<h2 id="chapter-20"><ANTIMG src="images/i_236.jpg" alt="" /><br/> CHAPTER XX<br/> <span class="chapter-title">THE CLOTHO SPIDER</span></h2>
<p><span class="upper">Prettily</span> shaped and clad, as far as a Spider
can be, the Clotho Spider is, above all, a very
clever spinstress. She is named after the Clotho of
antiquity, the youngest of the Three Fates, who
holds the distaff whence our destinies are spun. It
is a pity that the Fate Clotho cannot spin as soft
lives for us as the exquisite silk the Spider Clotho
spins for herself!</p>
<p>If we would make the acquaintance of the Clotho
Spider we must go up the rocky slopes in the olive-land,
scorched and blistered by the sun, turn over
the flat stones, those of a fair size, search, above all,
the piles which the shepherds set up for a seat from
which to watch the sheep browsing amongst the lavender
below. Do not be too easily disheartened if
you do not find her at first. The Clotho is rare;
not every spot suits her. If we are lucky, we shall
see, clinging to the lower surface of the stone which
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we have lifted, a queer-looking thing, shaped like
the dome of a building turned upside down, and
about half the size of a tangerine orange. The outside
is hung with small shells, bits of earth, and,
especially, dried insects.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/i_237.jpg" alt="clinging to the lower surface of the stone which we have lifted, a queer-looking thing" /></div>
<p>The edge of the dome is scalloped into a dozen
pointed scallops, the points of which spread and are
fixed to the stone. A flat roof closes the top of the
dwelling.</p>
<p>Where is the entrance? All the arches of the edge
open upon the roof; not one leads inside. Yet the
owner of the house must go out from time to time,
if only in search of food; on returning from her
expedition, she must go in again. How does she
make her exits and her entrances? A straw will
tell us the secret.</p>
<p>Pass it over the threshold of the various arches.
It finds them all carefully closed, apparently. But
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one of the scallops, if cleverly coaxed, opens at the
edge into two lips and stands slightly ajar. This is
the door, which at once shuts again of its own elasticity.
Nor is this all: the Spider, when she returns
home, often bolts herself in; that is to say, she joins
and fastens the two leaves of the door with a little
silk.</p>
<p>The Clotho, when in danger, runs quickly home;
she opens the chink with a touch of her claw, enters
and disappears. The door closes of itself and is supplied,
in case of need, with a lock consisting of a few
threads. No burglar, on the outside of so many
arches, one and all alike, will ever discover under
which one the fugitive vanished so suddenly.</p>
<p>Let us open the Spider’s cabin. What luxury!
We have read how the Princess in the fairy-tale was
unable to rest, if there was a crumpled rose-leaf in
her bed. The Clotho is quite as fastidious. Her
couch is more delicate than swan’s-down and whiter
than the fleece of clouds where brood the summer
storms. It is the ideal blanket. Above is a canopy
or tester of equal softness. Between the two nestles
the Spider, short-legged, clad in somber garments,
with five yellow favors on her back.</p>
<p>Rest in this exquisite retreat demands that it be
perfectly steady, especially on gusty days, when sharp
draughts creep under the stone dwelling. By taking
a careful look at her we can see how the Spider manages
this. The arches that bear the weight of the
building are fastened to the stone at each end. Moreover,
where they touch, you may see a cluster of
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diverging threads that creep along the stone and
cling to it throughout their length, which spreads
afar. I have measured some that were fully nine
feet long. These are so many cables; they are like
the ropes and pegs that hold the Arab’s tent in
position.</p>
<p>Another detail attracts our attention: whereas the
inside of the house is exquisitely clean, the outside is
covered with dirt, bits of earth, chips of rotten wood,
little pieces of gravel. Often there are worse things
still: hung up or embedded are the dry carcasses of
Beetles that favor under-rock shelters; parts of
Thousand-legged Worms, bleached by the sun;
snail-shells, chosen from among the smallest.</p>
<p>These relics are plainly, for the most part, table-leavings,
broken victuals. Unskilled in laying traps,
the Clotho lives upon the insects who wander from
one stone to another. Whoever ventures under the
slab at night is strangled by the hostess; and the
dried-up carcass, instead of being flung to a distance,
is hung to the silken wall, as though the Spider
wished to make a bogey-house of her home. But
this cannot be her aim. To act like the ogre who
hangs his victim from the castle battlements is the
worst way to disarm suspicion in the passers-by
whom you are lying in wait to capture.</p>
<p>There are other reasons which increase our doubts.
The shells hung up are most often empty; but there
are also some occupied by the Snail, alive and untouched.
What can the Spider do with these snail-shells
wherein the animal retreats so far that she cannot
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reach it? The Spider cannot break the hard
shell or get at the hermit through the opening. Then
why should she collect these prizes, whose slimy flesh
is probably not to her taste? We begin to suspect a
simple question of ballast and balance. The House
Spider prevents her web, spun in a corner of the
wall, from losing its shape at the least breath of air,
by loading it with crumbling plaster and allowing
tiny fragments of mortar to accumulate. The Clotho
Spider dumps down on her abode any more or less
heavy object, mainly corpses of insects, because she
need not look for these and finds them ready to hand
after each meal. They are weights, not trophies;
they take the place of materials that must otherwise
be collected from a distance and lifted to the top.
In this way, a breastwork is obtained that strengthens
and steadies the house. Further balance is often
given by tiny shells and other objects hanging a
long way down. The Clotho knows the laws of
balancing; by means of additional weights, she is able
to lower the center of gravity and thus to give her
dwelling the proper equilibrium and roominess.</p>
<p>Now what does she do in her softly-wadded
home? Nothing, that I know of. With a full
stomach, her legs luxuriously stretched over the
down carpet, she does nothing, thinks of nothing;
she listens to the sound of the earth revolving on its
axis. It is not sleep, still less is it waking; it is a
middle state where the Spider is conscious of nothing
except that she is happy. We ourselves, when comfortably
in bed, enjoy, just before we fall asleep, a
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few moments of bliss, when we neither think nor
worry; and those moments are among the sweetest in
our lives. The Clotho Spider seems to know similar
moments and to make the most of them.</p>
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