<h2 id="chapter-13"><ANTIMG src="images/i_135.jpg" alt="" /><br/> CHAPTER XIII<br/> <span class="chapter-title">THE PINE CATERPILLAR</span></h2>
<p><span class="upper">In</span> my piece of waste ground stand some pine-trees.
Every year the Caterpillar takes possession
of them and spins his great purses in their
branches. To protect the pine-needles, which are
horribly eaten, I have to destroy the nests each winter
with a long forked stick.</p>
<p>You hungry little Caterpillars, if I let you have
your way, I should soon be robbed of the murmur of
my once so leafy pines. But I am going to make a
compact with you. You have a story to tell. Tell
it to me; and for a year, for two years or longer,
until I know more or less about it, I will leave you
undisturbed.</p>
<p>The result of my compact with the Caterpillars
is that I soon have some thirty nests within a few
steps of my door. With such treasures daily before
my eyes, I cannot help seeing the Pine Caterpillar’s
<SPAN name="page-136" class="pagenum" href="#page-136" title="136"></SPAN>
story unfolded at full length. These Caterpillars
are also called the Processionaries, because they always
go abroad in a procession, one following
closely after the other.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/i_136.jpg" alt="You hungry little Caterpillars, if I let you have your way, I should soon be robbed of the murmur of my once so leafy pines." /></div>
<p>First of all, the egg. During the first half of August,
if we look at the lower branches of the pines,
we shall discover, here and there on the foliage, certain
<SPAN name="page-137" class="pagenum" href="#page-137" title="137"></SPAN>
little whitish cylinders spotting the dark green.
These are the Pine Moth’s eggs; each cylinder is
the cluster laid by one mother. The cylinder is like
a tiny muff about an inch long and a fifth or sixth of
an inch wide, wrapped around the base of the pine-needles,
which are grouped in twos. This muff has
a silky appearance and is white slightly tinted with
russet. It is covered with scales that overlap like
the tiles on a roof. The whole thing resembles
somewhat a walnut-catkin that is not yet full-grown.</p>
<p>The scales, soft as velvet to the touch and carefully
laid one upon the other, form a roof that protects
the eggs. Not a drop of rain or dew can penetrate.
Where did this soft covering come from?
From the mother Moth; she has stripped a part of
her body for her children. Like the Eider-duck, she
has made a warm overcoat for her eggs out of her
own down.</p>
<p>If one removes the scaly fleece with pincers the
eggs appear, looking like little white-enamel beads.
There are about three hundred of them in one cylinder.
Quite a family for one mother! They are
beautifully placed, and remind one of a tiny cob of
Indian corn. Nobody, young or old, learned or
ignorant, could help exclaiming, on seeing the Pine
Moth’s pretty little spike,</p>
<p>“How handsome!”</p>
<p>And what will strike us most will be not the beautiful
enamel pearls, but the way in which they are
put together with such geometrical regularity. Is
it not strange that a tiny Moth should follow the
<SPAN name="page-138" class="pagenum" href="#page-138" title="138"></SPAN>
laws of order? But the more we study nature, the
more we realize that there is order everywhere. It
is the beauty of the universe, the same under every
sun, whether the suns be single or many, white or
red, blue or yellow. Why all this regularity in the
curve of the petals of a flower, why all this elegance
in the chasings on a Beetle’s wing-cases? Is that
infinite grace, even in the tiniest details, the result of
brutal, uncontrolled forces? It seems hardly likely.
Is there not Some One back of it all, Some One who
is a supreme lover of beauty? That would explain
everything.</p>
<p>These are very deep thoughts about a group of
Moth-eggs that will bear a crop of Caterpillars.
It cannot be helped. The minute we begin to investigate
the tiniest things in nature, we have to begin
asking “Why?” And science cannot answer us.
That is the strange part of it.</p>
<p>The Pine Moth’s eggs hatch in September. If
one lifts the scales of the little muff, one can see black
heads appear, which nibble and push back their coverings.
