<h2 id="chapter-16"><ANTIMG src="images/i_171.jpg" alt="" /><br/> CHAPTER XVI<br/> <span class="chapter-title">THE TRUFFLE-HUNTING BEETLE</span></h2>
<p><span class="upper">Before</span> we come to the Beetle, I must first tell
you about my friend, the Dog, who hunts
truffles, which are underground mushrooms. Dogs
are quite often used for this purpose, and I have had
the good fortune on several occasions to go with a
Dog who was a great expert in this line. He was
certainly nothing to look at, this artist whom I was
so anxious to see at work: just a Dog, placid and deliberate
in his ways, ugly, unkempt; the sort of Dog
you would never have at your own fireside. Talent
and poverty often go hand in hand.</p>
<p>His master, a celebrated truffle-gatherer in the village,
was at first afraid that I wanted to steal his
secrets and set up a rival business, but when he found
that I only made drawings of mushrooms and set
down lists of underground vegetable things, he let
me join his expeditions.</p>
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It was agreed between us that the Dog should
act as he pleased and receive a bit of bread as his
reward after each discovery, no matter whether the
underground mushroom he discovered was a real
truffle, the kind people like to eat, or an uneatable
one. In no case was the master to drive the dog
away from a spot where experience told him there
was nothing salable to be found. As far as my
studies went, I did not care whether the mushrooms
were edible or not.</p>
<p>Conducted in this way, the expedition was very
successful. The busy Dog trotted along with his
nose to the wind, at a moderate pace. Every little
while he stopped, questioned the ground with his
nostrils, scratched for a few seconds, without too
much excitement, then looked up at his master as if
to say:</p>
<p>“Here we are, here we are! On my word of
honor as a Dog, there’s a truffle here.”</p>
<p>And he spoke the truth. The master dug at the
spot indicated. If the trowel went astray, the Dog
showed the man how to put it right by sniffing at
the bottom of the hole. The mushroom was always
there. A Dog’s nose cannot lie. But he made us
gather all sorts of underground mushrooms: the
large and the small, the fresh and the decayed, the
scented and the unscented, the fragrant and those
which were the reverse. I was surprised at my collection,
which included most of the underground
fungi of the neighborhood.</p>
<p>Is it smell as we understand it that guides the Dog
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in his search? I do not believe that it is, otherwise
he would not point out so many varieties which smell
so very different. He must perceive something that
we cannot. It is a mistake to compare everything by
human standards. There are more sensations in the
world than we know of. Such secrets are known to
insects better than to other animals, like the Dog or
the Pig, who also hunts truffles with its nose. We will
hear now about the Truffle-hunting Beetle.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/i_173.jpg" alt="the Pig, who also hunts truffles with its nose" /></div>
<p>This is a pretty little black Beetle, with a pale and
velvety belly, round as a cherry-stone and much the
same size. By rubbing the tip of its abdomen against
the edge of its wing-cases it makes a soft chirrup like
that which little birds make when their mother comes
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with their food. The male wears a graceful horn
on his head.</p>
<p>I found these Beetles in a certain pine-woods
where there are plenty of mushrooms. It is a
pleasant place, where my whole family like to go in
the mild days of autumn. They find everything
there: old Magpies’ nests, made of bundles of twigs;
Jays squabbling with each other, after filling their
crops with acorns on the oaks hard by; Rabbits
suddenly starting out of a rosemary bush, showing
their little white upturned tails. There is lovely sand
for the children to dig tunnels in, sand that is
easy to build into rows of huts which we thatch with
moss and top with a bit of reed by way of a chimney.
And when we are there we lunch off an apple to
the sound of the Æolian harps of the breezes softly
sighing through the pine-needles!</p>
<p>Yes, for the children it is a real paradise. The
grown-ups also enjoy it, and one of my chief enjoyments
is watching my Truffle-beetle. His burrows
may be seen here and there. The door is left open
and surrounded merely by a padding of sand. The
burrow is about nine inches deep, going straight
down in very loose soil. When I cut into it with a
knife, I often find that it is empty. The insect has
left during the night, having finished its business
there and gone to settle elsewhere. The Truffle-beetle
is a tramp, a night-walker, who leaves his
home whenever he feels like it and easily gets a new
one. Sometimes I do find the insect at the bottom
of the pit, always alone, sometimes a male, sometimes
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a female, never two at the same time. The
burrow is not a house for the family; it is a sort of
bachelor house, dug for comfort only for the solitary
Beetle.</p>
<p>The Beetle in this house is clutching a small mushroom,
usually partly eaten. He will not part from
it. It is his treasure, his worldly goods. Scattered
crumbs tell us that we have caught him feasting.</p>
<p>When we take his prize away from him we find
that it is a sort of little underground mushroom,
closely related to the truffle.</p>
<p>This throws a light upon the habits of the Beetle
and his reason for making new burrows so often. In
the calm of the twilight, the little gadabout takes to
the fields, chirruping softly as he goes, cheering himself
with song. He explores the soil, questions it
as to its contents, just as the Dog does when hunting
for truffles. His sense of smell tells him when the
coveted morsel is underneath, covered by a few
inches of sand. Certain of the exact spot where the
thing lies, he digs straight down and never fails to
reach it. As long as the provisions last, he does not
go out again. Blissfully he feeds at the bottom of
the well he has dug to reach the mushroom. He
does not care whether his door is open or not.</p>
<p>When he has eaten all his food, he moves, looking
for more, and to find it he digs a new burrow,
which will be given up in its turn. Thus he spends
all autumn and the next spring, the seasons for mushrooms,
traveling from one of his little hotels to another.</p>
<p><SPAN name="page-176" class="pagenum" href="#page-176" title="176"></SPAN>
This truffle which the Beetle hunts appears to have
no particular odor. How, then, can he detect it
from the ground over the place where it is buried?
He is a clever Beetle, and we do not know yet just
how he manages it.</p>
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