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<h2> CHAPTER VIII. THE CADDIS WORM </h2>
<p>Whom shall I lodge in my glass trough, kept permanently wholesome by the
action of the water weeds? I shall keep caddis worms, those expert
dressers. Few of the self-clothing insects surpass them in ingenious
attire. The ponds in my neighborhood supply me with five or six species,
each possessing an art of its own. Today, but one of these shall receive
historical honors.</p>
<p>I obtain it from the muddy bottomed, stagnant pools crammed with small
reeds. As far as one can judge from the habitation merely, it should be,
according to the specialists, Limnophilus flavicornis, whose work has
earned for the whole corporation the pretty name of Phryganea, a Greek
term meaning a bit of wood, a stick. In a no less expressive fashion, the
Provencal peasant calls it lou portofais, lou porto-caneu. This is the
little grub that carries through the still waters a faggot of tiny
fragments fallen from the reeds.</p>
<p>Its sheath, a travelling house, is a composite and barbaric piece of work,
a megalithic pile wherein art, retires in favor of amorphous strength. The
materials are many and sundry, so much so that we might imagine that we
had the work of dissimilar builders before our eyes, if frequent
transitions did not tell us the contrary.</p>
<p>With the young ones, the novices, it starts with a sort of deep basket in
rustic wicker-work. The twigs employed present nearly always the same
characteristics and are none other than bits of small, stiff roots, long
steeped and peeled under water. The grub that has made a find of these
fibers saws them with its mandibles and cuts them into little straight
sticks, which it fixes one by one to the edge of its basket, always
crosswise, perpendicular to the axis of the work.</p>
<p>Picture a circle surrounded by a bristling mass of tangents, or rather a
polygon with its sides extended in all directions. On this assemblage of
straight lines we place repeated layers of others, without troubling about
similarity of position, thus obtaining a sort of ragged fascine, whose
sticks project on every side. Such is the bastion of the child grub, an
excellent system of defense, with its continuous pile of spikes, but
difficult to steer through the tangle of aquatic plants.</p>
<p>Sooner or later, the worm forsakes this kind of caltrop which catches on
to everything. It was a basket maker, it now turns carpenter; it builds
with little beams and joists—that is to say, with round bits of
wood, browned by the water, often as wide as a thick straw and a
finger's-breadth long, more or less—taking them as chance supplies
them.</p>
<p>For the rest, there is something of everything in this rag bag: bits of
stubble, fag ends of rushes, scraps of plants, fragments of some tiny twig
or other, chips of wood, shreds of bark, largish grains, especially the
seeds of the yellow iris, which were red when they fell from their
capsules and are now black as jet.</p>
<p>The heterogeneous collection is piled up anyhow. Some pieces are fixed
lengthwise, others across, others aslant. There are angles in this
direction and angles in the other, resulting in sharp little turns and
twists; the big is mixed with the little, the correct rubs shoulders with
the shapeless. It is not an edifice, it is a frenzied conglomeration.
Sometimes, a fine disorder is an effect of art. This is not so here: the
work of the Caddis worm is not a masterpiece worth signing.</p>
<p>And this mad heaping up follows straight upon the regular basket work of
the start. The young grub's fascine did not lack a certain elegance, with
its dainty laths, all stacked crosswise, methodically; and, lo and behold,
the builder, grown larger, more experienced and, one would think, more
skilful, abandons the orderly plan to adopt another which is wild and
incoherent! There is no transition stage between the two systems. The
extravagant pile rises abruptly from the original basket. But that we
often find the two kinds of work placed one above the other, we would not
dare ascribe to them a common origin. The fact of their being joined
together is the only thing that makes them one, in spite of the
incongruity.</p>
<p>But the two storeys do not last indefinitely. When the worm has grown
slightly and is housed to its satisfaction in a heap of joists, it
abandons the basket of its childhood, which has become too narrow and is
now a troublesome burden. It cuts through its sheath, lops off and lets go
the stern, the original work. When moving to a higher and roomier flat, it
understands how to lighten its portable house by breaking off a part of
it. All that remains is the upper floor, which is enlarged at the
aperture, as and when required, by the same architecture of disordered
beams.</p>
<p>Side by side with these cases, which are mere ugly faggots, we find others
just as often of exquisite beauty and composed entirely of tiny shells. Do
they come from the same workshop? It takes very convincing proofs to make
us believe this. Here is order with its charm, there disorder with its
hideousness; on the one hand a dainty mosaic of shells, on the other a
clumsy heap of sticks. And yet it is all produced by the same laborer.</p>
<p>Proofs abound. On some case which offends the eye with the want of
arrangement in its bits of wood, patches are apt to appear which are quite
regular and made of shells; in the same way, it is not unusual to see a
horrid tangle of joists braced to a masterpiece of shell work. One feels a
certain annoyance at seeing the pretty sheath so barbarously spoilt.</p>
<p>This mixed construction tells us that the rustic stacker of wooden beams
excels, when occasion offers, in making elegant shell pavements and that
it practices rough carpentry and delicate mosaic work indifferently. In
the latter instance, the scabbard is made, above all, of Planorbes,
selected among the smaller of these pond snails and laid flat. Without
being scrupulously regular, the work, at its best, does not lack merit.