The tiny creatures come out slowly all over
the surface. They are pale yellow, with a black head
twice as large as their body. The first thing they
do is to eat the pine-needles on which their nest was
placed; then they fall to on the near-by needles.</p>
<p>From time to time, three or four who have eaten
as much as they want fall into line and walk in step
in a little procession. This is practice for the coming
processions. If I disturb them, they sway the
front half of their bodies and wag their heads.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/i_139.jpg" alt="" /> <p class="caption">“When winter is near they will build a stronger tent.”</p> </div>
<p><SPAN name="page-140" class="pagenum" href="#page-140" title="140"></SPAN>
The next thing they do is to spin a little tent at
the place where their nest was. The tent is a small
ball made of gauze, supported on some leaves. Inside
it the Caterpillars take a rest during the hottest
part of the day. In the afternoon they leave this
shelter and start feeding again.</p>
<p>In less than an hour, you see, after coming from
the egg, the young Caterpillar shows what he can
do. He eats leaves, he forms processions, and he
spins tents.</p>
<p>In twenty-four hours the little tent has become
as large as a hazel-nut, and in two weeks it is the size
of an apple. But it is still only a temporary summer
tent. When winter is near, they will build a stronger
one. In the meantime, the Caterpillars eat the leaves
around which their tent is stretched. Their house
gives them at the same time board and lodging. This
is a good arrangement, because it saves them from
going out, and they are so young and so tiny that it
is dangerous for them to go out yet awhile.</p>
<p>When this tent gives way, owing to the Caterpillars
having nibbled the leaves supporting it, the family
moves on, like the Arabs, and erects a new tent
higher up on the pine-tree. Sometimes they reach
the very top of the tree.</p>
<p>In the meantime the Caterpillars have changed
their dress. They now wear six little bright red
patches on their backs, surrounded with scarlet
bristles. In the midst of these red patches are specks
of gold. The hairs on their sides and underneath
are whitish.</p>
<p><SPAN name="page-141" class="pagenum" href="#page-141" title="141"></SPAN>
In November they begin to build their winter tent
high up in the pine at the tip of a bough. They surround
the leaves at the end of the bough with a network
of silk. Leaves and silk together are stronger
than silk alone. By the time it is finished it is as
large as a half-gallon measure and about the shape of
an egg, with a sheath over the supporting branch. In
the center of the nest is a milk-white mass of thickly-woven
threads mingled with green leaves. At the
top are round openings, the doors of the house,
through which the Caterpillars go in and out. There
is a sort of veranda on top made of threads stretched
from the tips of the leaves projecting from the dome,
where the Caterpillars come and doze in the sun,
heaped one upon the other, with rounded backs. The
threads above are an awning, to keep the sun from
being too warm for them.</p>
<p>The inside of the Caterpillars’ nest is not at all
a tidy place; it is full of rags, shreds of the Caterpillars’
skins, and dirt.</p>
<p>The Caterpillars stay in their nest all night, and
come out about ten o’clock in the morning to take
the sun on their terrace or veranda. They spend
the whole day there, dozing. Motionless, heaped
together, they steep themselves deliciously in warmth
and from time to time show their bliss by nodding
and wagging their heads. At six or seven o’clock,
when it grows dark, the sleepers awake, bestir themselves,
and go their several ways over the surface of
the nest.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/i_142.jpg" alt="They are busy doing this for an hour or two every evening." /></div>
<p>Wherever they go, they strengthen the nest or enlarge
<SPAN name="page-142" class="pagenum" href="#page-142" title="142"></SPAN>
it by the threads of silk that come out of their
mouths and trail behind them. More green leaves
are taken in, and the tent becomes bigger and bigger.
They are busy doing this for an hour or two every
evening. So far, they have known nothing but summer;
but they seem to realize that winter is coming.
