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Title: The Sacred Beetle and others
Author: Fabre, Jean-Henri
Language: English
As this book started as an ASCII text book there are no pictures available.


*** Start of this LibraryBlog Digital Book "The Sacred Beetle and others" ***


                        THE WORKS OF J. H. FABRE

                                  THE
                             SACRED BEETLE
                               AND OTHERS


                                   BY
                             J. HENRI FABRE

                             Translated by
                  ALEXANDER TEIXEIRA DE MATTOS, F.Z.S.

                      WITH A PREFACE BY THE AUTHOR



                          HODDER AND STOUGHTON
                   LONDON      NEW YORK      TORONTO



AUTHOR’S PREFACE


In the building of the nest, the family safeguard, we see the highest
manifestation of the faculties of instinct. That clever architect, the
bird, teaches us as much; and the insect, with its still more diverse
talents, repeats the lesson, telling us that maternity is the supreme
inspirer of instinct. Entrusted with the preservation of the species,
which is of more importance than the preservation of individuals,
maternity awakens in the drowsiest intelligence marvellous gleams of
foresight; it is the thrice sacred hearth where are kindled those
mysterious psychic fires which will suddenly burst into flame and
dazzle us with their semblance of infallible reason. The more maternity
asserts itself, the higher does instinct ascend.

In this respect no creatures are more deserving of our attention than
the Hymenoptera, upon whom the cares of maternity devolve in their
fulness. All these favourites of instinct prepare board and lodging for
their offspring. They become master-craftsmen in a host of trades for
the sake of a family which their faceted eyes will never behold, but
which is nevertheless no stranger to the mother’s powers of foresight.
One turns cotton-spinner and produces cotton-wool bottles; another sets
up as a basket-maker and weaves hampers out of bits of leaves; a third
becomes a mason and builds rooms of cement and domes of road-metal; a
fourth opens pottery-works, where clay is kneaded into shapely vases
and rounded pots; yet another goes in for mining and digs mysterious
underground chambers in the warm, moist earth. A thousand trades
similar to ours and often even unknown to our industrial system enter
into the preparation of the abode. Next come the provisions for the
expected nurselings: piles of honey, loaves of pollen, stores of game,
preserved by a cunning paralysing-process. In such works as these,
having the future of the family for their sole object, the highest
manifestations of instinct are displayed under the stimulus of
maternity.

So far as the rest of the insect race is concerned, the mother’s cares
are generally most summary. In the majority of cases, all that is done
is to lay the eggs in a favourable spot, where the larva, at its own
risk and peril, can find bed and breakfast. With such rustic ideas upon
the upbringing of the offspring, talents are superfluous. Lycurgus
banished the arts from his republic on the ground that they were
enervating. In like manner the higher inspirations of instinct have no
home among insects reared in the Spartan fashion. The mother scorns the
sweet task of the nurse; and the psychic prerogatives, which are the
best of all, diminish and disappear, so true is it that, with animals
as with ourselves, the family is a source of perfection.

While the Hymenopteron, so extremely thoughtful of her progeny, fills
us with wonder, the others, which abandon theirs to the accidents of
good luck or bad, must seem to us, by comparison, of little interest.
These others form almost the whole of the entomological race; at least,
among the fauna of our country-sides, there is, to my knowledge, only
one other example of insects preparing board and lodging for their
family, as do the gatherers of honey and the buriers of well-filled
game-bags.

And, strange to say, these insects vying in maternal solicitude with
the flower-despoiling tribe of Bees are none other than the
Dung-beetles, the dealers in ordure, the scavengers of the
cattle-fouled meadows. We must pass from the scented blossoms of our
flower-beds to the Mule-dung of our high-roads to find a second
instance of devoted mothers and lofty instincts. Nature abounds in
these antitheses. What are our ugliness or beauty, our cleanliness or
dirt to her? Out of filth, she creates the flower; from a little
manure, she extracts the thrice-blessed grain of wheat.

Notwithstanding their disgusting occupation, the Dung-beetles are of a
very respectable standing. Their size, which is generally imposing;
their severe and immaculately glossy attire; their portly bodies,
thickset and compact; the quaint ornamentation of brow or thorax: all
combined make them cut an excellent figure in the collector’s boxes,
especially when to our home species, oftenest of an ebon black, we add
a few tropical varieties, a-glitter with gleams of gold and flashes of
burnished copper.

They are the sedulous attendants of our herds, for which reason several
of them are faintly redolent of benzoic acid, the aromatic of the
Sheep-folds. Their pastoral habits have impressed the nomenclators, too
often, alas, careless of euphony, who this time have changed their tune
and headed their descriptions with such names as Melibœus, Tityrus,
Amyntas, Corydon, Mopsus and Alexis. We find here the whole series of
bucolic appellations made famous by the poets of antiquity. Virgil’s
eclogues have lent their vocabulary for the Dung-beetles’
glorification. We should have to go back to the Butterflies with their
dainty graces to find an equally poetic nomenclature. In their case the
epic names of the Iliad ring out, borrowed from the camps of Greek and
Trojan and perhaps too magnificently bellicose for those peaceable
winged flowers whose habits in no wise recall the martial deeds of an
Ajax or an Achilles. Much better-imagined is the bucolic title given to
the Dung-beetles: it tells us the insect’s chief characteristic, its
predilection for pasture-lands.

The dung-manipulators have as head of their line the Sacred Beetle or
Scarab, whose strange behaviour had already attracted the attention of
the fellah in the valley of the Nile, some thousand years before the
Christian era. As he watered his patch of onions in the spring, the
Egyptian peasant would see from time to time a fat black insect pass
close by, hurriedly trundling a ball of Camel-dung backwards. He would
watch the queer rolling thing in amazement, even as the Provençal
peasant watches it to this day.

No one fails to be surprised when he first finds himself in the
presence of the Scarab, who, with his head down and his long hind-legs
in the air, pushes with might and main his huge pill, the source of so
many awkward tumbles. Undoubtedly the simple fellah, on beholding this
spectacle, wondered what that ball could be, what object the black
creature could have in rolling it along with such vigour. The peasant
of to-day asks himself the same question.

In the days of the Rameses and Thothmes, superstition had something to
say in the matter; men saw in the rolling sphere an image of the world
performing its daily revolution; and the Scarab received divine
honours: in memory of his ancient glory, he continues the Sacred Beetle
of the modern naturalists.

It is six or seven thousand years since the curious pill-maker first
got himself talked about: are his habits thoroughly familiar to us yet?
Do we know the exact use for which he intends his ball, do we know how
he rears his family? Not at all. The most authoritative works
perpetuate the grossest errors where he is concerned.

Ancient Egypt used to say that the Scarab rolls his ball from east to
west, the direction in which the world turns. He next buries it
underground for twenty-eight days, the period of a lunary revolution.
This four weeks’ incubation quickens the pill-maker’s progeny. On the
twenty-ninth day, which the insect knows to be that of the conjunction
of the sun and moon and of the birth of the world, he goes back to his
buried ball; he digs it up, opens it and throws it into the Nile. That
completes the cycle. Immersion in the sacred waters causes a Scarab to
emerge from the ball.

Let us not laugh overmuch at these Pharaonic stories: they contain a
modicum of truth mingled with the fantastic theories of astrology.
Moreover, a good deal of the laughter would recoil upon our own
science, for the fundamental error of regarding as the Scarab’s cradle
the ball which we see rolling across the fields still lingers in our
text-books. All the authors who write about the Sacred Beetle repeat
it; the tradition has come down to us intact from the far-off days when
the Pyramids were built.

It is a good thing from time to time to wield the hatchet in the
overgrown thicket of tradition; it is well to shake off the yoke of
accepted ideas. It is possible that, cleansed of its obscuring dross,
truth may at last shine forth resplendent, far greater and more
wonderful than the things which we were taught. I have sometimes
harboured these rash doubts; and I have no reason to regret it, notably
in the case of the Scarab. To-day I know the sacred pill-roller’s story
thoroughly; and the reader shall see how much more marvellous it is
than the tales handed down to us by the old Egyptians.

The early chapters of my investigations into the nature of instinct [1]
have already proved, in the most categorical fashion, that the round
pellets rolled hither and thither along the ground by the insect do not
and indeed cannot contain germs. They are not habitations for the egg
and the grub; they are provisions which the Sacred Beetle hurriedly
removes from the madding crowd in order to bury them and consume them
at leisure in a subterranean dining-room.

Nearly forty years have elapsed since I used eagerly to collect the
materials to support my iconoclastic assertions on the Plateau des
Angles, near Avignon; and nothing has happened to invalidate my
statements; far from it: everything has corroborated them. The
incontestable proof came at last when I obtained the Scarab’s nest, a
genuine nest this time, gathered in such quantities as I wished and in
some cases even shaped before my eyes.

I have described my former vain attempts to find the larva’s abode; I
have described the pitiful failure of my efforts at rearing under
cover; and perhaps the reader commiserated my woes when he saw me on
the outskirts of the town stealthily and ingloriously gathering in a
paper bag the donation dropped by a passing Mule for my charges.
Certainly, as things were, my task was no easy one. My boarders, who
were great consumers, or more correctly speaking great wasters, used to
beguile the tedium of captivity by indulging in art for art’s sake in
the glad sunshine. Pill followed on pill, all beautifully rounded, to
be abandoned unused after a few exercises in rolling. The heap of
provisions, which I had so painfully acquired in the friendly shadow of
the gloaming, was squandered with disheartening rapidity; and there
came a time when the daily bread failed. Moreover, the stringy manna
falling from the Horse and the Mule is hardly suited to the mother’s
work, as I learned afterwards. Something more homogeneous, more plastic
is needed; and this only the Sheep’s somewhat laxer bowels are able to
supply.

In short, though my earlier studies taught me all about the Scarab’s
public manners, for several reasons they told me nothing of his private
habits. The nest-building problem remained as obscure as ever. Its
solution demands a good deal more than the straitened resources of a
town and the scientific equipment of a laboratory. It requires
prolonged residence in the country; it requires the proximity of flocks
and herds in the bright sunshine. Given these conditions, success is
assured, provided that one have zeal and perseverance; and these
conditions I find to perfection in my quiet village.

Provisions, my great difficulty in the old days, are now to be had for
the asking. Close to my house, Mules pass along the high-road, on their
way to the fields and back again; morning and evening, flocks of Sheep
go by, making for the pasture or the fold; not five yards from my door,
my neighbour’s Goat is tethered: I can hear her bleating as she nibbles
away at her ring of grass. Moreover, should food be scarce in my
immediate vicinity, there are always youthful purveyors who, lured by
visions of lollipops, are ready to scour the country to collect
victuals for my Beetles.

They arrive, not one but a dozen, bringing their contributions in the
queerest of receptacles. In this novel procession of gift-bearers, any
concave thing that chances to be handy is employed: the crown of an old
hat, a broken tile, a bit of stove-pipe, the bottom of a spinning-top,
a fragment of a basket, an old shoe hardened into a sort of boat, at a
pinch the collector’s own cap.

‘It’s prime stuff this time,’ their shining eyes seem to proclaim.
‘It’s something extra special.’

The goods are duly approved and paid for on the spot, as agreed. To
close the transaction in a fitting manner, I take the victuallers to
the cages and show them the Beetle rolling his pill. They gaze in
wonder at the funny creature that looks as if it were playing with its
ball; they laugh at its tumbles and scream with delight at its clumsy
struggles when it comes to grief and lies on its back kicking. A
charming sight, especially when the lollipops bulging in the
youngsters’ cheeks are just beginning to melt deliciously. Thus the
zeal of my little collaborators is kept alive. There is no fear of my
boarders starving: their larder will be lavishly supplied.

Who are these boarders? Well, first and foremost the Sacred Beetle, the
chief subject of my present investigations. Sérignan’s long screen of
hills might well mark his extreme northern boundary. Here ends the
Mediterranean flora, whose last ligneous representatives are the
arboraceous heather and the arbutus-tree; and here, in all probability,
the mighty pill-maker, a passionate lover of the sun, terminates his
arctic explorations. He abounds on the hot slopes facing the south and
in the narrow belt of plain sheltered by that powerful reflector.
According to all appearances, the elegant Gallic Bolboceras and the
stalwart Spanish Copris likewise stop at this line; for both are as
sensitive to cold as he. To these curious Dung-beetles, whose private
habits are so little known, let us add the Gymnopleuri, the Minotaur,
the Geotrupes, the Onthophagi. They are all welcomed in my cages, for
all, I am convinced beforehand, have surprises in store for us in the
details of their underground business.

My cages have a capacity of about a cubic yard. Except for the front,
which is of wire gauze, the whole is made of wood. This keeps out any
excessive rain, the effect of which would be to turn the layer of earth
in my open-air appliances into mud. Over-great moisture would be fatal
to the prisoners, who cannot, in their straitened artificial demesne,
act as they do when at liberty and prolong their digging indefinitely
until they come upon a medium suitable to their operations. They want
soil which is porous and not too dry, though in no danger of ever
becoming muddy. The earth in the cages therefore is of a sandy
character and, after being sifted, is slightly moistened and flattened
down just enough to prevent any landslips in the future galleries. Its
depth is barely ten or eleven inches, which is insufficient in certain
cases; but those of the inmates who have a fancy for deep galleries,
like the Geotrupes for instance, are well able to make up horizontally
for what is denied them perpendicularly.

The trellised front has a south aspect and allows the sun’s rays to
penetrate right into the dwelling. The opposite side, which faces
north, consists of two shutters one above the other. They are movable
and are kept in place by hooks or bolts. The top one opens for food to
be distributed and for the cleaning of the cage; it is the kitchen-door
for everyday use. It is also the entrance-gate for any new captives
whom I succeed in bagging. The bottom shutter, which keeps the layer of
earth in position, is opened only on great occasions, when we want to
surprise the insect in its home life and to ascertain the condition of
the progress underground. Then the bolts are drawn; the board, which is
on hinges, falls; and a vertical section of the soil is laid bare,
giving us an excellent opportunity of studying the Dung-beetles’ work.
Our examination is made with the point of a knife and has to be
conducted with the utmost care. In this way we get with precision and
without difficulty industrial details which could not always be
obtained by laborious digging in the open fields.

Nevertheless, outdoor investigations are indispensable and often yield
far more important results than anything derived from home rearing;
for, though some Dung-beetles are indifferent to captivity and work in
the cage with their customary vigour, others, who are of a more nervous
temperament or perhaps more cautious, distrust my boarded palaces and
are extremely reluctant to surrender their secrets. It is only once in
a way that they fall victims to my assiduous wooing. Besides, if my
menagerie is to be run properly, I must know something of what is
happening outside, were it only to find out the right time of year for
my various projects. It is absolutely essential therefore that our
study of the insect in captivity should be amply supplemented by
observations of its life and habits in the wild state.

Here an assistant would be very useful to me, some one with leisure,
with a seeing eye and a simple heart, whose curiosity would be as
unaffected as my own. This helper I have: such an one indeed as I have
never had before or since. He is a young shepherd, a friend of the
family. He has read a little and has a keen desire for knowledge, so he
is not frightened by the terms Scarabæus, Geotrupes, Copris or
Onthophagus when I name the insects which he has dug up the day before
and kept for me in a box.

At early dawn in the dog-days, when my insects are busy with their
nest-building, you may see him in the meadows. When night falls and the
heat begins to lessen, he is still there; and all day long, till far
into the night, he passes to and fro among the pill-rollers, who are
attracted from every quarter by the reek of the victuals strewn by his
Sheep. Well-posted in the various points of my entomological problems,
he watches events and keeps me informed. He awaits his opportunity; he
inspects the grass. With his knife he lays bare the subterranean cell
which is betrayed by its little mound of earth; he scrapes, digs and
finds; and it all constitutes a glorious change from his vague pastoral
musings.

Ah, what splendid mornings we spend together, in the cool of the day,
seeking the nest of the Scarab or the Copris! Old Sultan is there,
seated on some knoll or other and keeping an autocratic eye upon the
fleecy rabble. Nothing, not even the crust which a friend holds out to
him, distracts his attention from his exalted functions. Certainly he
is not much to look at, with his tangled black coat, soiled with the
thousands of seeds which have caught in it. He is not a handsome Dog,
but what a lot of sense there is in his shaggy head, what a talent for
knowing exactly what is permitted and what forbidden, for perceiving
the absence of some heedless one forgotten behind a dip in the ground!
Upon my word, one would think that he knew the number of Sheep confided
to his care, his Sheep, though never a bone of them comes his way! He
has counted them from the top of his knoll. One is missing. Sultan
rushes off. Here he comes, bringing the straggler back to the flock.
Clever Dog! I admire your skill in arithmetic, though I fail to
understand how your crude brain ever acquired it. Yes, old fellow, we
can rely on you; the two of us, your master and I, can hunt the
Dung-beetle at our ease and disappear in the copsewood; not one of your
charges will go astray, not one will nibble at the neighbouring vines.

It was in this way that I worked, at early morn, before the sun grew
too hot, in partnership with the young shepherd and our common friend
Sultan, though at times I was alone, myself sole pastor of the seventy
bleating Sheep. And so the materials were gathered for this history of
the Sacred Beetle and his rivals.



TRANSLATOR’S NOTE


This is the first of the four volumes containing Fabre’s essays on
Beetles, the order of insects to which, if we judge by his output, he
devoted the longest study. It will be followed in due course by The
Glow-worm and Other Beetles, The Life of the Weevil, and More Beetles.
These three, however, will be issued, not in immediate succession, but
turn by turn with books upon other insects; for the Souvenirs
entomologiques, from which all or nearly all this material is taken,
are still far from being exhausted.

Of the eighteen chapters that make up the present volume, some have
appeared, either complete or in a more or less abbreviated form, in
various interesting illustrated miscellanies published independently of
the Collected Edition. Part of the Author’s Preface and the chapters
entitled ‘The Sacred Beetle’ and ‘The Sacred Beetle in Captivity’ will
be found in Insect Life, prepared for Messrs. Macmillan and Co. by the
author of Mademoiselle Mori. Similarly, the next three chapters on the
Sacred Beetle, the two treating of the Spanish Copris, the chapter on
the Onthophagi and Oniticelli, and the first two chapters on the
Geotrupes form part of The Life and Love of the Insect, translated by
myself for Messrs. Adam and Charles Black and published in America by
the Macmillan Co. Lastly, The Sisyphus: the Instinct of Paternity
occurs in Mr. Fisher Unwin’s Social Life in the Insect World,
translated by Mr. Bernard Miall and published in America by the Century
Co. These chapters are all included in the Collected Edition by
arrangement with the publishers named.

It remains for me (I grieve to say, for the last time) to acknowledge
my debt to the late Miss Frances Rodwell, my very capable assistant,
who did so much to assist me in preparing this and most of the previous
volumes. Her too early death, in the winter of this year, was an
occasion of sorrow, and a great loss to many besides myself.


Alexander Teixeira de Mattos.

Chelsea, 26th April 1919.



CONTENTS


                                                            PAGE
        AUTHOR’S PREFACE                                       v

        TRANSLATOR’S NOTE                                   xvii

        CHAPTER I
        THE SACRED BEETLE                                      1

        CHAPTER II
        THE SACRED BEETLE IN CAPTIVITY                        29

        CHAPTER III
        THE SACRED BEETLE: THE BALL                           42

        CHAPTER IV
        THE SACRED BEETLE: THE PEAR                           56

        CHAPTER V
        THE SACRED BEETLE: THE MODELLING                      73

        CHAPTER VI
        THE SACRED BEETLE: THE LARVA                          83

        CHAPTER VII
        THE SACRED BEETLE: THE NYMPH; THE RELEASE             96

        CHAPTER VIII
        THE BROAD-NECKED SCARAB; THE GYMNOPLEURI             112

        CHAPTER IX
        THE SPANISH COPRIS: THE LAYING OF THE EGGS           127

        CHAPTER X
        THE SPANISH COPRIS: THE HABITS OF THE MOTHER         149

        CHAPTER XI
        ONTHOPHAGI AND ONITICELLI                            172

        CHAPTER XII
        THE GEOTRUPES: THE PUBLIC HEALTH                     189

        CHAPTER XIII
        THE GEOTRUPES: NEST-BUILDING                         203

        CHAPTER XIV
        THE GEOTRUPES: THE LARVA                             221

        CHAPTER XV
        THE SISYPHUS: THE INSTINCT OF PATERNITY              235

        CHAPTER XVI
        THE LUNARY COPRIS; THE BISON ONITIS                  248

        CHAPTER XVII
        THE BULL ONTHOPHAGUS: THE CELL                       263

        CHAPTER XVIII
        THE BULL ONTHOPHAGUS: THE LARVA; THE NYMPH           280

        INDEX                                                293



CHAPTER I

THE SACRED BEETLE


It happened like this. There were five or six of us: myself, the
oldest, officially their master but even more their friend and comrade;
they, lads with warm hearts and joyous imaginations, overflowing with
that youthful vitality which makes us so enthusiastic and so eager for
knowledge. We started off one morning down a path fringed with dwarf
elder and hawthorn, whose clustering blossoms were already a paradise
for the Rose-chafer ecstatically drinking in their bitter perfumes. We
talked as we went. We were going to see whether the Sacred Beetle had
yet made his appearance on the sandy plateau of Les Angles, [2] whether
he was rolling that pellet of dung in which ancient Egypt beheld an
image of the world; we were going to find out whether the stream at the
foot of the hill was not hiding under its mantle of duckweed young
Newts with gills like tiny branches of coral; whether that pretty
little fish of our rivulets, the Stickleback, had donned his wedding
scarf of purple and blue; whether the newly arrived Swallow was
skimming the meadows on pointed wing, chasing the Crane-flies, who
scatter their eggs as they dance through the air; if the Eyed Lizard
was sunning his blue-speckled body on the threshold of a burrow dug in
the sandstone; if the Laughing Gull, travelling from the sea in the
wake of the legions of fish that ascend the Rhone to milt in its
waters, was hovering in his hundreds over the river, ever and anon
uttering his cry so like a maniac’s laughter; if ... but that will do.
To be brief, let us say that, like good simple folk who find pleasure
in all living things, we were off to spend a morning at the most
wonderful of festivals, life’s springtime awakening.

Our expectations were fulfilled. The Stickleback was dressed in his
best: his scales would have paled the lustre of silver; his throat was
flashing with the brightest vermilion. On the approach of the great
black Horse-leech, the spines on his back and sides started up, as
though worked by a spring. In the face of this resolute altitude, the
bandit turns tail and slips ignominiously down among the water-weeds.
The placid mollusc tribe—Planorbes, Limnæi and other Water-snails—were
sucking in the air on the surface of the water. The Hydrophilus and her
hideous larva, those pirates of the ponds, darted amongst them,
wringing a neck or two as they passed. The stupid crowd did not seem
even to notice it. But let us leave the plain and its waters and
clamber up the bluff to the plateau above us. Up there, Sheep are
grazing and Horses being exercised for the approaching races, while all
are distributing manna to the enraptured Dung-beetles.

Here are the scavengers at work, the Beetles whose proud mission it is
to purge the soil of its filth. One would never weary of admiring the
variety of tools wherewith they are supplied, whether for shifting,
cutting up and shaping the stercoral matter or for excavating deep
burrows in which they will seclude themselves with their booty. This
equipment resembles a technical museum where every digging-implement is
represented. It includes things that seem copied from those
appertaining to human industry and others of so original a type that
they might well serve us as models for new inventions.

The Spanish Copris carries on his forehead a powerful pointed horn,
curved backwards, like the long blade of a mattock. In addition to a
similar horn, the Lunary Copris has two strong spikes, curved like a
ploughshare, springing from the thorax and also, between the two, a
jagged protuberance which does duty as a broad rake. Bubas bubalis and
B. bison, both exclusively Mediterranean species, have their forehead
armed with two stout diverging horns, between which juts a horizontal
dagger, supplied by the corselet. Minotaurus typhœus carries on the
front of his thorax three ploughshares, which stick straight out,
parallel to one another, the side ones longer than the middle one. The
Bull Onthophagus has as his tool two long curved pieces that remind us
of the horns of a Bull; the Cow Onthophagus, on the other hand, has a
two-pronged fork standing erect on his flat head. Even the poorest
have, either on their head or on their corselet, hard knobs that make
implements which the patient insect can turn to good use,
notwithstanding their bluntness. All are supplied with a shovel, that
is to say, they have a broad, flat head with a sharp edge; all use a
rake, that is to say, they collect materials with their toothed
fore-legs.

As some sort of compensation for their unsavoury task, several of them
give out a powerful scent of musk, while their bellies shine like
polished metal. The Mimic Geotrupes has gleams of copper and gold
beneath; the Stercoraceous Geotrupes has a belly of amethystine violet.
But generally their colouring is black. The Dung-beetles in gorgeous
raiment, those veritable living gems, belong to the tropics. Upper
Egypt can show us under its Camel-dung a Beetle rivalling the emerald’s
brilliant green; Guiana, Brazil and Senegambia boast of Copres that are
a metallic red, rich as copper and ruby-bright. The Dung-beetles of our
climes cannot flaunt such jewellery, but they are no less remarkable
for their habits.

What excitement over a single patch of Cow-dung! Never did adventurers
hurrying from the four corners of the earth display such eagerness in
working a Californian claim. Before the sun becomes too hot, they are
there in their hundreds, large and small, of every sort, shape and
size, hastening to carve themselves a slice of the common cake. There
are some that labour in the open air and scrape the surface; there are
others that dig themselves galleries in the thick of the heap, in
search of choice veins; some work the lower stratum and bury their
spoil without delay in the ground just below; others again, the
smallest, keep on one side and crumble a morsel that has slipped their
way during the mighty excavations of their more powerful fellows. Some,
newcomers and doubtless the hungriest, consume their meal on the spot;
but the greater number dream of accumulating stocks that will allow
them to spend long days in affluence, down in some safe retreat. A
nice, fresh patch of dung is not found just when you want it, in the
barren plains overgrown with thyme; a windfall of this sort is as manna
from the sky; only fortune’s favourites receive so fair a portion.
Wherefore the riches of to-day are prudently hoarded for the morrow.
The stercoraceous scent has carried the glad tidings half a mile
around; and all have hastened up to get a store of provisions. A few
laggards are still arriving, on the wing or on foot.

Who is this that comes trotting towards the heap, fearing lest he reach
it too late? His long legs move with awkward jerks, as though driven by
some mechanism within his belly; his little red antennæ unfurl their
fan, a sign of anxious greed. He is coming, he has come, not without
sending a few banqueters sprawling. It is the Sacred Beetle, clad all
in black, the biggest and most famous of our Dung-beetles. Behold him
at table, beside his fellow-guests, each of whom is giving the last
touches to his ball with the flat of his broad fore-legs or else
enriching it with yet one more layer before retiring to enjoy the fruit
of his labours in peace. Let us follow the construction of the famous
ball in all its phases.

The clypeus, or shield, that is the edge of the broad, flat head, is
notched with six angular teeth arranged in a semicircle. This
constitutes the tool for digging and cutting up, the rake that lifts
and casts aside the unnutritious vegetable fibres, goes for something
better, scrapes and collects it. A choice is thus made, for these
connoisseurs differentiate between one thing and another, making a
rough selection when the Beetle is occupied with his own provender, but
an extremely scrupulous one when it is a matter of constructing the
maternal ball, which has a central cavity in which the egg will hatch.
Then every scrap of fibre is conscientiously rejected and only the
stercoral quintessence is gathered as the material for building the
inner layer of the cell. The young larva, on issuing from the egg, thus
finds in the very walls of its lodging a food of special delicacy which
strengthens its digestion and enables it afterwards to attack the
coarse outer layers.

Where his own needs are concerned, the Beetle is less particular and
contents himself with a very general sorting. The notched shield then
does its scooping and digging, its casting aside and scraping together
more or less at random. The fore-legs play a mighty part in the work.
They are flat, bow-shaped, supplied with powerful nervures and armed on
the outside with five strong teeth. If a vigorous effort be needed to
remove an obstacle or to force a way through the thickest part of the
heap, the Dung-beetle makes use of his elbows, that is to say, he
flings his toothed legs to right and left and clears a semicircular
space with an energetic sweep. Room once made, a different kind of work
is found for these same limbs: they collect armfuls of the stuff raked
together by the shield and push it under the insect’s belly, between
the four hinder legs. These are formed for the turner’s trade. They are
long and slender, especially the last pair, slightly bowed and finished
with a very sharp claw. They are at once recognised as compasses,
capable of embracing a globular body in their curved branches and of
verifying and correcting its shape. Their function is, in fact, to
fashion the ball.

Armful by armful, the material is heaped up under the belly, between
the four legs, which, by a slight pressure, impart their own curve to
it and give it a preliminary outline. Then, every now and again, the
rough-hewn pill is set spinning between the four branches of the double
pair of spherical compasses; it turns under the Dung-beetle’s belly
until it is rolled into a perfect ball. Should the surface layer lack
plasticity and threaten to peel off, should some too-stringy part
refuse to yield to the action of the lathe, the fore-legs touch up the
faulty places; their broad paddles pat the ball to give consistency to
the new layer and to work the recalcitrant bits into the mass.

Under a hot sun, when time presses, one stands amazed at the turner’s
feverish activity. And so the work proceeds apace: what a moment ago
was a tiny pellet is now a ball the size of a walnut; soon it will be
the size of an apple. I have seen some gluttons manufacture a ball the
size of a man’s fist. This indeed means food in the larder for days to
come!

The Beetle has his provisions. The next thing is to withdraw from the
fray and transport the victuals to a suitable place. Here the Scarab’s
most striking characteristics begin to show themselves. Straightway he
begins his journey; he clasps his sphere with his two long hind-legs,
whose terminal claws, planted in the mass, serve as pivots; he obtains
a purchase with the middle pair of legs; and, with his toothed
fore-arms, pressing in turn upon the ground, to do duty as levers, he
proceeds with his load, he himself moving backwards, body bent, head
down and hind-quarters in the air. The rear legs, the principal factor
in the mechanism, are in continual movement backwards and forwards,
shifting the claws to change the axis of rotation, to keep the load
balanced and to push it along by alternate thrusts to right and left.
In this way the ball finds itself touching the ground by turns with
every point of its surface, a process which perfects its shape and
gives an even consistency to its outer layer by means of pressure
uniformly distributed.

And now to work with a will! The thing moves, it begins to roll; we
shall get there, though not without difficulty. Here is a first awkward
place: the Beetle is wending his way athwart a slope and the heavy mass
tends to follow the incline; the insect, however, for reasons best
known to itself, prefers to cut across this natural road, a bold
project which may be brought to naught by a false step or by a grain of
sand that disturbs the balance of the load. The false step is made:
down goes the ball to the bottom of the valley; and the insect, toppled
over by the shock, is lying on its back, kicking. It is soon up again
and hastens to harness itself once more to its load. The machine works
better than ever. But look out, you dunderhead! Follow the dip of the
valley: that will save labour and mishaps; the road is good and level;
your ball will roll quite easily. Not a bit of it! The Beetle prepares
once again to mount the slope that has already been his undoing.
Perhaps it suits him to return to the heights. Against that I have
nothing to say: the Scarab’s judgment is better than mine as to the
advisability of keeping to lofty regions; he can see farther than I can
in these matters. But at least take this path, which will lead you up
by a gentle incline! Certainly not! Let him find himself near some very
steep slope, impossible to climb, and that is the very path which the
obstinate fellow will choose. Now begins a Sisyphean labour. The ball,
that enormous burden, is painfully hoisted, step by step, with infinite
precautions, to a certain height, always backwards. We wonder by what
miracle of statics a mass of this size can be kept upon the slope. Oh!
An ill-advised movement frustrates all this toil: the ball rolls down,
dragging the Beetle with it. Once more the heights are scaled and
another fall is the sequel. The attempt is renewed, with greater skill
this time at the difficult points; a wretched grass-root, the cause of
the previous falls, is carefully got over. We are almost there; but
steady now, steady! It is a dangerous ascent and the merest trifle may
yet ruin everything. For see, a leg slips on a smooth bit of gravel!
Down come ball and Beetle, all mixed up together. And the insect begins
over again, with indefatigable obstinacy. Ten times, twenty times, he
will attempt the hopeless ascent, until his persistence vanquishes all
obstacles, or until, wisely recognizing the futility of his efforts, he
adopts the level road.

The Scarab does not always push his precious ball alone: sometimes he
takes a partner; or, to be accurate, the partner takes him. This is the
way in which things usually happen: once his ball is ready, a
Dung-beetle issues from the crowd and leaves the workyard, pushing his
prize backwards. A neighbour, a newcomer, whose own task is hardly
begun, abruptly drops his work and runs to the moving ball, to lend a
hand to the lucky owner, who seems to accept the proffered aid kindly.
Henceforth the two work in partnership. Each does his best to push the
pellet to a place of safety. Was a compact really concluded in the
workyard, a tacit agreement to share the cake between them? While one
was kneading and moulding the ball, was the other tapping rich veins
whence to extract choice materials and add them to the common store? I
have never observed any such collaboration; I have always seen each
Dung-beetle occupied solely with his own affairs in the works. The
last-comer, therefore, has no acquired rights.

Can it then be a partnership between the two sexes, a couple intending
to set up house? I thought so for a time. The two Beetles, one before,
one behind, pushing the heavy ball with equal fervour, reminded me of a
song which the hurdy-gurdies used to grind out some years ago:


    Pour monter notre ménage, hélas! comment ferons-nous?
    Toi devant et moi derrière, nous pousserons le tonneau. [3]


The evidence of the scalpel compelled me to abandon my belief in this
domestic idyll. There is no outward difference between the two sexes in
the Scarabæi. I therefore dissected the pair of Dung-beetles engaged in
trundling one and the same ball; and they very often proved to be of
the same sex.

Neither community of family nor community of labour! Then what is the
motive for this apparent partnership? It is purely and simply an
attempt at robbery. The zealous fellow-worker, on the false plea of
lending a helping hand, cherishes a plan to purloin the ball at the
first opportunity. To make one’s own ball at the heap means hard work
and patience; to steal one ready-made, or at least to foist one’s self
as a guest, is a much easier matter. Should the owner’s vigilance
slacken, you can run away with his property; should you be too closely
watched, you can sit down to table uninvited, pleading services
rendered. It is ‘Heads I win, tails you lose’ in these tactics, so that
pillage is practised as one of the most lucrative of trades. Some go to
work craftily, in the way which I have described: they come to the aid
of a comrade who has not the least need of them and hide the most
barefaced greed under the cloak of charitable assistance. Others,
bolder perhaps, more confident in their strength, go straight to their
goal and commit robbery with violence.

