<SPAN name="THE_LITTLE_ARMY_612" id="THE_LITTLE_ARMY_612"></SPAN>
<h2>III</h2>
<h3>THE LITTLE ARMY</h3>
<p>Ben Gile shook his head. As his hair was long and white, and his hands
moved with his head, just as if he were a lot of dried branches moving
in the wind, it was enough to frighten little Betty. "Plagues of Egypt!
Plagues of Egypt!" he kept muttering. Now, Betty had been to school a
long time—I think it must have been as much as two whole years, which
is a very <i>long</i> time for school and a very <i>short</i> time for climbing
trees—now, Betty had been to school and knew better. She crept behind a
big beech-tree, but she stuck her little head out and said, in a
trembling voice:</p>
<p>"It was locusts, sir, wasn't it—and wild honey?"</p>
<p>Betty wasn't at all certain that any kind of honey could be a plague.</p>
<p>"It was locusts, child—yes, you're right," answered the old man.
"Locusts it was; but you eat wild honey."<SPAN class="pagenum" name="page_22" id="page_22" title="22"></SPAN></p>
<p>Betty came out from behind the tree and whispered, "You eat them
<i>both</i>?"</p>
<p>"So men did in the Bible," said Ben Gile, and washing his sugar-pails,
and putting his maple sugar camp—a very sweet place for a little girl
to be when there are still piles of maple sugar packed away on the
shelves—in order for the summer.</p>
<p>In all her short life Betty had never known another old man like him. In
the winter he taught school; in spring he made maple sugar; in summer he
was guiding about the ponds or looking up into the trees most of the
time; and in the fall he cut wood before he went back to teaching; but
what was oddest of all to Betty was that he knew the squirrels and deer
and rabbits as well as he seemed to know little girls or little boys.
There was a story told in those woods about his taming even a trout so
that one morning it hopped out of the water and followed him everywhere
he went—hop, hop, flop behind him. And in the evening, as Ben Gile and
his tame trout were passing by the pond again, the trout fell in and was
drowned. But, dear me, that is a fish story, and you mustn't believe any
fish stories whatever except those your father tells! Still, if your
grandpa is fond of fishing, you may believe his fish stories, too.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <SPAN name="illus-003" id="illus-003"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/illus-023.jpg" alt="locust" title="" /><br/> <span class="caption"> <i>A.</i> A locust.<br/>
<i>B.</i> Cast-off skin of a young locust.
</span></div>
<p><SPAN class="pagenum" name="page_25" id="page_25" title="25"></SPAN>Betty
came out farther from behind the tree. "Please, sir, do <i>you</i> eat
grasshoppers?"</p>
<p>"Not yet, my dear." The old man's eyes twinkled. "I knew a little boy
once"—Betty was wondering whether this old man had ever been a little
boy himself—"I knew a little boy once who wasn't afraid to swallow even
a caterpillar, but I think that little boy never thought of eating a
grasshopper." The old man shook his head gravely. "No, not a
grasshopper."</p>
<p>"Please, sir," said Betty, coming right up to the bucket he was washing
in the brook—"please, sir, do you know any stories about grasshoppers?"</p>
<p>Ben Gile laid his finger along his nose and thought. Betty was sure he
knew a hundred million stories, and that he could tell her something
about anything she might ask for in all the world.</p>
<p>"Well, once upon a time," the old man began, "there was another old man
who was a great deal wiser than I am, and a great deal richer, my dear,
for he owned a whole kingdom and lived in a palace, and his name was—"<SPAN class="pagenum" name="page_26" id="page_26" title="26"></SPAN></p>
<p>"Solomon!" called out Betty, dancing up and down, out of pride in her
own wisdom.</p>
<p>"Right! And this other old man said:</p>
<div class="blockquot">
<p>"There are four things which are little upon the
earth, but they are exceedingly wise:</p>
<p>"The ants are a people not strong, yet they prepare their meat in the summer;</p>
<p>"The conies are but a feeble folk, yet make they their houses in the rocks;</p>