They work away at their house with an ardor that
seems to say:</p>
<p>“Oh, how nice and warm we shall be in our beds
here, nestling one against the other, when the pine-tree
swings aloft its frosted candelabra! Let us
work with a will!”</p>
<p>Yes, Caterpillars, my friends, let us work with a
will, great and small, men and grubs alike, so that we
<SPAN name="page-143" class="pagenum" href="#page-143" title="143"></SPAN>
may fall asleep peacefully; you with the torpor that
makes way for your transformation into Moths, we
with that last sleep which breaks off life only to renew
it. Let us work!</p>
<p>After the day’s work comes their dinner. The
Caterpillars come down from the nest and begin on
the pine-needles below. It is a magnificent sight to
see the red-coated band lined up in twos and threes
on each needle and in ranks so closely formed that
the green sprigs of the branch bend under the load.
The diners, all motionless, all poking their heads
forward, nibble in silence, placidly. Their broad
black foreheads gleam in the rays of my lantern.
They eat far into the night. Then they go back to
the nest, where, for a little longer, they continue
spinning on the surface. It is one or two o’clock in
the morning when the last of the band goes indoors.</p>
<p>The Pine Caterpillars eat only three kinds of pine:
the Scotch pine, the maritime pine, and the Aleppo
pine; never the leaves of the other cone-bearing
trees, with one exception. In vain I offer them other
foliage from the evergreens in my yard: the spruce,
the yew, the juniper, the cypress. What! Am I
asking them, the Pine Caterpillars, to bite into that?
They will take good care not to, in spite of the tempting
resinous smell! They would die of hunger rather
than touch it! One cone-bearing tree and one only
is excepted: the cedar. They will eat the leaves of
that. Why the cedar and not the others? I do not
know. The Caterpillar’s stomach is as particular
as ours, and has its secrets.</p>
<p><SPAN name="page-144" class="pagenum" href="#page-144" title="144"></SPAN>
To guide them as they wander about their tree,
the Caterpillars have their silk ribbon, formed by
threads from their mouths. They follow this on
their return. Sometimes they miss it and strike the
ribbon made by another band of Caterpillars. They
follow it and reach a strange dwelling. No matter!
There is not the least quarreling between the owners
and the new arrivals. Both go on browsing peacefully,
as though nothing had happened. And all
without hesitation, when bedtime comes, make for
the nest, like brothers who have always lived together;
all do some spinning before going to rest,
thicken the blanket a little, and are then swallowed
up in the same dormitory. By accidents like these
some nests grow to be very large. Each for all and
all for each. So says the Processionary, who every
evening spends his little capital of silk on enlarging
a shelter that is often new to him. What would he
do with his puny skein, if alone? Hardly anything.
But there are hundreds and hundreds of them in the
spinning-mill; and the result of their tiny contributions
is a stuff belonging to all, a thick blanket splendidly
warm in winter. In working for himself, each
works for the others; and the others work for him.
Lucky Caterpillars that know nothing of property,
the cause of strife!</p>
<div><SPAN name="page-145" class="pagenum" href="#page-145" title="145"></SPAN></div>
<h3>THE PROCESSIONARIES</h3>
<p>There is an old story about a Ram which was
thrown into the water from on board ship, whereupon
all the sheep leaped into the sea one after the
other; “for,” says the teller of the story, “it is the
nature of the sheep always to follow the first, wheresoever
it goes; which makes Aristotle mark them for
the most silly and foolish animals in the world.”</p>
<p>The Pine Caterpillars are even more sheeplike
than sheep. Where the first goes all the others go,
in a regular string, with not an empty space between
them.</p>
<p>They proceed in single file, each touching with
its head the rear of the one in front of it. No matter
how the one in front twists and turns, the whole
procession does the same. Another odd thing: they
are all, you might say, tight-rope walkers; they all
follow a silken rail. The leading Caterpillar dribbles
his thread on the path he makes, the second Caterpillar
steps on it and doubles it with his thread; and
all the others add their rope, so that after the procession
has passed, there is left a narrow white ribbon
whose dazzling whiteness shimmers in the sun.