The pretty, close-whorled spirals, placed one against the other on the
same level, have a very pleasing general effect. No pilgrim returning from
Santiago de Compostella ever slung handsomer tippet from his shoulders.</p>
<p>But only too often the caddis worm dashes ahead, regardless of proportion.
The big is joined to the small, the exaggerated suddenly stands out, to
the great detriment of order. Side by side with tiny Planorbes, each at
most the size of a lentil, others are fixed as large as one's fingernail;
and these cannot possibly be fitted in correctly. They overlap the regular
parts and spoil their finish.</p>
<p>To crown the disorder, the caddis worm adds to the flat spirals any dead
shell that comes handy, without distinction of species, provided it be not
excessively large. I notice, in its collection of bric-a-brac, the Physa,
the Paludina, the Limnaea, the Amber snail [all pond snails] and even the
Pisidium [a bivalve], that little twin-valved casket.</p>
<p>Land shells, swept into the ditches by the rains after the inmate's death,
are accepted quite as readily. In the work made of the Mollusk's cast-off
clothing, I find encrusted the spindle shell of the Clausilium, the key
shell of the pupa, the spiral of the smaller Helix, the yawning volute of
the Vitrina, or glass snail, the turret shell of the Bulimus [all land
snails], denizens all of the fields. In short, the caddis worm builds with
more or less everything that comes from the plant or the dead mollusk.
Among the diversified refuse of the pond, the only materials rejected are
those of a gravelly nature. Stone and pebble are excluded from the
building with a care that is very rarely absent. This is a question of
hydrostatics to which we will return presently. For the moment, let us try
to follow the construction of the scabbard.</p>
<p>In a tumbler small enough to allow of easy and precise observation, I
install three or four caddis worms, extracted this moment from their
sheaths with every possible precaution. After a number of attempts which
have at last shown me the right road, I place at their disposal two kinds
of materials, possessing opposite qualities; the supple and the firm, the
soft and the hard. On the one hand, we have a live aquatic plant, such as
watercress, for instance, or ombrelle d'eau, having at its base a tufty
bunch of fine white roots about as thick as a horsehair. In these soft
tresses, the caddis worm, which observes a vegetarian diet, will find at
one and the same time the wherewithal to build and eat. On the other hand,
we have a little faggot of bits of wood, very dry, equal in length and
each possessing the thickness of a good sized pin. The two sorts of
building material lie side by side, mingling their threads and sticks. The
animal can make its choice from the lump.</p>
<p>A few hours later, having recovered from the shock of losing its sheath,
the caddis worm sets to work to manufacture a new one. It settles across a
bunch of tangled rootlets, which are brought together by the builder's
legs and more or less arranged by the undulating movement of the hinder
part. This gives a kind of incoherent and ill defined suspended belt, a
narrow hammock with a number of loose catches; for the various bits of
which it is made up are respected by the teeth and extended from place to
place beyond the main cords of the roots. Here, without much trouble, is
the support, suitably fixed by natural moorings. A few threads of silk,
casually distributed, make the frail combination a trifle more secure.</p>
<p>And now to the work of building. Supported by the suspended belt, the
caddis worm stretches itself and thrusts out its middle legs, which, being
longer than the others, are the grapnels intended to seize things at a
distance. It meets a bit of root, fastens on to it, climbs above the point
gripped, as though it were measuring the piece to a requisite length, and
then, with the fine scissors of its mandibles, cuts the string.</p>
<p>There is at once a brief recoil, which brings the animal back to the level
of the hammock. The bit detached lies across the worm's chest, held in its
forelegs, which turn it, twist it, wave it about, lay it down, lift it up,
as though trying for the best position. Those forelegs make admirably
dexterous arms. Being less long than the other two pairs, they are brought
into immediate contact with those primordial implements, the mandibles and
