<h2 id="chapter-19"><ANTIMG src="images/i_209.jpg" alt="" /><br/> CHAPTER XIX<br/> <span class="chapter-title">THE TARANTULA</span></h2>
<p><span class="upper">The</span> Spider has a bad name: most of us think
her a horrid animal, and hasten to crush her
under our feet. Nevertheless, any one who observes
her knows that she is a hard worker, a talented
weaver, a wily huntress, and very interesting in other
ways. Yes, the Spider is well worth studying, apart
from any scientific reasons; but she is said to be
poisonous, and that is her crime and the main reason
why we hate her. She <em>is</em> poisonous, in a way, if
by that we understand that the animal is armed with
two fangs which cause the immediate death of the
little victims that she catches; but there is a great
difference between killing a Midge and harming a
Man. However quickly the Spider’s poison kills
insects, it is not as a rule serious for us and causes
less trouble than a gnat-bite. That, at least, is what
we can safely say about the great majority of Spiders.</p>
<p>Nevertheless, a few are to be feared. The Italians
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say that the Tarantula produces convulsions
and frenzied dances in the person stung by her.
Music is the only cure for this, and they tell us some
tunes are better than others. The tarantella,
a lively dance, probably owes its name to this idea
of the Italian peasants. The story makes us feel
like laughing, but, after all, the bite of the Tarantula
may possibly bring on some nervous trouble which
music will relieve; and possibly a very energetic
dance makes the patient break out into a perspiration
and so get rid of the poison.</p>
<p>The most powerful Spider in my neighborhood,
the Black-bellied Tarantula, will presently show us
what her poison can do. But first I will introduce
her to you in her home, and tell you about her hunting.</p>
<p>This Tarantula is dressed in black velvet on the
lower surface, with brown stripes on the abdomen
and gray and white rings around the legs. Her
favorite dwelling-place is the dry, pebbly ground,
covered with sun-scorched thyme. In my plot of
waste ground, there are quite twenty of these Spiders’
burrows. I hardly ever pass by one of these
haunts without giving a glance down the pit where
gleam, like diamonds, the four great eyes, the four
telescopes of the hermit. The four other eyes,
which are much smaller, are not visible at that depth.</p>
<p>The Tarantula’s dwellings are pits about a foot
deep, dug by herself with her fangs, going straight
down at first and then bent elbow-wise. They are
about an inch wide. On the edge of the hole stands
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a curb, formed of straw, bits and scraps of all sorts,
and even small pebbles, the size of a hazel-nut. The
whole is kept in place and cemented with the Spider’s
silk. Sometimes this curb, or little tower, is an inch
high; sometimes it is a mere rim.</p>
<p>I wished to catch some of these Spiders, so I
waved a spikelet of grass at the entrance of the
burrow to imitate the humming of a Bee. I expected
that the Tarantula would rush out, thinking she
heard a prey. My scheme did not succeed. The
Tarantula, indeed, came a little way up her tube to
find out the meaning of the sounds at her door; but
she soon scented a trap; she remained motionless at
mid-height and would not come any farther.</p>
<p>I found that the best method to secure the wily
Tarantula was to procure a supply of live Bumble-bees.
I put one into a little bottle with a mouth
just wide enough to cover the opening of the burrow;
and I turned the apparatus thus baited over
the opening. The powerful Bee at first fluttered and
hummed about her glass prison; then, seeing a burrow
like that made by her own family, she went into
it without much hesitation. She was very foolish:
while she went down, the Spider came up; and the
meeting took place in the perpendicular passage.
For a few moments, I heard a sort of death-song:
it was the humming of the poor Bumble-bee. This
was followed by a long silence. I removed the bottle
and explored the pit with a pair of pincers.
I brought out the Bumble-bee, motionless, dead.
A terrible tragedy must have happened. The Spider
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followed, refusing to let go so rich a booty. Game
and huntress were brought outside the hole, which I
stopped up with a pebble. Outside her own house
the Tarantula is timid and hardly able to run away.
To push her with a straw into a paper bag was the
work of a second. Soon I had a colony of Tarantulas
in my laboratory.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/i_212.jpg" alt="I found that the best method to secure the wily Tarantula was to procure a supply of live Bumble-bees" /></div>
<p>I did not give the Tarantula the Bee merely in
order to capture her. I wished to know also her
manner of hunting. I knew that she is one of those
insects who live from day to day on what they kill.