This is a sumptuous manner of road-making: we
sprinkle our roads with broken stones and level them
by the pressure of a heavy steam-roller; they lay
over their paths a soft satin rail!</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/i_146.jpg" alt="" /> <p class="caption">“They Proceed in Single File.”</p> </div>
<p>What is the use of all this luxury? Could they
not, like other Caterpillars, walk about without
<SPAN name="page-147" class="pagenum" href="#page-147" title="147"></SPAN>
these costly preparations? I see two reasons. It is
night when the Processionaries go forth to feed, and
they follow a very winding route. They go down
one branch, up another, from the needle to the twig,
from the twig to the branch, and so on. When it is
time to go home, they would have hard work to find
their way if it were not for the silken thread they
leave behind them. It reminds one of the story of
Theseus (in the “Tanglewood Tales,” or the old
mythologies), who would have been lost in the Cretan
labyrinth if it had not been for the clue of thread
which Ariadne gave him.</p>
<p>Sometimes, too, they take longer expeditions by
day, marching in procession for thirty yards or so.
They are not looking for food; they are off on a trip,
seeing the world, perhaps looking for a place to bury
themselves later on, in the second stage before they
become Moths. In a walk of this distance, the guiding-thread
is very necessary.</p>
<p>The guiding-thread, too, brings them all back
home to the nest when they are separated, hunting
for food in the pine-tree. They pick up their threads,
and come hurrying from a host of twigs, from here,
from there, from above, from below, back to the
group. So the silk is more than a road: it is a social
bond that keeps all the members of the community
united.</p>
<p>At the head of every procession, long or short,
goes the first Caterpillar, the leader. He is
leader only by chance; everything depends upon the
order in which they happen to line up. If the file
<SPAN name="page-148" class="pagenum" href="#page-148" title="148"></SPAN>
should break up, for some reason, and form again,
some other Caterpillar might have first rank. But
the leader’s temporary duties give him airs of his
own. While the others follow passively in a close
file, he, the captain, tosses himself about and flings
the front of his body hither and thither. As he
marches ahead he seems to be seeking his way. Does
he really explore the country? Does he choose the
best places? Or are his hesitations only the result
of the absence of the guiding-thread the rest follow?
Why cannot I read what passes under his black,
shiny skull, so like a drop of tar? To judge by actions,
he has sense enough to recognize very rough
places, over-slippery surfaces, dusty places, and,
above all, the threads left by other Caterpillars.
This is all, or nearly all, that my long acquaintance
with the Processionaries has taught me about their
brain power.</p>
<p>The processions vary greatly in length. The finest
one I ever saw was twelve or thirteen yards long
and numbered about three hundred Caterpillars,
drawn up with absolute precision in a wavy line. If
there were only two in a row, however, the order
would still be perfect: the second touches and follows
the first.</p>
<p>I make up my mind to play a trick upon the Caterpillars
which have hatched out in my greenhouse. I
wish to arrange their silken track so that it will join
on to itself and form an endless circuit, with no
branch tracks leading from it. Will the Processionaries
<SPAN name="page-149" class="pagenum" href="#page-149" title="149"></SPAN>
then go round and round upon a road that
never comes to an end?</p>
<p>Chance makes it easy for me to arrange something
of this sort. On the shelf in my greenhouse
in which the nests are planted stand some big palm
vases measuring nearly a yard and a half in circumference
at the top. The Caterpillars often scale the
sides and climb up to the molding which forms a
cornice or ledge around the opening. This place
suits them for their processions. It provides me
with a circular track all ready-made.</p>
<p>One day I discover a numerous troop making their
way up and gradually reaching the favorite ledge.