Scenes are constantly happening such as this: a Scarab goes off,
peacefully, by himself, rolling his ball, his lawful property, acquired
by conscientious work. Another comes flying up, I know not whence,
drops down heavily, folds his dingy wings under their cases and, with
the back of his toothed fore-arms, knocks over the owner, who is
powerless to ward off the attack in his awkward position, harnessed as
he is to his property. While the victim struggles to his feet, the
other perches himself atop the ball, the best position from which to
repel an assailant. With his fore-arms crossed over his breast, ready
to hit back, he awaits events. The dispossessed one moves round the
ball, seeking a favourable spot at which to make the assault; the
usurper spins round on the roof of the citadel, facing his opponent all
the time. If the latter raise himself in order to scale the wall, the
robber gives him a blow that stretches him on his back. Safe at the top
of his fortress, the besieged Beetle could foil his adversary’s
attempts indefinitely if the latter did not change his tactics. He
turns sapper so as to reduce the citadel with the garrison. The ball,
shaken from below, totters and begins rolling, carrying with it the
thieving Dung-beetle, who makes violent efforts to maintain his
position on the top. This he succeeds in doing—though not
invariably—thanks to hurried gymnastic feats which land him higher on
the ball and make up for the ground which he loses by its rotation.
Should a false movement bring him to earth, the chances become equal
and the struggle turns into a wrestling-match. Robber and robbed
grapple with each other, breast to breast. Their legs lock and unlock,
their joints intertwine, their horny armour clashes and grates with the
rasping sound of metal under the file. Then the one who succeeds in
throwing his opponent and releasing himself scrambles to the top of the
ball and there takes up his position. The siege is renewed, now by the
robber, now by the robbed, as the chances of the hand-to-hand conflict
may decree. The former, a brawny desperado, no novice at the game,
often has the best of the fight. Then, after two or three unsuccessful
attempts, the defeated Beetle wearies and returns philosophically to
the heap, to make himself a new pellet. As for the other, with all fear
of a surprise attack at an end, he harnesses himself to the conquered
ball and pushes it whither he pleases. I have sometimes seen a third
thief appear upon the scene and rob the robber. Nor can I honestly say
that I was sorry.

I ask myself in vain what Proudhon [4] introduced into Scarabæan
morality the daring paradox that ‘property means plunder,’ or what
diplomatist taught the Dung-beetle the savage maxim that ‘might is
right.’ I have no data that would enable me to trace the origin of
these spoliations, which have become a custom, of this abuse of
strength to capture a lump of ordure. All that I can say is that theft
is a general practice among the Scarabs. These dung-rollers rob one
another with a calm effrontery which, to my knowledge, is without a
parallel. I leave it to future observers to elucidate this curious
problem in animal psychology and I go back to the two partners rolling
their ball in concert.

But first let me dispel a current error in the text-books. I find in M.
Émile Blanchard’s [5] magnificent work, Métamorphoses, mœurs et
instincts des insectes, the following passage:


   ‘Sometimes our insect is stopped by an insurmountable obstacle; the
    ball has fallen into a hole. At such moments the Ateuchus [6] gives
    evidence of a really astonishing grasp of the situation as well as
    of a system of ready communication between individuals of the same
    species which is even more remarkable. Recognizing the
    impossibility of coaxing the ball out of the hole, the Ateuchus
    seems to abandon it and flies away. If you are sufficiently endowed
    with that great and noble virtue called patience, stay by the
    forsaken ball: after a while, the Ateuchus will return to the same
    spot and will not return alone; he will be accompanied by two,
    three, four or five companions, who will all alight at the place
    indicated and will combine their efforts to raise the load. The
    Ateuchus has been to fetch reinforcements; and this explains why it
    is such a common sight, in the dry fields, to see several Ateuchi
    joining in the removal of a single ball.’


Lastly, I read in Illiger’s [7] Entomological Magazine:


   ‘A Gymnopleurus pilularius, [8] while constructing the ball of dung
    destined to contain her eggs, let it roll into a hole, whence she
    strove for a long time to extract it unaided. Finding that she was
    wasting her time in vain efforts, she ran to a neighbouring heap of
    manure to fetch three individuals of her own species, who, uniting
    their strength to hers, succeeded in withdrawing the ball from the
    cavity into which it had fallen and then returned to their manure
    to continue their work.’


I crave a thousand pardons of my illustrious master, M. Blanchard, but
things certainly do not happen as he says. To begin with, the two
accounts are so much alike that they must have had a common origin.
Illiger, on the strength of observations not continuous enough to
deserve blind confidence, put forward the case of his Gymnopleurus; and
the same story was repeated about the Scarabæi because it is, in fact,
quite usual to see two of these insects occupied together either in
rolling a ball or in getting it out of a troublesome place. But this
cooperation in no way proves that the Dung-beetle who found himself in
difficulties went to requisition the aid of his mates. I have had no
small measure of the patience recommended by M. Blanchard; I have lived
laborious days in close intimacy, if I may say so, with the Sacred
Beetle; I have done everything that I could think of in order to enter
as thoroughly as possible into his ways and habits and to study them
from life; and I have never seen anything that suggested either nearly
or remotely the idea of companions summoned to lend assistance. As I
shall presently relate, I have subjected the Dung-beetle to far more
serious trials than that of getting his ball into a hole; I have
confronted him with much graver difficulties than that of mounting a
slope, which is sheer sport to the obstinate Sisyphus, who seems to
delight in the rough gymnastics involved in climbing steep places, as
if the ball thereby grew firmer and accordingly increased in value; I
have created artificial situations in which the insect had the
uttermost need of help; and never did my eyes detect any evidence of
friendly services rendered by comrade to comrade. I have seen Beetles
robbed and Beetles robbing and nothing more. If a number of them were
gathered around the same pill, it meant that a battle was taking place.
My humble opinion, therefore, is that the incident of a number of
Scarabæi collected around the same ball with thieving intentions has
given rise to these stories of comrades called in to lend a hand.
Imperfect observations are responsible for this transformation of the
bold highwayman into a helpful companion who has left his work to do
another a friendly turn.

It is no light matter to attribute to an insect a really astonishing
grasp of a situation, combined with an even more amazing power of
communication between individuals of the same species. Such an
admission involves more than one imagines. That is why I insist on my
point. What! Are we to believe that a Beetle in distress will conceive
the idea of going in quest of help? We are to imagine him flying off
and scouring the country to find fellow-workers on some patch of dung;
when he has found them, we are to suppose that he addresses them, in a
sort of pantomime, by gestures with his antennæ more particularly, in
some such words as these:

‘I say, you fellows, my load’s upset in a hole over there; come and
help me get it out. I’ll do as much for you one day!’

And we are to believe that his comrades understand! And, more
incredible still, that they straightway leave their work, the pellet
which they have just begun, the beloved pill exposed to the cupidity of
others and certain to be filched in their absence, and go to the help
of the suppliant! I am profoundly incredulous of such unselfishness;
and my incredulity is confirmed by what I have witnessed for years and
years, not in glass-cases but in the very places where the Scarab
works. Apart from its maternal solicitude, in which respect it is
nearly always admirable, the insect cares for nothing but itself,
unless it lives in societies, like the Hive-bees, the Ants and the
rest.

But let me end this digression, which is excused by the importance of
the subject. I was saying that a Sacred Beetle, in possession of a ball
which he is pushing backwards, is often joined by another, who comes
hurrying up to lend an assistance which is anything but disinterested,
his intention being to rob his companion if the opportunity present
itself. Let us call the two workers partners, though that is not the
proper name for them, seeing that the one forces himself upon the
other, who probably accepts outside help only for fear of a worse evil.
The meeting, by the way, is absolutely peaceful. The owner of the ball
does not cease work for an instant on the arrival of the newcomer; and
his uninvited assistant seems animated by the best intentions and sets
to work on the spot. The way in which the two partners harness
themselves differs. The proprietor occupies the chief position, the
place of honour: he pushes at the rear, with his hind-legs in the air
and his head down. His subordinate is in front, in the reverse posture,
head up, toothed arms on the ball, long hind-legs on the ground.
Between the two, the ball rolls along, one driving it before him, the
other pulling it towards him.

The efforts of the couple are not always very harmonious, the more so
as the assistant has his back to the road to be traversed, while the
owner’s view is impeded by the load. The result is that they are
constantly having accidents, absurd tumbles, taken cheerfully and in
good part: each picks himself up quickly and resumes the same position
as before. On level ground this system of traction does not correspond
with the dynamic force expended, through lack of precision in the
combined movements: the Scarab at the back would do as well and better
if left to himself. And so the helper, having given a proof of his
good-will at the risk of throwing the machinery out of gear, now
decides to keep still, without letting go of the precious ball, of
course. He already looks upon that as his: a ball touched is a ball
gained. He won’t be so silly as not to stick to it: the other might
give him the slip!

So he gathers his legs flat under his belly, encrusting himself, so to
speak, on the ball and becoming one with it. Henceforth, the whole
concern—the ball and the Beetle clinging to its surface—is rolled along
by the efforts of the lawful owner. The intruder sits tight and lies
low, heedless whether the load pass over his body, whether he be at the
top, bottom or side of the rolling ball. A queer sort of assistant, who
gets a free ride so as to make sure of his share of the victuals!

But a steep ascent heaves in sight and gives him a fine part to play.
He takes the lead now, holding up the heavy mass with his toothed arms,
while his mate seeks a purchase in order to hoist the load a little
higher. In this way, by a combination of well-directed efforts, the
Beetle above gripping, the one below pushing, I have seen a couple
mount hills which would have been too much for a single carter, however
persevering. But in times of difficulty not all show the same zeal:
there are some who, on awkward slopes where their assistance is most
needed, seem blissfully unaware of the trouble. While the unhappy
Sisyphus exhausts himself in attempts to get over the bad part, the
other quietly leaves him to it: imbedded in the ball, he rolls down
with it if it comes to grief and is hoisted up with it when they start
afresh.

I have often tried the following experiment on the two partners in
order to judge their inventive faculties when placed in a serious
predicament. Suppose them to be on level ground, number two seated
motionless on the ball, number one busy pushing. Without disturbing the
latter, I nail the ball to the ground with a long, strong pin. It stops
suddenly. The Beetle, unaware of my perfidy, doubtless believes that
some natural obstacle, a rut, a tuft of couch-grass, a pebble, bars the
way. He redoubles his efforts, struggles his hardest; nothing happens.

‘What can the matter be? Let’s go and see.’

The Beetle walks two or three times round his pellet. Discovering
nothing to account for its immobility, he returns to the rear and
starts pushing again. The ball remains stationary.

‘Let’s look up above.’

The Beetle goes up, to find nothing but his motionless colleague, for I
had taken care to drive in the pin so deep that the head disappeared in
the ball. He explores the whole upper surface and comes down again.
Fresh thrusts are vigorously applied in front and at the sides, with
the same absence of success. There is not a doubt about it: never
before was Dung-beetle confronted with such a problem in inertia.

Now is the time, the very time, to claim assistance, which is all the
easier as his mate is there, close at hand, squatting on the summit of
the ball. Will the Scarab rouse him? Will he talk to him like this:

‘What are you doing there, lazybones? Come and look at the thing: it’s
broken down!’

Nothing proves that he does anything of the kind, for I see him
steadily shaking the unshakable, inspecting his stationary machine on
every side, while all this time his companion sits resting. At long
last, however, the latter becomes aware that something unusual is
happening; he is apprised of it by his mate’s restless tramping and by
the immobility of the ball. He comes down, therefore, and in his turn
examines the machine. Double harness does no better than single
harness. This is beginning to look serious. The little fans of the
Beetles’ antennæ open and shut, open again, betraying by their
agitation acute anxiety. Then a stroke of genius ends the perplexity:

‘Who knows what’s underneath?’

They now start exploring below the ball; and a little digging soon
reveals the presence of the pin. They recognize at once that the
trouble is there.

If I had had a voice in their deliberations, I should have said:

‘We must make a hole in the ball and pull out that skewer which is
holding it down.’

This most elementary of all proceedings and one so easy to such expert
diggers was not adopted, was not even tried. The Dung-beetle was
shrewder than man. The two colleagues, one on this side, one on that,
slip under the ball, which begins to slide up the pin, getting higher
and higher in proportion as the living wedges make their way
underneath. The clever operation is made possible by the softness of
the material, which gives easily and makes a channel under the head of
the immovable stake. Soon the pellet is suspended at a height equal to
the thickness of the Scarabs’ bodies. The rest is not such plain
sailing. The Dung-beetles, who at first were lying flat, rise gradually
to their feet, still pushing with their backs. The work becomes harder
and harder as the legs, in straightening out, lose their strength; but
none the less they do it. Then comes a time when they can no longer
push with their backs, the limit of their height having been reached. A
last resource remains, but one much less favourable to the development
of motive power. This is for the insect to adopt one or other of its
postures when harnessed to the ball, head down or up, and to push with
its hind- or fore-legs, as the case may be. Finally the ball drops to
the ground, unless we have used too long a pin. The gash made by our
stake is repaired, more or less, and the carting of the precious pellet
is at once resumed.

But, should the pin really be too long, then the ball, which remains
firmly fixed, ends by being suspended at a height above that of the
insect’s full stature. In that case, after vain evolutions around the
unconquerable greased pole, the Dung-beetles throw up the sponge,
unless we are sufficiently kind-hearted to finish the work ourselves
and restore their treasure to them. Or again we can help them by
raising the floor with a small flat stone, a pedestal from the top of
which it is possible for the Beetle to continue his labours. Its use
does not appear to be immediately understood, for neither of the two is
in any hurry to take advantage of it. Nevertheless, by accident or
design, one or other at last finds himself on the stone. Oh, joy! As he
passed, he felt the ball touch his back. At that contact, courage
returns; and his efforts begin once more. Standing on his helpful
platform, the Scarab stretches his joints, rounds his shoulders, as one
might say, and shoves the pellet upwards. When his shoulders no longer
avail, he works with his legs, now upright, now head downwards. There
is a fresh pause, accompanied by fresh signs of uneasiness, when the
limit of extension is reached. Thereupon, without disturbing the
creature, we place a second little stone on the top of the first. With
the aid of this new step, which provides a fulcrum for its levers, the
insect pursues its task. Thus adding story upon story as required, I
have seen the Scarab, hoisted to the summit of a tottering pile three
or four fingers’-breadth in height, persevere in his work until the
ball was completely detached.

Had he some vague consciousness of the service performed by the gradual
raising of the pedestal? I venture to doubt it, though he cleverly took
advantage of my platform of little stones. As a matter of fact, if the
very elementary idea of using a higher support in order to reach
something placed above one’s grasp were not beyond the Beetle’s
comprehension, how is it that, when there are two of them, neither
thinks of lending the other his back so as to raise him by that much
and make it possible for him to go on working? If one helped the other
in this way, they could reach twice as high. They are very far,
however, from any such cooperation. Each pushes the ball, with all his
might, I admit, but he pushes as if he were alone and seems to have no
notion of the happy result that would follow a combined effort. In this
instance, when the ball is nailed to the ground by a pin, they do
exactly what they do in corresponding circumstances, as, for example,
when the load is brought to a standstill by some obstacle, caught in a
loop of couch-grass or transfixed by some spiky bit of stalk that has
run into the soft, rolling mass. I produced artificially a stoppage
which is not really very different from those occurring naturally when
the ball is being rolled amid the thousand and one irregularities of
the ground; and the Beetle behaves, in my experimental tests, as he
would have behaved in any other circumstances in which I had no part.
He uses his back as a wedge and a lever and pushes with his feet,
without introducing anything new into his methods, even when he has a
companion and can avail himself of his assistance.

When he is all alone in face of the difficulty, when he has no
assistant, his dynamic operations remain absolutely the same; and his
efforts to move his transfixed ball end in success, provided that we
give him the indispensable support of a platform, built up little by
little. If we deny him this succour, then, no longer encouraged by the
contact of his beloved ball, he loses heart and sooner or later flies
away, doubtless with many regrets, and disappears. Where to? I do not
know. What I do know is that he does not return with a gang of
fellow-labourers whom he has begged to help him. What would he do with
them, he who cannot make use of even one comrade?

But perhaps my experiment, which leaves the ball suspended at an
inaccessible height and the insect with its means of action exhausted,
is a little too far removed from ordinary conditions. Let us try
instead a miniature pit, deep enough and steep enough to prevent the
Dung-beetle, when placed at the bottom, from rolling his load up the
side. These are exactly the conditions stated by Messrs. Blanchard and
Illiger. Well, what happens? When dogged but utterly fruitless efforts
have convinced him of his helplessness, the Beetle takes wing and
disappears. Relying upon what these learned writers said, I have waited
long hours for the insect to return reinforced by a few friends. I have
always waited in vain. Many a time also I have found the pellet several
days later just where I left it, stuck at the top of a pin or in a
hole, proving that nothing fresh had happened in my absence. A ball
abandoned from necessity is a ball abandoned for good, with no attempt
at salvage with the aid of others. A dexterous use of wedge and lever
to set the ball rolling again is therefore, when all is said, the
greatest intellectual effort which I have observed in the Sacred
Beetle. To make up for what the experiment refutes, namely, an appeal
for help among fellow-workers, I gladly chronicle this feat of
mechanical prowess for the Dung-beetles’ greater glory.

Directing their steps at random, over sandy plains thick with thyme,
over cart-ruts and steep places, the two Beetle brethren roll the ball
along for some time, thus giving its substance a certain consistency
which may be to their liking. While still on the road, they select a
favourable spot. The rightful owner, the Beetle who throughout has kept
the place of honour, behind the ball, the one in short who has done
almost all the carting by himself, sets to work to dig the dining-room.
Beside him is the ball, with number two clinging to it, shamming dead.
Number one attacks the sand with his sharp-edged forehead and his
toothed legs; he flings armfuls of it behind him; and the work of
excavating proceeds apace. Soon the Beetle has disappeared from view in
the half-dug cavern. Whenever he returns to the upper air with a load,
he invariably glances at his ball to see if all is well. From time to
time he brings it nearer the threshold of the burrow; he feels it and
seems to acquire new vigour from the contact. The other, lying demure
and motionless on the ball, continues to inspire confidence. Meanwhile
the underground hall grows larger and deeper; and the digger’s field of
operations is now too vast for any but very occasional appearances. Now
is the time. The crafty sleeper awakens and hurriedly decamps with the
ball, which he pushes behind him with the speed of a pickpocket anxious
not to be caught in the act. This breach of trust rouses my
indignation, but the historian triumphs for the moment over the
moralist and I leave him alone: I shall have time enough to intervene
on the side of law and order if things threaten to turn out badly.

The thief is already some yards away. His victim comes out of the
burrow, looks around and finds nothing. Doubtless an old hand himself,
he knows what this means. Scent and sight soon put him on the track. He
makes haste and catches up the robber; but the artful dodger, when he
feels his pursuer close on his heels, promptly changes his posture,
gets on his hind-legs and clasps the ball with his toothed arms, as he
does when acting as an assistant.

You rogue, you! I see through your tricks: you mean to plead as an
excuse that the pellet rolled down the slope and that you are only
trying to stop it and bring it back home. I, however, an impartial
witness, declare that the ball was quite steady at the entrance to the
burrow and did not roll of its own accord. Besides, the ground is
level. I declare that I saw you set the thing in motion and make off
with unmistakable intentions. It was an attempt at larceny, or I’ve
never seen one!

My evidence is not admitted. The owner cheerfully accepts the other’s
excuses; and the two bring the ball back to the burrow as though
nothing had happened.

If the thief, however, has time to get far enough away, or if he
manages to cover his trail by adroitly doubling back, the injury is
irreparable. To collect provisions under a blazing sun, to cart them a
long distance, to dig a comfortable banqueting-hall in the sand, and
then—just when everything is ready and your appetite, whetted by
exercise, lends an added charm to the approaching feast—suddenly to
find yourself cheated by a crafty partner is, it must be admitted, a
reverse of fortune that would dishearten most of us. The Dung-beetle
does not allow himself to be cast down by this piece of ill-luck: he
rubs his cheeks, spreads his antennæ, sniffs the air and flies to the
nearest heap to begin all over again. I admire and envy this cast of
character.

Suppose the Scarab fortunate enough to have found a loyal partner; or,
better still, suppose that he has met no self-incited companion. The
burrow is ready. It is a shallow cavity, about the size of one’s fist,
dug in soft earth, usually in sand, and communicating with the outside
by a short passage just wide enough to admit the ball. As soon as the
provisions are safely stored away, the Scarab shuts himself in by
stopping up the entrance to his dwelling with rubbish kept in a corner
for the purpose. Once the door is closed, nothing outside betrays the
existence of the banqueting-chamber. And, now, hail mirth and jollity!
All is for the best in the best of all possible worlds! The table is
sumptuously spread; the ceiling tempers the heat of the sun and allows
only a moist and gentle warmth to penetrate; the undisturbed quiet, the
darkness, the Crickets’ concert overhead are all pleasant aids to
digestion. So complete has been the illusion that I have caught myself
listening at the door, expecting to hear the revellers burst into the
famous snatch in Galatée: [9]


            Ah! qu’il est doux de ne rien faire,
            Quand tout s’agite autour de nous? [10]


Who would dare disturb the bliss of such a banquet? But the desire for
knowledge is capable of all things; and I had the necessary daring. I
will set down here the result of my violation of the home.

The ball by itself fills almost the whole room; the rich repast rises
from floor to ceiling. A narrow passage runs between it and the walls.
Here sit the banqueters, two at most, very often only one, belly to
table, back to the wall. Once the seat is chosen, no one stirs; all the
vital forces are absorbed by the digestive faculties. There is no
fidgeting, which might mean the loss of a mouthful; no dainty toying
with the food, which might cause some to be wasted. Everything has to
pass through, properly and in order. To see them seated so solemnly
around a ball of dung, one would think that they were conscious of
their function as cleansers of the earth and that they were
deliberately devoting themselves to that marvellous chemistry which out
of filth brings forth the flower that delights our eyes and the
Beetles’ wing-case that jewels our lawns in spring. For this supreme
work which turns into living matter the refuse which neither the Horse
nor the Mule can utilize, despite the perfection of their digestive
organs, the Dung-beetle must needs be specially equipped. And indeed
anatomy compels us to admire the prodigious length of his coiled
intestine, which slowly elaborates the materials in its manifold
windings and exhausts them to the very last serviceable atom. Matter
from which the ruminant’s stomach could extract nothing, yields to this
powerful alembic riches that, at a mere touch, are transmuted into ebon
mail in the Sacred Scarab and a breastplate of gold and rubies in other
Dung-beetles.

Now this wonderful metamorphosis of ordure has to be accomplished in
the shortest possible time: the public health demands it. And so the
Scarab is endowed with matchless digestive powers. Once housed in the
company of food, he goes on eating and digesting, day and night, until
the provisions are exhausted. There is no difficulty in proving this.
Open the cell to which the Dung-beetle has retired from the world. At
any hour of the day, we shall find the insect seated at table and,
behind it, still hanging to it, a continuous cord, roughly coiled like
a pile of cables. One can easily guess, without embarrassing
explanations, what this cord represents. The great ball of dung passes
mouthful by mouthful through the Beetle’s digestive canals, yielding up
its nutritive essences, and reappears at the opposite end spun into a
cord. Well, this unbroken cord, which is always found hanging from the
aperture of the draw-plate, is ample proof, without further evidence,
that the digestive processes go on without ceasing. When the provisions
are coming to an end, the cable unrolled is of an astounding length: it
can be measured in feet. Where shall we find the like of this stomach
which, to avoid any loss when life’s balance-sheet is made out, feasts
for a week or a fortnight, without stopping, on such distasteful fare?

When the whole ball has passed through the machine, the hermit comes
back to the daylight, tries his luck afresh, finds another patch of
dung, fashions a new ball and starts eating again. This life of
pleasure lasts for a month or two, from May to June; then, with the
coming of the fierce heat beloved of the Cicadæ, [11] the Sacred
Beetles take up their summer quarters and bury themselves in the cool
earth. They reappear with the first autumn rains, less numerous and
less active than in spring, but now seemingly absorbed in the most
important work of all, the future of the species.



CHAPTER II

THE SACRED BEETLE IN CAPTIVITY


If we ransack the books for information about the habits of the
dung-rollers in general and the Sacred Beetle in particular, we find
that modern science still clings to some of the beliefs which were
current in the days of the Pharaohs. We are told that the ball which is
bumped across the fields contains an egg, that it is a cradle in which
the future larva is to find both board and lodging. The parents roll it
over hilly country to make it nice and round; and, when jolts and jars
and tumbles down steep places have shaped it properly, they bury it and
abandon it to the care of that great incubator, the earth.

So rough an upbringing has always seemed to me improbable. How could a
Beetle’s egg, that delicate thing, so sensitive under its soft wrapper,
survive the shaking-up which it would undergo in that rolling cradle?
In the germ is a spark of life which the least touch, the veriest
trifle can extinguish. Are we to believe that the parents would
deliberately bump it over hill and dale for hours? No, that is not the
way in which things happen; a mother does not subject her offspring to
the torture of a Regulus’ barrel.

However, something more than logic was needed to make a clean sweep of
accepted opinion. I therefore opened some hundreds of the pellets that
were being rolled along by the Dung-beetles; I opened others which I
took from holes dug before my eyes; and never once did I find either a
central cell or an egg in those pellets. They were invariably rough
lumps of food, fashioned in haste, with no definite internal structure,
merely so much provender with which the Beetle retires to spend a few
days in undisturbed gluttony. The dung-rollers covet and steal them
from one another with a keenness which they would certainly not display
in robbing one another of new family charges. For Sacred Beetles to go
stealing eggs would be an absurdity, each of them having quite enough
to do in securing the future of her own. So this point is henceforward
settled beyond question: the pellets which we see the Dung-beetles
rolling never contain eggs.

My first attempt to solve the knotty problem of the larva’s rearing
involved the construction of a spacious vivarium, with an artificial
soil of sand and a constant supply of provisions. Into this cage I put
some twenty Sacred Beetles, together with Copres, Gymnopleuri and
Onthophagi. No entomological experiment ever cost me so many
disappointments. The difficulty was the renewing of the food supply.
Now my landlord owned a stable and a Horse. I gained the confidence of
his man, who at first laughed at my proposals, but soon allowed himself
to be convinced by the sight of silver. Each of my insects’ breakfasts
came to twenty-five centimes. I am sure that no Beetle budget ever
amounted to such a sum before. Well, I can still see and I shall always
see Joseph, after grooming the Horse of a morning, put his head over
the garden-wall and, making a speaking-trumpet of his hand, call ‘Hi!’
to me in a whisper. I would hurry up to receive a potful of droppings.
Caution was necessary on both sides, as the sequel will show you. One
day the master happened to come up just when the transfer was being
made, and took it into his head that all his manure was going over the
wall and that what he wanted for his cabbages went to grow my verbenas
and narcissi. Vainly I tried to explain: he thought that I was being
funny. Poor Joseph was scolded, called all manner of names and
threatened with dismissal if it happened again. It didn’t.

I had one resource left, which was to go ignominiously along the
high-road and furtively collect my captives’ daily bread in a paper
bag. This I did and I am not ashamed of it. Sometimes fortune favoured
me: a Donkey carrying the produce of the Château-Renard or Barbentane
kitchen-gardens to the Avignon market would drop his contribution as he
passed my door. The gratuity, picked up instantly, made me rich for
several days. In short, by scheming, waiting, running about and playing
the diplomat for a blob of dung, I managed to feed my prisoners. If a
passion for one’s work and a love which nothing can discourage ensure
success, my experiment ought to have succeeded. It did not succeed.
After a time, my Sacred Beetles, pining for their native heath in a
space too limited for their elaborate evolutions, died miserable
deaths, without revealing their secrets. The Gymnopleuri and Onthophagi
were not so disappointing. At the proper time I shall make use of the
information which I obtained from them.

Together with my attempts at home breeding I carried on my direct
investigations abroad. The results fell far short of my wishes. One day
I decided that I must enlist outside help. As it happened, a merry band
of youngsters was crossing the plateau. It was a Thursday. [12]
Untroubled by thoughts of school and horrid lessons, they were coming
from the neighbouring village of Les Angles, with an apple in one hand
and a piece of bread in the other, and wending their way to the bare
hill yonder, where the bullets bury themselves harmlessly when the
garrison is at rifle-practice. The object of this early morning
expedition was the unearthing of a few bits of lead, worth perhaps a
halfpenny the lot. The small pink blossoms of the wild geranium decked
the scanty patches of grass which for a brief moment beautified this
Arabia Petræa; the Wheat-ear, in his black-and-white motley, twittered
as he flew from one rocky point to another; on the threshold of burrows
dug at the foot of the thyme-tufts, the Crickets were filling the air
with their droning symphony. And the children were rejoicing in this
springtide happiness and rejoicing still more in the prospect of
wealth, the halfpenny which they would receive for such bullets as they
found, the halfpenny which would enable them to buy two peppermint
bull’s-eyes next Sunday, two of the big ones, at a farthing apiece,
from the woman at the stall outside the church.

I accost the tallest, whose sharp face gives me some hope of him; the
little ones stand round, eating their apples. I explain what I want and
show them the Sacred Beetle rolling his ball; I tell them that in some
such ball, hidden somewhere or other underground, there is occasionally
a little hollow place and in that hollow a little worm. The thing to do
is to dig around at random, keeping an eye on what the Beetles are
doing, and to find the ball containing the worm. Balls without a worm
don’t count. And, to tempt them with a fabulous sum which shall divert
to my purposes the time hitherto devoted to a few farthings’ worth of
lead, I promise to pay a franc, a shiny new twenty-sou piece, for each
occupied ball. At the mention of this sum, those adorably innocent eyes
open their widest. I have upset all their ideas of finance by naming
this fanciful price. Then, to show that my proposal is serious, I
distribute a few sous as earnest-money. I arrange to be there next
week, on the same day and at the same time, and faithfully to perform
my part of the bargain towards all those who have made the lucky find.
After carefully posting the party in their duties, I dismiss them.

‘He means it!’ the children said, as they went away. ‘He really means
it! If only we could make a franc apiece!’

And their hearts swelling with fond hopes, they clinked the sous in
their hands. The flattened bullets were forgotten. I saw the children
scatter over the plain and begin their search.

On the appointed day, a week later, I returned to the plateau. I was
confident of success. My young helpers were sure to have spoken to
their playmates of this lucrative trade in Beetle-balls and convinced
the incredulous by displaying their earnest-money. And indeed I found a
larger party than the first time awaiting me on the spot. They came
running to meet me, but there was no burst of triumph, no shout of joy.
I suspected at once that things were going badly; and my suspicions
were but too well-founded. Many times, after coming out of school, they
had hunted for what I had described, but they had never discovered
anything like it. They handed me a few pellets found underground with
the Beetle, but these were simply masses of provisions, containing no
larva. I explained matters anew and made another appointment for the
following Thursday. Again the search was unsuccessful. The disheartened
little hunters were now reduced to quite a small number. I made a final
appeal to their sportsmanship and perseverance; but nothing came of it.
And I ended by compensating the most industrious, those who had held
out to the last, and cancelling the bargain. I had to conduct my own
researches, which, though apparently very simple, were in reality
extremely difficult.

Many years have passed since then, but even to-day I am without any
definite, consistent result after all my digging and exploring, though
I have made my examinations at the most likely spots and have carefully
watched for favourable opportunities. I am reduced to piecing together
my incomplete observations and filling up the gaps by analogy. [13] The
little that I have seen, combined with my study of other Dung-beetles
in captivity—Gymnopleuri, Copres and Onthophagi—is summed up in what
follows.

The ball which is destined to contain the egg is not made in public, in
the hurry and confusion of the dung-yard. It is a work of art and
supreme patience, demanding concentration and scrupulous care, both
alike impossible in the thick of the crowd. One needs solitude in order
to think out a plan of operations and set to work. So the mother digs
in the sand a burrow four to eight inches deep. It is a rather spacious
hall communicating with the outer world by a much narrower passage. The
insect brings into it carefully selected materials, doubtless in
spherical form. There must be many journeys, for towards the end of the
work the contents of the cell are out of all proportion to the size of
the entrance-door and could not be stored at one attempt. I remember a
Spanish Copris who, at the time of my inspection, was finishing a ball
as big as an orange at the far end of a burrow whose only communication
with the outside was by means of a gallery into which I was just able
to insert my finger. It is true that the Copres do not roll pills and
do not travel long distances to fetch food home. They dig a hole
immediately under the dung and drag the material backwards, armful by
armful, to the bottom of their well. They have thus no difficulty in
provisioning their houses; moreover, they work in security under the
shelter of the manure: two conditions that promote luxurious tastes.
The Dung-beetles that follow the humble trade of pill-rollers are less
extravagant; and yet, if he cares to make two or three journeys, the
Sacred Beetle can amass wealth of which the Spanish Copris might well
be jealous.

So far, the Beetle has only raw material, lumped together anyhow. A
minute sorting has to take place before anything else is done: this
stuff, the purest, is for the inner layer on which the grub will feed;
that other, coarser stuff is for the outer layers, which are not meant
for food and serve only as a protecting shell. Then, around a central
hollow which receives the egg, the materials must be arranged in
successive strata, according as they are less refined and less
nutritive; the layers must possess a proper consistency and must be
made to adhere to one another; last of all, the stringy parts of the
outer layers, which have to protect the whole structure, must be felted
together. How does the clumsy Sacred Beetle, who is so stiff in her
movements, accomplish a work of this kind in complete darkness, at the
bottom of a hole crammed with provisions and hardly leaving room to
stir? When I consider the delicacy of the workmanship and then the
rough tools of the worker—angular limbs capable of cutting into hard or
even rocky soil—I think of an Elephant trying to make lace. Let whoso
can explain this miracle of maternal industry; as for me, I give it up,
all the more as I have not had the luck to see the artist at work. We
will confine ourselves to describing her masterpiece.

The ball containing the egg is usually the size of an average apple. In
the centre is an oval hollow about two-fifths of an inch in diameter.
The egg is fixed at the bottom, standing perpendicularly; it is
cylindrical, rounded at both ends, yellowish-white and about as large
as a grain of wheat, but shorter. The inside of the niche is coated
with a shiny, greenish-brown, semifluid material, a real stercoral
cream, destined to form the larva’s first mouthfuls. To make this
dainty food, does the mother collect the quintessence of the dung? The
appearance of it tells me something different and makes me certain that
it is a pap prepared in the maternal stomach. The Pigeon softens the
grain in her crop and turns it into a sort of milky soup which she
subsequently disgorges to her brood. To all seeming, the Dung-beetle
displays the same solicitude: she half-digests choice provender and
disgorges it in the form of a meat-extract with which she lines the
walls of the cavity where the egg is laid. Thus the larva, on hatching,
finds an easily-digested food, which very soon strengthens its stomach
and enables it to attack the underlying strata, which have not been
refined in the same way. Under the semi-fluid paste is a soft,
well-compressed, uniform mass, from which every stringy particle is
excluded. Beyond this are the coarser layers, abounding in vegetable
fibres. Finally, the outside of the ball is composed of the commonest
materials, but packed and felted into a stout rind.

