<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_50" id="Page_50">50</SPAN></span></p>
<div class="dcp-chap7">
<p style='padding-top: 280px;'> </p>
<h2 style='padding-left: 200px;'>THE LITTLE SPIDER'S FIRST WEB</h2>
<p style='padding-left: 200px;'>The first thing our
little Spider remembered
was being crowded
with a lot of other
little Spiders in a tiny brown
house. This tiny house had
no windows, and was very
warm and dark and stuffy.
When the wind blew, the little
Spiders would hear it rushing
through the forest near by, and
would feel their round brown
house swinging like a cradle. It
was fastened to a bush by the
edge of the forest, but they could
not know that, so they just wiggled and
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_51" id="Page_51">51</SPAN></span>
pushed and ate the food that they found
in the house, and wondered what it all
meant. They didn't even guess that a
mother Spider had made the brown house
and put the food in it for her Spider
babies to eat when they came out of
their eggs. She had put the eggs in,
too, but the little Spiders didn't remember
the time when they lay curled up in
the eggs. They didn't know what had
been nor what was to be—they thought
that to eat and wiggle and sleep was all
of life. You see they had much to learn.</p>
<p style='padding-left: 200px;'>One morning the little Spiders found
that the food was all gone, and they
pushed and scrambled harder than ever,
because they were hungry and wanted
more. Exactly what happened nobody
knew, but suddenly it grew light, and
some of them fell out of the house. All
the rest scrambled after, and there they
stood, winking and blinking in the bright
sunshine, and feeling a little bit dizzy, be<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_52" id="Page_52">52</SPAN></span>cause
they were on a shaky web made of
silvery ropes.</p>
<p>Just then the web began to shake even
more, and a beautiful great mother Spider
ran out on it. She was dressed in black
and yellow velvet, and her eight eyes
glistened and gleamed in the sunlight.
They had never dreamed of such a wonderful
creature.</p>
<p>"Well, my children," she exclaimed, "I
know you must be hungry, and I have
breakfast all ready for you." So they
began eating at once, and the mother
Spider told them many things about the
meadow and the forest, and said they
must amuse themselves while she worked
to get food for them. There was no
father Spider to help her, and, as she
said, "Growing children must have plenty
of good plain food."</p>
<p>You can just fancy what a good time
the baby Spiders had. There were a
hundred and seventy of them, so they<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_53" id="Page_53">53</SPAN></span>
had no chance to grow lonely, even when
their mother was away. They lived in
this way for quite a while, and grew bigger
and stronger every day. One morning
the mother Spider said to her biggest
daughter, "You are quite old enough to
work now, and I will teach you to spin
your web."</p>
<p>The little Spider soon learned to draw
out the silvery ropes from the pocket in
her body where they were made and kept,
and very soon she had one fastened at
both ends to branches of the bush. Then
her mother made her walk out to the
middle of her rope bridge, and spin and
fasten two more, so that it looked like a
shining cross. After that was done, the
mother showed her something like a comb,
which is part of a Spider's foot, and taught
her how to measure, and put more ropes
out from the middle of the cross, until it
looked like the spokes of a wheel.</p>
<p>The little Spider got much discouraged,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_54" id="Page_54">54</SPAN></span>
and said, "Let me finish it some other
time; I am tired of working now."</p>
<p>The mother Spider answered, "No, I
cannot have a lazy child."</p>
<p>The little one said, "I can't ever do it,
I know I can't."</p>
<p>"Now," said the mother, "I shall have
to give you a Spider scolding. You have
acted as lazy as the Tree Frog says boys
and girls sometimes do. He has been up
near the farm-house, and says that he has
seen there children who do not like to
work. The meadow people could hardly
believe such a thing at first. He says
they were cross and unhappy children, and
no wonder! Lazy people are never happy.
You try to finish the web, and see if I am
not right. You are not a baby now, and
you must work and get your own food."</p>
<p>So the little Spider spun the circles of
rope in the web, and made these ropes
sticky, as all careful spiders do. She ate
the loose ends and pieces that were left<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_55" id="Page_55">55</SPAN></span>
over, to save them for another time, and
when it was done, it was so fine and perfect
that her brothers and sisters crowded
around, saying, "Oh! oh! oh! how beautiful!"
and asked the mother to teach them.
The little web-spinner was happier than
she had ever been before, and the mother
began to teach her other children. But
it takes a long time to teach a hundred
and seventy children.</p>
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