She does not store up preserved food for her children,
like the Beetles; she is not a “paralyzer,” like
the Wasps you have read about, who cleverly spare
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their game so as to leave it a glimmer of life and
keep it fresh for weeks at a time; she is a killer,
who makes a meal off her capture on the spot. I
wished to find out how she kills them so quickly.</p>
<p>She does not go in for peaceable game. The big
Grasshopper, with the powerful jaws, the Bee and
other wearers of poisoned daggers must fall into her
hole from time to time, and the duel she fights with
them is nearly equal as far as weapons go. For the
poisonous fangs of the Spider the Wasp has her
poisoned dagger or sting. Which of the two bandits
shall have the best of it? The Tarantula has no
second means of defense, no cord to bind her victim,
as the Garden Spiders have. These cover the
captives with their silk, making all resistance impossible.
The Tarantula has a riskier job. She has
only her courage and her fangs, and she must leap
upon her dangerous prey and kill it quickly. She
must know exactly where to strike, for, strong
though her poison is, I cannot believe it would kill
the prey instantly at any point where she happens
to bite. She must bite in some spot of vital importance.</p>
<div><SPAN name="page-214" class="pagenum" href="#page-214" title="214"></SPAN></div>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/i_214.jpg" alt="the Spider’s burrow" /></div>
<h3>A FIGHT WITH A CARPENTER-BEE</h3>
<p>Instead of with the Bumble-bee, who enters the
Spider’s burrow, I wish to make the Tarantula fight
with some other insect, who will stay above ground.
For this purpose I take one of the largest and most
powerful Bees that I can find, the Carpenter-bee,
clad in black velvet, with wings of purple gauze.
She is nearly an inch long; her sting is very painful
and produces a swelling that hurts for a long time.
I know, because I have been stung. Here indeed is
a foe worthy of the Tarantula.</p>
<p>I catch several Carpenter-bees, place them one
by one in bottles, and choose a strong, bold Tarantula,
one moreover who appears to be very hungry.
I put the bottle baited with a Carpenter-bee upside
down over her door. The Bee buzzes gravely in
her glass bell; the Spider comes up from the recesses
of her cave; she is on the threshold, but inside;
she looks; she waits. I also wait. The quarters,
the half-hours pass; nothing happens. The
Spider goes down again: she probably thought the
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attempt too dangerous. I try in this way three more
Tarantulas, but cannot make them leave their lairs.</p>
<p>At last I have better success. A Spider suddenly
rushes from her hole: she is unusually warlike,
doubtless because she is very hungry. She attacks
the Bee in the bottle, and the combat lasts for but
the twinkling of an eye. The sturdy Carpenter-bee
is dead. Where did the murderess strike her?
Right in the nape of the neck; her fangs are still
there. She has the knowledge which I suspected:
she has bitten the only point she could bite to produce
sudden death. She has struck the center of
the victim’s nervous system.</p>
<p>I make more experiments and find that it is only
once in a while that the Tarantula will come out to
fight the Carpenter-bee, but each time that she
does so she kills it in the same way. The reason of
the Tarantula’s hesitation is plain. An insect of
this kind cannot be seized recklessly: the Tarantula
who missed her strike by biting at random would do
so at the risk of her life. Stung in any other place,
the Bee might live for hours and manage to sting
her foe with her poisoned dagger. The Spider is
well aware of this. In the safe shelter of her
threshold she watches for the right moment; she
waits for the big Bee to face her, when the neck is
easily grabbed.</p>
<div><SPAN name="page-216" class="pagenum" href="#page-216" title="216"></SPAN></div>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/i_216.jpg" alt="a young, well-fledged Sparrow" /></div>
<h3>THE TARANTULA’S POISON</h3>
<p>The Tarantula’s poison is a pretty dangerous
weapon, as we shall see. I make a Tarantula bite
the leg of a young, well-fledged Sparrow, ready to
leave the nest. A drop of blood flows; the wounded
spot is surrounded by a reddish circle, changing to
purple. The bird almost immediately loses the use
of its leg, which drags, with the toes doubled in; it
hops upon the other leg. Aside from this, the patient
does not seem to trouble much about his hurt;
his appetite is good. My daughters feed him on
Flies, bread-crumb, apricot-pulp. He is sure to get
well; he will recover his strength; the poor victim
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of the curiosity of science will be restored to liberty.