Manifestly we have here a progressive change of diet. On leaving the
egg, the frail grub licks the dainty broth on the walls of its cell.
There is not much of this, but it is strengthening and very nutritious.
The pap of earliest infancy is followed by the more solid food given to
the weaned nurseling, a sort of paste that stands midway between the
exquisitely delicate fare at the start and the coarse provisions at the
finish. There is a thick layer of it, enough to turn the infant into a
sturdy youngster. But now for the strong comes strong meat:
barley-bread with its husks, that is to say, natural droppings full of
sharp bits of hay. Of this the larva has enough and to spare; and, when
it has attained its full growth, there remains an enclosing layer. The
capacity of the dwelling has increased with the growth of the occupant,
fed on the very substance of the walls; the original little cell with
the very thick walls is now a big cell with walls only a few
millimetres in thickness; the inner layers have become larva, nymph or
Beetle, according to the period. Lastly, the ball itself is a stout
shell, protecting within its spacious interior the mysterious processes
of the metamorphosis.

I can go no farther, for lack of observations; my records of the birth
of the Sacred Beetle stop short at the egg. I have not seen the larva,
which however is known and is described in the text-books; [14] nor
have I seen the perfect insect while still enclosed in its chamber in
the ball, before it has had any practice in its duties as a pill-roller
and excavator. And this is just what I particularly wanted to see. I
should have liked to find the Dung-beetle in his native cell, recently
transformed, new to all labour, so as to examine the workman’s hand
before it started its work. I will tell you the reason for this wish.

Insects have at the end of each leg a sort of finger, or tarsus as it
is called, consisting of a succession of delicate parts which may be
compared with the joints of our fingers. They end in a hooked claw. One
finger to each leg: that is the rule; and this finger, at least with
the higher Beetles and notably the Dung-beetles, has five phalanges or
joints. Now, by a really strange exception, the Scarabs have no tarsi
on their front legs, while possessing very well-shaped ones, with five
joints apiece, on the two other pairs. They are maimed, crippled: they
lack, on their fore-limbs, that which in the insect very roughly
represents our hand. A similar anomaly occurs in the Onitis- and
Bubas-beetles, who also belong to the Dung-beetle family. Entomology
has long recorded this curious fact, without being able to offer a
satisfactory explanation. Is the creature born maimed, does it come
into the world without fingers to its forelimbs? Or does it lose them
by accident, once it is given over to its toilsome labours?

One could easily imagine this mutilation to be the result of the
insect’s hard work. Poking about, digging and raking and slicing, at
one time in the gravelly soil, at another in the stringy mass of
manure, do not constitute a task in which organs so delicate as the
tarsi can be employed without risk. And here is an even more serious
matter: when the Beetle is rolling his ball backwards, with his head
down, it is with the extremities of his fore-feet that he presses
against the ground. What might not happen to the insect’s feeble
fingers, slender as thread, in consequence of this continual rubbing
against the rough soil? They are merely useless encumbrances; one day
or other they seem bound to disappear, crushed, torn off, worn out in a
thousand ways. We know unfortunately that our own workmen are all too
frequently injured in handling heavy tools and lifting great weights;
even so might the Scarab be crippled in rolling his ball, an enormous
load to him. In that case his maimed arms would be a noble testimony to
his industrious life.

But straightway grave doubts begin to assail us. If these mutilations
were really accidental and the result of too strenuous work, they would
be the exception, not the rule. Because a workman or several workmen
have had a hand caught and crushed in a machine, it does not follow
that all the rest will also lose their hands. If the Scarab sometimes,
or even very frequently, loses his fore-fingers in pursuing his trade
as a pill-roller, there must be some at least who, more fortunate or
more skilful, have preserved their tarsi. Let us then consult the
actual facts. I have observed in very large numbers the various species
of Scarabs that inhabit France: Scarabæus sacer, who is common in
Provence; S. semipunctatus, who keeps fairly close to the sea and
frequents the sandy shores of Cette, Palavas and the Golfe Juan;
lastly, S. laticollis, who is much more widely distributed than either
of the others and is found up the Rhone Valley at least as far as
Lyons. In addition, I have studied an African species, S. cicatricosus,
picked up near Constantine. Well, in all four species, the absence of
tarsi on the front legs has been an invariable fact, with not a single
exception, at any rate within the range of my observations. The Scarab
therefore is maimed from the start; and it is a natural peculiarity in
his case, not an accident.

Besides, there is another argument in support of this statement. If the
lack of fore-fingers were an accidental mutilation, due to violent
exertion, there are other insects, Dung-beetles too, who habitually
undertake works of excavation even more arduous than the Scarab’s, and
who ought therefore, a fortiori, to be deprived of their front tarsi,
since these are useless and even irksome when the leg has to serve as a
powerful digging-implement. The Geotrupes, for instance, who so well
deserve their name, meaning Earth-piercers, sink wells in the hard soil
of the roads, among stones cemented with clay: perpendicular wells so
deep that, to inspect the cell at the bottom of them, we have to make
use of a stout spade; and even then we do not always succeed. Now these
unrivalled miners, who easily open up long tunnels in a substance whose
surface the Sacred Beetle would hardly be able to disturb, have their
front tarsi intact, as if cutting through rocks were work calling for
delicate tools rather than strong ones. Everything then supports the
belief that, if we could see the Scarab while still a novice in his
native cell, we should find him to be mutilated in just the same way as
the much-travelled veteran who has worn himself out with toil.

This absence of fingers might serve as the foundation for an argument
in favour of the theories now in fashion: the struggle for life and the
evolution of the species. People might say:

‘The Scarabs began by having tarsi to all their legs, in conformity
with the general laws of insect structure. In one way or another, some
of them lost these troublesome appendages to their front legs, they
being hurtful rather than useful. Finding themselves the better for
this mutilation, which made their work easier, they gained the
advantage over their less-favoured fellows; they founded a family by
handing down their fingerless stumps to their descendants; and the
fingered insect of antiquity ended by becoming the maimed insect of our
times.’

I am ready to yield to this reasoning if you will first tell me why,
with similar but much harder tasks to perform, the Geotrupes has
retained his tarsi. Until then we will go on believing that the first
Scarab who rolled his ball, perhaps on the shore of some lake in which
the Palæotherium bathed, was as innocent of front tarsi as his
descendant of to-day.



CHAPTER III

THE SACRED BEETLE: THE BALL


There is no need to return to the Sacred Beetle working in the daylight
or consuming his booty underground, either alone, as usually happens,
or in the company of a guest: what I have said about this in a former
chapter is enough; and further observations would give no new
information of special interest. There is only one point which deserves
attention. This is the method of constructing the spherical pellet,
consisting merely of provisions which the Beetle collects for his own
use and conveys to an underground dining-room excavated at a convenient
spot. My present cages, which are much better arranged than those which
I had at first, enable us to watch the operation at our leisure; and
this operation will furnish data which will be of the greatest value
later in explaining the mysterious structure of the nest. Let us then
once more watch the Sacred Beetle as he busies himself with his
victuals.

I supply fresh provisions, derived from the Mule or, better, the Sheep.
The scent of the heap carries the news far and wide. The Beetles hasten
up from every direction, extending and waving the russet feathers of
their antennæ, a sign of acute excitement. Those who were dozing
underground split the sandy ceiling and sally forth from their cellars.
They are now all at the banquet, not without quarrels among neighbours,
who fight for the best bits and knock one another over with sudden
back-handers from their broad fore-legs. Things calm down; and, without
further disputes for the moment, each gets all that he can out of the
spot where he happens to be.

The foundation of the structure is, as a rule, a bit that is almost
round of itself. This is the kernel which, enlarged by successive
layers, will become the ultimate ball, the size of an apricot. Having
tested it and found it suitable, the owner leaves it as it is; or, at
other times, he may clean it a little, scraping the outside, which is
rough with bits of sand. It is now a question of constructing the ball
upon this foundation. The tools are the six-toothed rake of the
semicircular shield and the broad shovels of the fore-legs, which are
likewise armed on the outer edge with strong teeth, five in number.

Without for a moment letting go of the kernel, which is held in his
four hind-legs, more particularly those of the third, the longest pair,
the Beetle turns round slowly from side to side on the top of his
embryo pellet and selects from the heap around him the materials for
increasing its size. His sharp-edged forehead peels, cuts, digs and
rakes; his fore-legs work in unison, gathering and drawing up an armful
which is at once placed upon the central mass and patted down. A few
vigorous applications of the toothed shovels press the new layer into
position. And so, with armful after armful carefully added on top,
beneath and at the sides, the original pill grows into a big ball.

While working, the builder never leaves the dome of his edifice: he
revolves on his own axis, if he wants to give his attention to any
lateral part; to shape the lower portion, he bends down to the point
where it touches the ground; but from beginning to end the sphere never
moves on its base and the Beetle never relaxes his hold.

To obtain a perfectly round form, we need the potter’s wheel, whose
rotation makes up for our want of skill; to enlarge his snowball and
make it into the enormous sphere which he will end by being unable to
move, the schoolboy rolls it in the snow: the rolling gives it the
regularity which the direct work of the hands, guided by an
inexperienced eye, would not. More dexterous than we, the Sacred Beetle
can dispense with either rolling or rotation; he moulds his ball by
means of superadded layers, without shifting its place and without even
descending for an instant from the top of his dome to view the whole
structure from the requisite distance. The compasses of his bow-legs, a
living pair of callipers which measure and check the curve, are
sufficient for his purpose.

It is only with extreme caution, however, that I introduce these
callipers, as I am perfectly convinced, by a host of facts, that
instinct has no need of special tools. If further proof were wanted,
here it is. The male Scarab’s hind-legs are perceptibly bowed; the
female’s, on the contrary, are almost straight, though she is much the
cleverer and is able, as we shall see presently, to produce
masterpieces whose exquisite form far surpasses that of a monotonous
sphere.

If the curved compasses play but a secondary part in the matter and
perhaps no part at all, what is the guiding principle of this
sphericity? If one merely took into consideration the insect’s organism
and the circumstances in which the work is done, I see absolutely none.
We must go back farther, we must go back to the innate genius, the
instinct that guides the tool. The Scarab has a natural gift for making
spheres, just as the Hive-bee has a natural gift for making hexagonal
prisms. Both achieve geometrical perfection in their work and are
independent of any special mechanism which would force upon them the
particular shape attained.

For the time being, keep this in mind: the Sacred Beetle makes his ball
by placing next to each other armful after armful of the materials
which he has collected; he builds it up without moving it, without
turning it round. He fashions the dung with the pressure of his
fore-arms as the modeller in our studios fashions his clay with the
pressure of his thumb. And the result is not an approximate sphere,
with a lumpy surface; it is a perfect sphere, which our human
manufacturers would not disown.

The time has come for retiring with the booty so that we may bury it
farther away, at no great depth, and consume it in peace. The owner,
therefore, draws his ball out of the dung-yard; and, in accordance with
ancient usage, begins straightway to roll it about on the ground, a
little at random. Any one who was not present at the beginning and who
now saw the ball rolling along, with the insect pushing it backwards,
would naturally imagine that the round shape resulted from this method
of transport. It rolls, therefore it becomes round, even as a shapeless
lump of clay would soon become round if trundled in the same way.
Though apparently logical, the idea is erroneous in every respect: we
have just seen this perfect sphericity acquired before the ball moved
from the spot. The rolling therefore has nothing to do with this
geometrical accuracy; it merely hardens the surface into a tough crust
and polishes it a little, if only by working into the substance of the
pellet any coarse bits that might have made it rough at the beginning.
Between the pill that has been rolled for hours and the pill that is
stationary in the dung-yard there is no difference in configuration.

What is the advantage of this particular shape, which is invariably
adopted at the very outset of the work? Does the Scarab derive any
benefit from the circular form? Your spectacles would have to be made
of walnut-shells if you failed to see that the insect is brilliantly
inspired when it kneads its cake into a ball. These victuals, the
meagrest of meagre pittances from the point of view of nourishment, for
the Sheep’s fourfold stomach has already extracted pretty nearly all
the assimilable matter, have to make up in quantity for what they lack
in quality.

It is the same with various other Dung-beetles. They are all insatiable
gluttons; they all need a much larger amount of food than their modest
dimensions would lead us to suspect. The Spanish Copris, no bigger than
a good-sized hazel-nut, accumulates underground, for a single meal, a
pie as big as my fist; the Stercoraceous Geotrupes hoards in his hole a
sausage nine inches long and as wide as the neck of a claret-bottle.

These mighty eaters have an easy time of it. They establish themselves
immediately under the heap dropped by some standing Mule. Here they dig
passages and dining-rooms. The provisions are at the door of the house;
they form a roof for it. All that you have to do is to bring them in,
armful by armful, taking only as much as you can carry comfortably, for
you can go on fetching more as long as you like. In this way,
scandalous quantities of food are unobtrusively stored away in peaceful
manors whose presence no outward sign betrays.

The Sacred Beetle is not so fortunate as to have his cottage underneath
the heap where the victuals are collected. He is of a vagabond
temperament; and, when his work is over, he has no great inclination
for the company of those arrant thieves, his kinsmen. He has therefore
to travel to a distance with what he has secured, in quest of a site
where he can establish himself alone. His stock of provisions, it is
true, is comparatively modest: it is not to be mentioned in the same
breath as the Copris’ enormous cakes or the Geotrupes’ fat sausages. No
matter: modest though it be, its weight and bulk are too much for the
strength of any Beetle that might think of carrying it direct. It is
too heavy, ever so much too heavy, for him to take between his legs and
fly away with, nor could he possibly drag it, gripped in his mandibles.

If the hermit, eager to withdraw from the world, wished to make use of
direct means of conveyance, there would be only one method by which he
could accumulate in his far-off cell food enough for even a single day:
that would be to carry load after load on the wing, each load being
proportionate to his strength. But what a number of journeys that would
involve! What a lot of time would be wasted in this piecemeal
harvesting! Besides, when he went back, would he not find the table
already cleared? Think of the number of guests who were giving it their
attention! The opportunity is a good one; it may not occur again for a
long while. We must make the most of it without delay; the thing to do
is to secure enough now to stock our larder for at least a day.

But how to set about it? Nothing could be simpler. What we cannot carry
we drag; what we cannot drag we cart by rolling it along, as witness
all our wheeled conveyances. The Sacred Beetle therefore chooses the
sphere as a means of transport. It is the best shape of all for
rolling; it needs no axle-tree; it adapts itself admirably to the
diverse inequalities of the ground and, at each point of its surface,
provides the necessary leverage for the least expenditure of effort.
Such is the mechanical problem which the pill-roller solves. The
spherical form of his treasure is not the effect of the rolling: it
precedes it; it is modelled precisely with a view to that method of
conveyance, which is to make the carriage of the heavy load feasible.

The Sacred Beetle is a passionate lover of the sun, whose image he
copies in the radiating notches of his rounded shield. He needs the
bright light in order to make the most of the heap whence he extracts
first provisions and next materials for nest-building. The other
Dung-beetles—Geotrupes, Copres, Onites, Onthophagi—for the most part
have dark, mysterious habits; they work unseen under the roof of
excrement; they do not begin their quest until night is at hand and the
last glimmer of twilight is fading. The more trustful Scarab both seeks
and finds amid the gladness of the noonday sun; he works his bit of
ground quite openly and reaps his harvest in the hottest and brightest
hours of the day. His ebon breastplate is glittering on top of the heap
at times when there is naught to indicate the presence of numerous
fellow-workers, belonging to other genera, who are busy underneath,
carving themselves their share of the lower strata. Darkness for
others, but for him the light!

This love of the unscreened sun has its blissful side, as the insect,
drunk with heat, shows from time to time by exultant transports; but it
has also certain disadvantages. I have never witnessed any quarrel at
harvest-time between next-door neighbours, when these were Copres or
Geotrupes. Working in the dark, each is ignorant of what is happening
beside him. The rich morsel secured by one of them cannot arouse the
envy of his neighbours, since it is not perceived. This perhaps
explains the pacific relations among Dung-beetles who work in the
gloomy depths of the heap.

My suspicions are not unfounded. Robbery, the execrable right of the
strongest, is not the exclusive prerogative of the human brute: animals
also practise it; and the Sacred Beetle is a notorious offender. As the
work is done in the open, every one knows or is able to find out what
his companions are doing. They are mutually envious of each other’s
pills; and scuffles take place between proprietors wishing to leave the
yard and plunderers who find it more convenient to rob their fellows
than to set to work and knead loaves for themselves. On guard on the
top of his treasure, the owner of a ball will face his assailant, who
is trying to climb up, and push him into space with a stroke from his
stout fore-arms. The thief is flung on his back and flounders about for
a moment, but he is soon up and back again. The struggle is renewed.
Right does not always win, in which case the robber makes off with his
prize and the victim returns to the heap to make himself another pill.
It is not unusual for a third thief to appear upon the scene during the
fight and settle matters between the litigants by carrying off the
property at issue. I am inclined to think that it was affrays of this
sort that gave rise to the childish story of the Sacred Beetles who
were called to the rescue and came to lend a hand to their brothers in
distress. Brazen footpads were taken for kindly helpers.

The Sacred Beetle then is an inveterate thief; he shares the tastes of
the Bedouin Arab, his fellow-countryman in Africa; he too is addicted
to raiding. In his case, hunger and dearth, both evil counsellors,
cannot be invoked as an explanation of this moral obliquity. Provisions
are plentiful in my cages; certainly, in their days of liberty, my
captives never lived in the midst of such abundance; and yet affrays
are of frequent occurrence. They fight hotly-contested battles for the
loaves, just as though bread were lacking. Poverty has nothing to do
with it, for very often the thief abandons his booty after rolling it
for a few seconds. They steal for the pleasure of stealing. As La
Fontaine [15] well says, there is


                          ... double profit à faire:
        Son bien premièrement; et puis le mal d’autrui. [16]


In view of this propensity for thieving, what is the best thing that a
Scarab can do when he has conscientiously made his ball? Obviously, to
shun his fellows, to leave the premises and get away to a distant spot
where he can consume his provisions in the depths of some hiding-place.
This is what he does; and he loses no time in doing it: he knows his
kinsmen too well.

Here we see the necessity for an easy method of conveyance, so that
sufficient provisions may be carted in a single journey and as swiftly
as possible. The Sacred Beetle likes working in the bright light, in
the sunshine. His profits therefore, made in full view of everybody,
are no secret to any of the workers who have hurried to the same heap.
Thus is envy kindled; thus it becomes imperative to retire to a
distance, in order to avoid being robbed. This speedy retreat demands a
convenient means of transport; and that is obtained by the spherical
form given to the materials collected.

Here is the conclusion, unexpected but very logical and I would even
say obvious: the Sacred Beetle shapes his provisions into a ball
because he is an ardent lover of the sun. The various Dung-beetles who
work in broad daylight, the Gymnopleuri and Sisyphi of my district,
conform to the same mechanical principle: they all know the advantages
of a sphere, the best rolling-apparatus; they all practise the art of
pill-making. The other Dung-beetles, who work in the dark, do nothing
of the kind: their accumulations of food are shapeless.

Life in the vivarium supplies us with some other facts which are not
undeserving of the commentator’s attention. We have said that, when
fresh provisions are supplied, the Sacred Beetles who are roaming about
come running up eagerly to the smoking fare. The rich effluvia also
speedily attract those who are slumbering in their burrows. Little
mounds of sand pop up here and there, cracking as though for an
eruption, and we see new guests emerge, wiping the dust from their eyes
with the flat of their feet. Neither their dozing in that underground
room nor the thick roof of their dwelling has succeeded in foiling
their keenness of scent: those who have had to unearth themselves reach
the lump almost as quickly as the others.

These details remind us of certain facts noted, not without surprise,
by a host of observers on the sunny beaches at Cette, Palavas, the
Golfe Juan and the North African coast, down to the lonely Sahara. Here
the Sacred Beetle and his kinsmen—the Half-spotted Scarab, the
Pock-marked Scarab and others—swarm, becoming more vigorous and more
active in proportion as the climate grows hotter. They abound; and yet
very often not one shows himself; the entomologist’s practised eye
fails to discover a single specimen.

But now see things change. Seized with an urgent physiological need,
you leave your party unobtrusively and retire behind the bushes. You
have hardly stood up, hardly begun to adjust your dress,
when—whoosh!—here comes one, here come three, here come ten, appearing
suddenly you know not whence, and swoop upon the provender. Have they
hastened from afar, these bustling scavengers? Certainly not. Had they
been apprised at a great distance by their sense of smell, which is not
in itself impossible, they would not have had time to reach the quite
recent windfall so promptly. It follows, therefore, that they were
close by, within a radius of ten or twenty yards, hidden underground
and dozing. A scent that is ever awake, even in the lethargy of sleep,
told them, down in their burrows, of the happy event; and, splitting
their ceilings, they hurry up forthwith. In less time than the incident
takes to relate, a swarming population enlivens what was but now a
desert.

A keen and vigilant scent is the Beetle’s, we must admit; a scent which
is always in operation. The Dog smells the truffle through the soil,
but he is awake; the pill-roller smells his favourite fare through the
ground in the opposite direction, but he is asleep. Which of the two
has the subtler scent?

Science flings wide her net, welcoming even filth; and truth soars at
heights where nothing can soil her. The reader will therefore be good
enough to excuse certain details which cannot be avoided in a history
of the Dung-beetle; he will show some indulgence for what has gone
before and what will follow. The revolting workshop of the insect that
manipulates ordure will lead perhaps to loftier ideas than would the
perfumer’s factory with its jasmine and patchouli.

I have accused the Sacred Beetle of being an insatiable gormandizer. It
is time to prove what I said. In my cages, which are too small to allow
of much pill-rolling, my boarders often scorn to accumulate provisions
and confine themselves to eating where they are. It is a good
opportunity for us: the meal taken in public will tell us better than
the underground banquet what a Dung-beetle’s stomach can do.

On a very still and sultry day—these are the conditions most favourable
to my anchorites’ gastronomic joys—I observe one of the diners in the
open air, from eight o’clock in the morning until eight o’clock at
night. Watch in hand, I time the glutton. He appears to have come
across a morsel greatly to his taste, for, during those twelve hours,
he never stops feasting, but remains glued to the table, absolutely
stationary. At eight o’clock in the evening, I pay him a last visit.
His appetite seems undiminished; I find him in as fine fettle as at the
start. The banquet then must have gone on some time longer, until the
dish had disappeared entirely. In fact, next morning there was no sign
of my Beetle; and, of the sumptuous repast begun on the previous day,
naught remained but crumbs.

To eat the clock round is no small feat of gluttony; but the present
instance shows a much more remarkable feat of digestion. While matter
is continuously being chewed and swallowed by the insect in front, it
is reappearing, no less continuously, behind, deprived of its nutritive
particles and spun into a thin black cord, similar to cobbler’s thread.
The Scarab never evacuates except at table, so quickly are his
digestive operations performed. The wire-drawing apparatus begins to
work at the first few mouthfuls; it ceases soon after the last. Without
a break from beginning to end of the meal, the slender cord, ever
appended to the discharging orifice, goes on piling itself into a heap
which can easily be unrolled so long as there is no sign of
desiccation.

The working is as regular as that of a chronometer. Every minute, or
rather, to be exact, every four-and-fifty seconds, a discharge takes
place and the thread is lengthened by three to four millimetres. [17]
At long intervals I employ my tweezers, remove the cord and unroll the
mass along a graduated rule, in order to measure the amount produced.
The total for twelve hours is 2.88 metres. [18] As the meal and its
necessary complement, the work of the digestive apparatus, went on for
some time longer after my last visit, which was paid at eight o’clock
in the evening by lantern-light, my Beetle must have spun an unbroken
stercoraceous cord well over three yards in length.

Given the diameter and the length of the thread, it is easy to
calculate its volume. Nor is it difficult to arrive at the exact volume
of the insect by measuring the quantity of water which it displaces
when immersed in a narrow cylinder. The figures thus obtained are not
devoid of interest: they tell us that, at a single bout of eating, in a
dozen hours, the Sacred Beetle digests very nearly his own bulk in
food. What a stomach! And, above all, what rapidity, what power of
digestion! From the very first mouthfuls, the residuum forms itself
into a thread that stretches and stretches indefinitely as long as the
meal lasts. In that amazing laboratory, which perhaps never puts up its
shutters, unless it be when victuals are lacking, the material merely
passes through, is at once treated by the stomach’s reagents and at
once exhausted. One may well believe that an apparatus which sanifies
filth so quickly has some part to play in the public health. We shall
have occasion to return to this important subject.



CHAPTER IV

THE SACRED BEETLE: THE PEAR


The young shepherd who had been told in his spare time to watch the
doings of the Sacred Beetle came to me in high spirits, one Sunday in
the latter part of June, to say that he thought the time had come to
begin our investigations. He had detected the insect issuing from the
ground, had dug at the spot where it made its appearance, and had
found, at no great depth, the queer thing which he was bringing me.

Queer it was and calculated to upset the little that I thought I knew.
In shape, it was exactly like a tiny pear that had lost all its fresh
colour and turned brown in rotting. What could this curious object be,
this pretty plaything that seemed to have come from a turner’s
workshop? Was it made by human hands? Was it a model of the fruit of
the pear-tree intended for some children’s museum? One would say so.

The little ones group themselves round me; they look at the
treasure-trove with longing eyes; they would like to add it to the
contents of their toy-box. It is much prettier in shape than an agate
marble, much more graceful than an ivory egg or a boxwood top. The
material, it is true, seems none too nicely chosen; but it is firm to
the touch and very artistically curved. In any case, the little pear
discovered underground must not go to swell the nursery collection
until we have found out more about it.

Can it really be the Sacred Beetle’s work? Is there an egg inside it, a
grub? The shepherd assures me that there is. A similar pear, crushed by
accident in the digging, contained, he says, a white egg, the size of a
grain of wheat. I dare not believe it, so greatly does the object which
he has brought me differ from the ball which I expected to see.

To open the mysterious prize and ascertain its contents would perhaps
be imprudent: such an act of violence might jeopardize the life of the
germ within, always provided that the Scarab’s egg be there, a matter
of which the shepherd seems convinced. Besides, I say to myself, the
pear-shape, so totally opposed to all our accepted ideas, is probably
accidental. Who knows if luck will ever give me anything like it again?
I should be wise to keep the thing just as it is and await events;
above all, I should be wise to go and seek for information on the spot.

The shepherd was at his post by daybreak the next morning. I joined him
on some slopes that had been lately cleared of their trees, where the
hot summer sun, which strikes with such force on the back of one’s
neck, could not reach us for two or three hours. In the cool morning
air, with the Sheep browsing under Sultan’s care, the two of us
scattered on our search.

A Sacred Beetle’s burrow is soon found: you can tell it by the fresh
little mound of earth above it. With a vigorous turn of the wrist, my
companion digs away with the little pocket-trowel which I have lent
him. Incorrigible earth-scraper that I am, I seldom set forth without
this light but serviceable tool. While he digs, I lie down, the better
to see the arrangement and furniture of the cellar which we are
unearthing, and I am all eyes. The shepherd uses the trowel as a lever
and, with his other hand, holds back and pushes aside the soil.

Here we are! A cave opens out and, in the moist warmth of the yawning
vault, I see a splendid pear lying full length upon the ground. No, I
shall not soon forget this first revelation of the Scarab’s maternal
masterpiece. My excitement could have been no greater had I been an
archæologist digging among the ancient relics of Egypt and lighting
upon the sacred insect of the dead, carved in emerald, in some
Pharaonic crypt. O ineffable moment, when truth suddenly shines forth!
What other joys can compare with that holy rapture! The shepherd was in
the seventh heaven; he laughed in response to my smile and was happy in
my gladness.

Luck does not repeat itself: ‘Non bis in idem,’ says the old adage. And
here have I twice had under my eyes this curious pear-shape. Is it by
any chance the normal shape, not subject to exception? Must we abandon
the thought of a sphere similar to those which the insect rolls along
the ground? Let us continue and we shall see.

A second hole is found. Like the previous one, it contains a pear. My
two treasures are as like as two peas; they might have issued from the
same mould. And here is a valuable confirmatory detail: in the second
burrow, by the side of the pear and fondly embracing it, is the mother
Beetle, engaged no doubt in giving it the finishing touches before
leaving the underground cave for good. All doubts are dispelled: I know
the worker and I know the work.

The rest of the morning provided abundant corroboration of these
premisses: before an intolerable sun drove me from the slope which I
was exploring, I was in possession of a dozen pears identical in shape
and almost in dimensions. On several occasions the mother was present
in the workshop.

To conclude this part of our subject, let me tell what the future held
in store for me. All through the dog-days, from the end of June until
September, I paid almost daily visits to the spots frequented by the
Sacred Beetle; and the burrows unearthed by my trowel furnished an
amount of evidence exceeding my fondest hopes. The insects reared in
captivity supplied me with more facts, though these, it is true, were
very scanty in comparison with the rich crop from the open fields. All
told, about a hundred nests, at the lowest computation, passed through
my hands; and they were invariably the graceful pear-shape, never,
absolutely never, the round shape of the pill, never the ball of which
the books tell us.

I myself once shared this error, placing as I did implicit confidence
in the words of the learned authorities. My old hunting-expeditions on
the Plateau des Angles led to no result; my attempts at home-rearing
failed pitifully; and yet I was anxious to give my young readers some
idea of the nest built by the Sacred Beetle. I therefore adopted the
traditional theory of the round shape; and then, taking analogy for my
guide, I made use of the little that I had learnt from other
dung-rollers to attempt an approximate sketch of the Sacred Beetle’s
work. It was an unlucky shot. Analogy no doubt is a valuable servant,
but oh, how poor compared with direct observation! Deceived by this
guide, so often untrustworthy amid the inexhaustible variety of life, I
helped to perpetuate the blunder; and so I hasten to apologize, begging
the reader to dismiss from his mind the little that I have said
heretofore on the probable nest-building methods of the Sacred Beetle.

And now let us unfold the authentic story, admitting as evidence only
facts actually observed again and again. The Sacred Beetle’s nest is
betrayed on the outside by a little heap of earth, by a tiny mound
formed of the superfluous soil which the mother, when closing up the
abode, has been unable to replace, part of the excavation having to be
left empty. Under this mound is a shaft which is rarely more than four
inches in depth, followed by a horizontal gallery, either straight or
winding, which ends in a spacious hall, large enough to contain a man’s
fist. This is the crypt in which the egg lies enveloped in food and
subjected to the incubation of a hot sun baking the ground only a few
inches above it; this is the roomy workshop in which the mother,
unfettered in her movements, has kneaded and shaped the future
nurseling’s food into a pear.

This stercoraceous bread has its main axis lying in a horizontal
position. Its shape and size remind one exactly of those little
Midsummer’s Day pears which, by virtue of their bright colouring, their
flavour and their early ripening, are so popular with the children.
There is a slight variation in the bulk of the pears found. The largest
dimensions are 45 millimetres in length by 30 millimetres in width;
[19] the smallest are 35 millimetres by 28. [20]

Without being as polished as stucco, the surface, which is absolutely
even, is carefully glazed with a thin layer of red earth. At first soft
as potter’s clay, the pyriform loaf soon dries and acquires a stout
crust which refuses to yield to the pressure of the fingers. Wood
itself is no harder. This rind is the defensive wrapper that isolates
the recluse from the world and allows him to consume his victuals in
profound peace. But, should the central mass become dried up, then the
danger is extremely serious. We shall have occasion to refer to the
unhappy lot of the grub condemned to a diet of too stale bread.

What dough does the Scarab’s bakehouse use? Who are the purveyors? The
Horse and the Mule? By no means. Yet that was what I expected—and so
would anybody—after seeing the insect make such energetic raids, for
its own use, upon the overflowing store of an ordinary lump of dung.
That is where it habitually manufactures the rolling ball which it goes
and consumes in some underground retreat.

While coarse bread, full of bits of hay, is good enough for the mother,
she becomes more particular where her children are concerned. She now
wants the very daintiest pastry, rich in nourishment and easily
digested; she wants the ovine manna: not that which the Sheep of a
costive habit scatters in trails of black olives, but that which,
elaborated in a less dry intestine, is fashioned into a single flat
cake. This is the material required, the dough exclusively used. It is
no longer the poor and stringy produce of the Horse, but an unctuous,
plastic, homogeneous thing, soaked through and through with nutritive
juices. Its plasticity and delicacy make it an admirable medium for an
artistic piece of work like the Scarab’s pear, while its alimentary
qualities suit the weak stomach of the new-born grub. There may not be
much of it, but the infant Beetle will find it sufficient for his
needs.

This explains the smallness of these pears, a point which made me
suspicious of the origin of my treasure until I found the mother
present with the provisions. I was unable to see in those little pears
the bill of fare of a future Sacred Beetle, who is so great a glutton
and of so remarkable a size.

It probably also explains my failure in the old days with my cages. In
my profound ignorance of the Sacred Beetle’s domestic life, I used to
supply her with what I could pick up here and there, droppings of Horse
or Mule; and the Beetle refused it for her children and declined to
build a nest. To-day, taught by my experience in the fields, I go to
the Sheep for my supplies and all is well in the cages. Does this mean
that the insect never employs for its breeding-pears materials derived
from the Horse, even if selected from the finest strata and carefully
cleansed from objectionable matter? If the best cannot be obtained, is
the middling refused? I prefer to be cautious and give no opinion. What
I can declare is that I inspected over a hundred burrows with a view to
writing this story, and that in every case, from first to last, the
larva’s provisions had been obtained from the Sheep.

Where is the egg in that nutritive mass so novel in shape? One would be
inclined to place it in the centre of the fat, round paunch. This
central point is best protected against accidents from the outside,
best off in the matter of temperature. Besides, the nascent grub would
here find a deep layer of food on every side of it and would not be
liable to make mistakes in the first mouthfuls. Everything being of the
same kind all round it, there would be no necessity for it to pick and
choose; wherever it chanced to apply its prentice tooth, it could
continue without hesitation its first dainty repast.

All this sounds so very rational that I allowed myself to be led away
by it. In the first pear that I examined, layer by layer, shaving off
slices with my penknife, I looked for the egg in the centre of the
paunch, feeling almost certain of finding it there. To my great
surprise, it was not there. Instead of being hollow, the centre of the
pear is full and consists of one continuous uniform alimentary mass.

My deductions, which any observer in my place would certainly have
shared, seemed very reasonable; the Scarab, however, is of another way
of thinking. We have our logic, of which we are rather proud; the
dung-kneader has hers, which is better than ours in this instance. She
has her own foresight, takes her own precautions; and she places the
egg elsewhere.