the spinneret. Their delicate terminal jointing, with a movable and
crooked finger, is the caddis worm's equivalent of our hand. They are the
working legs. The second pair, which are exceptionally long, serve to
spear distant materials and to give the worker a firm footing when
measuring a piece and cutting it with the pliers. Lastly, the hind legs,
of medium length, afford a support when the others are busy.</p>
<p>The caddis worm, I was saying, with the piece which it has removed held
crosswise to its chest, retreats a little way along its suspended hammock
until the spinneret is level with the support furnished by the close
tangle of rootlets. With a quick movement, it shifts its burden, gets it
as nearly by the middle as it can, so that the two ends stick out equally
on either side, and chooses the spot to place it, whereupon the spinneret
sets to work at once, while the little fore legs hold the scrap of root
motionless in its transversal position. The soldering is effected with a
touch of silk in the middle of the bit and along a certain distance to the
right and left, as far as the bending of the head permits.</p>
<p>Without delay, other sticks are speared in like manner at a distance, cut
off and placed in position. As the immediate neighborhood is stripped, the
material is gathered at a yet greater distance and the caddis worm bends
even farther from its support, which now holds only its last few segments.
It is a curious gymnastic display, that of this soft, hanging spine
turning and swaying, while the grapnels feel in every direction for a
thread.</p>
<p>All this labor results in a sort of casing of little white cords. The work
lacks firmness and regularity. Nevertheless, judging by the builder's
methods, I can see that the building would not be devoid of merit if the
materials gave it a better chance. The caddis worm estimates the size of
its pieces very fairly; it cuts them all to nearly the same length; it
always arranges them crosswise on the margin of the case; it fixes them by
the middle.</p>
<p>Nor is this all: the manner of working helps the general arrangement
considerably. When the bricklayer is building the narrow shaft of a
factory chimney, he stands in the center of his turret and turns round and
round while gradually laying new rows. The caddis worm acts in the same
way. It twists round in its sheath; it adopts without inconvenience
whatever position it pleases, so as to bring its spinneret full face with
the point to be gummed. There is no straining of the neck to left or
right, no throwing back of the head to reach points behind. The animal has
constantly before it, within the exact range of its implements, the place
at which the bit is to be fixed. When the piece is soldered, the worm
turns a little aside, to a length equal to that of the last soldering, and
here, along an extent which hardly ever varies, an extent determined by
the swing which its head is able to give, it fixes the next piece.</p>
<p>These several conditions ought to result in a geometrically ordered
dwelling, having a regular polygon as an opening. Then how comes it that
the cylinder of bits of root is so confused, so clumsily fashioned? The
reason is this: the worker possesses talent, but the materials do not lend
themselves to accurate work. The rootlets supply stumps of very uneven
shape and thickness. They include big and small ones, straight and bent,
simple and ramified. To combine all these dissimilar pieces into an
orderly whole is hardly possible, all the more so as the caddis worm does
not appear to attach very much importance to its cylinder, which is a
temporary work, hurriedly constructed to afford a speedy shelter. Matters
are urgent; and very soft fibers, clipped with a bite of the mandibles,
are more quickly gathered and more easily put together than joists, which
require the patient work of the saw. The inaccurate cylinder, in short,
held in position by numerous guy ropes, is a base upon which a solid and
definite structure will rise before long. Soon, the original work will
crumble to ruins and disappear, whereas the new one, a permanent
structure, will even outlast the owner.</p>
<p>The insects reared in a tumbler show yet another method of building the
first dwelling. This time, the caddis worm is given a few very leafy
stalks of pond weed (Potamogeton densum) and a bundle of small dry twigs.
It perches on a leaf, which the nippers of the mandibles cut half across.
