK THE THIRD.--COMMUNITIES OF INSECTS.


CHAPTER I.--THE TERMITES, OR WHITE ANTS.

  The habitations of the termites, erroneously called White Ants,
    described, both externally and internally, 235, 236
  A wonderful degree of skill shown in the erection of the great dome, 237
  Yet the builders labour under specially difficult circumstances, 238
  Their queen's fecundity; her offspring are tenderly treated, 239
  Their numbers would be a terror to man, were they not checked by many
    enemies, 240
  An illustration is given of their terrible ravages, 241


CHAPTER II.--THE ANTS:--THEIR DOMESTIC ECONOMY--THEIR NUPTIALS.

  Value of the ants as purifying and cleansing agents, 245
  An incident at Barbadoes, 246
  The carpenter-ants, and their ingenuity, described, 247
  Singular affection which they display for the young, 251
  They watch over them with incessant vigilance; their mode of
    inter-communication, 251
  A picture is given of the economy of an ant-hill, 252
  In their labours the ants solve numerous problems by sheer intuition, 253
  Their nuptials described as an idyllic poem, 254
  What remained in the morning, 255


CHAPTER III.--THE ANTS: THEIR FLOCKS AND THEIR SLAVES.

  The writer's pain at discovering among the ants the existence of
    slavery, 259
  Considerations which induced him to continue his studies, 260
  He finds that the ants keep their "herds of cattle," 261
  And discovers a reason for their apparent encouragement of slavery, 262
  Mixed communities of ants; workers and warriors, 263
  The workers are in reality the masters, though they seem to be
    slaves, 264
  A campaign described; red against black, 265
  Ant-societies regulated on the principle of division of labour, 266
  Their species undergo modifications in special circumstances, 267
  The influence of intellect over brute force exemplified, 268


CHAPTER IV.--THE ANTS: CIVIL WAR--EXTERMINATION OF THE COMMUNITY.

  It is the punishment of the tyrant that he cannot readily set free his
    captive, 271
  The caged nightingale, and the clod of earth, 272
  This clod proves to contain a republic of carpenter-ants, 272
  An effort is made to found a new community; difficulties in the way, 273
  An encounter between the carpenter-ants and some mason-ants, 274
  In which the victory is on the side of the Little, 275
  Who carry off the young of the conquered, 276
  A digression comments on the helplessness of the nymph, or larva, 277
  And points out its exceeding suffering in the hands of a victorious
    enemy, 278
  The writer is shocked by the relentless cruelty of the conquerors, 279
  Who have left but one poor fugitive to mourn the death of his
    companions, 280


CHAPTER V.--THE WASPS: THEIR FURY OF IMPROVISATION.

  Sensation caused by the intrusion of a wasp, 283
  A panegyric on a much-abused insect, 284
  Excessive industry of the wasp, 285
  It works, first, as a paper manufacturer; and next, as a mason, 285
  It builds its city with curious forethought and ingenuity, 286
  The mother-wasp, a remarkable example of self-sacrifice, 287
  Wasps distinguished by their patriotic enthusiasm, 288
  At the approach of winter they dissolve the commonwealth, 289


CHAPTER VI.--"THE BEES" OF VIRGIL.

  The Virgilian fable of Aristæus misunderstood, 293
  Intended by the poet as a parable of immortality, 294
  The writer was accidentally led to an understanding of its true
    significance, 295
  A visit to the cemetery of Père-Lachaise, 295
  Here certain lonely graves were haunted by a flight of bees, 296
  Yet they were not true bees; they were two-winged, 297
  They were "the Bees" of which Virgil had sung, 298


CHAPTER VII.--THE BEE IN THE FIELDS.

  Contrast between the Plant and the Animal, 301
  Yet the one life in some points approaches the other, and a certain
    sympathy exists between the flower and the winged insect, 302
  What the flower owes to the bee, 303
  And how far the bee is indebted to the flower, 303
  A panegyric upon the bee, which gives new life to vegetation, 304
  The bee's visit to the flower, and what takes place, 305
  It gives and it receives; evening and morning, 306
  How the bee suffers from cold, keen airs, 307
  "Farewell, madam, and many thanks!" 308


CHAPTER VIII.--THE BEES AS ARCHITECTS: THE CITY.

  Artistic character of the bee-hive, 311
  Its government democratic, or a modified constitutional monarchy, 312
  The writer traces the foundation and erection of the hive, 313
  Its division into cells, and their differences of construction, 314
  The thoughtful skill of the builders illustrated, 315
  As in their improvised defence against the ravages of the Sphinx
    Atropos, 316
  Which may be accepted as a proof of the intelligence of insects as
    distinguished from instinct, 317


CHAPTER IX.--HOW THE BEES CREATE THE PEOPLE AND THE COMMON MOTHER.