Slowly, in single file, the Caterpillars climb the great
vase, mount the ledge, and advance in regular procession,
while others are constantly arriving and continuing
the series. I wait for the string to close up,
that is to say, for the leader, who is following the
circular track, to return to the point from which he
started. This happens in a quarter of an hour. I
now have a circle of Caterpillars around the top of
the vase.</p>
<p>The next thing is to get rid of the rest of the
Caterpillars who are on their way up and who might
disturb the experiment; we must also do away with
all the silken paths that lead from the top of the
vase to the ground. With a thick hair-pencil I sweep
away the Caterpillars; with a big brush I carefully
rub down the vase and get rid of every thread which
the Caterpillars have laid on the march. When
<SPAN name="page-150" class="pagenum" href="#page-150" title="150"></SPAN>
these preparations are finished, a curious sight
awaits us.</p>
<p>The Caterpillars are going round and round on
the ledge at the top of the vase. They no longer
have a leader, because the circle is continuous; but
they do not know this, and each follows the one
in front of him, who he thinks is the leader.</p>
<p>The rail of silk has grown into a narrow ribbon,
which the Caterpillars keep adding to. It has no
branches anywhere. Will they walk endlessly round
and round until their strength gives out entirely?</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/i_150.jpg" alt="the tale of the Donkey" /></div>
<p>Old-fashioned scholars were fond of quoting the
tale of the Donkey who, when placed between two
bundles of hay, starved to death because he was unable
to decide in favor of either. They slandered
the worthy animal. The Donkey, who is no more
foolish than any one else, would feast off both
<SPAN name="page-151" class="pagenum" href="#page-151" title="151"></SPAN>
bundles. Will my Caterpillars show a little of his
common-sense? Will they make up their minds to
leave their closed circuit, to swerve to this side or
that? I thought that they would, and I was wrong.
I said to myself:</p>
<p>“The procession will go on turning for some
time, for an hour, two hours perhaps; then the
Caterpillars will perceive their mistake. They will
abandon the deceptive road and make their descent
somewhere or other.”</p>
<p>That they should remain up there, hard pressed
by hunger and the lack of shelter, when nothing prevented
them from going away, seemed to me unthinkable
foolishness. Facts, however, forced me
to accept the incredible.</p>
<p>The Caterpillars keep on marching round the
vase for hours and hours. As evening comes on,
there are more or less lengthy halts; they go more
slowly at times, especially as it grows colder. At
ten o’clock in the evening the walk is little more
than a lazy swaying of the body. Grazing-time
comes, when the other Caterpillars come crowding
out from their nests to feast on the pine-needles.
The ones on the vase would gladly take part in the
feast; they must have an appetite after a ten hours’
walk. A branch of pine is not a hand’s breadth
away from them. To reach it they have only to go
down the vase; and the poor wretches, foolish slaves
of their ribbon that they are, cannot make up their
minds to do so. At half-past ten I leave them to go
to bed; I am sure that during the night they will
<SPAN name="page-152" class="pagenum" href="#page-152" title="152"></SPAN>
come to their senses. At dawn I visit them again.
They are lined up as on the day before, but motionless.
When the air grows a little warmer, they
shake off their torpor, revive, and start walking
again in their circle.</p>
<p>Things go on as before during the next day. The
following night is very cold. The poor Caterpillars
spend a bad night. I find them clustered in two heaps
on the top of the vase, without any attempt at order.
They have huddled together to keep warm.
Perhaps, now that they are divided into two parts,
one of the leaders, not being obliged to follow a
Caterpillar in front of him, will have the sense to
break away. I am delighted to see them lining up
by degrees into two distinct files, with two leaders,
free to go where they please. At the sight of their
large black heads swaying anxiously from side to
side, I am inclined to think they will leave the enchanted
circle. But I am soon undeceived. As the
ranks fill out, the two sections of the chain meet and
the circle is formed again. Again the Caterpillars
march round and round all day.</p>
<p>The next night is again cold, and the Caterpillars
gather in a heap which overflows both sides of the
fatal ribbon. Next morning, when they awake, some
of them who find themselves outside the track actually
follow a leader who climbs to the top of the
vase and down the inside. There are seven of these
daring ones. The rest pay no attention to them and
walk round the circle again.</p>
<p>The Caterpillars inside the vase find no food
<SPAN name="page-153" class="pagenum" href="#page-153" title="153"></SPAN>
there, and retrace their steps along their thread to
the top, strike the procession again, and slip back
into the ranks.</p>
<p>Another day passes, and another. The sixth day
is warm, and for the first time I see daring leaders,
who, drunk with heat, stand on their hind-legs at the
extreme edge of the vase and fling themselves forward
into space. At last one of them decided to
take the plunge. He slips under the ledge and four
follow him. They go halfway down the vase, then
their courage fails and they climb up again and rejoin
the procession. But a start has been made and
a new track laid. Two days later, on the eighth day
of the experiment, the Caterpillars—now singly,
then in small groups, then again in strings of some
length—come down from the ledge by starting on
this fresh path. At sunset the last of the Caterpillars
is back in the nest at the foot.</p>
<p>I figure that they have walked for eighty-four
hours, and covered a good deal more than a quarter
of a mile while traveling in the circle. It was only
the disorder due to the cold nights that ever set them
off the track and back to safety. Poor, stupid Caterpillars!
