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<h2> CHAPTER VII. OTHER VERMIN. </h2>
<p>BESIDES the worm I do not think there is any insect enemy of books worth
description. The domestic black-beetle, or cockroach, is far too modern an
introduction to our country to have done much harm, though he will
sometimes nibble the binding of books, especially if they rest upon the
floor.</p>
<p>Not so fortunate, however, are our American cousins, for in the "Library
Journal" for September, 1879, Mr. Weston Flint gives an account of a
dreadful little pest which commits great havoc upon the cloth bindings of
the New York libraries. It is a small black-beetle or cockroach, called by
scientists "Blatta germanica" and by others the "Croton Bug." Unlike our
household pest, whose home is the kitchen, and whose bashfulness loves
secrecy and the dark hours, this misgrown flat species, of which it would
take two to make a medium-sized English specimen, has gained in impudence
what it has lost in size, fearing neither light nor noise, neither man nor
beast. In the old English Bible of 1551, we read in Psalm xci, 5, "Thou
shalt not nede to be afraied for eny Bugges by night." This verse falls
unheeded on the ear of the Western librarian who fears his "bugs" both
night and day, for they crawl over everything in broad sunlight, infesting
and infecting each corner and cranny of the bookshelves they choose as
their home. There is a remedy in the powder known as insecticide, which,
however, is very disagreeable upon books and shelves. It is, nevertheless,
very fatal to these pests, and affords some consolation in the fact that
so soon as a "bug" shows any signs of illness, he is devoured at once by
his voracious brethren with the same relish as if he were made of fresh
paste.</p>
<p>There is, too, a small silvery insect (Lepisma) which I have often seen in
the backs of neglected books, but his ravages are not of much importance.</p>
<p>Nor can we reckon the Codfish as very dangerous to literature, unless,
indeed, he be of the Roman obedience, like that wonderful
Ichthiobibliophage (pardon me, Professor Owen) who, in the year 1626,
swallowed three Puritanical treatises of John Frith, the Protestant
martyr. No wonder, after such a meal, he was soon caught, and became
famous in the annals of literature. The following is the title of a little
book issued upon the occasion: "Vox Piscis, or the Book-Fish containing
Three Treatises, which were found in the belly of a Cod-Fish in Cambridge
Market on Midsummer Eve, AD 1626." Lowndes says (see under "Tracey,")
"great was the consternation at Cambridge upon the publication of this
work."</p>
<p>Rats and mice, however, are occasionally very destructive, as the
following anecdote will show: Two centuries ago, the library of the Dean
and Chapter of Westminster was kept in the Chapter House, and repairs
having become necessary in that building, a scaffolding was erected
inside, the books being left on their shelves. One of the holes made in
the wall for a scaffold-pole was selected by a pair of rats for their
family residence. Here they formed a nest for their young ones by
descending to the library shelves and biting away the leaves of various
books. Snug and comfortable was the little household, until, one day, the
builder's men having finished, the poles were removed, and—alas! for
the rats—the hole was closed up with bricks and cement. Buried
alive, the father and mother, with five or six of their offspring, met
with a speedy death, and not until a few years ago, when a restoration of
the Chapter House was effected, was the rat grave opened again for a
scaffold pole, and all their skeletons and their nest discovered. Their
bones and paper fragments of the nest may now be seen in a glass case in
the Chapter House, some of the fragments being attributed to books from
the press of Caxton. This is not the case, although there are pieces of
very early black-letter books not now to be found in the Abbey library,
including little bits of the famous Queen Elizabeth's Prayer book, with
woodcuts, 1568.</p>
<p>A friend sends me the following incident: "A few years since, some rats
made nests in the trees surrounding my house; from thence they jumped on
to some flat roofing, and so made their way down a chimney into a room
where I kept books. A number of these, with parchment backs, they entirely
destroyed, as well as some half-dozen books whole bound in parchment."</p>
<p>Another friend informs me that in the Natural History Museum of the Devon
and Exeter Institution is a specimen of "another little pest, which has a
great affection for bindings in calf and roan. Its scientific name is
Niptus Hololeucos." He adds, "Are you aware that there was a terrible
creature allied to these, rejoicing in the name of Tomicus Typographus,
which committed sad ravages in Germany in the seventeenth century, and in
the old liturgies of that country is formally mentioned under its vulgar
name, 'The Turk'?" (See Kirby and Spence, Seventh Edition, 1858, p. 123.)
This is curious, and I did not know it, although I know well that
Typographus Tomicus, or the "cutting printer," is a sad enemy of (good)
books. Upon this part of our subject, however, I am debarred entering.</p>
<p>The following is from W. J. Westbrook, Mus. Doe., Cantab., and represents
ravages with which I am personally unacquainted:</p>
<p>"Dear Blades,—I send you an example of the 'enemy'-mosity of an
ordinary housefly. It hid behind the paper, emitted some caustic fluid,
and then departed this life. I have often caught them in such holes.'
30/12/83." The damage is an oblong hole, surrounded by a white fluffy
glaze (fungoid?), difficult to represent in a woodcut. The size here given
is exact.</p>
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