  Care of the bee for the nymph, or larva, 321
  As it grows, so does its wonderful organization develop, 322
  Special care bestowed on the future queen, 323
  The queen bee has attributes of its own, 324
  Her rage, when she becomes aware of the existence of possible rivals, 325
  The community divided between the old love and the new, 325
  An emigration takes place, 325
  And a new commonwealth is established, 326
  Sometimes the old queen and the new encounter one another, 327
  In which case a deadly combat ensues, 328
  And the victor becomes the idol of the people, 328
  If both perish, the community, in a state of great excitement, proceed
    to feed and bring up another, 329
  Whom they will guard with loving loyalty, 329


CONCLUSION.

  A comparison, and a contrast, between the bee and the ant, 333
  All insects teach certain noteworthy lessons, 334
  And, primarily, a reverence for life, 335
  Various anecdotes from the writer's own experience are here brought
    forward, in defence of the thesis that life is more precious than
    science, 336


Illustrative Notes, 341

[Illustration]




       *       *       *       *       *






End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Insect, by Jules Michelet

*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE INSECT ***

***** This file should be named 44287-8.txt or 44287-8.zip *****
This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
        http://www.gutenberg.org/4/4/2/8/44287/

Produced by Chris Curnow, Tom Cosmas and the Online
Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
file was produced from images generously made available
by The Internet Archive)


Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
will be renamed.

Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
permission and without paying copyright royalties.  Special rules,
set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark.  Project
Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission.  If you
do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
rules is very easy.  You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
research.  They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks.  Redistribution is
subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
redistribution.



*** START: FULL LICENSE ***

THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK

To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at
  www.gutenberg.org/license.


Section 1.  General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
electronic works

1.A.  By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
(trademark/copyright) agreement.  If you do not agree to abide by all
the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.

1.B.  "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark.  It may only be
used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement.  There are a few
things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
even without complying with the full terms of this agreement.  See
paragraph 1.C below.  There are a lot of things you can do with Project
Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
works.  See paragraph 1.E below.

1.C.  The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
Gutenberg-tm electronic works.  Nearly all the individual works in the
collection are in the public domain in the United States.  If an
individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
are removed.  Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
the work.  You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.

1.D.  The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
what you can do with this work.  Copyright laws in most countries are in
a constant state of change.  If you are outside the United States, check
the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
Gutenberg-tm work.  The Foundation makes no representations concerning
the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
States.

1.E.  Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:

1.E.1.  The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
copied or distributed:

This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
almost no restrictions whatsoever.  You may copy it, give it away or
re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org

1.E.2.  If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
or charges.  If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
1.E.9.

1.E.3.  If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
terms imposed by the copyright holder.  Additional terms will be linked
to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.

1.E.4.  Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.

1.E.5.  Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
Gutenberg-tm License.

1.E.6.  You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
word processing or hypertext form.  However, if you provide access to or
distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
form.  Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.

1.E.7.  Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.

1.E.8.  You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
that

- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
     the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
     you already use to calculate your applicable taxes.  The fee is
     owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
     has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
     Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation.  Royalty payments
     must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
     prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
     returns.  Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
     sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
     address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
     the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."

- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
     you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
     does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
     License.  You must require such a user to return or
     destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
     and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
     Project Gutenberg-tm works.

- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
     money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
     electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
     of receipt of the work.

- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
     distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.

1.E.9.  If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark.  Contact the
Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.

1.F.

1.F.1.  Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
collection.  Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
your equipment.

1.F.2.  LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
fees.  YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3.  YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
DAMAGE.

1.F.3.  LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
written explanation to the person you received the work from.  If you
received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
your written explanation.  The person or entity that provided you with
the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
refund.  If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund.  If the second copy
is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
opportunities to fix the problem.

1.F.4.  Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO OTHER
WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.

1.F.5.  Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
the applicable state law.  The invalidity or unenforceability of any
provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.

1.F.6.  INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.


Section  2.  Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm

Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers.  It exists
because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
people in all walks of life.

Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
remain freely available for generations to come.  In 2001, the Project
Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
and the Foundation information page at www.gutenberg.org


Section 3.  Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
Foundation

The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
Revenue Service.  The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
number is 64-6221541.  Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.

The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
throughout numerous locations.  Its business office is located at 809
North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887.  Email
contact links and up to date contact information can be found at the
Foundation's web site and official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact

For additional contact information:
     Dr. Gregory B. Newby
     Chief Executive and Director
     [email protected]

Section 4.  Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
Literary Archive Foundation

Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
array of equipment including outdated equipment.  Many small donations
($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
status with the IRS.

The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
States.  Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
with these requirements.  We do not solicit donations in locations
where we have not received written confirmation of compliance.  To
SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
particular state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate

While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
approach us with offers to donate.

International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
outside the United States.  U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.

Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
methods and addresses.  Donations are accepted in a number of other
ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations.
To donate, please visit:  www.gutenberg.org/donate


Section 5.  General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
works.

Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
with anyone.  For forty years, he produced and distributed Project
Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.

Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
unless a copyright notice is included.  Thus, we do not necessarily
keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.

Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:

     www.gutenberg.org

This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.