This is the wish and intention of us all. Twelve
hours later, we are still more hopeful; the invalid
takes nourishment readily; he clamors for it, if we
keep him waiting. Two days after, he refuses his
food. Wrapping himself stoically in his rumpled
feathers, the Sparrow hunches into a ball, now motionless,
now twitching. My girls take him in the
hollow of their hands and warm him with their
breath. The spasms become more frequent. A
gasp tells us that all is over. The bird is dead.</p>
<p>There is a certain coolness among us at the
evening meal. I read silent reproaches, because of
my experiment, in the eyes of the home-circle; I
know they think me cruel. The death of the unfortunate
Sparrow has saddened the whole family.
I myself feel remorseful: what I have found out
seems to me too dearly bought.</p>
<p>Nevertheless, I had the courage to try again with
a Mole who was caught stealing from our lettuce-beds.
I put him in a cage and fed him on a varied
diet of insects—Beetles and Grasshoppers. He
crunched them up with a fine appetite. Twenty-four
hours of this life convinced me that the Mole was
making the best of the bill of fare and taking kindly
to his captivity.</p>
<p>I made the Tarantula bite him at the tip of the
snout. When put back in his cage, the Mole kept
on scratching his nose with his broad paws. The
thing seemed to burn, to itch. From now on, he ate
less and less of the store of insects: on the evening
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of the following day, he refused them altogether.
About thirty-six hours after being bitten, the Mole
died during the night, and certainly not from starvation,
for there were still many live insects in the
cage.</p>
<p>The bite of my Tarantula is therefore dangerous
to other animals than insects: it is fatal to the Sparrow,
it is fatal to the Mole. I did not make any
more experiments, but I should say that people had
better beware of the bite of this Spider. It is not
to be trifled with.</p>
<p>Think, just for a moment, of the skill of the
Spider, the insect-killer, as contrasted with the skill
of the Wasps, the insect-paralyzers. These insect-killers,
who live on their prey, strike the game dead
at once by stinging the nerve-centers of the neck;
the paralyzers, on the other hand, who wish to keep
the food fresh for their larvæ, destroy the power
of movement by stinging the game in the other nerve-centers,
lower down. They do not acquire this
knowledge, they have it as soon as they are born.
And they teach those of us who think that there is
something behind it all, that there is Some One who
has planned things for insects and men alike.</p>
<h3>THE TARANTULA’S HUNTING</h3>
<p>From the Tarantulas whom I have captured and
placed in pans filled with earth in my laboratory, I
learn still more about their hunting. They are really
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magnificent, these captives. With their great bodies
inside their burrows, their heads outside, their glassy
eyes staring, their legs gathered for a spring, for
hours and hours they wait, motionless, bathing luxuriously
in the sun.</p>
<p>Should a titbit to her liking happen to pass, at
once the watcher darts from her tall tower, swift as
an arrow from the bow. With a dagger-thrust in
the neck, she stabs the Locust, Dragon-fly, or other
prey; and she as quickly climbs her tower and retires
with her capture. The performance is a wonderful
exhibition of skill and speed.</p>
<p>She very seldom misses the game, provided that
it pass at a convenient distance, within reach of her
bound. But if it be farther away she takes no notice
of it. Scorning to go in pursuit, she allows it to
roam at will.</p>
<p>This proves that the Tarantula has great patience,
for the burrow has nothing that can serve to attract
victims. At best, refuge provided by the tower
may, once in a long while, tempt some weary wayfaring
insect to use it as a resting-place. But, if
the game does not come to-day, it is sure to come
to-morrow, the next day, or later, for there are many
Locusts hopping in the waste land, and they are not
always able to regulate their leaps. Some day or
other, chance is bound to bring one of them near
the burrow. Then the Spider springs upon the victim
from the ramparts. Until then, she stoically
watches and fasts. She will dine when she can; but
she will finally dine.</p>
<p><SPAN name="page-220" class="pagenum" href="#page-220" title="220"></SPAN>
The Tarantula really does not suffer much from
a long fast. She has an accommodating stomach,
which is satisfied to be gorged to-day and to remain
empty afterwards for goodness knows how long.