But where? Why, in the narrow part of the pear, in the neck, right at
the end! Let us cut this neck lengthwise, taking the necessary
precautions not to damage the contents. It is hollowed into a niche
with polished and shiny walls. This niche is the tabernacle of the
germ, the hatching-chamber. The egg, which is very large in proportion
to the size of the mother, is an elongated oval, about ten millimetres
in length with a diameter of five millimetres at the widest part. [21]
It is white and is separated on all sides from the walls of the chamber
by a slight empty space, the only contact being at the rear end of the
egg, which adheres to the top of the niche. Lying horizontally, in
conformity with the normal position of the pear, the whole of it,
excepting the point of attachment, thus rests upon an air-mattress,
warmest and most buoyant of beds.

Now we know all about it. Let us next try to understand the Scarab’s
logic. Let us find out why she has to make that pear of hers, so
unusual a shape in insect structures; let us seek to explain the
suitability of the egg’s curious position. We are venturing on
dangerous ground when we enquire into the how and wherefore of things.
We easily lose our footing in that mysterious land where the moving
soil gives way beneath us, swallowing the foolhardy in the quicksands
of error. Must we abandon such excursions, because of the risk? Why
should we?

What does our science, so sublime compared with the feebleness of our
resources, so contemptible in the face of the boundless stretches of
the unknown, what does it know of absolute reality? Nothing. The world
interests us only because of the ideas which we form of it. Remove the
idea and everything becomes a desert, chaos, nothingness. An
omnium-gatherum of facts is not knowledge, but at most a cold catalogue
which we must thaw and quicken at the fire of the mind; we must bring
to it thought and the light of reason; we must interpret.

Let us adopt this course to explain the work of the Sacred Beetle.
Perhaps we shall end by attributing our own logic to the insect. After
all, it will be just as remarkable to see a wonderful agreement prevail
between that which reason dictates to us and that which instinct
dictates to the insect.

A grave danger threatens the Sacred Beetle in his grub state: the
drying-up of the food. The crypt in which the larval life is spent has
a layer of earth, some four inches thick, for a ceiling. Of what avail
is this flimsy screen against the torrid heat that beats down upon the
soil, baking it like a brick to a far greater depth than that? At times
the temperature of the grub’s abode mounts towards boiling-point; when
I thrust my hand into it, I feel the hot air of a Turkish bath.

The provisions, therefore, even though they have to last but three or
four weeks, are liable to dry up before that time and to become
uneatable. When, instead of the soft bread of its first meal, the
unhappy grub finds nothing to stay its stomach but a horrible crust,
hard as a pebble and tooth-proof, it is bound to perish of hunger. And
it does actually so perish. I have found numbers of these victims of
the August sun which, after eating plentifully of the fresh food and
digging themselves a cell in it, had succumbed, unable to continue
biting into provisions that had become too hard. There remained a thick
shell, a sort of closed oven, in which the poor thing lay baked and
shrivelled up.

While the grub dies of hunger in a shell which has dried into stone,
the full-grown insect that has completed its transformations dies there
too, for it is incapable of bursting the prison and freeing itself. I
shall come back later to the question of the final emergence and will
say no more about it for the present. Let us confine our attention to
the troubles of the grub.

The drying-up of the victuals is, I have said, fatal to it. This is
proved by the larvæ found baked in their oven; it is also proved, in a
more definite fashion, by the following experiment. In July, the period
of active nidification, I place in wooden or cardboard boxes a dozen
pears unearthed that morning from their native burrows. These boxes,
carefully closed, are put away in the dark, in my study, where the same
temperature prevails as outside. Well, in none of them is the infant
reared: sometimes the egg shrivels; sometimes the worm is hatched, but
very soon dies. On the other hand, in tin boxes or glass receptacles,
everything goes well: not one attempt at rearing fails.

Whence do these differences arise? Simply from this: in the high
temperature of July, evaporation proceeds apace under the permeable
wooden or cardboard screen; the food-pear dries up; and the unfortunate
worm dies of hunger. In the impermeable tin boxes, in the
carefully-sealed glass receptacles, there is no evaporation; the
provisions retain their softness; and the grubs thrive as well as in
their native burrow.

The insect employs two methods to ward off the danger of desiccation.
In the first place, it compresses the outer layer with all the strength
of its stout, flat fore-arms, turning it into a protective rind more
homogeneous and more compact than the central mass. If I break one of
these dried-up provision-boxes, the rind usually comes clean away,
leaving the centre part bare. The whole suggests the shell and kernel
of a nut. The pressure exercised by the mother when manipulating her
pear has affected the surface layer to a depth of a few millimetres,
and this has produced the rind; the influence of the pressure is not
felt lower down, and the result is the big central kernel. In the hot
summer months, the housewife puts her bread into a closed pan, to keep
it fresh. This is what the insect does, in its fashion: by dint of
compression, it covers the family bread with a pan.

The Sacred Beetle does not stop there: she becomes a geometrician
capable of solving a delicate problem of minimum values. Other
conditions being equal, evaporation obviously takes place in proportion
to the extent of the evaporating surface. The alimentary mass must
therefore be given the smallest possible surface, in order to reduce
the waste of moisture as much as possible; at the same time, this
minimum surface must incorporate the maximum aggregate of nutritive
materials, so that the grub may find sufficient nourishment. Now what
is the form that encloses the greatest bulk within the smallest
superficial area? Geometry answers, the sphere.

The Scarab, therefore, shapes the larva’s ration into a sphere (we will
leave the neck of the pear out of the question for the moment); and
this round form is not the result of blind mechanical conditions,
imposing an inevitable shape upon the worker; it is not the violent
effect of the rolling along the ground. We have already seen that, for
the purpose of easier and swifter transit, the insect kneads into a
perfect sphere the materials which it intends to consume at a distance,
without moving that sphere from the spot on which it rests; in short,
we have realized that the round form precedes the rolling.

In the same way, it will be seen presently that the pear destined for
the grub is fashioned in the burrow. It undergoes no rolling-process,
it is not even moved. The Sacred Beetle gives it the requisite outline
exactly as a modelling artist might do, shaping his clay under the
pressure of his thumb.

With the tools which it possesses, the insect could obtain other forms
of a less delicate curve than its pear-shaped piece of work. It could,
for instance, make a rough cylinder, the sausage customary among the
Geotrupes; or, simplifying the work to the utmost, it could leave the
lump without any definite form, just as it happened to find it. Things
would proceed all the faster and would leave more time for playing in
the sun. But no: the Sacred Beetle never chooses any shape but the
sphere, though it necessitates such scrupulous accuracy; she acts as
though she knew the laws of evaporation and geometry from beginning to
end.

It remains for us to examine the neck of the pear. What can be its
object, its use? The reply forces itself upon us irresistibly. This
neck contains the egg, in the hatching-chamber. Now every germ, whether
of plant or animal, needs air, the primary stimulus of life. To admit
that vivifying combustible, the shell of a bird’s egg is riddled with
an endless number of pores. The pear of the Sacred Beetle may be
compared with the egg of the Hen. Its shell is the rind, hardened by
pressure, to avoid untimely desiccation; its nutritive mass, its meat,
its yolk is the soft ball sheltered under the rind; its air-chamber is
the terminal space, the cavity in the neck, where the air envelops the
germ on every side. Where would that germ be better off, for breathing,
than in its hatching-chamber projecting into the atmosphere and giving
free play to the passage of gases through its thin and easily permeable
wall?

In the centre of the mass, on the other hand, aeration is not so easy.
The hardened rind does not possess pores like an egg-shell’s; and the
central kernel is formed of compact matter. The air enters it
nevertheless, for presently the grub will be able to live in it: the
grub, a robust organism which does not need the same tender flutter of
life as the sensitive germ.

Where the adolescent larva thrives, the egg would die of suffocation.
Here is a proof of it. I take a small, wide-necked phial and fill it
with Sheep-dung, the fare required in this case. I push in a bit of
stick and obtain a shaft which shall represent the hatching-chamber.
Down this shaft I place an egg carefully moved from its cell. I close
the orifice and cover up everything with a thickly-heaped layer of the
same material. Here, in all excepting the shape, we have an artificial
reproduction of the Sacred Beetle’s pellet; only, in this instance, the
egg is in the centre of the mass, the place which over-hasty
considerations made us but now believe the most suitable. Well, the
point which we selected is fatal to life. The egg dies there. What has
it lacked? Apparently, proper aeration.

Plenteously enveloped by the clammy mass, which is a bad conductor of
heat, it is also deprived of the mild temperature needed for its
hatching. In addition to air, every germ requires heat. In order to be
as near as possible to the incubator, the germ in the bird’s egg is on
the surface of the yolk and, thanks to its extreme mobility, always
comes to the top, no matter what the position of the egg may be. Thus
the most is made of the maternal heating-apparatus seated upon the
brood.

In the insect’s case, the incubator is the earth, which is warmed by
the sun. Its germ likewise comes close to the heating-apparatus; it
goes as near as it can to the universal incubator, in search of its
spark of life; instead of remaining sunk in the middle of the inert
mass, it takes up its position at the top of a projecting nipple,
lapped on all sides by the warm emanations of the soil.

These conditions, air and warmth, are so fundamental that no
Dung-beetle neglects them. The piles of food hoarded vary in form, as
we shall have an opportunity of seeing: in addition to the pear, such
shapes as the cylinder, the ovoid, the pill and the thimble are
adopted, according to the genus of the manipulator; but, amid this
diversity of outline, one primary feature remains unchanged, and that
is the placing of the egg in a hatching-chamber close to the surface
which allows free access to air and heat. And the most gifted in this
delicate art of knowing just where to place the egg is the Sacred
Beetle with her pear.

I was saying just now that this foremost of dung-kneaders behaved with
a logic that rivals our own. By this time, my statement has been
completely established. Here is something better still. Let us submit
the following problem to our leading scientific lights: a germ is
accompanied by a mass of victuals liable soon to be rendered useless by
desiccation. How should the alimentary mass be shaped? Where should the
egg be laid so as to be easily influenced by air and heat?

The first question of the problem has already been answered. Knowing
that evaporation varies in proportion to the extent of the evaporating
surface, science declares that the victuals shall be arranged in the
form of a ball, because the spherical shape is that which encloses the
greatest amount of material within the smallest surface. As for the
egg, since it requires a protecting sheath to keep it from any harmful
contact, it shall be contained within a thin, cylindrical case; and
this case shall be fixed upon the sphere.

Thus the requisite conditions are fulfilled: the provisions, packed
into a ball, keep fresh; the egg, protected by its slender, cylindrical
sheath, receives the influence of warmth and air without impediment.
The strictly needful has been obtained; but it is very ugly. Utility
has paid no attention to beauty.

An artist corrects the crude work of reason. He replaces the cylinder
by a semi-ellipsoid, so much prettier in form; he joins this ellipsoid
to the sphere by means of a graceful curved surface; and the whole
becomes the pear, the necked gourd. It is now a work of art, a thing of
beauty.

The Sacred Beetle does exactly what æsthetic considerations dictate to
ourselves. Can she, too, have a sense of beauty? Is she able to
appreciate the elegance of her pear? True, she does not see it: she
manipulates it in profound darkness. But she touches it. A poor touch
hers, roughly clad in horn, yet not insensible, after all, to delicate
contours.

It occurred to me to put children’s intelligence to the test with this
problem in æsthetics suggested by the Sacred Beetle’s work. I wanted
very immature minds, hardly opened, still slumbering in the misty
clouds of early childhood, in short, approximating as nearly as
possible to the vague intellect of the insect, if any such
approximation is permissible. At the same time I wanted them to be
clear-headed enough to understand me. I selected some untutored
youngsters, of whom the oldest was six.

I submitted to this tribunal the work of the Sacred Beetle and a
geometrical production of my own fingers, representing in the same
dimensions the sphere surmounted by a short cylinder. Taking each of
them aside, as though for confession, lest the opinion of one should
influence the opinion of another, I sprang my two toys upon them and
asked them which they thought the prettier. There were five of them;
and they all voted for the Sacred Beetle’s pear.

I was struck by this unanimity. The rough little peasant-lad, who has
scarcely yet learnt how to blow his nose, has already a certain sense
of elegance of form. He can distinguish between the beautiful and the
ugly. Can this be also true of the Sacred Beetle? No one who knew what
he was talking about would venture to say yes; no one either would
venture to say no. It is a question that cannot be answered, since we
cannot consult the one and only judge in this case. After all, the
solution might very well be exceedingly simple. What does the flower
know of its glorious corolla? What does the snowflake know of its
exquisite hexagonal stars? Like the flower and the snowflake, the
Sacred Beetle might well be ignorant of the beautiful, though it be her
work.

There is beauty everywhere, on the express condition that there be an
eye capable of recognizing it. Is this eye of the mind, this eye which
appraises correctness of form, to some extent an attribute of the dumb
creation? If the Toad’s ideal of beauty is unquestionably the She-toad,
outside the irresistible attraction of the sexes is there really such a
thing as beauty to an animal? Considered generally, what is beauty,
actually? Beauty is order. What is order? Harmony in the whole design.
What is harmony? Harmony is.... But enough. Answers would follow upon
questions without ever touching the real principle of it all, the
immovable foundation. What a lot of philosophizing over a lump of dung!
It is high time to change the subject.



CHAPTER V

THE SACRED BEETLE: THE MODELLING


Here we are on solid ground, in the domain of facts, of things that can
be seen and recorded. How does the Sacred Beetle obtain the maternal
pear? To begin with, it is certain that this shape is not achieved by
the process of transport, for it is not at all what one would get from
haphazard rolling in all directions. The belly of the gourd might be
made in that way; but the neck, the elliptical nipple hollowed into a
hatching-chamber: that delicate work could never result from a series
of violent, irregular bumps. A goldsmith does not hammer out a jewel on
a blacksmith’s anvil! Together with other sound reasons already
adduced, the pear-shaped outline delivers us, I hope, once and for all,
from the antiquated belief that the egg has its home inside a
roughly-jolted sphere.

To produce his masterpiece, the sculptor retires to his den. Even so
the Sacred Beetle. She shuts herself in her crypt, with the materials
which she has brought down there, in order to concentrate upon her
modelling. The block out of which she is to shape her pear may be
obtained in two ways. Sometimes the Beetle manages to secure from the
heap, by the method familiar to us, a fine mass of material which is
kneaded into a ball on the spot and which is a perfect sphere before it
is set in motion. Were it only a question of provisions intended for
her own meal, she would never act otherwise.

When the ball is deemed big enough, if the place does not suit her
wherein to dig the burrow, she sets out with her rolling burden, going
at random till she lights upon a favourable spot. On the way, the ball,
without becoming any rounder than it was to start with, hardens a
little on the surface and is encrusted with earth and tiny grains of
sand. This earthy rind, picked up on the road, is an authentic sign of
a more or less long journey. The detail is not without importance; we
shall find it useful presently.

At other times, the Beetle may hit upon a suitable site for her burrow
close to the heap which has provided her block. The soil may be free
from pebbles and easy to dig. In that case there is no need of any
travelling, and consequently no need to make a ball. The soft droppings
of the Sheep are gathered and stored as found, entering the workshop as
a shapeless mass, either in one lump or, if need be, in several.

This rarely happens under natural conditions, because of the roughness
of the ground, which is full of stones and flints. Sites practicable
for easy digging are few and far between; and the insect has to roam
about, with its burden, to find them. In my cages, on the other hand,
where the layer of earth has been passed through a sieve, it is the
usual case. Here the soil is easy to dig at any point; and so the
mother, who is anxious to get her eggs laid, merely lowers the nearest
lump underground, without waiting to give it any definite form.

Whether this storing without any preliminary modelling or carting take
place in the fields or in my cages, the ultimate result is most
striking. One day, I see a shapeless lump disappear into the crypt.
Next day, or the day after, I visit the workshop and find the artist in
front of her work. The original formless mass, the armfuls of scrapings
carried down, have become a pear perfect in outline and exquisitely
finished.

The artistic object bears the marks of its method of manufacture. The
part that rests upon the bottom of the cavity is crusted over with
earthy particles; all the rest is of a glossy polish. Owing to its
weight, owing also to the pressure exercised when the Beetle
manipulated it, the pear, while still quite soft, became soiled with
grains of earth on the side that touched the floor of the workshop; on
the remainder, which is the larger part, it has retained the delicate
finish which the insect was able to give it.

The inferences to be drawn from these carefully noted details are
obvious: the pear is no turner’s work; it has not been obtained by any
sort of rolling on the ground of the spacious studio, for in that case
it would have been soiled with earth all over. Besides, its projecting
neck eliminates this method of fabrication. And its unblemished upper
surface is eloquent testimony that it has not even been turned from one
side to the other. The Beetle, therefore, has moulded it where it lies,
without turning or shifting it at all; she has modelled it with little
taps of her broad paddles, just as we saw her model her ball in the
daylight.

Let us now return to what usually happens in the free state. The
materials then come from a distance and are carried into the burrow in
the form of a ball covered with soil on every part of its surface. What
will the insect do with this sphere which contains the paunch of the
future pear ready-made? It would be easy to answer this if I concerned
myself only with results, without troubling how those results were
obtained. It would be enough for me, as I have often done, to capture
the mother in her burrow with her ball and take the whole lot home, to
my insect laboratory, in order to keep a close watch on events.

I fill a large glass jar with earth, sifted, moistened and heaped to
the desired depth. I place the mother and the beloved pill which she is
clasping on the surface of this artificial soil. I stow away the
apparatus in a dim corner and wait. My patience is not tried very long.
Urged by the insistent ovaries, the Beetle resumes her interrupted
work.

In certain cases, I see her, still on the surface, destroying her ball,
ripping it up, cutting it to pieces, shredding it. This is not in the
least the act of one in despair who, finding herself a captive, breaks
the precious object in her madness. It is based on sound hygienics. A
scrupulous inspection of the morsel which she has gathered in haste,
among lawless competitors, is often necessary, for supervision is not
always easy on the harvest-field itself, in the midst of thieves and
robbers. The ball may be harbouring a collection of little Onthophagi
and Aphodii who passed unnoticed in the heat of acquisition.

These involuntary intruders, finding themselves very well-off in the
heart of the mass, would make good use of the future pear, much to the
detriment of the legitimate consumer. The ball must be purged of this
hungry brood. The mother, therefore, pulls it to pieces and scrutinizes
the fragments closely. Then the sorted bits are carefully put together
again and the ball remade, this time without any earthy rind. It is
dragged underground and becomes an immaculate pear, always excepting
the surface touching the soil.

Oftener still, the ball is thrust by the mother into the soil in the
jar just as I took it from the burrow, still with the rough crust which
it has acquired in its cross-country rolling from the place where it
was obtained to the place where the insect intends to use it. In that
event, I find it at the bottom of my jar transformed into a pear, but
still rough and encrusted with earth and sand over the whole of its
surface, thus proving that the pear-shaped outline has not demanded a
general recasting of the mass, inside as well as out, but has been
obtained by simple pressure and by drawing out the neck.

This is how, in the vast majority of cases, things happen under normal
conditions. Almost all the pears that I dig up in the fields have rinds
and are unpolished, some more, others less. If we put on one side the
inevitable incrustations due to the carting-process, these blemishes
would seem to point to a prolonged rolling in the interior of the
subterranean manor. The few which I find perfectly smooth, especially
those wonderfully neat specimens furnished by my cages, dispel this
mistake entirely. They show us that, when the materials are collected
near the burrow and stored away unshaped, the pear is modelled wholly
without rolling; they prove to us that, in other cases, the lines of
earth and grit on the outside of the ball are not a sign of its having
been rolled to and fro in the workshop, but are simply the marks of a
fairly long journey on the surface of the ground.

To be present at the construction of the pear is no easy matter: the
mystery-loving artist obstinately refuses to do any work as soon as the
light reaches her. She needs absolute darkness for her modelling; and I
need light if I would see her at her task. It is impossible to unite
the two conditions. Let us try, nevertheless; let us catch some
glimpses of the truth whose fulness eludes our vision.

The arrangements made are as follows: I once more take the big jar. I
cover the bottom with a layer of earth two or three inches deep. To
obtain the transparent workshop necessary for my observations, I fix a
tripod on the earthy layer and, on this support, about four inches in
height, I place a round piece of deal of the same diameter as the jar.
The glass-walled chamber thus marked out will represent the roomy crypt
in which the insect works. A piece is scolloped out of the edge of the
deal block, large enough to permit of the passage of the Beetle and her
ball. Lastly, above this screen, I heap a layer of earth as deep as the
jar allows.

During the operation, a portion of the upper earth falls through the
opening and slips down to the lower space in a wide inclined plane.
This was a circumstance which I had foreseen and which was
indispensable to my plan. By means of this slope, the artist, when she
has found the communicating trap-door, will make for the transparent
cell which I have arranged for her. She will make for it, of course,
only provided that she be in perfect darkness. I therefore make a
cardboard cylinder, closed at the top, and place it over the glass jar.
Left standing where it is, the opaque sheath will provide the dusk
which the insect wants; suddenly raised, it will give the light which I
want.

Things being thus arranged, I go in quest of a mother who has just
withdrawn into solitude with her ball. A morning’s search is enough to
provide me with what I need. I place the mother and her ball on the
surface of the upper layer of earth; I cap the apparatus with its
cardboard sheath; and I wait. I say to myself that the Beetle is too
persevering to give up work until her egg is housed and that she will
therefore dig herself a new burrow, dragging her ball with her as she
goes; she will pass through the upper layer of earth, which is not
sufficiently thick; she will come upon the deal board, an obstacle
similar to the broken stones that often bar her passage in the course
of her normal excavations; she will investigate the cause of the
impediment and, finding the opening, will descend through this
trap-door to the lower compartment, which, being free and roomy, will
represent to the insect the crypt whence I have just removed it. But
all this takes time; and I must wait for the morrow to satisfy my
impatient curiosity.

The hour has come: let us go and see. The study-door was left open
yesterday: the mere sound of the door-handle might disturb and stop my
distrustful worker. By way of greater precaution, before entering I put
on noiseless slippers. And now, whoosh! The cylinder is removed.
Capital! My forecast was correct.

The Beetle occupies the glazed studio. I surprise her at work, with her
broad foot laid on the rough model of the pear. But, startled by the
sudden light, she remains motionless, as though petrified. This lasts a
few seconds. Then she turns her back upon me and awkwardly ascends the
inclined plane, to reach the dim heights of her gallery. I give a
glance at the work, take note of its shape and its position, and once
more restore darkness with the cardboard sheath. Let us not prolong our
intrusion, if we would renew the test.

My sudden, short visit gives us some idea of the mysterious work. The
ball, which at first was absolutely spherical, is now depressed at the
top into a sort of shallow crater with a swollen rim. The thing reminds
me, on a very much smaller scale, of certain prehistoric pots, with a
round belly, a thick-lipped mouth and a narrow groove round the neck.
This rough model of the future pear tells us of the insect’s method, a
method identical with that of pleistocene man ignorant of the potter’s
wheel.

The plastic ball, ringed at one end, has had a groove made in it, the
starting-point of the neck of the pear; it has also been drawn out
slightly into a rather blunt projection. In the centre of this
projection pressure has been applied. The first stage of the work
therefore consists merely in placing a ring round the ball and applying
pressure.

Towards evening I pay another sudden visit, in complete silence. The
insect has recovered from its excitement of the morning and gone down
again to its workshop. Troubled by the flood of light, baffled by the
strange events to which my artifices give rise, it at once makes off
and takes refuge in the upper story. The poor mother, persecuted by
these illuminations, moves away into the darkest recesses; but she goes
regretfully, with hesitating steps.

The work has progressed. The crater has become deeper; its thick lips
have disappeared, are thinner, closer together, drawn out into the neck
of a pear. The object, however, has not changed its place. Its position
and direction are exactly as I noted them before. The side that rested
on the ground is still at the bottom, at the same point; the side that
faced upwards is still at the top; the crater that lay on my right has
been replaced by the neck, still on my right. All of which gives
conclusive proof of my earlier statements: there is no rolling, but
only pressure, which kneads and shapes.

The next day, a third visit. The pear is finished. Its neck, yesterday
a yawning sack, is now closed. The egg, therefore, is laid; the work is
completed and demands only the finishing touches of general polishing,
touches upon which the mother, so intent on geometrical perfection, was
doubtless engaged at the time when I disturbed her.

The most delicate part of the business escapes my observation. Roughly
speaking, I can see plainly how the egg’s hatching-chamber is obtained:
the thick pad surrounding the original crater is thinned and flattened
under the pressure of the feet and is lengthened into a sack the mouth
of which gradually narrows. Up to this point the work provides its own
explanation. But, when we think of the insect’s rigid tools, its broad,
toothed fore-arms, whose spasmodic movements remind us of the stiff
gestures of an automaton, we are left without any explanation of the
exquisite perfection of the cell which is to be the hatching-chamber of
the egg.

With this crude equipment, excellently adapted to pickaxe-work though
it be, how does the Scarab obtain the natal dwelling, the oval nest so
daintily polished and glazed within? Does her foot, a regular saw,
fitted with enormous teeth, begin to rival the artist’s brush in
delicacy from the moment when it is inserted through the narrow orifice
of the sack? Why not? I have said elsewhere, and this is the moment to
say it again: the tool does not make the workman. The insect exercises
its own particular talents with any kind of tool with which it is
supplied. It can saw with a plane or plane with a saw, like the model
workman of whom Franklin tells us. The same strong-toothed rake which
the Sacred Beetle uses to open up the earth she also employs as a
trowel and brush wherewith to glaze the stucco of the chamber in which
the grub will be born.

In conclusion, one more detail concerning this hatching-chamber. At the
extreme end of the neck of the pear, one point is always pretty clearly
distinguished: it bristles with stringy fibres, while the rest of the
neck is carefully polished. This is the plug with which the mother has
closed the narrow opening after carefully depositing the egg; and this
plug, as its hairy structure shows, has not been subjected to the
pressure exerted over all the rest of the mass, working into it any
projecting bits, however small, till not the slightest sign of
roughness remains.

Why does the extreme end of the pear receive this special treatment, a
most curious exception, when nothing else has eluded the heavy blows of
the insect’s legs? The reason is that the hind-end of the egg rests
against this plug, which, were it pressed down and driven in, would
transmit the pressure to the germ and imperil its safety. So the
mother, aware of the risk, stops the hole without ramming down the
stopper: the air in the hatching-chamber is thus more easily renewed;
and the egg escapes the dangerous activity of the powerful rammer.



CHAPTER VI

THE SACRED BEETLE: THE LARVA


Under the thin ceiling of the burrow, the Sacred Beetle’s egg undergoes
the varying influences of the sun, the supreme incubator. Consequently
there is not, nor can there be, any fixed date for the quickening of
the germ. In very hot, sunny weather, I have obtained a grub five or
six days after the egg was laid; with a more moderate temperature, I
have had to wait until the twelfth day. June and July are the
hatching-months.

As soon as the new-born grub has flung aside its swaddling clothes, it
forthwith bites into the walls of its chamber. If starts eating its
house, not anyhow, but with unerring wisdom. If it nibbled at the thin
side of its cell—and there is nothing to dissuade it, for here as
elsewhere the materials are of excellent quality—if its mandibles
scraped the extreme end of the nipple, the weakest point, it would make
a breach in the protecting wall before it had sufficient putty to
repair that breach. This putty is the material which we shall see the
larva using later, when accidents of that kind occur from external
causes.

If it ate into its heap of provisions at random, it would expose itself
to serious risks from the outside; at the very least it would be liable
to slip out of its cradle and tumble to the ground through the open
window. Once it falls out of its cell, there is no hope for the little
grub. It will not know how to make its way back to the larder; and, if
it does find its heap of provisions again, it will be repelled by the
hard rind with its bits of grit and sand. In its wisdom, greater than
any possessed by the young of the higher animals, which are always
watched over by a mother, the new-born larva, still sleek and shiny
with the slime of the egg, thoroughly knows the danger and avoids it by
masterly tactics.

Though all the food around it is alike and all is to its taste,
nevertheless it tackles exclusively the floor of its cell, a floor
continued by the bulky sphere in which bites will be permissible in
every direction, as the consumer pleases.

Can any one explain why this particular spot is chosen as the
starting-point, when there is nothing to distinguish it, from the point
of view of food? Could the tiny creature be warned of the proximity of
the outer air by the effect which a thin wall has on its sensitive
skin? If so, how is this effect produced? Besides, what does a grub,
that moment born, know of outside dangers? I am quite in the dark.

Or rather I begin to see daylight. I recognize once again, under
another aspect, what was taught me some years ago by the Scolia-wasps
[22] and the Sphex-wasps, [23] those scientific eaters, those skilful
anatomists, who can discriminate so well between the lawful and the
unlawful and are consequently able to devour their prey without killing
it until the end of the meal. The Sacred Beetle has his own complicated
art of eating. Though he need not trouble about the preservation of the
victuals, which are not liable to go bad, he has nevertheless to guard
against ill-timed mouthfuls, which would rob him of his shelter. Of
these dangerous mouthfuls, the earliest are the most to be feared,
because of the creature’s weakness and the thinness of the wall. As its
protection, therefore, the grub has, in its own way, the primal
inspiration without which none would be able to live; it obeys the
imperious voice of instinct, which says:

‘There shalt thou bite and no elsewhere.’

And, respecting all the rest, however tempting, it bites at the
prescribed spot; it eats into the pear at the bottom of the neck. In a
few days it has worked its way deep down into the mass, where it waxes
big and fat, transforming the filthy material into a plump larva
gleaming with health, ivory-white with slate-coloured reflections and
without a speck of dirt upon it. The matter which has disappeared, or
rather which has been remelted in life’s crucible, leaves empty a round
cell into which the grub fits itself, curving its back under the
spherical dome and bending double.

The time has come for a sight stranger than any yet displayed to me by
the industrial prowess of an insect. Anxious to observe the grub in the
intimacy of its home, I open in the belly of the pear a little
peep-hole half a centimetre [24] square. The head of the recluse at
once appears in the opening, to enquire what is happening. The breach
is perceived. The head disappears. I can just see the white back
turning about in the narrow cabin; and, then and there, the window
which I have made is closed with a soft, brown paste, which soon
hardens.

The inside of the cabin, said I to myself, is no doubt a semifluid
porridge. Turning round, as is shown by the sudden slide of its back,
the grub has collected a handful of this material and, completing the
circuit, has stuck its load, by way of mortar, in the breach which it
considered dangerous. I remove the plug. The grub acts as before, puts
its head at the window, withdraws it, spins round as easily as a nut in
its shell and forthwith produces a second plug as ample as the first.
Forewarned of what was coming, this time I saw more clearly.

What a mistake I had made! However, I am not so much startled as I
might be: in the art of defence, animals often employ means which our
imagination would not dare to contemplate. It is not the grub’s head
that is presented at the breach, after the preliminary twisting: it is
the other extremity. It does not bring a lump of its alimentary dough,
gathered by scraping the walls: it excretes upon the aperture to be
closed, which is a much more economical proceeding. Sparingly measured
out, the rations must not be wasted: there is just enough to live upon.
Besides, the cement is of better quality; it soon sets. Lastly, the
urgent repairs are more quickly effected if the intestines lend their
kindly aid.

They do, in point of fact, and to an astonishing degree. Five, six
times in succession and oftener, I remove the plug; and, time after
time, the mortar ejects a copious discharge from its apparently
inexhaustible reservoir, which is ever at the mason’s service, without
an interval for rest. The grub is already beginning to resemble the
Sacred Beetle, whose stercoraceous prowess we know: it is a past master
in the art of dunging. It possesses above any other animal in the world
an intestinal docility which anatomy presently will undertake to
explain to us in part.

The plasterer and the mason have their trowels. In the same way, the
grub, that zealous repairer of breaches made in its home, has a trowel
of its own. The last segment is lopped off slantwise and carries on its
dorsal surface a sort of inclined plane, a broad disk surrounded by a
fleshy pad. In the middle of the disk is a slit, forming the
cementing-aperture. There you have your trowel, a most respectable one,
flattened out and supplied with a rim to prevent the compressed matter
from flowing away uselessly.

As soon as the mass of plastic matter has been emitted, the levelling-
and compressing-instrument sets to work to introduce the cement well
into the irregularities of the breach, to push it right through the
thickness of the ruined portion, to give it consistency and smooth it.
After this trowel-work, the grub turns round: it comes and finishes the
job with its wide forehead and improves it with the tip of its
mandibles. Wait a quarter of an hour; and the repaired portion will be
as firm as the rest of the shell, so quickly does the cement set.
Outside, the repairs are betrayed by the irregular projections where
the stuff has been forced out, the part which the trowel could not
reach; but, inside, there is no trace of the breakage: the usual polish
has been restored at the damaged spot. A plasterer stopping a hole in
one of our walls could produce no better piece of work.

Nor do the grub’s talents end here. With its cement it becomes the
mender of pots and pans. Let me explain. I have compared the outside of
the pear, which, when pressed and dried, becomes a stout shell, with a
jar containing fresh food. In the course of my excavations, sometimes
made on difficult soil, I have happened occasionally to break this jar
with an ill-directed blow of my trowel. I have collected the potsherds,
pieced them together, after restoring the grub to its place, and kept
the whole thing united by wrapping it in a scrap of newspaper.

On reaching home, I have found the pear put out of shape, no doubt, and
seamed with scars, but just as solid as ever. During the walk, the grub
had restored its ruined dwelling to condition. Cement injected into the
cracks joined the pieces; inside, a thick plastering strengthened the
inner wall, so much so that the repaired shell was quite as good as the
untouched shell, except for the irregularity of the outside. In its
artistically-mended stronghold the grub found the peace essential to
its existence.

The time has come to ask ourselves the reason for this plasterer’s
craft. Destined to live in complete darkness, does the larva stop the
cracks made in its house in order to avoid the unwelcome intrusion of
the light? But it is blind. There is no trace of an organ of sight on
its yellowish headpiece. The absence of eyes, however, does not
authorize us to deny the influence of the light, an influence which
perhaps is vaguely resented by the grub’s delicate skin. Proofs are
required. Here they are.

I manage to make my breach almost in the dark. The little light that
remains is just sufficient to guide my house-breaking-implement. When
the opening is made, I at once lower the shell into a dark box. A few
minutes later, the hole is stopped. Despite the darkness in which it
found itself, the grub has thought fit to seal up its cell.

In small jars packed full of provisions, I bring up larvæ taken from
their native pear. A pit is dug in the mass of foodstuffs, ending at
the bottom in a hemisphere. This cavity, representing about the half of
the pear, will be the artificial cell given in exchange for the natural
one. I put the grubs on which I am experimenting into separate cells.
The change of residence produces no appreciable anxiety. Finding the
food of my selecting very much to their taste, they bite into the walls
with their customary appetite. Exile in no way perturbs those stoical
stomachs; and my attempts at breeding are pursued unchecked.