People are fond of saying that animals can
reason, but there are no beginnings of a reasoning
power to be seen in them.</p>
<div><SPAN name="page-154" class="pagenum" href="#page-154" title="154"></SPAN></div>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/i_154.jpg" alt="Let us consider the habits of the Pine Caterpillar" /></div>
<h3>THE CATERPILLARS AS WEATHER PROPHETS</h3>
<p>In January the Pine Caterpillar sheds his skin for
the second time. He is not nearly so pretty afterwards,
but he has gained some new organs which
are very useful. The hairs on the middle of his back
are now of a dull reddish color, made paler still by
many long white hairs mixed in with them. This
faded costume has an odd feature. On the back
may be seen eight gashes, like mouths, which open
and close at the Caterpillar’s will. When the mouths
are open there appears in each of them a little swelling,
which seems extremely sensitive, for at the
slightest irritation it goes in again.</p>
<p><SPAN name="page-155" class="pagenum" href="#page-155" title="155"></SPAN>
What is the use of these queer mouths and tumors,
as we call the little swellings? Certainly not
to breathe with, for no one, not even a Caterpillar,
breathes from the middle of his back. Let us consider
the habits of the Pine Caterpillar, and perhaps
we shall find out.</p>
<p>The Pine Caterpillar is most active during the
winter, and at night. But if the north wind blow
too violently, if the cold be too piercing, if it snow,
or rain, or if the mist thicken into an icy drizzle, the
Caterpillars prudently stay at home, sheltering
under their waterproof tent.</p>
<p>It would be convenient to foresee these disagreeable
weather conditions. The Caterpillar dreads
them. A drop of rain sets him in a flutter; a snowflake
exasperates him. To start for the grazing-grounds
at dark of night, in uncertain weather,
would be dangerous, for the procession goes some
distance and travels slowly. The flock would have a
bad time of it before regaining shelter, if they were
caught in a sudden storm, such as are frequent in
the bad season of the year. Can the Pine Caterpillar
possibly be able to foretell the weather? Let
me tell how I came to suspect this.</p>
<p>One night some friends came to see my Caterpillars
in the greenhouse start on their nightly pilgrimage.
We waited till nine o’clock, then went in. But,
but ... what is this? Not a Caterpillar outside
the nests! Last night and on the nights before
they came out in countless numbers; to-night not one
is to be seen. We waited till ten o’clock, till eleven,
<SPAN name="page-156" class="pagenum" href="#page-156" title="156"></SPAN>
till midnight. Then, very much mortified, I had to
send my friends away.</p>
<p>Next day I found that it had rained in the night
and again in the morning, and that there was snow
on the mountains. Had the Caterpillars, more sensitive
than any of us to atmospheric changes, refused
to venture out because they had known what was
going to happen? After all, why not? I thought I
would keep on observing them.</p>
<p>I found that whenever the weather chart in the
newspaper announced a coming depression of the
atmosphere, such as is made by storms, my greenhouse
Caterpillars stayed at home, though neither
rain, snow, nor cold could affect them in their indoor
shelter. Sometimes they foretold the storm two days
ahead. Their gift for scenting bad weather very
soon won the confidence of the household. When
we had to go into town to buy provisions, we used
to consult our Caterpillars the night before; and according
to what they did, we went or stayed at home.</p>
<p>The second dress of the Pine Caterpillar, therefore,
seems to bring with it the power to foretell the
weather. And this power is probably given by the
wide mouths, which yawn open to sample the air
from time to time and to give a warning of the sudden
storm.</p>
<div><SPAN name="page-157" class="pagenum" href="#page-157" title="157"></SPAN></div>
<h3>THE PINE MOTH</h3>
<p>When March comes, the Caterpillars leave their
nest and their pine-tree and go on their final trip.