The portion left untouched will act as a lanyard and give the necessary
steadiness to the early operations.</p>
<p>From an adjoining leaf a section is cut out entirely, an angular and good
sized piece. There is plenty of material and no need for economy. The
piece is soldered with silk to the strip which was not wholly cut off. The
result of three or four similar operations is to surround the Caddis worm
with a conical bag, whose wide mouth is scalloped with pointed and very
irregular notches. The work of the nippers continues; fresh pieces are
fixed, from one to another, inside the funnel, not far from the edge, so
that the bag lengthens, tapers and ends by wrapping the animal in a light
and floating drapery.</p>
<p>Thus clad for the time being, either in the fine silk of the pond weed or
in the linsey-woolsey supplied by the roots of the watercress, the caddis
worm begins to think of building a more solid sheath. The present casing
will serve as a foundation for the stronger building. But the necessary
materials are seldom near at hand: you have to go and fetch them, you have
to move your position, an effort which has been avoided until now. With
this object, the caddis worm cuts its moorings, that is to say, the
rootlets which keep the cylinder fixed, or else the half-severed leaf of
pond weed on which the cone-shaped bag has come into being.</p>
<p>The worm is now free. The smallness of the artificial pond, the tumbler,
soon brings it into touch with what it is seeking. This is a little faggot
of dry twigs, which I have selected of equal length and of slight
thickness. Displaying greater care than it did when treating the slender
roots, the carpenter measures out the requisite length on the joist. The
distance to which it has to extend its body in order to reach the point
where the break will be made tells it pretty accurately what length of
stick it wants.</p>
<p>The piece is patiently sawn off with the mandibles; it is next taken in
the fore legs and held crosswise below the neck. The backward movement
which brings the caddis worm home also brings the bit of twig to the edge
of the tube. Thereupon, the methods employed in working with the scraps of
root are renewed in precisely the same manner. The sticks are scaffolded
to the regulation height, all alike in length, amply soldered in the
middle and free at either end.</p>
<p>With the picked materials provided, the carpenter has turned out a work of
some elegance. The joists are all arranged crosswise, because this way is
the handiest for carrying the sticks and putting them in position; they
are fixed by the middle, because the two arms that hold the stick while
the spinneret does its work require an equal grasp on either side; each
soldering covers a length which is seen to be practically invariable,
because it is equal to the width described by the head in bending first to
this side and then to that when the silk is emitted; the whole assumes a
polygonal shape, not far removed from a rectilinear pentagon, because,
between laying one piece and the next, the caddis worm turns by the width
of an arc corresponding with the length of a soldering. The regularity of
the method produces the regularity of the work; but it is essential, of
course, that the materials should lend themselves to precise coordination.</p>
<p>In its natural pond, the caddis worm does not often have at its disposal
the picked joists which I give it in the tumbler. It comes across
something of everything; and that something of everything it employs as it
finds it. Bits of wood, large seeds, empty shells, stubble stalks,
shapeless fragments are used in the building for better or for worse, just
as they occur, without being trimmed by the saw; and this jumble, the
result of chance, results in a shockingly faulty structure.</p>
<p>The caddis worm does not forget its talents; but it lacks choice pieces.
Give it a proper timber yard and it at once reverts to correct
architecture, of which it carries the plans within itself. With small,
dead pond snails, all of the same size, it fashions a splendid patchwork
scabbard; with a cluster of slender roots, reduced by rotting to their
stiff, straight, woody axis, it manufactures pretty specimens of wicker
work which could serve as models to our basket makers.</p>
<p>Let us watch it at work when it is unable to use its favorite joist. There
is no point in giving it clumsy building stones; that would only bring us
back to the uncouth sheaths. Its propensity to make use of soaked seeds,
those of the iris, for instance, suggests that I might try grains. I
select rice, which, because of its hardness, will be tantamount to wood
and, because of its clean whiteness and its oval shape, will lend itself
to artistic masonry.</p>
<p>Obviously, my denuded caddis worms cannot start their work with bricks of
this kind. Where would they fix their first layer? They must have a
foundation, quick and easy to build. This is once more supplied by a
temporary cylinder of watercress roots. On this support follow the grains
of rice, which, grouped one atop the other, straight or slanting, end by
giving a magnificent turret of ivory. Next to the sheaths made of tiny
snail shells, this is the prettiest thing with which the caddis worm's
industry has furnished me. A fine sense of order has returned, because the
materials, regular and of identical character, have cooperated with the
correct method of the worker.</p>
<p>The two demonstrations are enough. Sticks and grains of rice make it plain
that the caddis worm is not the bungler that one would expect from the
monstrous buildings in the pond. Those Cyclopean piles, those mad
conglomerations, are the inevitable results of chance finds, which are
used for the best because there is no choice. The water carpenter has an
art of its own, has method and rules of symmetry. When well served by
fortune, it is quite able to turn out good work; when ill-served, it acts
like others: the work which it turns out is bad. Poverty makes for
ugliness.</p>
<p>There is another matter wherein the caddis worm deserves our attention.