When I had the Spiders in my laboratory, I sometimes
neglected to feed them for weeks at a time,
and they were none the worse for it. After they
have fasted a long time, they do not pine away, but
are smitten with a wolf-like hunger.</p>
<p>In her youth, before she has a burrow, the Tarantula
earns her living in another manner. Clad in
gray like her elders, but without the black-velvet
apron which she receives on reaching the marriageable
age, she roams among the stubby grass. This
is true hunting. When the right kind of game heaves
in sight, the Spider pursues it, drives it from its shelters,
follows it hot-foot. The fugitive gains the
heights, and makes as though to fly away. He has
not the time. With an upward leap, the Tarantula
grabs him before he can rise.</p>
<p>I am charmed with the quick way in which my
year-old Spider boarders seize the Flies that I
provide for them. In vain does the Fly take refuge a
couple of inches up, on some blade of grass. With
a sudden spring into the air, the Spider pounces on
her prey. No Cat is quicker in catching her Mouse.</p>
<p>But these are the feats of youth not handicapped
by fatness. Later, when the bag of eggs has to be
trailed along, the Tarantula cannot indulge in gymnastics.
She then digs herself her hunting-lodge,
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and sits in her watch-tower, on the lookout for
game.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/i_221.jpg" alt="a Tarantula spinning on the ground a silk network" /></div>
<h3>THE TARANTULA’S BAG</h3>
<p>You will be surprised to hear how devoted this terrible
Tarantula is to her family.</p>
<p>Early one morning in August, I found a Tarantula
spinning on the ground a silk network covering
an extent about as large as the palm of one’s hand.
It was coarse and shapeless, but firmly fixed. This is
the floor on which the Spider means to work. It
will protect her nest from the sand.</p>
<p>On this floor she weaves a round mat, about the
size of a fifty-cent piece and made of superb white
silk. She thickens the outer part of it, until it becomes
a sort of bowl, surrounded by a wide, flat
edge. Upon this bowl she lays her eggs. These she
covers with silk. The result is a pill set in the middle
of a circular carpet.</p>
<p><SPAN name="page-222" class="pagenum" href="#page-222" title="222"></SPAN>
With her legs she takes up and breaks off one by
one the threads that keep the round mat stretched
on the coarse floor. At the same time, she grips this
sheet with her fangs, lifts it by degrees, tears it from
its base, and folds it over upon the globe of eggs. It
is hard work. The whole thing totters, the floor collapses,
heavy with sand. The Tarantula, by a movement
of her legs, casts these soiled shreds aside.
She pulls with her fangs and sweeps with her broom-like
legs, till she has pulled away her bag of eggs.</p>
<p>It is like a white-silk pill, soft and sticky to the
touch, as big as an average cherry. If you look
closely, you will notice, running horizontally around
the middle, a fold which a needle is able to raise
without breaking it. This is the edge of the circular
mat, drawn over the lower half of the bag. The
upper half, through which the young Tarantulas
will go out, is less well protected: its only wrapper
is the silk spun over the eggs immediately after they
were laid.</p>
<p>Inside, there is nothing but the eggs: no mattress,
no soft eider down, like that of the Banded
Spider. This Tarantula has no need to guard her
eggs against the weather, for the hatching will take
place long before the cold weather comes.</p>
<p>The mother has been busy the whole morning over
her bag. Now she is tired. She embraces her dear
pill and remains motionless. I shall see her no more
to-day. Next morning I find the Spider carrying her
bag of eggs slung behind her.</p>
<p>For three weeks and more the Tarantula trails
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the bag of eggs hanging to her spinnerets. When
she comes up from her shaft to lean upon the curb
and bask in the sun, when she suddenly retires underground
in the face of danger, and when she is
roaming the country before settling down, she never
lets go her precious bag, though it is a very inconvenient
burden in walking, climbing or leaping. If,
by some accident, it become detached from the fastening
to which it is hung, she flings herself madly
on her treasure and lovingly embraces it, ready to
bite the person who would take it from her. She
restores the pill to its place with a quick touch of
her spinnerets, and strides off, still threatening.</p>
<p>Towards the end of summer, every morning, as
soon as the sun is hot, the Tarantulas come up from
the bottom of their burrows with their bags and station
themselves at the opening. Earlier in the season
they have taken long naps on the threshold in
the sun in the middle of the day; but now they ascend
for a different reason. Before, the Tarantula
came out into the sun for her own sake. Leaning
on the parapet, she had the front half of her body
outside the pit and the back half inside. Her eyes
took their fill of light; the body remained in the
dark. When carrying her egg-bag the Spider reverses
her position: the front is in the pit, the rear
outside. With her hind-legs she holds the white
pill, bulging with germs, lifted above the entrance;
gently she turns and re-turns it, so as to present every
side to the life-giving rays of the sun. And this
goes on for half the day, as long as the temperature
<SPAN name="page-224" class="pagenum" href="#page-224" title="224"></SPAN>
is high; and it is repeated daily, with exquisite patience,
during three or four weeks. To hatch its
eggs, the bird covers them with the quilt of its
breast; it strains them to the furnace of its heart.