On the twentieth of March I spent a whole morning
watching a file about three yards long, containing
about a hundred of the Caterpillars, now much
faded as to their coats. The procession toils grimly
along, up and down over the uneven ground. Then
it breaks into groups, which halt and form independent
processions.</p>
<p>They have important business on hand. After two
hours or so of marching, the little procession reaches
the foot of a wall, where the soil is powdery, very
dry, and easy to burrow in. The Caterpillar at the
head of the row explores, and digs a little, as if to
find out the nature of the ground. The others,
trusting their leader, follow him blindly. Whatever
he decides will be adopted by all. Finally the
leading Caterpillar finds a spot he likes; he stops,
and the others break up into a swarming heap. All
their backs are joggling pell-mell; all their feet are
raking; all their jaws are digging the soil. Little
by little, they make a hole in which to bury themselves.
For some time to come the tunneled soil
cracks and rises and covers itself with little mole-hills;
then all is still. The Caterpillars have descended
to a depth of three inches, and are weaving,
or about to weave, their cocoons.</p>
<p>Two weeks later I dug down and found them
<SPAN name="page-158" class="pagenum" href="#page-158" title="158"></SPAN>
there, wrapped in scanty white silk, soiled with dirt.
Sometimes, if the soil permits, they bury themselves
as deep as nine inches.</p>
<p>How, then, does the Moth, that delicate creature,
with her flimsy wings and sweeping antennæ-plumes,
make her way above ground? She does not appear
till the end of July or in August. By that time the
soil is hard, having been beaten down by the rain
and baked by the sun. Never could a Moth break
her way through unless she had tools for the purpose
and were dressed with great simplicity.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/i_158.jpg" alt="the Moth, that delicate creature" /></div>
<p>From some cocoons that I kept in test-tubes in my
laboratory I found that the Pine Moth, on coming
<SPAN name="page-159" class="pagenum" href="#page-159" title="159"></SPAN>
out of the cocoon, has her finery bundled up. She
looks like a cylinder with rounded ends. The wings
are pressed against her breast like narrow scarfs;
the antennæ have not yet unfolded their plumes and
are turned back along the Moth’s sides. Her hair
fleece is laid flat, pointing backwards. Her legs
alone are free, to help her through the soil.</p>
<p>She needs even more preparation, though, to bore
her hole. If you pass the tip of your finger over her
head you will feel a few very rough wrinkles. The
magnifying-glass shows us that these are hard scales,
of which the longest and strongest is the top one,
in the middle of her forehead. There you have the
center-bit of her boring-tool. I see the Moths in the
sand in my test-tubes butting with their heads, jerking
now in one direction, now in another. They are
boring into the sand. By the following day they will
have bored a shaft ten inches long and reached the
surface.</p>
<p>When at last the Moth reaches the surface, she
slowly spreads her bunched wings, extends her antennæ,
and puffs out her fleece. She is all dressed
now, as nicely as she can be. To be sure, she is not
the most brilliant of our Moths, but she looks very
well. Her upper wings are gray, striped with a few
crinkly brown streaks; her under-wings white; throat
covered with thick gray fur; abdomen clad in bright-russet
velvet. The tip end of her body shines like
pale gold. At first sight it looks bare, but it is not:
it is covered with tiny scales, so close together that
they look like one piece.</p>
<p><SPAN name="page-160" class="pagenum" href="#page-160" title="160"></SPAN>
There is something interesting about these scales.
However gently we touch them with the point of
a needle, they fly off in great numbers. This is the
golden fleece of which the mother robs herself to
make the nest or muff for her eggs at the base of the
pine-needles which we spoke of at the beginning of
the story.</p>
<div><SPAN name="page-161" class="pagenum" href="#page-161" title="161"></SPAN></div>
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