With a perseverance which repeated trials do not tire, it makes itself a
new tube when I strip it. This is opposed to the habits of the generality
of insects, which do not recommence the thing once done, but simply
continue it according to the usual rules, taking no account of the ruined
or vanished portions. The caddis worm is a striking exception: it starts
again. Whence does it derive this capacity?</p>
<p>I begin by learning that, given a sudden alarm, it readily leaves its
scabbard. When I go fishing for caddis worms, I put them in tin boxes,
containing no other moisture than that wherewith my catches are soaked. I
heap them up loosely, to avoid any grievous tumult and to fill the space
at my disposal as best I may. I take no further precaution. This is enough
to keep the caddis worms in good condition during the two or three hours
which I devote to fishing and to walking home.</p>
<p>On my return, I find that a number of them have left their houses. They
are swarming naked among the empty scabbards and those still occupied by
their inhabitants. It is a pitiful sight to see these evicted ones
dragging their bare abdomens and their frail respiratory threads over the
bristling sticks. There is no great harm done, however; and I empty the
whole lot into the glass pond.</p>
<p>Not one resumes possession of an unoccupied sheath. Perhaps it would take
them too long to find one of the exact size. They think it better to
abandon the old clouts and to manufacture cases new from top to bottom.
The process is a rapid one. By the next day, with the materials wherein
the glass trough abounds—bundles of twigs and tufts of watercress—all
the denuded worms have made themselves at least a temporary home in the
form of a tube of rootlets.</p>
<p>The lack of water, combined with the excitement of the crowding in the
boxes, has upset my captives greatly; and, scenting a grave peril, they
have made off hurriedly, doffing the cumbersome jacket, which is difficult
to carry. They have stripped themselves so as to flee with greater ease.
The alarm cannot have been due to me: there are not many simpletons like
myself who are interested in the affairs of the pond; and the caddis worm
has not been cautioned against their tricks. The sudden desertion of the
crib has certainly some other reason than man's molestations.</p>
<p>I catch a glimpse of this reason, the real one. The glass pond was
originally occupied by a dozen Dytisci, or water beetles, whose diving
performances are so curious to watch. One day, meaning no harm and for
want of a better receptacle, I fling among them a couple of handfuls of
caddis worms. Blunderer that I am, what have I done! The corsairs, hiding
in the rugged corners of the rock work, at once perceive the windfall.
They rise to the surface with great strokes of their oars; they hasten and
fling themselves upon the crowd of carpenters. Each pirate grabs a sheath
by the middle and strives to rip it open by tearing off shells and sticks.