<p>"The locusts have no king, yet go they forth all of them by bands;</p>
<p>"The spider taketh hold with her hands and is in kings' palaces."</p>
</div>
<p>"But that's not a story."</p>
<p>The guide shook his head. "You don't know a story, child, when you hear
one. It began, 'Once upon a time,' didn't it?"</p>
<p>"Yes, sir; but please tell me another."</p>
<p>"Well, there are others in the Bible, my dear, about locusts and
grasshoppers."</p>
<p>"But, please, sir," said Betty, who was almost ready to cry, she was so
teased—"please tell me one of your <i>own</i> stories."</p>
<p>Ben Gile began to swash his bucket up and down, up and down, in the
stream until the water fairly rocked. Then he pulled the bucket out of
the water, set it beside him, and reached out after a locust.<SPAN class="pagenum" name="page_27" id="page_27" title="27"></SPAN></p>
<p>"Here he is." There was a long pause. Betty thought he would never go
on. "Well, once upon a time there was a little army and all its uniforms
were brown and green, and from the meanest soldier in the ranks to the
lieutenant-commander this little army was made up of insects who
belonged to the same tribe. Let me see—there were the grasshoppers and
the locusts and the katydids and the crickets."</p>
<p>"Please, sir, were they cousins?"</p>
<p>"I think they were, my dear. Yes, first cousins, and, unlike even my
first cousins, they all have wings, and straight wings like this."</p>
<p>The guide gently spread out one of the wings.</p>
<p>"Just where the back of your chest is these wings grow—two pairs of
wings, my dear, and two pairs of wings mean a good deal more than two
pairs of new shoes. This first pair is straight and narrow and hard,
because it is meant to cover the gauzy wings underneath. Puff!"</p>
<p>Away flew the locust.</p>
<p>"You see, he doesn't use his first pair, but holds them out straight
from his body while he spreads out the gauzy ones like a—like a—"</p>
<p>"Fan!" shouted Betty, quite forgetting the tiny squirrel who had come up
near her, and, at<SPAN class="pagenum" name="page_28" id="page_28" title="28"></SPAN> her shout, nearly jumped out of his little red
jacket.</p>
<p>"A yellow fan," said the old man. "And some have a red fan. Well, I
think," said he, reaching for his pail, "there isn't going to be any
more of this story."</p>
<p>"Not any more? But there must be more, sir; I've seen hundreds and
hundreds of them on a dusty road, and, please, they're just the color of
the dirt."</p>
<p>The guide shook his head. "Not to-day."</p>
<p>By this time Betty was so eager to have him go on that she had forgotten
all about being afraid of him. "And when they whir up from the road,
sir, they say, 'Clack! clack! clack!'"</p>
<p>The old man made a sound like the noise of a locust.</p>
<p>"How does it make its mouth move, sir?"</p>
<p>"It doesn't make its mouth move, child. It makes the noise by striking
the edges of the gauzy wings and hard wing covers together. See, this
way!" And the old man struck his arm and leg together. "It has another
fiddle, too, which it uses when it makes the long, rasping, drowsy sound
of summer days. Then it rubs the rough edges of its hind leg against the
edge of its wing-cover."<SPAN class="pagenum" name="page_29" id="page_29" title="29"></SPAN></p>
<p>"Please, is it happy, then?" asked Betty.</p>
<p>"Just as happy as a healthy locust, who lives in long, sweet-smelling
grass and is contented with his own singing, can be, and that is very
happy."</p>
<p>"Oh!" said Betty, "it doesn't use its mouth, then? Jimmie said it did."</p>
<p>"Jimmie's a stupid boy. See this fellow." The old man held the locust
toward Betty. "With its upper lip, broad, you see; and there is the
lower lip made in two scallops, and there's a short feeler on either
side, and another pair of soft jaws with a feeler. Hidden away under
those parts is a pair of dark-brown, horny jaws which open like two big
swinging gates."</p>
<p>"What makes them so big?"</p>
<p>"The better to eat you with, my dear." The guide worked his jaws until
Betty, half afraid and half pleased, screamed and ran behind a tree.