The Tarantula turns hers in front of the hearth of
hearths: she gives them the sun as an incubator.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/i_224.jpg" alt="the young ones, who have been some time hatched, are ready to come out" /></div>
<h3>THE TARANTULA’S BABIES</h3>
<p>In the early days of September, the young ones,
who have been some time hatched, are ready to come
out. The pill rips open along the middle fold. We
have read of this fold. Does the mother, feeling
the brood quicken inside the satin wrapper, herself
break open the vessel at the right moment? It
seems probable. On the other hand, it may burst
of itself, as does the Banded Spider’s balloon, a
tough wallet which opens a breach of its own accord,
long after the mother has ceased to exist.</p>
<p><SPAN name="page-225" class="pagenum" href="#page-225" title="225"></SPAN>
As they come out of the pill, the little Tarantulas,
to the number of about a couple of hundred, clamber
on the mother Tarantula’s back and there sit
motionless, jammed close together, forming a sort
of bark of mingled legs and bodies. The mother
cannot be recognized under this live cloak. When
the hatching is over, the wallet is loosened from the
spinnerets and cast aside as a worthless rag.</p>
<p>The little ones are very good: none stirs, none
tries to get more room for himself at his neighbor’s
expense. What are they doing there, so quietly?
They allow themselves to be carted about, like the
young of the Opossum. Whether she sit in long
meditation at the bottom of her den, or come to the
opening, in mild weather, to bask in the sun, the
Tarantula never throws off her greatcoat of swarming
youngsters until the fine season comes.</p>
<p>If, in the middle of winter, in January, or February,
I happen, out in the fields, to ransack the Spider’s
dwelling, after the rain, snow, and frost have
battered it and, as a rule, destroyed the curb at
the entrance, I always find her at home, still full of
vigor, still carrying her family. This upbringing
of her youngsters on her back lasts five or six
months at least, without interruption. The celebrated
American carrier, the Opossum, who lets
her children go after a few weeks’ carting, cuts a
poor figure beside the Tarantula.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/i_226.jpg" alt="" /> <p class="caption">“Does she help them to regain their place on her back?”</p> </div>
<p>What do the little ones eat on their mother’s
spine? Nothing, so far as I know. I do not see
them grow larger. I find them, when they finally
<SPAN name="page-227" class="pagenum" href="#page-227" title="227"></SPAN>
leave to shift for themselves, just as they were when
they left the bag.</p>
<p>During the bad season, the mother herself eats
very little. At long intervals she accepts, in my
jars, a belated Locust, whom I have captured, for
her benefit, in the sunnier nooks. In order to keep
herself in condition, as she is when she is dug up in
the course of my winter excavations, she must therefore
sometimes break her fast and come out in
search of prey, without, of course, discarding her
live cloak of youngsters.</p>
<p>The expedition has its dangers. The little Spiders
may be brushed off by a blade of grass. What
becomes of them when they have a fall? Does the
mother give them a thought? Does she help them
to regain their place on her back? Not at all.