A remarkable thing now happens. All my transplanted ones work little by
little to complete the round nest of which my pit represented only the
lower half. I have provided the flooring. They propose to add a
ceiling, a dome, and thus to shut themselves up in a spherical
enclosure. The materials are the putty supplied by the intestines; the
building-tool is the trowel, the inclined plane of the final segment.
Soft bricks are laid on the margin of the well. When these have set,
they serve as a support for a second row, sloping slightly inwards.
Other rows follow, marking the curve of the general structure more and
more distinctly. Also, from time to time, a wriggle of the hinder part
assists in determining the spherical conformation. In this way, without
any supporting scaffold, without the cradle indispensable to our
architects in building an arched roof, a commanding dome is obtained,
built upon space and completing the sphere which I began.

Some of them shorten the work. The glass wall of the little jar
occasionally comes within range. Its smooth surface suits the taste of
these fastidious polishers; its curve, to a certain extent, coincides
with that of their plan. They make use of it, doubtless not from
economy of labour and time, but because, to their mind, the smooth
round wall is a thing of their own making. In this way there is
reserved, on the sides of the cupola, a large glazed window which
answers my purpose admirably.

Well, the grubs which, all day long and for weeks on end, receive the
bright light of my study through this window of mine keep as quiet as
the others, eating and digesting, and never trouble to shut out any
unwelcome rays with a blind made of their putty. We may take it
therefore that, when the larva so eagerly closes the breach which I
have made in its chamber, its object is not to protect itself from the
light.

Does it fear draughts then, when it scrupulously fills up the least
cranny through which the air might enter? This again is not the
solution. The temperature is the same in my room and in the grub’s;
besides, when I perpetrate my burglaries, the atmosphere in my study is
absolutely still. I do not examine the prisoner in a gale, but in the
calm of my workroom, in the even profounder calm of a glass jar.

There can be no question of a cold breeze, which would be painful to a
very sensitive skin; and nevertheless the air is the enemy to be
avoided at all costs. If it flowed in at all plentifully through a
breach, with the dryness which the July heat imparts to it, the
provisions would be dried up. Faced with an uneatable biscuit, the grub
would become languid and anæmic and would soon perish of hunger. The
mother, to the best of her abilities, has guarded her offspring against
death from starvation by making her pear round and giving it a stout
rind; but, for all that, her children are not released from every
obligation to watch their rations. If they want bread that keeps soft
and fresh to the last, they must in their turn see to it that the
provision-jar is properly closed. Crevices may appear, fraught with
grave danger. It is important to stop them up without delay. This, if I
be not utterly at fault, is the reason why the grub is a plasterer
armed with a trowel and provided with a workshop that can always
furnish plenty of putty. The pot-mender repairs his cracked jar in
order to keep his bread nice and soft.

A serious objection suggests itself. The slits, the breaches, the
vent-holes which I see so zealously cemented are the work of my
instruments: tweezers, penknife, dissecting-needles. It cannot be
maintained that the grub is endowed with its strange talent to protect
itself against the troubles brought upon it by human curiosity. What
has it to fear from man, in its life underground? Nothing, or next to
nothing. Since the Sacred Beetle started rolling his ball under the
broad canopy of the sky, I am probably the first to worry his family in
order to make them talk to me and instruct me. Others will come after
me perhaps; but they will be very few! No, man’s destructive
interference is not worth the pains of providing one’s self with a
trowel and cement. Then why this art of stopping crevices?

Wait. In its apparently peaceful home, in its round shell which seems
to give it such perfect security, the grub nevertheless has its
troubles. Which of us has not, from the greatest to the smallest? They
begin at birth. Though I have only touched the fringe of the matter, I
am already aware of three or four sorts of grievous accidents to which
the Sacred Beetle’s larva is liable. Plants, animals, blind physical
forces, all work its ruin by destroying its larder.

Competition is rife around the cake served up by the Sheep. When the
mother Scarab arrives to take her share and manufacture her pill, the
bit is often at the mercy of fellow-banqueters of whom the smallest are
the most to be dreaded. There are especially little Onthophagi, earnest
workers crouching under the shelter of the cake. Some prefer to plunge
into the richest part and bury themselves ecstatically in its luscious
depths. One of these is Schreber’s Onthophagus, who is a shiny
ebon-black, with four red spots on his wing-cases. Another is the
smallest of our Aphodii (Aphodius pusillus, Herbst), who confides her
eggs, here and there, to the thick part of the cake. In her hurry, the
mother Scarab does not examine her harvest very carefully. While some
of the Onthophagi are removed, others, buried in the centre of the
mass, escape notice. Besides, the Aphodius’ eggs are so small that they
elude her vigilance. In this way a contaminated lump of paste is taken
into the burrow and moulded.

The pears in our gardens suffer from vermin which disfigure them with
scars. The Sacred Beetle’s pears suffer even worse ravages. The
Onthophagus shut in by accident ferrets about and pulls them to pieces.
When, filled to repletion, the glutton wishes to make his exit, he
pierces them with circular holes large enough to admit a lead-pencil.
The evil is worse still with the Aphodius, whose family hatch, develop
and undergo their transformation in the very heart of the provisions.
My notes contain descriptions of pears perforated in every direction,
riddled with a multitude of holes that serve for the escape of the tiny
dung-worker, a parasite in spite of himself.

With table-fellows such as these, who bore ventilating-shafts in the
provisions, the Sacred Beetle’s grub dies if the miners be numerous.
Its trowel and mortar cannot cope with so great a task. They can cope
with it if the damage be slight and the intruders few. At once stopping
up every passage that opens around it, the grub holds its own against
the invader; it disgruntles him and drives him away. The pear is saved
and preserved from internal desiccation.

Various Cryptogamia have a finger in the pie. They invade the fertile
soil of the pill, make it rise in scales, split it with fissures by
implanting their pustules. In its shell cracked by this vegetation, the
grub would die were it not for the safeguard of its mortar, which puts
an end to these desiccating vent-holes.

It puts an end to them in a third case, the most frequent of all.
Without the intervention of any ravager, whether animal or plant, the
pear pretty often peels of its own accord, swells and tears. Is this
due to a reaction in the outer layer, which was too tightly pressed by
the mother when modelling? Is it due to an attempt at fermentation? Or
is it not rather the result of a contraction similar to that of clay,
which splits in drying? All three causes might very well play their
part.

But, without saying anything positive on this point, I will draw
attention to certain deep fissures which seem to threaten the soft
bread with desiccation, inadequately protected as it is by the cracked
jar. Have no fear that these spontaneous breaches will do any harm: the
larva will soon put them right. In the distribution of gifts, it was
not for nothing that the trowel and putty were awarded to the Sacred
Beetle’s grub.

We will now give a brief description of the larva, without stopping to
enumerate the articulations of the palpi and antennæ, which are
wearisome details of no immediate interest. It is a fat grub and has a
fine, white skin, with pale slate-coloured reflections proceeding from
the digestive organs, which are visible when you hold the creature to
the light. Bent into a broken arch or hook, it is not unlike the grub
of the Cockchafer, but has a much more ungainly figure, for, on its
back, at the sudden bend of the hook, the third, fourth and fifth
segments of the abdomen swell into an enormous hump, a tumour, a bag so
prominent that the skin seems on the point of bursting under the
pressure of the contents. This is the animal’s most striking feature:
the fact that it carries a knapsack.

The head is small, in proportion to the grub’s size, is slightly
convex, bright-red and studded with a few pale bristles. The legs are
fairly long and sturdy, ending in a pointed tarsus. The grub does not
use them as a means of progression. When taken from its shell and
placed upon the table, it struggles in clumsy contortions without
succeeding in shifting its position; and the helpless creature betrays
its anxiety by repeated discharges of its mortar.

Let us also mention the terminal trowel, that last segment lopped into
a slanting disk and rimmed with a fleshy pad. In the centre of this
inclined plane is the open stercoraceous slit, which thus, by a very
unusual inversion, occupies the upper surface. A huge hump and a
trowel: that gives you the insect in two words.

In his Histoire naturelle des coléoptères de France, Mulsant describes
the larva of the Sacred Beetle. He tells us with meticulous detail the
number and shape of the joints of the palpi and antennæ; he sees the
hypopygium [25] and its pointed bristles; he sees a multitude of things
in the domain of the microscope; and he does not see the monstrous
knapsack that takes up almost half the insect, nor does he see the
strange configuration of the last segment. There is not a doubt in my
mind that the writer of this minute description has made a mistake: the
larva of which he speaks is nothing like that of the Sacred Beetle.

We must not finish the history of the grub without saying a few words
about its internal structure. Anatomy will show us the works wherein
the cement employed in so eccentric a manner is manufactured. The
stomach or chylific ventricle is a long, thick cylinder, starting from
the creature’s neck after a very short œsophagus. It measures about
three times the insect’s length. In its last quarter, it carries a
voluminous lateral pocket distended by the food. This is a subsidiary
stomach in which the supplies are stored so as to yield their nutritive
principles more thoroughly. The chylific ventricle is much too long to
lie straight and twists round in front of its appendix, in the form of
a large loop occupying the dorsal surface. It is to contain this loop
and the side-pocket that the back swells into a hump. The grub’s
knapsack is, therefore, a second paunch, an annexe, as it were, of the
stomach, which is by itself incapable of holding the voluminous
digestive apparatus. Four very fine, very long tubular glands, very
much entangled, four Malpighian vessels mark the limits of the chylific
ventricle.

Next comes the intestine, which is narrow and cylindrical and rises in
front. The intestine is followed by the rectum, which pushes backwards.
This last, which is exceptionally large and furnished with stout walls,
is wrinkled across, bloated and distended with its contents. There you
have the roomy warehouse in which the digestive refuse accumulates;
there you have the mighty ejaculator, ever ready to provide cement.



CHAPTER VII

THE SACRED BEETLE: THE NYMPH; THE RELEASE


The larva increases in bulk as it eats the walls of its house from the
inside. Little by little, the belly of the pear is scooped out into a
cell whose capacity grows in proportion to the growth of its
inhabitant. Ensconced in its hermitage, supplied with board and
lodging, the recluse waxes big and fat. What more is wanted? Certain
hygienic duties have to be attended to, though it is no easy matter in
a cramped little niche nearly all the room in which is occupied by the
grub; the mortar incessantly elaborated by an excessively obliging
intestine must be shot somewhere when there is no breach that needs
repairing.

The larva is certainly not fastidious, but even so the bill of fare
must not be too outrageous. The humblest of the humble does not return
to what he or his kin have already digested. Matter from which the
intestinal alembic has extracted the last available atom yields nothing
more, unless we change both chemist and apparatus. What the Sheep, with
her fourfold stomach, has left behind as worthless residue is an
excellent thing for the grub, which also boasts a mighty paunch; but
the larva’s own droppings, though no doubt pleasing in their turn to
consumers of another class, are loathsome to the grub itself. Then
where shall the cumbrous refuse be stored, in a lodging of such
niggardly dimensions?

I have described elsewhere the singular industry of the Cotton-bees,
[26] whose larvæ, in order not to foul their provision of honey, make
from their digestive dregs an elegant casket, a masterpiece of inlaid
work. With the only material at its disposal in its secluded retreat,
with the filth that apparently ought to be an intolerable nuisance, the
grub of the Sacred Beetle produces a work less artistic than the
Cotton-bee’s but much more comfortable. Let us see how it is done.

Attacking its pear at the bottom of the neck, eating steadily downwards
and leaving nothing intact in its area of operations except a flimsy
wall necessary for its protection, the larva obtains a free space at
the back, in which its droppings are deposited without dirtying the
provisions. The hatching-chamber is the first to be filled up in this
way; then gradually more and more of the segment which has been eaten
into follows suit, always in the round part of the pear, which
consequently by degrees recovers its original compactness at the top,
while the bottom becomes less and less thick. Behind the grub is the
ever-increasing mass of used material; in front of it is the layer,
smaller day by day, of untouched food.

Complete development is attained in four or five weeks. By that time
there is in the belly of the pear an eccentric circular cavity, with
walls very thick towards the neck of the pear and very flimsy at the
other end, the disparity being occasioned by the method of eating and
of progressive filling up. The meal is over. Next comes the furnishing
of the cell, which must be padded snugly for the tender body of the
nymph, and the strengthening of one of the hemispheres, the one whose
walls have been scraped by the last bites to the utmost permissible
limit.

For this most important work the larva has wisely reserved a plentiful
stock of cement. The trowel therefore begins to be busy. This time, the
object is not to repair damage; it is to double and treble the
thickness of the wall in the weaker hemisphere and to cover the whole
surface with stucco which, after being polished by the movements of the
grub’s body, will be soft to the touch. As this cement acquires a
consistency superior to that of the original materials, the grub is at
last contained within a stout casket which defies all efforts to open
it with one’s fingers and is almost capable of withstanding a blow from
a stone.

The apartment is ready. The grub sheds its skin and becomes a nymph.
There are very few inhabitants of the insect world that can compare for
sober beauty with the delicate creature which, with wing-cases
recumbent in front of it like a wide-pleated scarf and fore-legs folded
under its head like those of the adult Beetle when counterfeiting
death, calls to mind a mummy kept by its linen bandages in the approved
hieratic attitude. Semitranslucent and honey-yellow, it looks as though
it were carved from a block of amber. Imagine it hardened in this
state, mineralized, rendered incorruptible: it would make a splendid
topaz gem.

In this marvel of beauty, so severe and dignified in shape and
colouring, one point above all captivates me and at last provides me
with the solution of a far-reaching problem. Have the fore-legs a
tarsus, yes or no? This is the great matter that makes me neglect the
jewel for the sake of a structural detail. Let us then return to a
subject that used to excite me in my early days, for the answer has
come at last, late, it is true, but certain and indisputable. The
probabilities which were all that my first investigations could give me
turn into certainties established by overwhelming evidence.

By a very strange exception, the full-grown Sacred Beetle and his
congeners have no front tarsi: they lack on their fore-limbs the
five-jointed finger which is the rule among the highest section of
Beetles, the Pentamera. The remaining legs, on the other hand, follow
the general law and possess a very well-shaped tarsus. Does this
curious formation of the toothed fore-arms date from birth, or is it
accidental?

At first sight, an accident seems not unlikely. The Sacred Beetle is a
strenuous miner and a great pedestrian. Always in contact with the
rough soil, whether in walking or digging, used moreover for constant
leverage when the insect is rolling its pill backwards, the front limbs
are exposed much more freely than the others to the danger of spraining
and twisting their delicate finger, of putting it out of joint, of
losing it entirely, from the first moment when the work begins.

Lest this explanation should appeal to any of my readers, I will hasten
to undeceive him. The absence of the front fingers is not the result of
an accident. Here before my eyes lies the unanswerable proof. I examine
the nymph’s legs with the magnifying glass: those in front have not the
least vestige of a tarsus; the toothed limb ends bluntly, without any
trace of a terminal appendage. In the others, on the contrary, the
tarsus is as distinct as can be, notwithstanding the shapeless, lumpy
condition due to the swaddling-bands and humours of the nymphal state.
It suggests a finger swollen with chilblains.

If the evidence of the nymph were not sufficient, there would still be
that of the perfect insect, which, casting its mummy-cloths and moving
for the first time in its shell, wields fingerless fore-arms. The point
is established for a certainty: the Sacred Beetle is born maimed; his
mutilation dates from the beginning.

‘Very well,’ our popular theorists will reply, ‘the Sacred Beetle is
mutilated from birth; but his remote ancestors were not. Formed
according to the general rule, they were correct in structure down to
this tiny digital detail. There were some who, in their rough work as
navvies and carters, wore out that fragile, useless member which was
always in the way; and, finding themselves all the better equipped for
their work by this accidental amputation, they bequeathed it to their
successors, to the great benefit of their race. The present insect
profits by the improvement obtained by a long array of ancestors and,
acting under the stimulus of the struggle for life, gives more and more
durability to a favourable condition due to chance.’

O ingenious theorists, so triumphant on paper, so impotent in the face
of facts, just listen to me for a moment! If the loss of the front
fingers is a fortunate circumstance for the Sacred Beetle, who
faithfully transmits the leg of olden time fortuitously maimed, why
should it not be so with the other limbs, if they too chanced to lose
their terminal appendage, a tiny, feeble filament, which is very nearly
useless and which, owing to its fragility, is a cause of awkward
encounters with the roughness of the soil?

The Sacred Beetle is not a climber; he is an ordinary pedestrian,
supporting himself upon the point of an iron-shod stick, whereby I mean
the stout spike or prickle with which the tip of his leg is armed. He
has no occasion to hold on by his claws to some hanging branch, as the
Cockchafer does. It would therefore, meseems, be entirely to his
advantage to rid himself of the four remaining digits, which jut out
sideways, give no help in walking, and do not play any part in the
making and the carting of the ball. Yes, that would mean progress, for
the simple reason that the less hold you give the enemy the better. It
remains to be seen if chance ever produces this state of things.

It does and very often. At the end of the fine weather, in October,
when the insect has worn itself out in digging, in trundling pills and
in modelling pears, the maimed, disabled by their exertions, form the
great majority. Both in my cages and out of doors, I see them in all
stages of mutilation. Some have lost the finger on their four
hind-limbs altogether; others retain a stump, a couple of joints, a
single joint; those least damaged have a few members left intact.

Here then is the mutilation on which the philosophers base their
theory. And it is no rare accident: every year the cripples outnumber
the others when the time comes for retiring to winter-quarters. In
their final labours they seem no more embarrassed than those who have
been spared by the buffeting of life. On both sides I find the same
nimbleness of movement, the same dexterity in kneading the reserve of
bread which will enable them to bear the first rigours of winter with
equanimity in their underground homes. In scavenger’s work, the maimed
rival the others.

And these cripples found families: they spend the cold season beneath
the soil; they wake up in the spring, return to the surface and take
part for a second time, sometimes even for a third, in life’s great
festival. Their descendants ought to profit by an improvement which has
been renewed year by year, ever since Sacred Beetles came into the
world, and which has certainly had time to become fixed and to convert
itself into a settled habit. But they do nothing of the sort. Every
Sacred Beetle that breaks his shell, with not one exception, is endowed
with the regulation four tarsi.

Well, my theorists, what do you say to that? For the two front legs you
offer a sort of explanation; and the four others give you a categorical
denial. Have you not been taking your fancies for facts?

Then what is the cause of the Sacred Beetle’s original mutilation? I
will frankly confess that I have no idea. Nevertheless those two maimed
members are very strange, so strange indeed that they have enticed the
masters, the greatest masters, into lamentable errors. Listen, first of
all, to Latreille, [27] the prince of descriptive entomologists. In his
article on the insects which ancient Egypt painted or carved upon her
monuments, [28] he quotes the writings of Horapollo, [29] a unique
document preserved for us in the papyri for the glorification of the
sacred insect:


   ‘One would be tempted at first,’ he says, ‘to set down as fiction
    what Horapollo says of the number of this Beetle’s fingers:
    according to him, there are thirty. Nevertheless, this computation,
    judged by the way in which he looks at the tarsus, is quite
    correct, for this part consists of five joints; and, if we take
    each of them for a finger, the legs being six in number and each
    ending in a five-jointed tarsus, the Sacred Beetles evidently had
    thirty fingers.’


Forgive me, illustrious master: the number of joints is but twenty,
because the two fore-legs are without tarsi. You were carried away by
the general rule. Losing sight of the singular exception, which you
certainly knew, you said thirty, obsessed for a moment by that
overwhelmingly positive rule. Yes, you knew the exception, so much so
that the figure of the Scarab accompanying your article, a figure drawn
from the insect and not from the Egyptian monuments, is irreproachably
accurate: it has no tarsi on its front legs. The blunder is pardonable,
because the exception is so unusual.

Mulsant, [30] in his volume on the French Lamellicorns, quotes
Horapollo and his allowance of thirty fingers to the insect according
to the number of days which the sun takes to traverse a sign of the
Zodiac. He repeats Latreille’s explanation. He goes even farther. Here
are his own words:


   ‘If we count each joint of the tarsi as a finger, we must admit
    that this insect was examined with great attention.’


Examined with great attention! By whom, pray? By Horapollo? Not a bit
of it! By you, my master: yes, indeed yes! And yet the rule, in its
very positiveness, is misleading you for a moment; it misleads you
again and in a more serious fashion when, in your illustration of the
Sacred Beetle, you represent the insect with tarsi on its fore-legs,
tarsi similar to those on the other legs. You, painstaking describer
though you be, have in your turn been the victim of a momentary
aberration. The rule is so general that it has made you lose sight of
the singularity of the exception.

What did Horapollo himself see? Apparently what we see in our day. If
Latreille’s explanation be right, as everything seems to indicate, if
the Egyptian author began by counting the first thirty fingers
according to the number of joints in the tarsi, it is because he made a
mental enumeration on the basis of the general circumstances. He was
guilty of a slip which was not so very reprehensible, seeing that, more
than a thousand years later, masters like Latreille and Mulsant were
guilty of the same slip. If we must blame something, let us blame the
exceptional structure of the insect.

‘But,’ I may be asked, ‘why should not Horapollo have seen the exact
truth? Perhaps the Sacred Beetle of his day had tarsi which the insect
no longer possesses. In that case, it has been transformed by the slow
work of time.’

I am waiting for some one to show me a natural Scarab of Horapollo’s
period before I reply to this objection on the part of the
evolutionists. The tombs which so religiously guard the Cat, the Ibis
and the Crocodile must also contain the sacred insect. All that I have
by me is a few figures showing the Scarab as we find him engraved on
the monuments or carved in fine stone as an amulet for the mummies. The
ancient artist is remarkably faithful in the execution of the thing as
a whole; but his graver and chisel have not troubled about such
insignificant details as the tarsi.

Poor as I am in documents of this kind, I doubt whether the work of
sculptor or engraver will solve the problem. Even if an image with
front tarsi were discovered somewhere or other, the question would be
no further advanced. It would always be possible to plead a mistake, an
oversight, a leaning towards symmetry. The doubt, so long as it
prevails in certain minds, can be removed only by the sight of the
ancient insect in the natural state. I will wait for it, though
convinced beforehand that the Sacred Beetle of the Pharaohs differed in
no way from our own.

We will stay a little longer with the old Egyptian author, though his
wild allegorical jargon is usually incomprehensible. He is sometimes
strikingly accurate in his ideas. Is this due to a chance coincidence?
Or is it the result of serious observation? I should be glad to take
the latter view, so perfect is the agreement between his statements and
certain biological details of which our own science was ignorant until
quite lately. Of the home life of the Sacred Beetle Horapollo knew much
more than we do. He tells us this in particular:


   ‘The Scarabæus deposits this ball in the earth for the space of
    twenty-eight days (for in so many days the moon passes through the
    twelve signs of the Zodiac). By thus remaining under the moon the
    race of Scarabæi is endowed with life; and upon the twenty-ninth
    day, after having opened the ball, it casts it into water, for it
    is aware that upon that day the conjunction of the moon and sun
    takes place, as well as the generation of the world. From the ball
    thus opened, the animals, that is, the Scarabæi, issue forth.’ [31]


Let us dismiss the revolution of the moon, the conjunction of the sun
and moon, the generation of the world and other astrological
absurdities, but remember this, the twenty-eight days of incubation
required by the ball underground, the twenty-eight days during which
the Scarab is born to life. Let us also remember the indispensable
intervention of water to bring the insect out of its burst shell. These
are definite facts, falling within the domain of true science. Are they
imaginary or real? The question deserves investigation.

The ancients were unacquainted with the wonders of the metamorphosis.
To them a larva was a worm born of corruption. The wretched creature
had no future to lift it from its abject state: as worm it appeared and
as worm it must disappear. It was not a mask whereunder a higher form
of life was being elaborated; it was a definite entity, supremely
contemptible and doomed soon to return to the putrescence of which it
was the offspring.

To the Egyptian author, then, the Scarab’s larva was unknown. And, if
by chance he had had before his eyes the insect’s shell inhabited by a
fat, pot-bellied grub, he would never have suspected in the foul and
ugly animal the sober beauty of the future Scarab. According to the
ideas of the time, ideas that were long maintained, the sacred insect
had neither father nor mother: an error excusable among the untutored
ancients, for here the two sexes are outwardly indistinguishable. It
was born of the ordure that formed its ball; and its birth dated from
the appearance of the nymph, that amber jewel displaying, in a
perfectly recognizable shape, the features of the adult insect.

In the eyes of antiquity the life of the Sacred Beetle began at the
moment when he could be recognized, not before; for otherwise we should
have that as yet unsuspected connecting-link, the grub. The
twenty-eight days, therefore, during which, as Horapollo tells us, the
offspring of the insect quickens, represent the duration of the nymphal
phase. This duration has been the object of special attention in my
studies. It varies but never to any great extent. From my notes I find
thirty-three days to be the longest period and twenty-one the shortest.
The average, supplied by some twenty observations, is twenty-eight
days. This very number twenty-eight, this number of days contained in
four weeks, actually appears oftener than the others. Horapollo spoke
truly: the real insect takes life in the space of a lunar month.

The four weeks passed, behold the Sacred Beetle in his final shape: the
shape, yes, but not the colouring, which is very strange when the nymph
casts its skin. The head, legs and thorax are dark-red, except the
denticulations of the forehead and fore-arms, which are smoky-brown.
The abdomen is an opaque white; the wing-cases are semitransparent
white, very faintly tinged with yellow. This imposing raiment, blending
the scarlet of the cardinal’s cassock with the white of the celebrant’s
alb, a raiment that harmonizes with the insect’s hieratic character, is
but temporary and turns darker by degrees, to make way for a uniform of
ebon black. About a month is needed for the horny armour to acquire a
firm consistency and a definite hue.

At last the Beetle is fully matured. Awakening within him is the
delicious restlessness born of coming freedom. He, hitherto a son of
the darkness, foresees the gladness of the light. Great is his longing
to burst the shell so that he may emerge from his underground prison
and come into the sun; but the difficulty of liberating himself is no
small one. Will he or will he not escape from the natal cradle, which
has now become a hateful dungeon? It depends.

Generally in August the Sacred Beetle is ripe for release: in August,
save for rare exceptions, the most torrid, dry and scorching month of
the year. If therefore no shower come from time to time to give some
slight relief to the panting earth, then the cell to be burst and the
wall to be breached defy the strength and patience of the insect, which
is helpless against all that hardness. Owing to prolonged desiccation,
the soft original matter has become an insuperable rampart; it has
turned into a sort of brick baked in the kiln of summer.

I have, of course, made experiments on the insect in these difficult
circumstances. I gather pear-shaped shells containing the adult Beetle,
who is on the point of emerging, in view of the lateness of the season.
These shells are already dry and very hard; and I lay them in a box
where they retain their dryness. Sooner or later I hear the sharp
grating of a rasp inside each cell. It is the prisoner working to make
himself an outlet by scraping the wall with the rake of his forehead
and fore-feet. Two or three days elapse; and the process of deliverance
seems to be no further advanced.

I come to the assistance of a pair of them by myself opening a loophole
with a knife. My idea is that this first breach will help the egress of
the recluse by giving him a place to start upon, an exit that will only
need widening. But not at all: these favoured ones make no more
progress with their work than the others.

In less than a fortnight silence prevails in all the shells. The
prisoners, worn out with vain endeavours, have perished. I break the
caskets containing the deceased. A meagre pinch of dust, hardly as much
as an average pea in bulk, is all that those powerful implements, rasp,
saw, harrow and rake, have succeeded in detaching from the invincible
wall.

I take some other shells, of equal hardness, wrap them in a wet rag and
put them in a flask. When the moisture has soaked through them, I rid
them of their wrapper and keep them in the corked flask. This time
events take a very different course. Softened to a nicety by the wet
rag, the shells open, burst by the efforts of the prisoner, who props
himself boldly on his legs, using his back as a lever; or else, scraped
away at one point, they crumble to pieces and reveal a yawning breach.
The experiment is a complete success. In every case the release of the
Beetles is safely accomplished: a few drops of water have brought them
the joys of the sun.

For the second time Horapollo was right. True, it is not the mother, as
the ancient writer says, who throws her ball into the water: it is the
clouds that provide the liberating douche, it is the rain that brings
about the ultimate release. In the natural state things must happen as
in my experiments. When the soil is burnt by the August sun, the
shells, baked like bricks under their thin covering of earth, are for
most of the time hard as stones. It is impossible for the insect to
wear away its casket and escape. But let a shower come—that life-giving
baptism which the seed of the plant and the family of the Beetle alike
await within the cinders of the earth—let a little rain fall; and soon
there will be a resurrection in the fields.

The earth becomes soaked. There you have the wet rag of my experiment.
At its touch the shell recovers the softness of its early days, the
casket becomes yielding; the insect makes play with its legs and pushes
with its back; it is free. It is in fact in September, during the first
rains that herald autumn, that the Sacred Beetle leaves his native
burrow and comes forth to enliven the pastoral sward, even as the
former generation enlivened it in the spring. The clouds, hitherto so
ungenerous, at last set him free.

When the earth is exceptionally cool, the bursting of the shell and the
deliverance of its occupant can occur at an earlier period; but in
ground scorched by the pitiless summer sun, as is usually the case in
my district, the Beetle, however eager he may be to see the light, must
needs wait for the first rain to soften his stubborn shell. A downpour
is to him a question of life and death. Horapollo, that echo of the
Egyptian magi, saw true when he made water play its part in the birth
of the sacred insect.

But let us drop the jargon of antiquity, with its fragments of truth;
let us not overlook the first acts of the Scarab on leaving his shell;
and let us be present at his prentice steps in open-air life. In August
I break the casket in which I hear the helpless captive chafing. I
place the insect, the only one of its species, in a cage together with
some Gymnopleuri. There is plenty of fresh food provided. This is the
moment, said I to myself, when we take refreshment after so long an
abstinence. Well, I was wrong: the new recruit shows no interest in the
victuals, notwithstanding my invitations, my summons to the tempting
heap. What he wants above all is the joys of the light. He scales the
metal trelliswork, sets himself in the sun, and there motionless takes
his fill of its beams.

What passes through his dull-witted Dung-beetle brain during this first
bath of radiant brightness? Probably nothing. His is the unconscious
happiness of a flower blossoming in the sun.

At last the insect goes to the victuals. A pellet is made in accordance
with all the rules. There is no apprenticeship: at the first attempt,
the spherical form is achieved as accurately as after long practice. A
burrow is dug in which the bread just kneaded may be eaten in peace.
Here again we find the novice thoroughly versed in his art. No length
of experience will add anything to his talents.

His digging-tools are his fore-legs and forehead. To shoot the rubbish
outside, he uses the barrow, exactly like any of his elders, that is to
say, he covers his corselet with a load of earth; then, head downwards,
he dives into the dust, afterwards coming forward and depositing his
load a few inches from the entrance. With a leisurely step, like that
of a navvy with a long job before him, he goes underground again to
reload his barrow. This work upon the dining-room takes whole hours to
finish.

At length the ball is stored away. The front-door is shut; and the
thing is done. Bed and board secured, begone dull care! All is for the
best in the best of all possible worlds. Lucky creature! Without ever
seeing it practised by your kindred, whom you have not yet met, without
ever learning it, you know your trade to perfection; and it will give
you an ample share of food and tranquillity, both so hard to achieve in
human life.



CHAPTER VIII

THE BROAD-NECKED SCARAB; THE GYMNOPLEURI


What we have learnt from the Sacred Beetle must not lead us into rash
generalizations and make us attribute it in every slightest detail to
the other Dung-beetles of the same family. Similarity of structure does
not entail parity of instincts. A common basis no doubt exists,
resulting from identity of equipment; but many variations of the
essential theme are possible and are dictated by inherent aptitudes of
which the insect’s organization gives us no inkling. In fact, the study
of these variations, of these peculiarities, with their hidden reasons,
forms the most attractive part of the observer’s researches as he
explores his corner of the entomological domain. Unsparing of time and
patience, sometimes of ingenuity, you have at last learnt what this one
does. See now what that one does, his near neighbour structurally. To
what extent does number two repeat the habits of number one? Has he
ways of his own, tricks of the trade, industrial specialities unknown
to the other? It is a highly interesting problem, for the impassable
line of demarcation between the two species is much more conspicuous in
these psychological differences than in the differences of the
wing-case or antenna.

The Scarab clan is represented in my district by the Sacred Beetle
(Scarabæus sacer, Lin.), the Half-spotted Scarab (S. semipunctatus,
Fab.) and the Broad-necked Scarab (S. laticollis, Lin.). The two former
are chilly creatures and hardly stir from the Mediterranean; the third
goes pretty far north. The Half-spotted Scarab does not leave the
coast; he abounds on the sandy beaches of the Golfe Juan, Cette and
Palavas. I have, in my time, admired his prowess at pill-rolling, of
which he is as fervent a devotee as his colleague the Sacred Beetle.
To-day, though we are old friends, I cannot, to my great regret, give
my attention to him: we are too far away from each other. I recommend
him to any one wishing to add a chapter to Scarab biography: he also
must have—I feel nearly sure of it—peculiarities worth noting.

And so, to complete this study, there remains in my immediate proximity
only the Broad-necked Scarab, the smallest of the three. He is very
rare around Sérignan, though widely distributed in other parts of the
Vaucluse. This scarcity deprives me of opportunities for observing the
insect in the open fields; and my only resource is to bring up a few
chance specimens in captivity.

Behind the wire-gauze of his prison, the Broad-necked Scarab does not
display the Sacred Beetle’s athletic prowess nor his bold and hasty
temper. In his case we see no scuffles between robber and robbed, no
pills manufactured purely for art’s sake, rolled for a little while
with wild enthusiasm and then consigned to the rubbish-heap without
being employed at all. The same blood does not flow in the veins of the
two pill-rollers.

Of a quieter disposition and less wasteful of his gleanings, the Beetle
with the broad corselet attacks discreetly the heap of manna provided
by the Sheep; he picks from the best part some armfuls of material
which he makes into a ball; he attends to his business without
troubling the others or being troubled by them. For the rest, his
methods are the same as those of the Sacred Beetle. The sphere, which
is always an easier object to convey, is fashioned on the spot before
being set in motion. With his wide fore-legs the Beetle pats and kneads
and moulds it, making it smooth and level by adding an armful here and
there. The perfect roundness of the ball is achieved before it leaves
the place.

When the requisite size has been obtained, the pill-roller makes his
way with his booty to the spot where the burrow is to be dug. The
journey is effected exactly as it would be by the Sacred Beetle. Head
downwards, hind-legs lifted against the rolling mechanism, the insect
pushes backwards. So far there is nothing new, save for a certain
slowness in the performance. But wait a little while: soon a striking
difference in habits will separate the two insects.

As each pill is carted away, I seize it, together with its owner, and
place both on the surface of a layer of fresh, close-packed sand in a
flower-pot. A sheet of glass serves as a lid, keeps the sand nice and
cool, prevents escape and admits the light. By interning each Beetle
separately, I am saved from the mistakes which might arise if I put
them in the common cage, where a number of my boarders are at work; and
I shall not risk ascribing to several what may be the performance of
one alone. By this solitary confinement, each individual Beetle’s work
can be studied more easily.

The interned mother makes hardly any protest against her servitude.
Soon she is digging the sand and disappears in it with her pill. Let us
give her time to establish her quarters and to get on with her domestic
labours.