"Oh, how they can eat!" growled the old man, "more than any little girl
or boy I ever knew! Years and years ago, when your mamma was a baby,
they mounted up into the air from the Rocky Mountains and flew eastward
in a great cloud. Down they swooped upon the fertile valleys in rustling
hordes, and ate everything in sight—grass, grains, vegetables, and
bushes.<SPAN class="pagenum" name="page_30" id="page_30" title="30"></SPAN> They ate and ate and ate until they had eaten up fifty million
dollars' worth of food, and the poor farmer could hear nothing but the
sound of the chewing of those ever-swinging jaws. Now, be off, little
girl, or my pails won't be clean."</p>
<p>"Oh, please, sir, just tell me how they jump and breathe."</p>
<p>"Dear, dear, see this fellow!" He had wet a little grain of maple sugar,
and a tiny meadow grasshopper which had alighted on his knee was pushing
the sweet stuff into its mouth with both fore legs. "Child, you must
never," said the old man, savagely, "push your food in that way."</p>
<p>"Please, sir," answered Betty, "I never do, because I eat with my fork
and my knife. Please, sir, are they happy when they jump?"</p>
<p>"Looks like a horse, doesn't it?" asked the old man. "It's made for
jumping. Think of all the training it takes to make a jumper of your
brother at school. Well, this chap can jump ten times as far. It's born
with a better jump than the longest-legged boy you ever saw. But the
locust might get its head cut off when jumping if it weren't for this
little saddle that covers the soft part of the neck. Mr. Locust<SPAN class="pagenum" name="page_31" id="page_31" title="31"></SPAN> can't
always look before he leaps, as a little girl can, and the knife edge of
a blade of grass would cut its head right off if it weren't for this
saddle. See, here are its long leaping-legs, and on the back edge of
these are some spines to keep it from slipping, and the feet are padded
with several soft little cushions that keep it from chin-chopping itself
to pieces when it lands after a long jump. And here, my dear, are little
rest-legs just behind the front legs. With these Mr. Locust hangs on to
a blade of grass when tired—a fine idea, child; every little boy and
girl ought to have some rest-legs like the locust. And the locust has
some extra eyes, too."</p>
<p>Ben Gile was going so fast now that Betty was listening to him, mouth
open, as he pointed with a blade of grass to one thing after another.</p>
<p>"You see, the locust has two big eyes, and there in the middle of the
forehead it has three little eyes, and with five eyes there isn't much
it can't see. And here on the body are two tiny shining oval windows.
These are ear-laps, and that, my dear, is the way it hears. And upon the
sides of the body (the thorax—that is, just the chest) and his abdomen
are tiny holes. The air enters through these, and that is the way Mr.
Locust breathes."<SPAN class="pagenum" name="page_32" id="page_32" title="32"></SPAN></p>
<p>"Oh," said Betty, "then it hasn't got any nose? I thought everything in
the world had a nose."</p>
<p>"And this little body," the old man went on, "is as strong as a grub
hoe. With it the locust makes holes in fence rails, logs, stumps, and
the earth, and in those holes mother locust lays her eggs. See, those
four spines are for boring holes. With these Mrs. Locust bores a hole in
the ground, and then with these same spines she guides the bundles of
eggs into the hole and covers them up with a gummy stuff. There the eggs
stay until next spring, when, my dear, out comes a little hopper with no
wings, and this little hopper is called a nymph. It grows and splits its
skin, grows and splits its skin, and with its new skin—it has five or
six skins, and leaves all its old clothes hanging around on the
bushes—its wings grow bigger and bigger. At last it flies off just as
its mother and father did a year ago."</p>
<p>Ben Gile tossed the locust into the air and called out, "Shoo!" clapping
his hands loudly together. Out from the woods came two baby deer, a
wise, gentle old cow; from the cabin came a mother cat and three kittens
and a big black dog; and from the trees scampered down a half a dozen
squirrels.<SPAN class="pagenum" name="page_33" id="page_33" title="33"></SPAN></p>
<p>"Time for dinner."</p>
<p>Betty went up to him and whispered something in his ear. The old man
nodded his head solemnly, and the little girl went trotting along the
path to Rangeley Village.</p>
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