The affection of a Spider’s heart, divided among
some hundreds, can spare but a very feeble portion
to each. The Tarantula hardly troubles, whether
one youngster fall from his place, or six, or all of
them. She waits quietly for the victims of the mishap
to get out of their own difficulty, which they do
for that matter, and very nimbly.</p>
<p>I sweep the whole family from the back of one of
my boarders with a hair-pencil. Not a sign of
emotion, not an attempt at search on the part of the
mother. After trotting about a little on the sand,
the dislodged youngsters find, these here, those there,
one or another of the mother’s legs, spread wide in
a circle. By means of these climbing-poles they
swarm to the top, and soon the group on the mother’s
<SPAN name="page-228" class="pagenum" href="#page-228" title="228"></SPAN>
back resumes its original form. Not one of the
lot is missing. The Tarantula’s sons know their
trade as acrobats to perfection: the mother need not
trouble her head about their fall.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/i_228.jpg" alt="what do they live upon, during their seven months’ upbringing on the mother’s back?" /></div>
<h3>A MEAL OF SUNSHINE</h3>
<p>Does the Tarantula at least feed the youngsters
who, for seven months, swarm upon her back? Does
she invite them to the party when she has captured
a prize? I thought so at first; and I gave special
attention to watching the mothers eat. Usually, the
prey is devoured out of sight, in the burrow; but
sometimes a meal is taken on the threshold, in the
open air. Well, I see then that while the mother
eats, the youngsters do not budge from their camping
ground on her back. Not one quits its place
or gives a sign of wishing to slip down and join in
the meal. Nor does the mother invite them to come
<SPAN name="page-229" class="pagenum" href="#page-229" title="229"></SPAN>
and refresh themselves, or put any left-over food
aside for them. She feeds and the others look on,
or rather remain indifferent to what is happening.
Their perfect quiet during the Tarantula’s feast is
a proof that they are not hungry.</p>
<p>Then what do they live upon, during their seven
months’ upbringing on the mother’s back? One
thinks of their absorbing nourishment from their
mother’s skin. We must give up this notion. Never
are they seen to put their mouths to it. And the
Tarantula, far from being exhausted and shriveling,
keeps perfectly well and plump; she even puts
on flesh.</p>
<p>Once more, with what do the little ones keep up
their strength? We do not like to suggest that they
are still living on the food they received in the egg,
especially when we consider that they must use
the energy drawn from this food to produce silk,
a material of the highest importance, of which a
plentiful use will be made presently. There must
be other powers at play in the tiny animal’s machinery.</p>
<p>We could understand their not needing anything
to eat if they did not move; complete quiet is not
life. But the young Spiders, although usually quiet
on their mother’s back, are at all times ready for
exercise and for agile swarming. When they fall
from the mother’s baby-carriage, they briskly pick
themselves up, briskly scramble up a leg and make
their way to the top. It is a splendidly nimble and
spirited performance. Besides, once seated, they
<SPAN name="page-230" class="pagenum" href="#page-230" title="230"></SPAN>
have to keep a firm balance; they have to stretch and
stiffen their little limbs in order to hang on to their
neighbors. As a matter of fact, there is no absolute
rest for them.</p>
<p>Now physiology teaches us that not a muscle
works without using up energy. The animal is like
a machine; it must renew its body, which wears out
with movement, and it must have something to make
heat, which is turned into action. We can compare
it with the locomotive-engine. As the iron horse
does its work, it gradually wears out its pistons, its
rods, its wheels, its boiler-tubes, all of which have
to be made good from time to time. The foundry-man
and the blacksmith repair it, supply it with
new parts; it is as if they were giving it food to renew
itself. But, although it be brand-new, it cannot
move until the stoker shovels some coal into its
inside and sets fire to it. This coal is like energy-producing
food; it makes the engine work.</p>
<p>Things are just the same with the animal. Since
nothing is made from nothing, the little new-born
animal is made from the food there was in the egg.
This is tissue-forming food which increases the body,
up to a certain point, and renews it as it wears away.
But it must have heat-food, or energy-food, too.
Then the animal will walk, run, jump, swim, fly, or
move in any one of a thousand manners.</p>
<p>To return to the young Spiders: they grow no
larger until after they leave their mother. At the
age of seven months they are the same as at birth.
The egg supplied the food necessary for their tiny
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frames; and they do not need more tissue-forming
food as long as they do not grow. This we can understand.
But where do they get the energy-food
that makes them able to move about so actively?</p>
<p>Here is an idea. What is coal, the energy-food of
the locomotive? It is the fossil remains of trees
which, ages ago, drank the sunlight with their leaves.
Coal is really stored-up sunlight and the locomotive,
devouring it, is devouring sunlight.</p>
<p>Beasts of flesh and blood act no otherwise.
Whether they eat one another or plants, they always
live on the stimulant of the sun’s heat, a heat stored
in grass, fruit, seed, and those which feed on such.