Three or four weeks go by. The Beetle has not reappeared upon the
surface, a proof of her patient absorption in her maternal duties. At
last I remove the contents of the pot, very carefully, layer by layer,
until I uncover a spacious burrow. The rubbish from this cavity was
heaped up on the surface, forming a little mound. This is the secret
chamber, the gynæceum in which the mother now and for a long time to
come keeps watch over her budding family.

The original pill has disappeared. In its stead are two little pears,
elegantly shaped and wonderfully finished: two, not one, as I naturally
expected from the information already in my possession. They strike me
as being even more delicately and gracefully rounded than the Sacred
Beetle’s. Perhaps their tiny dimensions cause my preference: maxime
miranda in minimis. They measure 33 millimetres in length and 24
millimetres across their greatest width. [32] Let us drop figures and
admit that the dumpy modeller, with her slow and awkward ways, is the
artistic rival or even the superior of her famous kinswoman. I expected
to see some clumsy apprentice; I find a consummate artificer. We must
not judge people by appearances; it is a wise maxim, even when applied
to insects.

If we examine the pot somewhat earlier, it will tell us how the pear is
made. I find sometimes a perfectly round ball and a pear without any
traces of the original pill; sometimes a ball only, with a nearly
hemispherical remnant of the pill, a lump from which the materials
subjected to modelling have been detached in one piece. The method of
work can be deduced from these facts.

The pill which the Scarab fashions on the surface of the soil by taking
armfuls from the heap encountered is but a temporary piece of work,
which is given a round form with the sole object of facilitating its
transport. He gives his attention to it, no doubt, but is not unduly
anxious about it; all that he wants is that the journey should be
effected without any crumbling of his treasure or impediment in the
rolling. The surface of the sphere, therefore, is not thoroughly
treated; it is not compressed into a rind or made scrupulously even.

Underground, when it is a question of getting the egg’s casket ready,
the casket that is to be both larder and cradle, it becomes another
matter. An incision is made all round the pill, dividing it into two
almost equal portions, and one half is subjected to manipulation, while
the other lies just against it, destined to receive the same treatment
later. The hemisphere worked upon is rounded into a ball, which will be
the belly of the prospective pear. This time, the modelling is
performed with the nicest care: the future of the larva, which also is
exposed to the dangers of overdry bread, is at stake. The surface of
the ball is therefore patted at one spot after the other,
conscientiously hardened by compression and levelled along a regular
curve. The spherule thus obtained possesses geometrical precision, or
very nearly so. Let us not forget that this difficult work is
accomplished without rolling, as the clean condition of the surface
shows.

The rest of the business may be guessed from the proceedings of the
Sacred Beetle. The sphere is hollowed into a crater and becomes a sort
of bulging, shallow pot. The lips are drawn out into a pocket which
receives the egg. The pocket is closed, polished outside and joined
neatly to the sphere. The pear is finished. The other half of the pill
is now similarly treated.

The notable feature of this work is the elegant regularity of the forms
obtained without any rolling. Chance enables me to add another and a
most striking proof to the many that I have given of this modelling
done on the spot. Once and once only I managed to get from the
Broad-necked Scarab two pears closely soldered together by their
bellies and lying in opposite directions. The first one constructed can
teach us nothing new, but the second tells us this: when, for a reason
that is not apparent, for lack of room perhaps, the insect left this
second pear touching the other and soldered it to its neighbour while
working at it, obviously, with this appendage, any rolling or any
moving became impracticable. Nevertheless, the pretty shape was secured
to perfection.

From the point of view of instinct, the distinguishing features which
make of the two pear-modellers two entirely different species are
absolutely clear from these details and much more conclusive than the
peculiarities in the corselet and wing-case. The Sacred Beetle’s burrow
never contains more than one pear. The Broad-necked Scarab’s contains
two. I even suspect that there are sometimes three, when the haul is a
large one: we shall learn more on this subject from the Copres. The
first, when she gets her pill underground, uses it just as she obtained
it in the workyard and does not subdivide it at all. The second breaks
up hers, though it is a little smaller, into two equal parts and
fashions each half into a pear. The single ball gives place to two and
sometimes even perhaps to three. If the two Dung-beetles have a common
origin, I should like to know how this radical difference in their
domestic economy declared itself.

The story of the Gymnopleuri is the same as that of the Scarabs, on a
more modest scale. To pass it over in silence, for fear of too much
sameness, would be to deprive ourselves of evidence calculated to
confirm certain theories whose truth is established by the recurrence
of similar facts. Let us set it forth, in an abridged form.

The Gymnopleurus family owes its name to a lateral notch in the
wing-cases, which leaves a part of the sides bare. It is represented in
France by two species. One, with smooth wing-cases (G. pilularius,
Fab.), is fairly common everywhere; the other (G. flagellatus, Fab.),
stippled on the top with little holes, as though the insect had been
pitted with small-pox, is rarer and prefers the south. Both species
abound in the pebbly plains of my neighbourhood, where the Sheep pass
amid the lavender and thyme. Their shape is not unlike that of the
Sacred Beetle; but they are much smaller. For the rest, they have the
same habits, the same fields of operation, the same nesting-period: May
and June, down to July.

Applying themselves to similar labours, Gymnopleuri and Scarabs are
brought into each other’s society rather by the force of things than by
the love of company. I not infrequently see them settling next door to
each other; I even oftener find them seated at the same heap. In bright
sunshine the banqueters are sometimes very numerous. The Gymnopleuri
predominate largely.

One would be inclined to think that these insects, endowed with powers
of nimble and sustained flight, explore the country in swarms and that,
when they find rich plunder, they all swoop down upon it at once.
Though the sight of so large a crowd might seem to mean something of
the kind, I am very sceptical about these expeditions in large
squadrons. I am more ready to believe that the Gymnopleuri have come,
from everywhere in the neighbourhood, one by one, guided by keenness of
scent. What I see is a gathering of individuals who have hastened from
every point of the compass, and not the halt of a swarm engaged on a
common search. No matter: the teeming colony is at times so numerous
that it would be possible to pick up the Gymnopleuri by handfuls.

But they hardly give one time. When the peril is realized, which soon
happens, most of them fly off with all speed; the others crouch low and
hide themselves under the heap. In a moment the tumult of activity is
succeeded by absolute stillness. The Sacred Beetle is not subject to
these sudden attacks of panic, which empty the busiest yard in the
twinkling of an eye. When surprised at his task and examined at close
quarters, however importunately, he impassively continues his work. He
knows no fear. Here we see a thorough difference in temperament between
insects which are identical in structure and which follow the same
trade.

The difference is equally marked in another respect: the Sacred Beetle
is a fervent pill-roller. When the ball is made, his supreme felicity,
his summa voluptas, is to cart it backwards for hours at a time, to
juggle with it, so to speak, under a blazing sun. His epithet
pilularius notwithstanding, the Gymnopleurus does not show so much
enthusiasm over a round pellet. Unless he means to feed upon it quietly
in a burrow or to use it as a ration for his larva, he never kneads a
ball only to roll it about ecstatically and then abandon it when this
violent exercise has given him his fill of pleasure.

Both in his wild state and in captivity, the Gymnopleurus makes his
meal on the spot where he finds his food; it is hardly his habit to
make a round loaf in order to consume it afterwards in some underground
retreat. The pill to which the insect owes its name is rolled, so far
as I have seen, only in the interests of its family.

The mother takes from the heap the amount of material required for
rearing a larva and kneads it into a ball at the spot where it is
gathered. Then, going backwards, with her head down, like the Scarabs,
she rolls it and finally stores it in a burrow, in order to give it the
necessary treatment for the egg to thrive.

Of course the rolling ball never contains the egg. The laying takes
place not on the public highway but in the privacy of the subsoil. A
burrow is dug, two or three inches deep at most. It is spacious in
proportion to its contents, proving that the Sacred Beetle’s
studio-work is repeated by the Gymnopleurus. I am speaking of that
modelling in which the artist must have full liberty of movement. When
the egg is laid, the cell remains empty; only the passage is filled up,
as witness the little mound outside, the surplus of the unreplaced
refuse.

A minute’s digging with my pocket-trowel and the humble cabin is laid
bare. The mother is often present, occupied in some trifling household
duties before quitting the cell for good. In the middle of the room
lies her work, the cradle of the germ and the ration of the coming
larva. Its shape and size are those of a Sparrow’s egg; and I am here
speaking of both Gymnopleuri, whose habits and labours are so much
alike that I need not distinguish between them. Unless we found the
mother beside it, we should be unable to tell whether the ovoid which
we have dug up is the work of the smooth or of the pock-marked insect.
At most, a slight advantage in size might point to the former; and even
so this characteristic is far from trustworthy.

The egg-shape, with its two unequal ends, one large and round, the
other more pointed, shaped like an elliptical nipple, or even drawn out
into the neck of a pear, confirms the conclusions with which we are
already acquainted. An outline of this kind is not obtained by rolling,
which is only reconcilable with a sphere. To get it, the mother must
knead her lump of stuff. This may be already more or less round, as the
result of the work done in the yard whence it came and of the
subsequent carting, or it may still be shapeless, if the heap was near
enough to allow of immediate storing. In short, once at home, she acts
like the Sacred Beetle, and does modelling-work.

The material lends itself well to this. Taken from the most plastic
stuff supplied by the Sheep, it is shaped as easily as clay. In this
way the graceful, firm, polished ovoid is obtained, a work of art like
the pear and as exquisite in its soft curve as a bird’s egg.

Where, inside it, is the insect’s germ? If we argued rightly when
discussing the Sacred Beetle, if really the questions of ventilation
and warmth demand that the egg be as near as possible to the
surrounding atmosphere, while remaining protected by a rampart, it is
evident that the egg must be installed at the small end of the ovoid,
behind a thin defensive wall.

And this in fact is where it lies, lodged in a tiny hatching-chamber
and wrapped on every side in a blanket of air, which is easily renewed
through a slender partition and a matted plug. This position did not
surprise me; from what the Sacred Beetle had already taught me I
expected it. The point of my knife, this time no novice, went straight
to the ovoid’s pointed teat and scratched. The egg appeared,
magnificently confirming the argument which had at first been merely
suspected, then dimly seen and finally changed into certainty by the
recurrence of the fundamental facts under varying conditions.

Scarabs and Gymnopleuri are modellers who were not educated in the same
school; they differ in the outline of their masterpiece. With the same
materials, the first manufacture pears, the second for the most part
ovoids; and yet, despite this divergence, they both conform to the
essential conditions demanded by the egg and by the grub. The grub
wants provisions that are not liable to become prematurely dry. This
condition is fulfilled, so far as may be, by giving the mass a round
shape, which evaporates less quickly because of its smaller surface.
The egg requires unrestricted air and the heat of the sun’s rays,
conditions which are fulfilled in the one case by the pear with its
neck and in the other by the ovoid with its pointed end.

Laid in June, the egg of either species of Gymnopleuri hatches in less
than a week. The average is five or six days. Any one who has seen the
larva of the Sacred Beetle knows, so far as essentials go, the larva of
the two small pill-rollers. In each case it is a big-bellied grub,
curved into a hook and carrying a hump or knapsack which contains a
portion of the mighty digestive apparatus. The body is cut off
slantwise at the back and forms a stercoral trowel, denoting habits
similar to those of the Sacred Beetle’s larva.

We see repeated, in fact, the peculiarities described in the story of
the big pill-roller. In the larval state, the Gymnopleuri also are
great excreters, ever ready with mortar to make good the imperilled
dwelling. They instantly repair the breaches which I make, either to
observe them in the privacy of their home or to provoke their
plastering-industry. They fill up the chinks with putty, solder the
parts that become disjointed, mend the broken cell. When the nymphosis
approaches, the mortar that remains is expended in a layer of stucco,
which reinforces and polishes the inner walls.

The same dangers give rise to the same defensive methods. Like the
Sacred Beetles’, the shell of the Gymnopleuri is liable to crack. The
free admission of air to the interior would have disastrous
consequences, by drying the food, which must keep soft until the grub
has attained its full growth. An intestine which is never empty and
which displays unparalleled docility gets the threatened grub out of
its trouble. There is no need to enlarge upon this point; the Sacred
Beetle has told us all about it.

The insects reared in captivity tell me that, in the Gymnopleuri, the
larva lasts seventeen to twenty-five days and the nymph fifteen to
twenty. These figures are bound to vary, but within narrow limits. I
shall therefore fix each period at approximately three weeks.

Nothing remarkable happens during the nymphal stage. The only thing to
be noted is the curious costume worn by the perfect insect on its first
appearance. It is the costume which the Sacred Beetle showed us: head,
corselet, legs and chest a rusty red; wing-cases and abdomen white. We
may add that, being powerless to burst his shell, which has been turned
into a strong-box by the heat of August, the prisoner, in order to
release himself, waits until the first September rains come to his help
and soften the wall.

Instinct, which under normal conditions amazes us with its unerring
prescience, astonishes us no less with its dense ignorance when
unaccustomed conditions supervene. Each insect has its trade, in which
it excels, its series of actions logically arranged. Here it is really
a master. Its foresight, though unwitting, here surpasses our
deliberate science; its unconscious inspiration is here the superior of
our conscious reason. But divert it from its natural course; and
forthwith darkness succeeds the splendours of light. Nothing will
rekindle the extinguished rays, not even the greatest stimulus that
exists, the stimulus of maternity.

I have given many instances of this strange antithesis, [33] which is
the death-blow to certain theories; I find another and an exceedingly
striking one in the Dung-beetles whose story I have now nearly finished
telling. We are surprised at this clear vision of the future possessed
by our manufacturers of spheres, pears and ovoids; but we are no less
surprised by something totally different, namely, the mother’s profound
indifference to the nursery which but now was the object of her
tenderest cares.

My remarks apply equally to the Sacred Beetle and the two Gymnopleuri,
all of whom display the same admirable zeal when the grub’s comfort has
to be assured, and later, with no less unanimity, the same
indifference. I surprise the mother in her burrow before she has laid
her eggs, or, if the laying be over, before she has added those
meticulous after-touches dictated by her exaggerated conscientiousness.
I install her in a pot packed full of earth, placing her on the surface
of the artificial soil, together with her work, in its more or less
advanced state. In this place of banishment, provided that it be quiet,
there is not much hesitation. The mother, who until now has held her
precious materials tight-clutched, decides to dig a burrow. As the work
of excavation progresses, she drags her pellet down with her, for it is
a sacred thing with which she must not part at any time, even amid the
difficulties of her digging. Soon the cell in which the pear or the
ovoid is to be made is in existence at the bottom of the pot.

I now intervene and turn the pot upside down. Everything is
topsy-turvy; the entrance-gallery and the terminal hall disappear. I
extract the mother and the pellet from the ruins. Once more the pot is
filled with earth; and the same test begins all over again. A few hours
are enough to restore the courage shaken by all this upheaval. For the
second time, the mother buries herself with the heap of provisions
destined for the grub. For the second time also, when the establishment
is finished, the overturning of the pot unsettles everything. The
experiment is renewed. Persisting in its maternal solicitude, if
necessary until its strength gives way, the insect again buries itself,
together with its sphere.

Four times over, in two days, I have thus seen the mother Beetle bear
up under the devastation which I have wrought and start afresh, with
touching patience, on the ruined dwelling. I did not think fit to
pursue the test. You feel some scruples in submitting maternal
affection to such tribulations as these. However, it seems probable
that, sooner or later, the exhausted and bewildered insect would have
refused to go on digging.

My experiments of this kind are numerous; and they all prove that, when
taken from her burrow with her work unfinished, the mother shows
indefatigable perseverance in burying and depositing in a place of
safety the cradle which has begun to take shape though as yet
untenanted. For the sake of a pellet of stuff which the presence of the
egg has not yet turned into a sacred thing, she displays exaggerated
prudence and caution, as well as amazing foresight. No tricks of the
experimenter, no all-upsetting accidents, nothing, unless her strength
be worn out, can divert her from her object. She is filled with a sort
of indomitable obsession. The future of her race requires that the lump
of stuff should descend into the earth; and descend it will, whatever
happens.

Now for the other side of the medal. The egg is laid; everything is in
order underground. The mother comes out. I take hold of her as she does
so; I dig up the pear or ovoid; I place the work and the worker side by
side on the surface of the soil, in the conditions that prevailed just
now. This assuredly is the right moment for burying the pill. It
contains the egg, a delicate thing which a touch of the sun will wither
in its thin wrapper. Expose it for fifteen minutes to the heat of the
sun’s rays; and all will be lost. What will the mother do in this grave
emergency?

She does nothing at all. She does not even seem to perceive the
presence of the object which was so precious to her yesterday, when the
egg was not yet laid. Zealous to excess before the laying is over, she
is indifferent afterwards. The finished work no longer concerns her.
Imagine a pebble in the place of the ovoid or pear: the mother would
treat it no better and no worse. One sole preoccupation urges her: to
get away. I can see that by the manner in which she paces the enclosure
that keeps her prisoner.

That is instinct’s way: it buries perseveringly the lifeless lump and
leaves the quickened lump to perish on the surface. The work to be done
is everything; the work done no longer counts. Instinct sees the future
and knows nothing of the past.



CHAPTER IX

THE SPANISH COPRIS: THE LAYING OF THE EGGS


If we show instinct doing for the egg what would be done on the advice
of reason matured by study and experience, we achieve a result of no
small philosophic importance; and an austere scientific conscience
begins to trouble me with scruples. Not that I wish to give science a
forbidding aspect: I am convinced that one can say the wisest things
without employing a barbarous vocabulary. Clearness is the supreme
courtesy of the wielder of the pen. I do my best to observe it. No, the
scruple that stops me is of another kind.

I begin to wonder if I am not in this case the victim of an illusion. I
say to myself:

‘Gymnopleuri and Sacred Beetles, when in the open air, are
manufacturers of balls or pills. That is their trade, learnt we know
not how, prescribed perhaps by their structure, in particular by their
long legs, some of which are slightly curved. When they are making
preparations for the egg, is it so wonderful that they continue
underground their own ball-making speciality?’

If we leave out of the question the neck of the pear and the projecting
tip of the ovoid, details much more difficult to explain, there remains
the most important part so far as bulk is concerned, the globular part,
a repetition of the thing which the insect makes outside the burrow;
there remains the pellet with which the Sacred Beetle plays in the
sunshine, sometimes without making any other use of it, the ball which
the Gymnopleurus rolls peacefully over the turf.

Then what is the object here of the globular form, the best
preventative of desiccation during the heat of summer? This property of
the sphere and of its near neighbour, the ovoid, is an accepted
physical fact; but it is only by accident that these shapes are the
right ones to overcome that difficulty. A creature built for rolling
balls across the fields goes on making balls underground. If the grub
fare all the better for finding tender foodstuffs under its mandibles
to the very end, that is a capital thing for the grub, but it is no
reason why we should extol the instinct of the mother.

So I argued, saying to myself that, before I was convinced, I should
need to be shown a Dung-beetle who was utterly unfamiliar with the
pill-making business in everyday life and who yet, when laying-time was
at hand, made an abrupt change in her habits and shaped her provisions
into a ball. My Dung-beetle would have to be a good fat one too. Is
there any such in my neighbourhood? Yes, there is; and she is one of
the handsomest and largest, next to the Sacred Beetle. I speak of the
Spanish Copris (C. hispanus, Lin.), who is so remarkable on account of
the sharp slope of her corselet and the disproportionate size of the
horn surmounting her head.

Round and squat, the Spanish Copris with her ponderous gait is
certainly a stranger to gymnastics such as are performed by the Sacred
Beetle or the Gymnopleurus. Her legs, which are of insignificant length
and folded under her belly at the slightest alarm, bear no comparison
with the stilts of the pill-rollers. Their stunted form and lack of
flexibility are enough in themselves to tell us that their owner would
not care to roam about hampered by a rolling ball.

The Copris is indeed of a sedentary habit. Once he has found his
provisions, at night or in the evening twilight, he digs a burrow under
the heap. It is a rough cavern, large enough to hold an apple. Here is
introduced, bit by bit, the stuff that is just over his head or at any
rate lying on the threshold of the cavern; here is engulfed, in no
definite shape, an enormous supply of victuals, bearing eloquent
witness to the insect’s gluttony. As long as the hoard lasts, the
Copris, engrossed in the pleasures of the table, does not return to the
surface. The home is not abandoned until the larder is emptied, when
the insect recommences its nocturnal quest, finds a new treasure and
scoops out another temporary dwelling.

As his trade is merely that of a gatherer of manure, shovelling in the
stuff without any preliminary manipulation, the Copris is evidently
quite ignorant, for the time being, of the art of kneading and
modelling a globular loaf. Besides, his short, clumsy legs seem utterly
irreconcilable with any such art.

In May, or June at latest, comes laying-time. The insect, so ready to
fill its own belly with the most sordid materials, becomes particular
where the portion of its family is concerned. Like the Sacred Beetle,
like the Gymnopleurus, it now wants the soft produce of the Sheep,
deposited in a single slab. Even when abundant, the cake is buried on
the spot in its entirety. Not a trace of it remains outside. Economy
demands that it be collected to the very last crumb.

You see: no travelling, no carting, no preparations. The cake is
carried down to the cellar by armfuls, at the very spot where it lies.
The insect repeats, with an eye to its grubs, what it did when working
for itself. As for the burrow, whose presence is indicated by a
good-sized mound, it is a roomy cavern excavated to a depth of some
eight inches. I observe that it is more spacious and better built than
the temporary abodes occupied by the Copris at times of revelry.

But let us turn from the insect in its wild state to the insect in
captivity. In the former case the evidence furnished by chance
encounters would be incomplete, fragmentary and of dubious relevancy;
and we shall do better to watch the Copris in my insect-house,
especially as she lends herself admirably to this sort of observation.
Let us observe the storing first.

In the soft evening light I see her appear on the threshold of her
burrow. She has come up from the depths, she is going to gather in her
harvest. She has not far to go: the provisions are there, outside the
door, a generous supply which I am careful to replenish. Cautiously,
ready to retreat at the least alarm, she makes her way to them with a
slow and measured step. Her shield does the rummaging and dissecting,
her fore-legs are busy extracting. An armful, quite a modest one, is
pulled away, crumbling to pieces. The Copris drags it backwards and
disappears underground. In less than two minutes, she is back again.
With feathery antennæ outspread, she warily scans the neighbourhood
before crossing the threshold of her dwelling.

A distance of two or three inches separates her from the heap of
provisions. It is a serious matter for her to venture so far. She would
have liked the victuals to be exactly overhead, forming a roof to her
house. That would have saved her from having to make these expeditions,
which are a source of anxiety. I have decided otherwise. To facilitate
observation, I have placed the supplies just on one side. By degrees
the nervous creature is reassured; it becomes accustomed to the open
air and to my presence, which, of course, I make as unobtrusive as
possible. Armful after armful goes down into the cellar. They are
always shapeless bits, shreds such as one might pick off with a small
pair of pincers.

Having learnt what I want to know about the insect’s method of
warehousing its provisions, I leave it to its work, which continues for
the best part of the night. On the following days, nothing happens; the
Copris goes out no more. Enough treasure has been laid up in a single
night. Let us wait a while and leave her time to stow away her stuff as
she pleases.

Before the week is out, I dig up the soil in my insect-house and bring
to light the burrow whose victualling I have been watching. As in the
fields, it is a spacious hall with an irregular, elliptic roof and an
almost level floor. In a corner is a round hole, similar to the orifice
in the neck of a bottle. This is the goods-entrance, opening on a
slanting gallery that runs up to the surface of the soil. The walls of
this house, which was hollowed out of fresh earth, have been carefully
compressed and are strong enough to resist any seismic disturbances
caused by my excavations. It is easy to see that the insect, toiling
for the future, has put forth all its skill, all its digging-powers, in
order to produce lasting work. The banqueting-tent may be a hole
hurriedly scooped out, with irregular and none too stable walls, but
the permanent dwelling is of larger dimensions and much more carefully
built.

I suspect that both sexes have a share in this architectural
masterpiece; at least, I often come upon the pair in the burrows
destined for the laying of the eggs. The roomy and luxurious apartment
was no doubt once the wedding-hall; the marriage was consummated under
the mighty dome in the building of which the lover had cooperated: a
gallant way of declaring his passion. I also suspect him of lending his
partner a hand with the collecting and storing of the provisions. From
what I have gathered, he too, strong as he is, shares in this finicking
work, collects his armfuls and descends into the crypt. It is a quicker
job when there are two to help. But, once the home is well stocked, he
retires discreetly, makes his way back to the surface and goes and
settles down elsewhere, leaving the mother to her delicate task. His
part in the family-mansion is ended.

Now what do we find in this mansion, to which we have seen so many tiny
loads of provisions lowered? A mass of small pieces, heaped together
anyhow? Not a bit of it. I always find a simple lump, a huge loaf which
fills the dwelling except for a narrow passage all round, just wide
enough to give the mother room to move.

This sumptuous portion, a regular Twelfth-Night cake, has no fixed
shape. I come across some that are ovoid, suggesting a Turkey’s egg in
form and size; I find some that are a flattened ellipsoid, similar to
the common onion; I discover some that are almost round, reminding me
of a Dutch cheese; I see some that are circular with a slight swelling
on the upper surface, like the loaves of the Provençal peasant or,
better still, the egg-cake, the fougasso à l’iôu with which he
celebrates Easter. In every case the surface is smooth and nicely
curved.

There is no mistaking what has happened: the mother has collected and
kneaded into one lump the numerous fragments brought down one after the
other; out of all those particles she has made a homogeneous thing, by
mashing them, working them together and treading on them. Time after
time I come across the baker on top of the colossal loaf which makes
the Sacred Beetle’s pill look so insignificant; she strolls about on
the convex surface, which sometimes measures as much as four inches
across; she pats the mass, makes it firm and level. I just catch sight
of the curious scene, for, the moment she is perceived, the pastry-cook
slips down the curved slope and hides away under her cake.

For a further knowledge of the work, for a study of its innermost
detail, we shall have to resort to artifice. There is scarcely any
difficulty about it. Either my long practice with the Sacred Beetle has
made me more skilful in my methods of research, or else the Copris is
less reserved and bears the rigours of captivity more philosophically:
at any rate, I succeed, without the slightest trouble, in following all
the phases of the nest-making to my heart’s content.

I employ two methods, each of them adapted for enlightening me on some
special points. Whenever the vivarium supplies me with a few large
cakes, I take these out of the burrows, together with the mother
Copris, and place them in my study. The receptacles are of two sorts,
according to whether I want light or darkness. In the former case, I
use glass jars with a diameter more or less the same as that of the
burrows, say four to five inches. At the bottom of each is a thin layer
of fresh sand, quite insufficient to allow the Copris to bury herself
in it, but still serving the purpose of sparing the insect the slippery
foothold of the actual glass and giving it the illusion of a soil
similar to that of which I have just deprived it. With this layer the
jar becomes a suitable cage for the mother and her loaf.

I need hardly say that the startled insect would not undertake anything
while light prevailed, no matter how dim and tempered. It must have
complete darkness, which I produce by means of a cardboard sheath
enclosing the jar. By carefully raising this sheath a little, I can
surprise the captive at her work whenever I feel inclined, the light in
my study being a shaded one, and even watch operations for a time. The
reader will notice that this arrangement is much less complex than that
which I used when I wished to see the Sacred Beetle engaged in
modelling her pear, the simpler method being made possible by the
different temperament of the Copris, who is more easy-going than her
kinswoman. A dozen of these eclipsed appliances are thus arranged on my
large laboratory-table. Any one seeing them standing in a row would
take them for a collection of groceries in whity-brown paper bags.

For my dark apparatus I use flower-pots filled with fresh, well-packed
sand. The mother and her cake occupy the lower part, which is adapted
as a niche by means of a cardboard screen forming a ceiling and
supporting the sand above. Or else I simply put the mother on the
surface of the sand with a supply of provisions. She digs herself a
burrow, does her warehousing, makes herself a home; and things follow
the usual course. In all cases I rely upon a sheet of glass, which does
duty as a lid, to keep my prisoners safe. These different devices will,
I trust, give me information on a delicate point of which I will say
more later.

What do the glass jars covered with an opaque sheath teach us? A good
many things, all of them interesting, and this to begin with: the big
loaf does not owe its curve—which is always regular, no matter how much
the actual shape may vary—to any rolling process. Our inspection of the
natural burrow has already told us that so large a mass could not have
been rolled into a cavity of which it fills almost the whole space.
Besides, the strength of the insect would be unequal to moving so great
a load.

From time to time I go to the jar for information and on every occasion
the same evidence is forthcoming. I see the mother, hoisted on top of
the lump, feeling here, feeling there, bestowing little taps, smoothing
away the projecting points, perfecting the thing; never do I catch her
looking as though she wanted to turn the block. It is clear as
daylight: rolling has nothing whatever to do with the matter.

The dough-maker’s assiduity, her patient care make me suspect an
industrial detail whereof I was far from dreaming. Why so many
after-touches to the mass, why so long a wait before making use of it?
It is, in fact, a week or more before the insect, still busy with its
pressing and polishing, makes up its mind to do something with its
hoard.

When the baker has kneaded his dough to the requisite extent, he
collects it into a single lump in a corner of the kneading-trough. The
leaven will work better in the depths of the voluminous mass. The
Copris knows this bakehouse secret. She heaps together all that she has
collected in her foraging; she carefully kneads the whole into a
provisional loaf and allows it time to improve by virtue of an internal
process that gives flavour to the paste and makes it of the right
consistency for subsequent manipulations. As long as this chemical
process remains unfinished, both the baker and the Copris wait. In the
case of the insect, it goes on for some time, a week at least.

At last it is ready. The baker’s man divides his lump into smaller
lumps, each of which will become a loaf. The Copris does the same
thing. By means of a circular cut made with the sharp edge of her
forehead and the saw of her fore-legs, she detaches from the mass a
piece of the prescribed size. With this stroke there is no hesitation,
no after-touches adding a bit here and taking off a bit there. Straight
away and with one sharp, decisive cut, she obtains the proper-sized
lump.

It now becomes a question of shaping it. Clasping it as best she can in
her short arms, so little adapted, one would think, to work of this
kind, the Copris rounds her lump of dough by means of pressure and of
pressure only. Gravely she moves about on the still shapeless pill,
climbs up, climbs down, turns to right and left, above and below; here
she methodically applies a little more pressure, there a little less,
touching and retouching with unvarying patience, and finally, after
twenty-four hours of it, the piece that was all corners has become a
perfect sphere, the size of a plum. There, in her crowded studio, with
scarcely room to move, the podgy artist has completed her work without
once shaking it on its base; by dint of time and patience she has
obtained the geometrical sphere which her clumsy tools and her confined
space seemed bound to deny her.

For a long time the insect continues to touch up its globe, polishing
it affectionately, passing its foot gently to and fro until the least
protuberance has disappeared. These meticulous finishing touches seem
endless. Towards the end of the second day, however, the sphere is
pronounced satisfactory. The mother climbs to the dome of her edifice
and there, still by simple pressure, hollows out a shallow crater. In
this basin the egg is laid.

Then, with extreme caution, with a delicacy that is most surprising
with such rough tools, the lips of the crater are brought together so
as to form a vaulted roof over the egg. The mother turns slowly, does a
little raking, draws the stuff upwards and finishes the
closing-process. This is the most ticklish work of all. A little too
much pressure, a miscalculated thrust might easily jeopardize the life
of the germ under its thin ceiling.

Every now and then the mother suspends operations. Motionless, with
lowered forehead, she seems to be sounding the cavity beneath, to be
listening to what is happening inside. All’s well, it seems; and once
again she resumes her patient toil: the careful, delicate scraping of
the sides towards the summit, which begins to taper a little and
lengthen out. In this way an ovoid with the small end uppermost takes
the place of the original sphere. Under the more or less projecting
nipple is the hatching-chamber with the egg. Twenty-four hours more are
spent in this minute work. Total: four times round the clock and
sometimes longer to construct the sphere, scoop out a basin, lay the
egg and shut it in by transforming the sphere into an ovoid.

The insect goes back to the cut loaf and helps itself to a second
slice, which, by the same manipulations as before, becomes an ovoid
tenanted by an egg. The surplus suffices for a third ovoid, sometimes
even for a fourth. I have never seen this number exceeded when the
mother had at her disposal only the materials which she had accumulated
in the burrow.

The laying is over. Here is the mother in her retreat, which is almost
filled by the three or four cradles standing one against the other,
pointed end upwards. What will she do now? Go away, no doubt, to
recruit her strength a little in the open air after her prolonged fast.
He who thinks so is mistaken. She stays. And yet she has eaten nothing
since she came underground, taking good care not to touch the loaf,
which, divided into equal portions, will provide the sustenance of the
family. The Copris is touchingly scrupulous where the children’s
inheritance is concerned: she is a devoted mother, who braves hunger
rather than let her offspring suffer privation.

She braves it for a second reason: to mount guard around the cradles.
From the end of June onwards the burrows are difficult to find, because
the mounds disappear through the action of storm or wind or the feet of
the passers-by. The few which I succeed in discovering always contain
the mother dozing beside a group of pills, in each of which a grub, now
nearing its complete development, feasts on the fat of the land.

My dark appliances, flower-pots filled with fresh sand, confirm what
the fields have taught me. Buried with provisions in the first
fortnight in May, the mothers do not reappear on the surface, under the
glass lid. They keep hidden in the burrow after laying their eggs; they
spend the sultry dog-days with their ovoids, watching them, no doubt,
as the glass-jars, with their freedom from subterranean obscurity, tell
us.

They come up again at the time of the first autumnal rains in
September. But by then the new generation has attained its perfect
form. The mother, therefore, enjoys in her underground home that rare
privilege for an insect, the joy of knowing her family; she hears her
children scratching at the shell to obtain their liberty; she is
present at the bursting of the casket which she has fashioned so
conscientiously; maybe she helps the exhausted weaklings when the
ground has not been cool enough to soften the walls. Mother and progeny
leave the underworld together; and together they arrive at the autumn
banquets, when the sun is mild and the ovine manna abounds along the
paths.

The flower-pots teach us something else. I place on the surface a few
separate couples taken from their burrows at the outset of the
building-operations. They are given a generous supply of provisions.
Each couple buries itself, settles down and starts hoarding; then,
after ten days or so, the male reappears on the surface, under the
sheet of glass. The other does not stir an inch. The eggs are laid, the
food-balls are shaped, patiently rounded and grouped at the bottom of
the pot. And all the time, so that he may not disturb the mother in her
work, the father remains exiled from the gynæceum. He has climbed to
the surface with the intention of going and digging himself a shelter
elsewhere. Being unable to do so within the narrow confines of the pot,
he stays at the top, barely concealed from view by a modicum of sand or
a few scraps of food. A lover of darkness and of the cool underground
depths, he remains obstinately for three months exposed to the air and
drought and light; he refuses to go to earth, lest he should interfere
with the sacred things that are taking place below. The Copris shall
have a good mark for thus respecting the maternal apartments.