While this ferocious enucleation continues with the object of reaching the
dainty morsel contained within, the caddis worm, close pressed, appears at
the mouth of the sheath, slips out and quickly decamps under the eyes of
the Dytiscus, who appears to notice nothing.</p>
<p>I have said before that the trade of killing can dispense with
intelligence. The brutal ripper of sheaths does not see the little white
sausage that slips between his legs, passes under his fangs and madly
flees. He continues to tear away the outer case and to tug at the silken
lining. When the breach is made, he is quite crestfallen at not finding
what he expected.</p>
<p>Poor fool! Your victim went out under your nose and you never saw it. The
worm has sunk to the bottom and taken refuge in the mysteries of the rock
work. If things were happening in the large expanse of a pond, it is clear
that, with their system of expeditious removals, most of the lodgers would
escape scot-free. Fleeing to a distance and recovering from the sharp
alarm, they would build themselves a new scabbard and all would be over
until the next attack, which would be baffled afresh by the selfsame
trick.</p>
<p>In my narrow trough, things take a more tragic turn. When the sheaths are
done for, when the caddis worms that are too slow in making off have been
eaten up, the Water beetles return to the rockery at the bottom. Here,
sooner or later, there are lamentable happenings. The naked fugitives are
discovered and, succulent morsels that they are, are forthwith torn to
pieces and devoured. Within twenty-four hours, not one of my band of
caddis worms is left alive. In order to continue my studies, I had to
lodge the water beetles elsewhere.</p>
<p>Under natural conditions, the caddis worm has its persecutors, the most
formidable of whom appears to be the Water beetle. When we consider that,
to thwart the brigand's attacks, it has invented the idea of quitting its
scabbard with all speed, its tactics are certainly most appropriate; but,
in that case, an exceptional condition becomes obligatory, namely, the
capacity for recommencing the work. This most unusual gift of recommencing
it possesses in a high measure. I am ready to see its origin in the
persecutions of the Dytiscus and other pirates. Necessity is the mother of
industry.</p>
<p>Certain caddis worms, of the Sericostoma and Leptocerus species, clothe
themselves in grains of sand and do not leave the bed of the stream. On a
clear bottom, swept by the current, they walk about from one bank of
verdure to the other and do not think of coming to the surface to float
and sail in the sunlight. The collectors of sticks and shells are more
highly privileged. They can remain on the level of the water indefinitely,
with no other support than their skiff, can rest in unsubmersible
flotillas and can even shift their place by working the rudder.</p>
<p>To what do they owe this privilege? Are we to look upon the bundle of
sticks as a sort of raft whose density is less than that of the water? Can
the shells, which are always empty and able to contain a few bubbles of
air in their spiral, he floats? Can the big joists, which break in so ugly
a fashion the none too great regularity of the work, serve to buoy up the
over-heavy raft? In short, is the caddis worm versed in the laws of
equilibrium and does it choose its pieces, now lighter and now heavier as
the case may be, so as to constitute a whole that is capable of floating?
The following facts are a refutation of any such hydrostatic calculations
in the animal.</p>
<p>I remove a number of caddis worms from their sheaths and submit these, as
they are, to the test of water. Whether formed wholly of fibrous remnants
or of mixed materials, not one of them floats. The scabbards made of
shells go to the bottom with the swiftness of a bit of gravel; the others
sink gently. I experiment with the separate materials one by one. No shell
remains on the surface, not even among the Planorbes, which a many-whorled
spiral ought, one would think, to keep afloat. The fibrous remnants must
be divided into two categories. The first, darkened by time and soaked
with moisture, sink to the bottom. These are the most plentiful. The
second, considerably fewer in number, of more recent date and less
saturated with water, float very well. The general result is immersion, as
in the case of the intact scabbards. I may add that the animal, when
removed from its tube, is also unable to float.</p>
<p>Then how does the caddis worm manage to remain on the surface without the
support of the grasses, considering that itself and its sheath are both
heavier than water? Its secret is soon revealed. I place a few high and
dry on a sheet of blotting paper, which will absorb the excess of liquid
unfavorable to successful observation. Outside its natural environment,
the animal moves about violently and restlessly. With its body half out of
the scabbard, this time composed entirely of fibrous matter, it clutches
with its feet at the supporting plane. Then, contracting itself, it draws
the scabbard towards it, half-raising it and sometimes even making it
assume a vertical position. Even so do the Bulimi move along, lifting
their shell as they complete each crawling step.</p>
<p>After a couple of minutes in the free air, I replace the caddis worm in
the water. This time, it floats, but like a cylinder with too much weight
below. The sheath remains vertical, with its hinder orifice level with the
water. Soon, an air bubble escapes from the orifice. Deprived of this
buoy, the skiff at once goes down.</p>
<p>The result is the same with the caddis worms in shell casings. At first,
they float, straight up on end, and then dip under and sink, faster than
the others, after sending out an air bubble or two through the back
window.</p>
<p>That is enough: the secret is out. When cased in wood or in shells, the
caddis worms, which are always heavier than water, are able to keep on the
surface by means of a temporary air balloon which decreases the density of
the whole structure.</p>
<p>This apparatus works in the simplest manner. Consider the rear of the
sheath. It is truncated, wide open and supplied with a membranous
partition, the work of the spinneret. A round hole occupies the center of
this screen. Beyond it lies the interior of the scabbard, which is
smoothly lined and wadded with satin, however rough the exterior may be.