The sun, the soul of the universe, is the supreme
giver of energy.</p>
<p>Instead of being served up in food and being
digested through the stomach, could not this sun-energy
enter the animal directly and charge it with
activity, just as the electric battery charges an accumulator
with power? Why not live on sun, seeing
that, after all, we find nothing but sun in the
fruits which we eat?</p>
<p>The chemists say they are going to feed us some
day on artificial food-stuffs put up in drug-stores.
Perhaps the laboratory and the factory will take
the place of the farm. Why should not physical
science do as well? It would leave to the chemist
the preparation of tissue-forming food; it would
give us energy-food. With the help of some ingenious
apparatus, it would pump into us our daily
supply of sun-energy, to be later spent in movement,
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so that we could keep going without eating at all.
What a delightful world, where one would lunch off
a ray of sunshine!</p>
<p>Are we dreaming, or will something like this
happen some day? It is worth while surely for
the scientists to think about it.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/i_232.jpg" alt="These are suspension-bridges; and my beasties nimbly run along them" /></div>
<h3>THE FLIGHT OF THE BABY TARANTULAS</h3>
<p>As the month of March comes to an end, the
mother Tarantula is outside her burrow, squatting on
the parapet at the entrance. It is time for the youngsters
to leave her. She lets them do as they please,
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seeming perfectly indifferent to what is happening.</p>
<p>The departure begins during glorious weather, in
the hottest hours of the morning. First these, then
those, of the little ones, according as they feel themselves
soaked with sunshine, leave the mother in
batches, run about for a moment on the ground, and
then quickly reach the trellis-work of the cage in
my laboratory, which they climb with surprising
quickness. They all make for the heights, though
their mother is accustomed to stay on the solid
ground. There is an upright ring at the top of the
cage. The youngsters hurry to it. They hang out
threads across the opening; they stretch others from
the ring to the nearest points of the trellis-work.
On these foot-bridges they perform slack-rope exercises.
The tiny legs open out from time to time
as though to reach the most distant points. I begin
to realize that they wish to go higher.</p>
<p>I top the trellis with a branch as high again.
The little Spiders hastily scramble up it, reach the
tip of the topmost twigs and from there send out
threads that fasten themselves to every surrounding
object. These are suspension-bridges; and my beasties
nimbly run along them, incessantly passing to and
fro. They seem to wish to climb still higher.</p>
<p>I take a nine-foot reed, with tiny branches spreading
right up to the top, and place it above the cage.
The little Tarantulas clamber to the very summit.
Here they send out longer threads, which are left
to float, and which again form bridges when their
loose ends touch some object. The rope-dancers
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embark upon them and form garlands which the
least breath of air swings daintily. One cannot see
the threads at all unless they come between the eyes
and the sun; the Spiders look as if they were dancing
in the air.</p>
<p>Then, suddenly, shaken by the air-currents, the
delicate mooring breaks and flies through space.
Behold the little Spiders fly off and away, hanging
to their threads! If the wind be favorable, they
can land at great distances.</p>
<p>The bands of little Spiders keep on leaving thus
for a week or two, if the weather is fine. On cloudy
days, none dreams of going. The travelers need
the kisses of the sun, which give them energy and
vigor.</p>
<p>At last, the whole family has disappeared, carried
afar by its flying-ropes. The mother is alone. The
loss of her children hardly seems to distress her.
She goes on with her hunting with greater energy,
now that she is not hampered with her coat of little
ones. She will have other families, become a grandmother
and a great-grandmother, for the Tarantulas
live several years.</p>
<p>In this species of Tarantula, as we have seen, a
sudden instinct arises in the young ones, to disappear,
as promptly and forever, a few hours later.
This is the climbing-instinct, which is unknown to
the older Tarantula and soon forgotten by the young
ones, who alight upon the ground and wander there
for many a long day before they begin to build their
burrows. Neither of them dreams of climbing to
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the top of a grass-stalk. Yet here we have the young
Tarantula, wishing to leave her mother and to travel
far away by the easiest and swiftest methods, suddenly
becoming an enthusiastic climber. We know
her object. From on high, finding a wide space beneath
her, she sends a thread floating. It is caught
by the wind, and carries her hanging to it. We have
our aeroplanes; she too possesses her flying-machine.
She makes it in her hour of need, and when
the journey is finished thinks no more about it.</p>
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