Let us come back to the jars, where the events hidden from us by the
soil are to be enacted before our eyes. The three or four pills, each
with its egg, stand one against another and occupy almost the whole
enclosure, leaving only narrow passages. Of the original lump very
little remains, at the most a few crumbs, which come in handy when
appetite returns. But that does not worry the mother much. She is far
more concerned about her ovoids.

Assiduously she goes from one to another, feels them, listens to them,
touches them up at points where my eye can perceive no flaw. Her
clumsy, horn-shod foot, more sensitive in darkness than my retina in
broad daylight, is perhaps discovering incipient cracks or defective
workmanship in the matter of consistency which must be attended to, in
order to prevent the air from entering and drying up the eggs. The
prudent mother therefore slips in and out of the narrow spaces between
the cradles, inspecting them carefully and remedying any accident, no
matter how trifling. If I disturb her, she sometimes rubs the tip of
her abdomen against the edge of her wing-cases, producing a soft
rustling noise, which is almost a murmur of complaint. Thus, between
scrupulous care and brief slumbers beside her group of cradles, the
mother passes the three months essential to the evolution of the
family.

I seem to catch a glimpse of the reason for this long watch. The
pill-rollers, whether Scarabs or Gymnopleuri, never have more than a
single pear, a single ovoid in their burrows. The mass of foodstuff,
which at times is rolled from a great distance, is necessarily limited
by the insect’s own limitations of strength. It is enough for one
larva, but not enough for two. An exception must be made with respect
to the Broad-necked Scarab, who brings up her family very frugally and
divides her rolling booty into two modest portions.

The others are obliged to dig a special burrow for each egg. When
everything is in order in the new establishment—and this does not take
long—they leave the underground vault and go off somewhere else,
wherever chance may lead them, to begin their pill-rolling, excavating
and egg-laying once more. With these nomadic habits, any prolonged
supervision on the mother’s part becomes impossible.

The Scarab suffers by it. Her pear, which is magnificently regular at
the outset, soon shows cracks and becomes scaly and swollen. Various
cryptogams invade it and undermine it; the material expands and the
resultant splitting causes the pear to lose its shape. We have seen how
the grub combats these troubles.

The Copris has other ways. She does not roll her stores from a
distance; she warehouses them on the spot, bit by bit, which enables
her to accumulate in a single burrow enough to satisfy all her brood.
As there is no need for further expeditions, the mother stays and keeps
watch. Under her never-failing vigilance, the pill does not crack, for
any crevice is stopped up as soon as it appears; nor does it become
covered with parasitic vegetation, for nothing can grow on a soil that
is constantly being raked. The two or three dozen ovoids which I have
before my eyes all bear witness to the mother’s watchfulness: not one
of them is split or cracked or infested with tiny fungi. In all of them
the surface is irreproachable. But, if I take them away from the mother
to put them into a bottle or tin, they suffer the same fate as the
Sacred Beetle’s pears: in the absence of supervision, destruction more
or less complete overtakes them.

Two examples will be instructive to us here. I take from a mother two
or three pills and place them in a tin, which prevents them from
getting dry. Before a week has passed, they are covered with a fungous
vegetation. More or less everything grows in this fertile soil; the
lesser fungi delight in it. To-day it is an infinitesimal crystalline
plant swollen into a bobbin-shape, bristling with short, dew-beaded
hairs and ending in a little round head as black as jet. I have not the
leisure to consult books and microscope and give a name to the tiny
apparition which attracts my attention for the first time. This
botanical detail is of little importance: all that we need know is that
the dark green of the pills has disappeared under the thick white
crystalline growth stippled with black specks.

I restore the two pills to the Copris keeping watch over her third. I
replace the opaque sheath and leave the insect undisturbed in the dark.
In an hour’s time or less, I look to see how things are getting on. The
parasitic vegetation has entirely disappeared, cut down, extirpated to
the last stalk. The magnifying-glass fails to reveal a trace of what, a
little while before, was a dense thicket. The insect has used its rake,
those notched legs, to some purpose; and the surface of the pill is
once more in the unblemished condition necessary for health.

The other experiment is a more serious one. With the point of my
penknife I make a gash in a pill at the upper end and lay bare the egg.
Here we have an artificial breach not unlike those which might be
caused naturally, but of much greater size. I give back to the mother
the violated cradle, threatened with disaster unless she intervenes.
But she does intervene and that quickly, once darkness comes. The
ragged edges slit by the penknife are brought together and soldered.
The small amount of stuff lost is replaced by scrapings taken from the
sides. In a very short time the breach is so neatly repaired that not a
trace remains of my onslaught.

I repeat it, making the danger graver and attacking all four pills with
my desecrating penknife, which cuts right through the hatching-chamber
and leaves the egg only an incomplete shelter under the gaping roof.
The mother’s counter-move is swift and effective. In one brief spell of
work everything is put right again. Yes, I can quite believe that with
this vigilant supervisor, who never sleeps except with one eye open,
there is no possibility of the cracks and the puffiness which so often
disfigure the Sacred Beetle’s pear.

Four pills containing eggs are all that I have been able to obtain from
the big loaf which I took from the burrow at the time of the nuptials.
Does this mean that the Copris can lay only that number? I think so. I
even believe that usually there are less, three, two, or possibly only
one. My boarders, installed in separate potfuls of sand at
nesting-time, did not reappear on the surface once they had stored away
the necessary provisions; they never came out to dip into the
replenished stock and enable themselves to increase the always
restricted number of ovoids lying at the bottom of the pot under the
mother’s watchful care.

This limitation of the family might very well be due partly to lack of
space. Three or four pills completely fill the burrow; there is no room
for more; and the mother, a stay-at-home alike from duty and
inclination, does not dream of digging another dwelling. It is true
that greater breadth in the one which she has would solve the problem
of room; but then a ceiling of excessive length would be liable to
collapse. Suppose I were myself to intervene, suppose I provided space
without the risk of the roof falling in, could there be an increase in
the number of eggs?

Yes, the number is almost doubled. My trick is quite simple. In one of
the glass jars, I take away her three or four pills from a mother who
has just finished the last. None of the loaf remains. I substitute for
it one of my own making, kneaded with the tip of a paper-knife. A new
type of baker, I do over again very nearly what the insect did at the
beginning. Reader, do not smile at my baking: science shall give it the
odour of sanctity.

My cake is favourably received by the Copris, who sets to work again,
starts laying anew and presents me with three of her perfect ovoids,
making seven in all, the greatest number that I obtained in my various
attempts of this kind. A large piece of the bun remains available. The
Copris does not utilize it, at least not for nest-building; she eats
it. The ovaries appear to be exhausted. This much is proved: the
pillaging of the burrow provides space; and the mother, taking
advantage of it, nearly doubles the number of her eggs with the aid of
the cake which I make for her.

Under natural conditions nothing of a similar kind can happen. There is
no obliging baker at hand, to shape and pat a new cake and slip it into
the oven that is the Copris’ cellar. Everything therefore tells us that
the stay-at-home Beetle, who makes up her mind not to reappear until
the cool autumn days, is of very limited bearing-capacity. Her family
consists of three or four at most. Occasionally, in the dog-days, long
after laying-time is past, I have even dug up a mother watching over a
solitary pill. This one, perhaps for lack of provisions, had reduced
her maternal joys to the narrowest limits.

The loaves kneaded with my paper-knife are readily accepted. We will
take advantage of this fact to make a few experiments. Instead of the
big, substantial cake, I fashion a pill which is a replica in shape and
size of the three or four which the mother is guarding after confiding
the egg to them. My imitation is a fairly good one. If I were to mix up
the two products, the natural and the artificial, I might easily fail
to distinguish between them afterwards. The counterfeit pill is placed
in the jar, beside the other. The disturbed insect at once hides in a
corner, under a little sand. I leave it in peace for a couple of days.
Then how great is my surprise to find the mother on the top of my pill,
digging a cup into it! In the afternoon the egg is laid and the cup
closed. I can only tell my pill from those of the Copris by the place
which it occupies. I had put it at the extreme right of the group, and
at the extreme right I find it, duly operated on by the insect. How
could the Beetle know that this ovoid, so like the others in every
respect, was untenanted? How did she allow herself unhesitatingly to
scoop the top into a crater when, judging by appearances, there might
be an egg just underneath? She takes good care not to do any fresh
excavating on the finished pills. What guide leads her to the
artificial one, which is extremely deceptive in appearance, and bids
her dig into that?

I do it again and yet again. The result is the same: the mother does
not confuse her work with mine and takes advantage of the presence of
my pill to install an egg in it. On only one occasion, when her
appetite seems suddenly to have come back, did I see her feeding on my
loaf. But her discrimination between the tenanted and the untenanted
was just as clearly marked here as in the previous instance. Instead of
attacking, in her hunger, the pills with eggs, by what miracle of
divination does she turn, in spite of their exact outward similarity,
to the pill which contains nothing?

Can my handiwork be defective? Did the wooden blade not press hard
enough to impart the proper consistency? Is there something wrong with
the dough as the result of insufficient kneading? These are delicate
questions, of which I, who am no expert in this kind of confectionery,
am not competent to judge. Let us have recourse to a master of the
pastry-cook’s art. I borrow from the Sacred Beetle the pill which he is
beginning to roll in the vivarium. I choose a small one, of the size
affected by the Copris. True, it is round; but the Copris’ pills also
are pretty often round, even after receiving the egg.

Well, the Sacred Beetle’s loaf, that loaf of irreproachable quality,
kneaded by the king of bread-makers, meets with the same fate as mine.
At one time it is provided with an egg, at another it is eaten, while
no accident ever happens by inadvertence to the exactly similar pills
kneaded by the Copris.

That the insect, finding itself in this mixed assembly, should rip open
what is still inanimate matter and respect what is already a cradle,
that it should discriminate between the lawful and the unlawful, in
circumstances such as these, seems to me incapable of explanation, if
there be no guide but senses resembling our own. It is useless to say
that it is a case of sight: the Beetle works in absolute darkness. Even
if she worked in the light, that would not lessen the difficulty. The
shape and appearance of the pill are alike in both instances; the
clearest sight would be at fault once the pills were mixed up.

It is impossible to suggest that smell has anything to do with it: the
substance of the pill does not vary; it is always the produce of the
Sheep. Impossible likewise to say that she is exercising the sense of
touch. What delicacy of touch can there be under a coat of horn?
Besides, the most exquisite sensitiveness would be required. Even if we
admit that the insect’s feet, particularly the tarsi, or the palpi, or
the antennæ, or anything you please, possess a certain faculty for
distinguishing between hard and soft, rough and smooth, round and
angular, still our experiment with the Sacred Beetle’s sphere warns us
to look where we are going. There surely we had the exact equivalent of
the Copris’ sphere—made of the same materials, kneaded to the same
consistency, given the same outline—and yet the Copris makes no
mistake.

To drag the sense of taste into the problem would be absurd. There
remains that of hearing. Later on, I might not deny the possibility
that this has something to do with it. When the larva is hatched, the
mother, ever attentive, might conceivably hear it nibbling the wall of
the cell, but for the present the chamber contains merely an egg; and
an egg is always silent.

Then what other means does the mother possess, I will not say of
thwarting my machinations—the problem is on a loftier plane and animals
are not endowed with special aptitudes in order to dodge an
experimenter’s wiles—what other means does she possess of obviating the
difficulties attendant upon her normal labours? Do not lose sight of
this: she begins by shaping a sphere; and the globular mass often does
not differ from the pills that have received the egg, in respect of
either form or size.

Nowhere is there peace, not even below ground. When, in a moment of
panic, the too-timid mother falls off her sphere and forsakes it to
seek refuge elsewhere, how can she afterwards find her ball again and
distinguish it from the others, without running the risk of crushing an
egg when she is pressing in the top of a pill to make the necessary
crater? She needs a safe guide here. What is that guide? I do not know.

I have said it many a time and I say it again: insects possess
sense-faculties of exquisite delicacy attuned to their special trade,
faculties of which we can form no conception because we have nothing
similar within ourselves. A man blind from birth can have no notion of
colour. We are as men blind from birth in the face of the unfathomable
mysteries that surround us; and myriads of questions arise to which no
answer can ever be given.



CHAPTER X

THE SPANISH COPRIS: THE HABITS OF THE MOTHER


There are two special points to be remembered in the life-history of
the Spanish Copris: the rearing of her family; and her pill-rolling
talents.

First, the output of her ovaries is extremely limited; and nevertheless
her race thrives just as much as that of many others whose seed is
numerous. Maternal care makes up for the small number of her eggs.
Prolific layers, after making a few rough and ready arrangements,
abandon their progeny to luck, which often sacrifices a thousand in
order to preserve one; they are factories turning out organic matter
for life’s comprehensive maw. Almost as soon as hatched, or even before
hatching, their offspring for the most part perish devoured.
Extermination makes short work of superfluity in the interests of the
community at large. That which was destined to live lives, but under
another form. These excessive breeders know and can know nothing of
maternal affection.

The Copres have other and fundamentally different habits. Three or four
eggs represent their entire posterity. How are they to be preserved, to
a great extent, from the accidents that await them? For them, so few in
numbers, as for the others, whose name is legion, existence is an
inexorable struggle. The mother knows it and, in order to save her
nearest and dearest, sacrifices herself, giving up outdoor pleasures,
nocturnal flights and that supreme delight of her race, the
investigation of a fresh heap of dung. Hidden underground, by the side
of her brood, she never leaves her nursery. She keeps watch; she
brushes off the parasitic growths; she closes up the cracks; she drives
off any ravagers that may appear: Acari, [34] tiny Staphylini, [35]
grubs of small Flies, Aphodii, [36] Onthophagi. [37] In September she
climbs to the surface with her family, which, having no further use for
her, emancipates itself and henceforth lives as it pleases. No bird
could be a more devoted mother.

Secondly, the Copris’ abrupt transformation at laying-time into an
expert pill-maker provides us, in so far as we are able to get at the
truth, with a proof of the theorem which I was almost afraid to
formulate just now. Here is a Beetle not equipped for the pill-roller’s
art, an art moreover which is not required for her individual
prosperity. She has no aptitude, no propensity for kneading the food
which she buries and consumes as she finds it; she is totally ignorant
of the sphere and its properties in connection with food-preservation;
and, all of a sudden, in obedience to an inspiration for which nothing,
in the ordinary course of her life, has prepared the way, she moulds
into a sphere or ovoid the legacy which she bequeaths to her grub. With
her short, clumsy fore-leg she shapes the viaticum of her offspring
into a skilful solid mass. The difficulty is great. It is overcome by
dint of application and patience. In two days, or three at most, the
round cradle is perfected. How does the dumpy creature go to work to
achieve mathematical exactness in her ball? The Sacred Beetle has her
long legs, which serve as compasses; the Gymnopleurus has similar
tools. But the Copris, unprovided with the spread of limb which would
enable her to encircle the object, finds nothing in her equipment that
favours the formation of a sphere. Perched upon her ovoid, she labours
at it bit by bit with an intensity that makes up for her defective
implements; she estimates the correctness of its curve by assiduous
tactile examinations from one end to the other. Perseverance triumphs
over clumsiness and achieves what at first seemed impossible.

Here all my readers will assail me with the same questions: why this
abrupt change in the insect’s habits? Why this indefatigable patience
in a form of work that bears no relation to the tools at hand? And what
is the use of this ovoid shape whose perfection demands so great an
outlay of time?

To these queries I see only one possible reply: the preservation of the
foodstuffs in a fresh condition demands the globular form. Remember
this: the Copris builds her nest in June; her larva develops during the
dog-days; it lies a few inches below the surface of the ground. In the
cavern, which is now a furnace, the provisions would soon become
uneatable, if the mother did not give them the shape least susceptible
to evaporation. Very different from the Sacred Beetle in habits and
structure but exposed to the same dangers in her larval state, the
Copris, in order to ward off the peril, adopts the principles of the
great pill-roller, principles whose surpassing wisdom we have already
made manifest.

I would ask the philosophers to ponder upon these five manufacturers of
preserved meats and the numerous rivals which they doubtless possess in
other climes. I submit to them these inventors of the largest possible
box with the smallest possible surface for provisions liable to dry;
and I ask them how such logical inspirations and so much rational
foresight can take birth in the obscure brain of the lower orders of
creation.

Let us come down to plain facts. The Copris’ pill is a more or less
pronounced ovoid, sometimes differing but slightly from a sphere in
shape. It is not quite so pretty as the work of the Gymnopleurus, which
is very nearly pear-shaped, or at least reminds one of a bird’s egg,
notably a Sparrow’s, because of the similarity in size. The Copris’
work is more like the egg of a nocturnal bird of prey, of any member of
the Owl family, as its projecting end does not stand out conspicuously.

From this pole to the other the ovoid measures, on an average, forty
millimetres, by thirty-four across. [38] Its whole surface is tightly
packed, hardened by pressure, converted into a crust with a little
earth grained into it. At the projecting end, an attentive eye will
discover a ring bristling with short straggling threads. Once the egg
is laid in the cup into which the original sphere is hollowed, the
mother, as I have already said, gradually brings the edges of the
cavity together. This produces the projecting end. To complete the
closing, she delicately rakes the ovoid and scrapes a little of the
material upwards. This forms the ceiling of the hatching-chamber. At
the top of this ceiling, which, if it fell in, would destroy the egg,
the pressure is very slight indeed, leaving an area devoid of rind and
covered with bits of thread. Immediately under this circle, which is a
sort of porous felt, lies the hatching-chamber, the egg’s little cell,
which easily admits air and warmth.

Like the Sacred Beetle’s egg and those of other Dung-beetles, the
Copris’ egg at once attracts attention by its size, but it grows much
larger before hatching, increasing two- or threefold in bulk. Its moist
chamber, saturated with the emanations from the provisions, supplies it
with nourishment. Through the chalky porous shell of the bird’s egg, an
exchange of gases takes place, a respiratory process which quickens
matter while consuming it. This is a cause of destruction as well as of
life: the sum total of the contents does not increase under the
inflexible wrapper; on the contrary, it diminishes.

Things happen otherwise in the Copris’ egg, as in the other
Dung-beetles’. We still, no doubt, find the vivifying assistance of the
air; but there is also an accession of new materials which come to add
to the reserves furnished by the ovary. Endosmosis causes the
exhalations of the chamber to penetrate through a very delicate
membrane, so much so that the egg is fed, swells and enlarges to thrice
its original volume. If we have failed to follow this progressive
growth attentively, we are quite surprised at the extraordinary final
size, which is out of all proportion to that of the mother.

This nourishment lasts a fairly long time, for the hatching takes from
fifteen to twenty days. Thanks to the added substance with which the
egg has been enriched, the larva is already pretty big when born. We
have not here the weakly grub, the animated speck which many insects
show us, but a pretty little creature, at once sturdy and tender,
which, happy at being alive, arches its back and frisks and rolls about
in its nest.

It is satin-white, with a touch of straw-colour on its skull-cap. I
find the terminal trowel plainly marked: I mean that slanting plane
with the scalloped edge whereof the Sacred Beetle has already shown us
the use when some breach in the cell needs repairing. The implement
tells us the future trade. You also, my attractive little grub, will
become a knapsacked excreter, a fervent plasterer manipulating the
stucco supplied by the intestines. But first I will subject you to an
experiment.

Now what are your first mouthfuls? As a rule I see the walls of your
nest shining with a greenish, semifluid wash, a sort of thinly-spread
jam. Is this a special dish intended for your delicate baby stomach? Is
it a childish dainty disgorged by the mother? I used to think so when I
first began to study the Sacred Beetle. To-day, after seeing a similar
wash in the cells of the various Dung-beetles, including the uncouth
Geotrupes, [39] I wonder whether it is not rather the result of a mere
exudation accumulating on the walls in a sort of dew, the fluid
quintessence filtering through the porous matter.

The Copris mother lent herself to observation better than any of the
others. I have many times surprised her at the moment when, hoisted on
her round pill, she excavates the top in the form of a cup; and I have
never seen anything that at all suggests a disgorgement. The cavity of
the bowl, which I lose no time in examining, is just like the rest.
Perhaps I have missed the favourable moment. In any case, I can take
only a brief glance at the mother’s occupations: all work ceases as
soon as I raise the cardboard sheath to give light. Under these
conditions the secret might escape me indefinitely. Let us look at the
difficulty from another angle and enquire whether some special
milk-food, elaborated in the mother’s stomach, is necessary for the
infant larva.

In one of my cages I rob a Sacred Beetle of her round pill, lately
fashioned and briskly rolled. I strip it at one point of its earthy
layer and into this clean point I drive the blunt end of a pencil,
making a hole a third of an inch deep. I install a newly-hatched
Copris-grub in it. The youngster has not yet taken the least
refreshment. It is lodged in a cell which in no respect differs from
the rest of the mass. There is no creamy coating, whether disgorged by
the mother or merely oozing through. What will result from this change
of quarters?

Nothing untoward. The larva develops and thrives quite as well as in
its native cell. Therefore, when I first started, I was the victim of
an illusion. The delicate wash which nearly always covers the
egg-chamber in the Dung-beetles’ work is simply an exudation. The grub
may be all the better for it, when taking its first mouthfuls; but it
is not indispensable. To-day’s experiment confirms the fact.

The grub subjected to this test was put into an open pit. Things cannot
remain in this condition. The absence of ceiling is irksome to the
young larva, which loves darkness and tranquillity. How will it set to
work to build its roof? The mortar-trowel cannot be used as yet, for
materials are lacking in the knapsack which so far has done no
digesting.

Novice though it be, the little grub has its resources. Since it cannot
be a plasterer, it becomes a bricklayer. With its legs and mandibles it
removes particles from the walls of its cell and comes and places them
one by one on the rim of the well. The defensive work makes rapid
progress and the assembled atoms form a vault. It has no strength about
it, I admit; the dome falls in if I merely breathe on it. But soon the
first mouthfuls will be swallowed; the intestines will fill; and, well
supplied, the grub will come and consolidate the work by injecting
mortar into the interstices. Properly cemented, the frail awning
becomes a solid ceiling.

Let us leave the tiny grub in peace and consult other larvæ which have
attained half their full growth. With the point of my penknife I pierce
the pill at the upper end; I open a window a few millimetres square.
The grub at once appears at the casement, anxiously enquiring into the
disaster. It rolls itself over in the cell and returns to the opening,
this time, however, presenting its wide, padded trowel. A jet of mortar
is discharged over the breach. The product is a little too much diluted
and of inferior quality. It runs, it flows in all directions, it does
not set quickly. A fresh ejaculation follows and another and yet
another, in swift succession. Useless pains! In vain the plasterer
tries again, in vain it struggles, gathering the trickling material
with its legs and mandibles: the hole refuses to close. The mortar is
still too fluid.

Poor, desperate thing, why don’t you copy your young sister? Do what
the little larva did just now: build an awning with particles taken
from the wall of your house; and your liquid putty will do well on that
spongy scaffolding! The large grub, trusting to its trowel, does not
think of that method. It exhausts itself, without any appreciable
result, in trying to effect repairs which the little grub managed most
ingeniously. What the baby knew how to do the big larva no longer
knows.

Insect industry has instances like this of professional methods
employed at certain periods and then abandoned and utterly forgotten. A
few days more or less make changes in the creature’s talents. The tiny
grub, devoid of cement, has bricks to fall back upon: the big larva,
rich in putty, scorns to build, or rather no longer knows how, though
it is even better-endowed than the youngster with the necessary tools.
The strong one no longer remembers what as a weakling he so well knew
how to do, only a few days before. A poor power of recollection, if
indeed there be such a power under that flat skull! However, in the
long run and thanks to the evaporation of the ejected materials, the
short-memoried plumber ends by stopping up the window. Nearly half a
day has been spent in trowel-work.

The idea occurs to me to try whether the mother will come to the
distressed one’s aid in like circumstances. We have seen her diligently
restoring the ceiling which I smashed above the egg. Will she do for
the big grub what she did for the sake of the germ? Will she repair the
torn pill in which the plasterer is helplessly floundering?

To make the experiment more conclusive, I select pills that do not
belong to the mother entrusted with the work of restoration. I picked
them up in the fields. They are far from regular, are all dented
because of the stony soil on which they lay, a soil not easily
convertible into a roomy workshop and consequently unsuited to exact
geometry. They are moreover encrusted with a reddish rind, due to the
ferruginous sand in which I packed them in order to avoid dangerous
jolting on the road. In short, they differ a good deal from those
elaborated in a jar, with plenty of space around them and on a clean
support, pills which are perfect ovoids, free from earthy stains. In
the top of two of them I make an opening which the grub, faithful to
its methods, at once strives to stop up, but without success. One,
stored away under a bell-glass, will serve me as a witness. The other I
place in a jar where the mother is watching her cradles, two splendid
ovoids.

I have not long to wait. An hour later I raise the cardboard screen.
The Copris is on the strange pill and so busily engaged that she pays
no attention to the daylight admitted. In other, less urgent
circumstances, she would at once have slipped down and taken shelter
from the troublesome light; this time, she does not move and
imperturbably continues her work. Before my eyes she rakes away the red
crust and uses the scrapings from the cleansed surface to spread over
and solder the breach. It is hermetically sealed in a very short space
of time. I stand amazed at the insect’s skill.

Well, while the Copris is restoring a pill that does not belong to her,
what is the grub that owns the other doing in the bell-glass? It
continues to kick about hopelessly, vainly lavishing cement that is
incapable of setting. Put to the test in the morning, it does not
succeed until the afternoon in closing the aperture; and then the job
is anything but well done. The borrowed mother, on the other hand, has
not taken twenty minutes to remedy the accident most excellently.

She does even more. After the most important part is finished and the
afflicted grub succoured, she stands all day, all night and the next
day on the newly-closed pill. She brushes it daintily with her tarsi to
get rid of the layer of earth; she obliterates the dents, smooths the
rough places and adjusts the curve, until from a shapeless and soiled
pill it becomes an ovoid vying in precision with those which she had
already manufactured in her glass jar.

Such care bestowed upon a strange grub deserves attention. I must go
on. I slip into the jar a second pill, similar to the foregoing,
ruptured at the top, with an opening larger than on the first occasion,
one about a sixteenth of an inch square. The greater the difficulty,
the more praiseworthy will the restoration be.

It is, indeed, difficult to close. The grub, a fat baby, is wildly
gesticulating and excreting through the window. Leaning over the hole,
its new mother seems to console it. She is like a nurse bending over
the cradle. Meanwhile her helpful legs are working with a will,
scratching around the yawning aperture to obtain the wherewithal to
stop it. But the materials, half-dried this time, are hard and
unyielding. They are slow in coming; and the quantity is too small for
so big a hole. No matter: what with the grub continuing to shoot forth
its putty and the other mixing it with her own scrapings, to give it
consistency, and afterwards spreading it, the opening closes up.

The thankless task has taken a whole afternoon. It is a good lesson for
me. I shall be more careful in future. I shall choose softer pills and,
instead of opening them by removing the materials, I shall simply lift
the wall by shreds until the grub is laid bare. The mother will only
have to flatten down those shreds and solder them together.

I act accordingly with a third pill, which is very neatly repaired in a
short time. Not a trace remains of the ravages caused by my penknife. I
continue in the same way with a fourth, a fifth and so on, at intervals
long enough to give the mother a rest. I stop when the receptacle is
full, looking like a pot of plums. The contents amount to twelve
pieces, of which ten have come from the outside, all ten violated by my
penknife and all restored to good condition by the foster-mother.

There are some interesting sidelights to this curious experiment, which
I could have continued if the capacity of the jar had permitted. The
Copris’ zeal, which was not lessened after the restoring of so many
ruins, and her diligence, which was the same at the end as in the
beginning, tell me that I had not exhausted the maternal solicitude.
Let us leave it at that; it is amply sufficient.

Observe first the arrangement of the pills. Three are enough to occupy
the floor-space of the enclosure. The others are therefore gradually
superposed in layers, making in the end a four-story structure. The
whole forms an irregular pile, an absolute labyrinth with very narrow,
winding lanes, through which the insect glides with some difficulty.
When her household is in order, the mother stays below, under the pile,
touching the sand. It is at this moment that a new broken cell is
introduced, right at the top of the pile, on the third or fourth floor.
Let us put back the screen, wait a few minutes and then go back to the
jar.

The mother is there, hoisted on the torn pill and doing her utmost to
close it. How was she informed on the ground-floor of what was
happening in the attic? How did she know that a larva up there was
calling for her assistance? The babe in distress screams and the nurse
comes running up. The grub says nothing; it makes no sound. Its
desperate gesticulations are not accompanied by any noise. And the
watcher hears this mute appeal. She notices the silence, she sees the
invisible. I am bewildered, every one would be bewildered by the
mystery of these perceptions which are so foreign to our nature and
which ‘topsy turvy the understanding,’ as Montaigne would say. Let us
pass on.

I have described elsewhere [40] the brutality with which the Bee, that
most gifted of insects, treats the eggs of her fellows. Osmiæ,
Chalicodomæ and others perpetrate atrocities at times. In a moment of
vengeance or of that inexplicable aberration which occurs after the
laying is finished, a sister’s egg, savagely torn from the cell with
the pincers of the mandibles, is flung into the dust-bin. The thing is
pitilessly crushed, is ripped open, is even eaten. How different from
the good-natured Copris!

Shall we attribute altruism among families to the Dung-beetle? Shall we
do her the signal honour of allowing that she administers relief to
foundlings? That would be madness. The mother who so diligently assists
the children of others thinks, beyond a doubt, that she is working for
her own. The victim of my experiment had two pills that belonged to
her; my intervention gave her ten more. And, in the jar filled with
prunes to the top, her assiduous care draws no distinction between the
real household and the casual family. Her intellect therefore is
incapable of the most elementary conception of quantity; she cannot
even distinguish between the singular and the plural, the few and the
many.

Can it be because of the darkness? No, for my frequent visits give the
Copris an opportunity, when the opaque screen is lifted, of looking
around her and discovering the strange accumulation, that is if light
be really the guide which she lacks. Besides, has she not another means
of information? In the natural burrow, the pills, three or at most four
in number, all lie on the ground, forming one row only. With my
additions they pile up into four stories.

In order to clamber to the top, in order to hoist herself up through
such a maze as never Copris mansion knew before, the Beetle must rub
against and touch the units of the heap. But she counts none the better
for that. To the insect all this is just the home, is just the family,
worthy of the same care at the summit as at the base. The twelve
produced by my trickery and the two of her own laying are the same
thing in her arithmetic.

I present this strange mathematician to any one who comes and talks to
me of a glimmer of reason in the insect, as Darwin claimed. It is one
of two things: either this glimmer does not exist, or else the Copris
reasons divinely and becomes a St. Vincent de Paul of insects, moved to
pity by the sad lot of the homeless. Make your choice.

It is possible that, rather than abandon the principle, men will not
shrink from sheer folly and that the compassionate Copris will one day
figure in the evolutionists’ Book of Moral Deeds. Why not? Does it not
already, with an eye to the same argument, contain a certain
tender-hearted Boa Constrictor who, on losing his master, lay down and
died of grief? Oh, the fond reptile! These edifying stories, compiled
with the object of tracing man back to the Gorilla, procure me a few
moments of mild amusement when I come across them. But we will not
labour the point.

Better that you and I, friend Copris, should speak of things that do
not raise storms. Would you mind telling me the reason of the
reputation which you enjoyed in the days of antiquity? Ancient Egypt
extolled you in pink granite and porphyry; she venerated you, O my fair
horned one, and awarded you honours similar to the Scarab’s! You ranked
second in the entomological hierarchy.

Horapollo tells us of two Sacred Beetles with horns. One sported a
single specimen on her head, the other had two. The first is you, the
inmate of my glass jars, or at least some one very like you. If Egypt
had known what you have just taught me, she would certainly have placed
you above the Scarab, that roving pill-roller who deserts her home and
leaves her family, after it has received its inheritance, to shift for
itself as best it can. Knowing nothing of your wonderful habits, which
history is noting for the first time, she deserves all the greater
praise for having divined your merits.

The second, the one with two horns, would, according to the experts,
appear to be the insect which the naturalists call the Isis Copris. I
know her only in effigy, but her image is so striking that I sometimes
catch myself dreaming late in life, just as I did in my youth, of going
down to Nubia and exploring the banks of the Nile, in order to
cross-examine, under some lump of Camel-dung, the insect that is
emblematic of Isis the divine brooder, nature made fruitful by Osiris,
the sun.

Oh, simpleton! Attend to your cabbages, sow your turnips: that won’t do
you any harm; water your lettuces; and understand, once and for all,
how vain are all our questionings when it is simply a matter of
enquiring into a muck-raker’s sagacity! Be less ambitious; confine
yourself to setting down facts.

So be it. There is nothing striking to be said of the larva, which is a
replica of the Sacred Beetle’s, save for some minute details which do
not interest us here. It has the same hump in the middle of its back,
the same slanting truncature of the last segment, expanding into a
trowel on the upper surface. A ready excreter, it understands, though
less thoroughly than the other, the art of stopping up breaches to
protect itself from draughts. The larval state covers a period of four
to six weeks.

At the end of July the nymph appears, first amber-yellow all over, next
currant-red on the head, horn, corselet, breast and legs, while the
wing-cases have the pale hue of gum arabic. A month later, by the end
of August, the perfect insect releases itself from its mummy wrappers.
Its costume, now wrought upon by delicate chemical changes, is quite as
strange as that of the new-born Sacred Beetle. Head, corselet, breast
and legs are chestnut-red. The horn, the epistoma and the
denticulations of the fore-legs are shaded with brown. The wing-cases
are a rather yellowish white. The abdomen is white, excepting only the
anal segment, which is an even brighter red than the thorax. I perceive
this early colouring of the anal segment, while the rest of the abdomen
is still quite pale, in the Sacred Beetles, the Gymnopleuri, the
Onthophagi, the Geotrupes, the Cetoniæ [41] and many others. Whence
this precocity? One more note of interrogation which will long stand
awaiting a reply.

A fortnight passes. The costume becomes ebon-black, the cuirass
hardens. The insect is ready for the emergence. We are at the end of
September; the earth has drunk in a few showers which soften the
stubborn shell and allow of an easy deliverance. This is the moment,
prisoners mine. If I have teased you a little, at least I have kept you
in plenty. Your shells have hardened in your cages and have become
caskets which your own efforts will never succeed in forcing open. I
will come to your aid. Let us describe in detail how things happen.

Once the burrow is supplied with the voluminous loaf out of which three
or four pilular rations are to be carved, the mother does not appear
outside again. Besides, there is no provision made for her. The heap
stored away below is the family cake, the exclusive patrimony of the
grubs, who will receive equal shares. For four months, therefore, the
recluse is without food of any kind.