Armed at the stern with two hooks which bite into the silky lining, the
animal is able to move backwards and forwards at will inside the cylinder,
to fix its grapnels at whatever point it pleases and thus to keep a hold
on the cylinder while the six legs and the fore part are outside.</p>
<p>When at rest, the body remains indoors entirely and the grub occupies the
whole of the tube. But let it contract ever so little towards the front,
or, better still, let it stick out a part of its body: a vacuum is formed
behind this sort of piston, which may be compared with that of a pump.
Thanks to the rear window, a valve without a plug, this vacuum at once
fills, thus renewing the aerated water around the gills, a soft fleece of
hairs distributed over the back and belly.</p>
<p>The piston stroke affects only the work of breathing; it does not alter
the density, makes hardly any change in that which is heavier than water.
To lighten the weight, the caddis worm must first rise to the surface.
With this object, it scales the grasses of one support after the other; it
clambers up, sticking to its purpose in spite of the drawback of its
faggot dragging through the tangle. When it has reached the goal, it lifts
the rear end a little above the water and gives a stroke of the piston.
The vacuum thus obtained fills with air. That is enough: skiff and boatman
are in a position to float. The now useless support of the grasses is
abandoned. The time has come for evolutions on the surface, in the glad
sunlight.</p>
<p>The caddis worm possesses no great talent as a navigator. To turn round,
to tack about, to shift its place slightly by a backward movement is all
that it can do; and even that it does very clumsily. The front part of the
body, sticking out of the case, acts as a rudder. Three or four times
over, it rises abruptly, bends, comes down again and strikes the water.
These paddle strokes, repeated at intervals, carry the unskilled oarsman
to fresh latitudes. It becomes a voyage on the right seas when the
crossing measures a hand's breadth.</p>
<p>However, tacking on the surface of the water affords the caddis worm no
pleasure. It prefers to twitter in one spot, to remain stationary in
flotillas. When the time comes to return to the quiet of the mud bed at
the bottom, the animal, having had enough of the sun, draws itself wholly
into its sheath again and, with a piston stroke, expels the air from the
back room. The normal density is restored and it sinks slowly to the
bottom.</p>
<p>We see, therefore, that the caddis worm has not to trouble about
hydrostatics when building its scabbard. In spite of the incongruity of
its work, in which the bulky and less dense portions seem to balance the
more solid, concentrated part, it is not called upon to contrive an
equipoise between the light and the heavy. It has other artifices whereby
to rise to the surface, to float and to dive down again. The ascent is
made by the ladder of the water weeds. The average density of the sheath
is of no importance, so long as the burden to be dragged is not beyond the
animal's strength. Besides, the weight of the load is greatly reduced when
moved in the water.</p>
<p>The admission of a bubble of air into the back chamber, which the animal
ceases to occupy, allow it, without further to-do, to remain for an
indefinite period on the surface. To dive down again, the caddis worm has
only to retreat entirely into its sheath. The air is driven out; and the
canoe, resuming its mean density, a greater specific density than that of
water, goes under at once and descends of its own accord.</p>
<p>There is, therefore, no choice of materials on the builder's part, no nice
calculation of equilibrium, save for one condition, that no stony matter
be admitted. That apart, everything serves, large and small, joist and
shell, seed and billet. Built up at haphazard, all these things make an
impregnable wall. One point alone is essential: the weight of the whole
must slightly exceed that of the water displaced; if not, there could be
no steadiness at the bottom of the pond, without a perpetual anchorage
struggling against the pull of the water. In the same manner, quick
submersion would be impossible at times when the surface became dangerous
and the frightened creature wanted to leave it.</p>
<p>Nor does this important heavier-than-water question call for lucid
discernment, seeing that almost the whole of the sheath is constructed at
the bottom of the pond, whither all the materials picked up at random,
having descended once before, are likely to descend again. In the sheaths,
the parts capable of floating are very rare. Without taking their specific
levity into account, simply so as not to remain idle, the caddis worm
fixed them to its bundle when sporting on the surface of the water.</p>
<p>We have our submarines, in which hydraulic ingenuity displays its highest
resources. The caddis worms have theirs, which emerge, float on the
surface, dip down and even stop at mid-depth by releasing gradually their
surplus air. And this apparatus, so perfectly balanced, so skilful,
requires no knowledge on the part of its constructor. It comes into being
of itself, in accordance with the plans of the universal harmony of
things.</p>
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