It is a voluntary privation. Victuals are there, within reach, copious
and of superior quality; but they are intended for the larvæ and the
mother will take good care not to touch them: anything abstracted for
her own use would mean so much less for the grubs. Gluttonous at the
outset, when there was no family to consider, she now becomes very
abstemious, even to the point of prolonged fasting. The Hen sitting on
her eggs forgets to eat for some weeks; the watchful Copris mother
forgets it during a third part of the year. The Dung-beetle outdoes the
bird in maternal self-abnegation.

Now what does this self-sacrificing mother do underground? To what
household cares can she devote the period of so long a fast? My
appliances provide a satisfactory answer. I possess, as I have said,
two kinds. One consists of glass jars with a thin layer of sand and a
cardboard case to create darkness; the other of large pots filled with
earth and closed with a pane of glass.

At any moment when I raise the opaque sheath of the first, I find the
mother now perched upon the top of her ovoids, now on the ground,
half-erect, smoothing the bulging curve with her fore-leg. On rarer
occasions, she is dozing in the midst of the heap.

The manner in which she employs her time is obvious. She watches her
treasure of pills; her inquisitive antennæ sound them to discover what
is happening inside; she listens to the nurselings growing; she touches
up faulty spots; she polishes and repolishes the surfaces in order to
delay the desiccation within until the development of the inmates is
complete.

These scrupulous cares, cares occupying every moment, have results
which would strike the attention of the least-experienced observer. The
egg-shaped vessels, or better the cradles of the nursery, are wonderful
in their regular curves and in their neatness. We see none of those
chinks with a blob of putty showing through, none of those cracks, of
those peeling scales, in short none of those defects which, towards the
end, nearly always disfigure the Sacred Beetle’s pears, handsome though
they be at the start.

The horned Dung-beetle’s caskets could not be better shaped, even after
they are thoroughly dried up, if they had been worked in plaster by a
modeller. What pretty, dark-bronze eggs they are, rivalling the Owl’s
in size and form! This irreproachable perfection, maintained until the
shell is burst by the emerging larva, is obtained only by incessant
touching up, interspersed at long intervals with periods of rest during
which the mother composes herself for a nap at the foot of the heap.

The glass jars leave room for doubt. It is possible to say that the
insect, imprisoned in an impassable enclosure, stays in the midst of
its pills because it is unable to go elsewhere. I agree; but there
remains that work of polishing and of continual inspection about which
the mother need not trouble at all if these cares did not form part of
her habits. Were she solely anxious to recover her liberty, she ought
to be roaming restlessly all round the enclosure, whereas I always see
her very quiet and absorbed. The only evidence of her excitement, when
the raising of the cardboard cylinder suddenly produces daylight, is
that she lets herself slide from the top of a pill and hides in the
heap. If I moderate the light, composure is soon restored and she
resumes her position on the summit, there to continue the work which my
visit interrupted.

For the rest, the evidence of the apparatus that is always in darkness
is conclusive. The mother buried herself in June in the sand of my pots
with copious provisions, which are soon converted into a certain number
of pills. She is at liberty to return to the surface when she pleases.
She will there find broad daylight under the big sheet of glass which
ensures me against her escape; she will find food, which I renew from
time to time in order to entice her.

Well, neither the daylight nor the food, desirable though this must
seem to be after a fast so long extended, is able to tempt her. Nothing
stirs in my pots, nothing rises to the surface until the rains come.

It is exceedingly probable that exactly the same thing happens
underground as in the jars. To make certain, I inspect some of my
appliances at different periods. I always find the mother beside her
pills, in a spacious cave which gives free play to the watcher’s
evolutions. She could go lower down in the sand and hide anywhere she
pleased, if rest is what she wants; she could climb outside and sit
down to fresh victuals, if refreshment became necessary. Neither the
prospects of rest in a deeper crypt nor the thought of the sun and of
nice soft rolls make her leave her family. Until the last of her
offspring has burst his shell, she sticks to her post in the
birth-chamber.

It is now October. The rains so greatly desired by man and beast have
come at last, soaking the ground to some depth. After the torrid and
dusty days of summer, when life is in suspense, we have the coolness
that revives it, we have the last festival of the year. In the midst of
the heath putting out its first pink bells, the oronge [42] splits its
white purse and comes into view, looking like the yolk of an egg half
deprived of its albumen; the massive purple boletus turns blue under
the heel of the passer-by who crushes it; the autumnal squill lifts its
little spike of lilac flowers; the strawberry-tree’s coral balls begin
to soften.

This tardy springtime has its echoes underground. The vernal
generations, Sacred Beetles and Gymnopleuri, Onthophagi and Copres,
hasten to burst their shells softened by the damp and come to the
surface to take part in the gaieties of the last fine weather.

My captives are denied the friendly shower. The cement of their
caskets, baked by the summer heat, is too hard to yield. The file of
the shield and legs would make no impression on it. I come to the poor
things’ assistance. A carefully graduated watering replaces the natural
rain in my glass and earthenware pots. To ascertain once more the
effects of water on the Dung-beetles’ deliverance, I leave a few of the
receptacles in the state of dryness for which they have to thank the
dog-days.

The result of my sprinkling soon becomes apparent. In a few days’ time,
now in one jar, now in another, the pills, properly softened, open and
fall to pieces under the prisoner’s efforts. The new-born Copris
appears and sits down, with his mother, to the food which I have placed
at his disposal.

When the hermit, stiffening his legs and humping his back, tries to
split the ceiling that presses down on him, does the mother come to his
assistance by delivering an assault from the outside? It is quite
possible. The watcher, hitherto so careful of her brood, so attentive
to what is happening within the pills, can hardly fail to hear the
sounds made by the captive in his struggles to emerge.

We have seen her indefatigably stopping the holes caused by my
indiscretion; we have seen her, often enough, restoring for the grub’s
greater safety the pill which I had opened with my penknife. Fitted by
instinct for repairing and building, why should she not be fitted for
demolishing? However, I will make no assertions, for I have been unable
to see. The favourable conditions always escaped me: I came either too
late or too early. And then let us not forget that the admission of
light usually interrupts the work.

In the darkness of the sand-filled pots, the liberation must take place
in the same way. All that I am able to witness is the insect’s
emergence above ground. Attracted by the smell of fresh provisions
which I have served on the threshold of the burrow, the newly-released
family emerge gradually, accompanied by the mother, wander round for a
time under the pane of glass and then attack the pile.

There are three or four of them, five at most. The sons are easily
recognized by the greater length of their horns; but there is nothing
to distinguish the daughters from the mother. For that matter, the same
confusion prevails among themselves. An abrupt change of attitude has
taken place; and the erstwhile devoted mother is now utterly
indifferent to the welfare of her emancipated family. Henceforward each
looks after his own home and his own interests. They no longer know one
another.

In the receptacles which are not moistened by artificial showers,
things come to a miserable end. The dry shell, almost as hard as an
apricot- or peach-stone, offers indomitable resistance. The insect’s
legs manage to grate off barely so much as a pinch of dust. I hear the
tools rasping against the unyielding wall; then silence follows and not
a prisoner survives to tell the tale. The mother too perishes in that
home which has remained dry when the season for dryness has passed. The
Copris, like the Sacred Beetle, needs the rain to soften the granite
shell.

To return to the liberated ones. When the emergence is effected, the
mother, we were saying, ceases to trouble about them. Her present
indifference, however, must not make us forget the wonderful care which
she has lavished for four months on end. Outside the Social
Hymenoptera—Bees, Wasps, Ants and so on—who spoon-feed their young and
bring them up according to scrupulously hygienic methods, where in the
insect world shall we find another example of such maternal
self-abnegation, of such wise and tender care for the offspring? I know
of none.

How did the Copris acquire this lofty quality, which I would readily
call a moral quality, if morality and nescience had any point of
contact? How did she learn to surpass in tenderness the Bee and the
Ant, both so greatly renowned? I say surpass. The mother Bee, indeed,
is simply a germ-factory, a prodigiously fertile factory, I admit. She
lays eggs; and that is all. The family is brought up by others, real
sisters of charity these, vowed to celibacy.

The Copris mother does more in her humble household. Alone and entirely
unaided, she provides each of her children with a cake whose crust,
hardening and constantly renovated with the maternal trowel, becomes an
inviolable cradle. So intense is her affection that she neglects
herself to the extent of losing all need for food. Down in a burrow,
for four consecutive months, she watches over her brood, attending to
the wants of the germ, the grub, the nymph and the perfect insect. She
does not return to the glad outer life until all her family are
emancipated. Thus do we behold one of the most brilliant manifestations
of maternal instinct in a humble dung-eater. The Spirit breatheth where
he will.



CHAPTER XI

ONTHOPHAGI AND ONITICELLI


After the notabilities of the Dung-beetle tribe, if we omit the
Geotrupes, who belong to a different clan, there remains, within the
very limited radius of my observation, the Onthophagus rabble, of which
I could gather a dozen different species around my house. What will
these small fry teach us?

Even more zealous than their big companions, they are the first that
hasten to exploit the heap left by the passing Mule. They come in
crowds and stay a long time working under the spread table that gives
them shade and coolness. Turn over the heap with your foot. You will be
surprised at the swarming population whose presence no outward sign
betrayed. The largest are scarce the size of a pea, but some are much
smaller still; and these dwarfs are no less busy than the others, no
less eager to crumble into dust the filth which, in the interests of
the public health, must be cleared away with all speed.

For the more important work of life there is nothing like the humble
toilers for realizing vast strength, made up of their joint weaknesses.
Swollen by numbers, the next to nothing becomes an enormous total.

Hurrying in detachments at the first news of the event, assisted
moreover in their sanitary work by their partners, the Aphodii, who are
as weak as they, the tiny Onthophagi soon clear the ground of its dirt.
Not that their appetite is equal to the consumption of such plentiful
provisions. What food do these pigmies need? A mere atom. But for that
atom, selected from among the exudations, search must be made amid the
wisps of masticated fodder. Hence, an endless division and dissection
of the lump, reducing it to dust which the sun sterilizes and the wind
dispels. As soon as the work is done—and very well done—the troop of
scavengers goes in search of another refuse-yard. Except for the period
of intense cold, which puts a stop to all activity, they are never
idle.

And do not run away with the idea that this filthy task entails an
inelegant shape and a ragged dress. Our squalor is unknown to the
insect. In its world, a navvy dons a sumptuous jerkin; an undertaker
decks himself in a triple saffron sash; a wood-cutter works in a velvet
coat. In like manner, the Onthophagus has his special gorgeousness.
True, the costume is always severe: brown and black are the predominant
colours, now dull, now polished as ebony. That is the general
groundwork, but how chaste and elegant are the decorative details!

One (O. lemur) has wing-cases of a light chestnut colour, with a
semicircle of black dots; a second (O. nuchicornis) has similar
chestnut wing-cases covered with splashes of Indian ink not unlike the
square Hebrew characters; a third (O. Schreberi), who is a glossy black
like that of jet, decks himself with four vermilion cockades; a fourth
(O. furcatus) lights up the tip of his short wing-cases with a gleam
similar to that of dying embers; many (O. vacca, O. cænobita and
others) have corselets and heads bright with the metal sheen of
Florentine bronze.

The graver’s work completes the beauty of the dress. Dainty chasing in
parallel grooves, delicate embroidery, knotty chaplets are distributed
in profusion among nearly all of them. Yes, the little Onthophagi, with
their short bodies and their nimble activity, are really pretty to look
at.

And then how original are their frontal decorations! These peace-lovers
delight in the panoply of war, as though they, the inoffensive ones,
thirsted for battle. Many of them crown their heads with threatening
horns. Let us mention a couple of the horned ones whose story will
occupy us more particularly. I mean, first, the Bull Onthophagus (O.
taurus), clad in raven black. He wears a pair of long horns, gracefully
curved and branching to either side. No pedigree bull, in the Swiss
meadows, can match them for curve or elegance. The second is the Forked
Onthophagus (O. furcatus), who is much smaller. His equipment consists
of a fork with three vertical prongs.

There you have the two chief subjects of this brief Onthophagus
biography. The others are equally worthy of being chronicled. From
first to last, they would all supply us with interesting details, some
of them even with peculiarities unknown elsewhere; but we must draw the
line somewhere in this multitude, which is difficult to observe in the
aggregate. And there is this more serious circumstance, that my choice
has not been free: I have had to content myself with the few lucky
discoveries made as the result of chance encounters out of doors and
with the few successful experiments made in the vivarium.

Two species only, the two which I have named, have proved satisfactory
in both directions. Let us watch them at work. They will show us the
principal features of the manner of life led by the whole tribe, for
they occupy the two extremes of the scale of sizes, the Bull
Onthophagus being one of the largest and the Forked Onthophagus one of
the smallest.

We will speak first of the nest. Contrary to my expectation, the
Onthophagi are indifferent nest-builders. With them we find no spheres
rolled joyously in the sunshine, no ovoids manipulated laboriously in
an underground workshop. Their business, that of reducing filth to
dust, appears to give them so much to do that they have no time left
for work demanding prolonged patience. They confine themselves to what
is strictly necessary and most rapidly obtained.

A perpendicular well is dug, a couple of inches deep, cylindrical in
shape and varying in bore according to the size of the well-sinker. The
pit of the Forked Onthophagus has the diameter of a lead-pencil; that
of the Bull Onthophagus is twice the width. Right at the bottom are the
grub’s provisions, plastered against the walls in a tightly-packed
heap. The total lack of free space at the sides of the pile shows how
the provisioning is done. There is not a sign of a niche, of the least
corner that would leave the mother enough liberty of movement to knead
and mould her bun. The material therefore is simply pressed down at the
bottom of the cylindrical sheath, where it takes the shape of a full
thimble.

I dig up some nests of the Forked Onthophagus near the end of July. It
is a crude piece of work, which surprises you by its roughness when you
think of the neat little worker. Wisps of hay, sticking out anyhow,
increase the untidy look of things. The nature of the materials,
supplied this time by the Mule, are partly the cause of this ugly
appearance.

The length of these nests is fourteen millimetres, the width seven.
[43] The upper surface is slightly concave, proving that the pressure
has been exercised by the mother. The lower end is rounded like the
bottom of the well which serves as a mould. I take a needle and with
the point of it I pick the rustic structure to pieces. The mass of
foodstuff occupies the base, forming the lower two-thirds of the
thimble into a compact block; the cell containing the egg is at the
top, under a thin, concave lid.

There is nothing fresh about the work of the Bull Onthophagus, which,
save for being larger, differs in no way from that of the Forked
Onthophagus. I am unacquainted with the insect’s modus operandi. As
regards the inner secrets of nest-building, these dwarfs are as
reticent as their big colleagues. One alone satisfied my curiosity, or
nearly; and then it was not an Onthophagus but a kindred species, the
Yellow-footed Oniticellus (O. flavipes).

I capture her in the last week of July, under a heap which a Mule
employed in treading out the corn on the thrashing-floor dropped during
a rest from work. The thick blanket, transformed by a hot sun into an
incomparable incubator, shelters a host of Onthophagi. The Oniticellus
is by herself. Her quick retreat down a yawning well attracts my
attention. I dig to a depth of about two inches and extract the lady of
the house together with her work, the latter in a sadly damaged
condition. I can, however, distinguish a sort of bag.

I install the Oniticellus in a tumbler, on a layer of heaped earth, and
give her as her nest-building materials what the Sacred Beetles and the
Copres prefer, the Sheep’s plastic paste. Caught at the moment when she
was about to lay, goaded by the irresistible needs of her ovaries, the
mother lends herself very obligingly to my wishes. She lays four eggs
in three days. This rapidity, which would doubtless be even greater if
my curiosity had not disturbed her in her task, is explained by the
simplicity of the work.

The mother goes to the lower surface of the stuff which I have supplied
and detaches from the central and softest part a slice sufficient for
her plans, removing it all in one piece, by means of a circular
section. It is the same method as that employed by the Copris taking
from her loaf the wherewithal to make a pellet. There is a pit
immediately below, dug in advance. The Oniticellus goes down it with
her burden.

I wait half an hour, to give the work time to take shape, and then turn
the glass upside down, hoping to surprise the mother in her domestic
business. The original little lump is now a bag moulded by pressure
against the sides of the well. The mother is at the bottom, motionless,
bewildered by my disturbing visit and the intrusion of light. To see
her working with her forehead and legs in order to spread the matter,
crush it and apply it to its earthen sheath seems to me a very
difficult thing to do. I abandon the attempt and restore the glass to
its first position.

A little later, I make a second examination, when the mother has left
her burrow. The work is now finished. The outward form is that of a
thimble fifteen millimetres deep by ten wide. [44] The flat end has all
the appearance of a lid fitted to the opening and carefully soldered
on. The rounded lower half of the thimble is full. This is the grub’s
larder. Above is the hatching-chamber, with the egg sticking up from
the floor, fixed perpendicularly by one end.

Great is the danger for the Oniticellus and the Onthophagus, offspring
of the dog-days, both of them. Their jar of preserves is greatly
restricted in volume. Its shape is in no way calculated to reduce
evaporation; it is too near the surface of the soil to escape the
dangerous dryness of the air. If the cake should harden, the grub will
die, after its abstinence has been prolonged to the utmost limits of
endurance.

I place in glass tubes, which will represent the native well, a few
Onthophagus- and Oniticellus-thimbles, first contriving an opening in
the side which will enable me to see what happens within. I close the
tubes with a plug of cotton and keep them in a shady part of my study.
Evaporation must be very slight in these impermeable and moreover
plugged sheaths. Nevertheless it is enough to produce in a few days a
degree of dryness which is fatal to feeding.

I see the starvelings remain motionless, unable to bite into the
hateful crust; I see them lose their plumpness, I see them wrinkle and
shrivel, and at last, in a fortnight’s time, take on all the appearance
of death. I replace the dry cotton with wet cotton. The atmosphere in
the tubes becomes damp; the thimbles are gradually saturated with the
moisture, swell out and soften; and the dying come back to life. They
do so to such good purpose that the whole cycle of the metamorphoses is
safely accomplished, on condition that the wet cotton be renewed from
time to time.

My carefully graduated artificial shower, with its damped cotton to
represent the clouds, inspires that return to life. It is like a
resurrection. In the normal conditions prevailing in the torrid,
rain-grudging month of August, the probability of an equivalent of that
shower is almost nil. How then is the fatal drying-up of the victuals
avoided? To begin with, there are, so it seems to me, certain gifts
bestowed on these little ones so inadequately protected by their
mother’s industry against the enemy, drought. I have seen Onthophagus-
and Oniticellus-larvæ recover their appetite, their plumpness and their
vigour under the wet cotton, after a three weeks’ fast that had reduced
them to a wrinkled pilule. This faculty of endurance has its uses: it
enables the possessor to await, in a state of lethargy akin to death,
the few, very uncertain drops of rain that will put an end to the
famine. It comes to the grub’s rescue, but it is not sufficient: the
prosperity of a race cannot be based upon privation.

There is something more, therefore; and this is furnished by the
mother’s instinct. Whereas the manufacturers of pears and ovoids always
dig their burrow at an open spot, with no other protection than the
mound of earth flung up, the makers of little thimbles bore their well
directly under the material exploited and go by preference to the
voluminous droppings of the Horse and the Mule. Under this thick
mattress, the soil, protected against sun and wind, keeps fresh and
damp for some little time, steeped as it is in the moisture from the
dung.

For that matter, the danger does not last long. The egg yields up the
grub in less than a week; and the larva attains its full development
within a dozen days or so, if nothing untoward happens. This makes
about twenty days in all for the critical period of the Onthophagus and
the Oniticellus. What does it matter if the walls of the emptied
thimble do dry after that! The nymph will be all the better off in a
solid casket, which will easily crumble to bits later, when, with the
first September rains, the insect effects its release.

In appearance and habits the grub resembles that which the Sacred
Beetle and the others have introduced to us. It possesses the same
aptitude for defending the cell against the dangerous intrusion of the
dry air; the same zeal, the same nimbleness in cementing the least
breach with the putty of the intestines; the same knapsack hunching the
middle of the back.

The grub of the Oniticellus has the most remarkable hump of all. Would
you care to have a quick and yet a faithful sketch of it? Draw a short,
wrinkled sausage. About the middle of this sausage, on the side, graft
an appendix. There you have the beast, in three almost equal parts. The
lower portion is the abdomen; the upper, where you are at first
inclined to look for the head, so clearly does it appear to be a
continuation of the part below, is the hump, the inordinate,
extravagant hump, bigger than caricaturist ever dared conceive in the
wildest flights of his imagination. It occupies the place which by
rights belongs to the chest and head. Then where are these? Thrust
aside by the monstrous knapsack, they constitute a lateral appendage, a
mere knob. The strange creature bends at right angles under the weight
of its hump.

When nature goes in for the grotesque, she leaves us behind. Is
grotesque the right word? I have seen representations of Monkeys
adorned with preposterous noses which Rabelais, for all his inspired
vision of the huge, never conceived; and this though he invented the
nose ‘like the beak of a limbeck, in every part thereof most variously
diapered with the twinkling sparkles of crimson blisters budding forth,
and purpled with pimples all enamelled with thick-set wheals of a
sanguine colour, bordered with gules.’ [45] I know some who are all
scrubby with shock-headed wigs and whiskers and imperials in which
every hairy drollery seems to be epitomized; and yet there is not a
doubt that noses ‘like the beak of a limbeck’ and bristly faces are
highly admired in the simian clan. There is no boundary between the
fashionable and the grotesque. It all depends upon the appraiser.

If the grub with the outrageous hump were to show itself in public, it
would doubtless represent the supreme expression of the beautiful in
the eyes of the Oniticellus and the Onthophagus. Because it is a
recluse, nobody sees it. Its charms would remain unknown but for the
philosophical observer, who says to himself:

‘Everything is good that harmonizes with the functions to be fulfilled.
The grub requires a cement-bag to safeguard its provisions against
desiccation; it is born with a knapsack on its back so that it may
live.’

Thus is the hump excused and abundantly justified.

Its usefulness is displayed from another point of view. The thimble is
of such a niggardly size that the grub consumes it almost entirely. All
that remains is a thin layer, a crumbling remnant which would provide
no security for the nymph. The ruined dwelling has to be strengthened,
to be lined with a new wall. For this purpose, the larva of the
Oniticellus empties the whole of its knapsack and gives its cell a
complete coating of cement, after the manner of the Sacred Beetle and
others.

The grub of the different species of Onthophagi does more artistic
work. Placing its putty drop by drop, it constructs a mosaic of
lightly-projecting scales, suggesting those of a cedar-cone. When
finished, well dried and stripped of the last shreds of the original
thimble, the shell thus obtained by the Bull Onthophagus is the size of
an average filbert and resembles the pretty cone of the alder-tree. The
imitation is so good that I was taken in by it the first time that I
handled the curious product when digging in my cages. It needed the
contents of the mock alder-cone to show me my mistake. The hump has an
artfulness of its own: it was keeping this elegant specimen of
stercoral jewellery in reserve for us.

The nymph of the Onthophagi provides us with another surprise. My
observations are confined to two species only: the Bull Onthophagus and
the Forked Onthophagus; but the difference between the two, in size and
shape, is great enough to allow me to generalize and apply the
following singular fact to the whole genus.

About the middle of the fore-edge of the corselet the nymph is armed
with a very distinct horn, projecting for about one-twelfth of an inch.
The horn is transparent, colourless and limp, as are all the budding
organs at this period, particularly the legs, the cornicles of the
forehead and the mouth-parts. This crystalline protuberance proclaims a
future horn as clearly as the mandible is proclaimed by its initial
nipple or the wing-case by its sheath. Any insect-collector will
understand my amazement. A horn there, on the prothorax! But no
Onthophagus wears such a weapon as that! The register of my
insect-house duly records the genus of the insect, but I dare not
believe it.

The nymph moults. Together with the cast skin, the unfamiliar horn
dries up and falls off, leaving not the least trace behind it. My two
Onthophagi, recently disguised in strange armour, now have their
corselets bare.

This fleeting organ, which disappears without leaving even an
excrescence, this temporary horn at a spot destined in the end to be
unmailed, gives rise to a few reflections. The Dung-beetles, those
placid creatures, generally favour a warlike harness: they love
outlandish weapons, halberds, spears, grappling-irons, scimitars. Let
us hurriedly recall the horn of the Spanish Copris. No Rhinoceros in
the Indian jungles boasts one to compare with it upon his nose. Broad
at the base, pointed at the tip, curved like a bow, when the head is
lifted the horn bends back till it touches the keel of the obliquely
truncated corselet. It might be a harpoon intended for ripping up some
monster. Remember also the Minotaur, [46] who looks as though he were
going to spit his foe with his sheaf of three couched lances, and the
Lunary Copris, horned on the forehead, armed with a pike on each
shoulder and wearing a corselet notched with little crescents that
remind us of the short curved knife of the pork-butcher.

The Onthophagi have a most varied arsenal. One, O. taurus, wears the
Bull’s crescent-shaped horns; a second, O. vacca, prefers a wide, short
blade, with its point sheathed in a notch in the corselet; a third, O.
furcatus, wields a trident; yet another, O. nuchicornis, owns a dagger
with a winged handle; and again O. cænobita sports a cavalryman’s
sword. The worst-equipped crown their foreheads with a transversal
crest, with a pair of cornicles.

What is the good of this panoply? Are we to look upon it as a set of
tools, pickaxes, mattocks, pitchforks, spades, levers, which the insect
might ply in digging? By no means. The only industrial implements are
the forehead and the legs, especially the fore-legs. I have never
discovered a Dung-beetle of any sort making use of her weapons either
to excavate her burrow or to mix her provisions. Besides, as a rule,
the direction of the things alone would prevent their employment as
utensils. For a digging-job performed forwards, what would you have a
Spanish Copris do with her pickaxe, which points backwards? The
powerful horn does not face the obstacle attacked; it turns its back
upon it.

The Minotaur’s trident, though arranged in a suitable direction,
likewise remains unemployed. When deprived of this armour with a clip
of my scissors, the Beetle loses none of his mining-talents; he goes
underground quite as easily as his unmutilated fellow. And here is an
even more conclusive argument: the mothers, to whose lot the labour of
nest-building falls; the mothers, those conspicuous workers, are
deprived of these horny growths or possess them only on a greatly
reduced scale. They simplify the armour, or reject it entirely, because
it is more of an impediment than an assistance to their work.

Are we to look upon them as means of defence? Not that either. The
ruminants, the main feeders of the dung-eaters, are also given to
wearing frontal armour. The analogy of taste is obvious, though it is
impossible for us to suspect its remote reasons. The Ram, the Bull, the
Goat, the Chamois, the Stag, the Reindeer and the rest of them are
armed with horns and antlers which they use in amorous jousts or for
the protection of the threatened herd. The Onthophagi know nothing of
these contests. There is no strife among them; and, should danger
arise, they content themselves with shamming death by gathering their
legs under their abdomen.

Their armour then is a mere ornament, the fine feathers of masculine
coquetry. According to life’s law of competition, the best-dressed
carry off the palm. Though we may regard those rapiers on the nose as
queer, their wearers are of another opinion; and the most eccentric
enjoy the highest favour. The smallest extra pimple, springing up by
accident, is an added beauty which may decide the choice among the
suitors. The best-adorned captivate the mothers, perpetuate the breed
and hand down to their offspring the cornicle or the knob that caused
their triumph. Thus by degrees was the ornamentation at which the
entomologist wonders to-day formed and transmitted from generation to
generation, improving as it went.

To this dictum of the evolutionists the nymph of the Onthophagus
replies as follows:

‘I have on my back a budding horn, the germ of a bit of ornamentation
that can be very handsome, as witness the Bison Bubas, who turns it
into a splendid prow-shaped protuberance; witness also various exotic
relatives of mine, who lengthen their corselet into a magnificent spur.
I possess the wherewithal to bring about a revolution among my kin. If
I retained it, my bump, that charming innovation, would relegate my
rivals to the second rank; I should be preferred above all others; I
should become the founder of a family; and my descendants, completing
and improving on my first attempt, would behold the extinction of those
antiquated old things. Why should the lump on my back wither
purposeless? Why should my endeavour, repeated year after year for
centuries, never achieve the promised result?’

Listen to me, O ambitious one! The theorists, it is true, declare that
every casual acquisition, however trifling, is handed down and
increases if it be profitable; but don’t rely overmuch on that
assertion. I do not doubt the advantages which you might gain from a
little ornament. What I do very much doubt is the efficacity of time
and environment as an evolutionary factor. You will be well-advised to
believe that, born in the dim and distant past with a transient
callosity, you are continuing and will continue to be born with that
rudimentary excrescence without any chance of fixing it, hardening it
into a horn or obtaining an additional decoration for your
wedding-garment.

Be we men or Dung-beetles, we are all created in the image of an
unalterable prototype: the changing conditions of life alter us
slightly on the surface but never in the framework of our being. The
verdigris of the ages may encrust our medals, but it can give them
neither a new image nor a new superscription. Nothing will give me the
wings of a bird, desirable though these would be in the midst of our
human squalor; nor will anything bestow upon your adult age the
triumphal crest which your nymphal knob seemed to prognosticate.

The nymphs of both the Onthophagus and the Oniticellus attain their
maturity in some twenty days. During August the adult form appears with
the half-white, half-red costume which has become familiar to us from
our earlier studies. The normal colouring is fixed pretty quickly.
Nevertheless the insect is in no hurry to burst its shell: the
difficulty would be too great. It waits for the first showers of
September, which will come to its assistance by softening the casket.
The liberating rain arrives; and behold, issuing from the earth to rush
after food, the joyous small fry of the Onthophagi.

Among the domestic secrets which my cages reveal to me at this period,
one above all attracts my attention. I possess at the same time, in
separate establishments, the newcomers and the veterans, which last are
as brisk and eager in their pursuit of the victuals as are their sons,
now banqueting for the first time in the open. The cages are stocked
with two generations.

The same synchronizing of fathers and sons is observable among all the
Dung-beetles that build their nests in the spring: Sacred Beetles,
Copres and Geotrupes. The precaution which I have taken to watch the
hatchings and to place the youngsters in a special compartment as and
when they appeared confirms this remarkable simultaneity.

It is an entomological principle that the ancestor shall not see his
descendants; he dies once the future of his family is assured. By a
glorious privilege, the Sacred Beetle and his rivals are allowed to
know their successors: fathers and sons meet at the same banquet, not
in my cages, where the problems under consideration compel me to keep
them separate, but in the open fields. Together they gambol in the sun,
together they exploit the patch of dung encountered; and this life of
revelry lasts as long as autumn continues to supply fine days.

The cold weather arrives. Sacred Beetles and Copres, Onthophagi and
Gymnopleuri dig themselves a burrow, go down into it with provisions,
shut themselves in and wait. In January, on a frosty day, I dig into
the cages, which have no protection against the inclemencies of the
season. I go to work discreetly, so as not to submit all my captives to
the harsh test. Those whom I exhume each sit huddled in a shell, beside
the remaining provisions. All that the lethargy produced by the cold
allows them to do is to move their legs and antennæ a little when I
expose them to the sun.

Hardly has the imprudent almond-tree burst into blossom in February,
when some of the sleepers awake. Two of the earlier Onthophagi, O.
lemur and O. fronticornis, are very common at this time, already
crumbling the dung warmed by the sun on the high-road. Soon the
festival of spring begins; and all, large and small, newcomers and
veterans, hasten to take part in it. The old ones, not all, but at
least some of them, the best-preserved, fly off and get married a
second time, an unparalleled privilege. They have two families,
separated by an interval of a year. They can indeed have three, as is
evidenced by the Broad-necked Scarab, who, kept in a cage for three
years, gives me every year her collection of pears. Perhaps they even
go beyond this. The Dung-beetle tribe has its patriarchs who are truly
venerable.



CHAPTER XII

THE GEOTRUPES: THE PUBLIC HEALTH


To complete the cycle of the year in the adult form, to see one’s self
surrounded by one’s sons at the spring festival, to double and treble
one’s family: that surely is a most exceptional privilege in the insect
world. The Bees, the aristocracy of instinct, perish once the honey-pot
is filled; the Butterflies, the aristocracy not of instinct but of
dress, die when they have fastened their packet of eggs in a propitious
spot; the richly-armoured Ground-beetles succumb when the germs of a
posterity are scattered beneath the stones.

So with the others, except among the social insects, where the mother
survives, either alone or accompanied by her attendants. It is a
general law: the insect is born orphaned of both its parents. And lo,
by an unexpected turn of fate, the humble scavenger escapes the
catastrophes that devour the mighty! The Dung-beetle, sated with days,
becomes a patriarch.

This longevity explains first of all a fact that struck me long ago,
when, to learn a little about the tribes whose history attracted me so
greatly, I used to stick rows of Beetles on pins in my boxes.
Ground-beetles, Rose-chafers, Buprestes, Capricorns, Saperdæ [47] and
the rest were collected one by one, after prolonged search. Now and
again a lucky find would make my cheeks glow with excitement.
Exclamations broke from our prentice band when one of these rarities
was captured. A touch of jealousy accompanied our congratulations of
the proud possessor. It was bound to be so; for think: there were not
enough to go round.

A Scalary Saperda, the denizen of dead cherry-trees, clad in deep
yellow with ladder-like markings of black velvet; a purply
Ground-beetle, edged with amethyst along his ebony wing-cases; a
brilliant Buprestis, wedding the sheen of gold and copper to the
gorgeous green of malachite: these were great events, far too
infrequent to satisfy us all.

With the Dung-beetles you can sing a different song! These are the ones
if you want to fill the greediest of asphyxiating-phials to the neck.
They, especially the smaller ones, are a numberless multitude when the
others are few and far between. I remember Onthophagi and Aphodii
swarming by the thousand under one shelter. You could have shovelled
them up if you wished.

To this day I am still astonished when I see these crowds again; as of
old, the abundance of the Dung-beetle family forms a striking contrast
with the comparative scarcity of the others. If it occurred to me to go
a-hunting once more and renew the quest to which I owe moments of such
sheer delight, I should be certain of filling my flasks with Scarabæi,
Copres, Geotrupes, Onthophagi and other members of the same corporation
before achieving any measure of success with the rest of the series. By
the time that May comes, the distiller of ordure is there in numbers;
and in July and August, those months of blazing heat which see the
suspension of labour in the fields, the dealer in unsavoury matter is
still at work while the others have taken to earth and are lying in
motionless torpor. He and his contemporary, the Cicada, [48] represent
almost by themselves such activity as prevails during the torrid days.

May not this greater frequency of the Dung-beetles, at least in my part
of the world, be due to the longevity of the adult form? I think so.
Whereas the other insects are summoned to enjoy the fine weather only
in successive generations, these receive a general invitation, father
and sons together, daughters and mother together. Being equally
prolific, they are therefore represented twice over.

And they really deserve it, in consideration of the services which they
render. There is a general hygienic law which requires that every
putrid thing shall disappear in the shortest possible time. Paris has
not yet solved the formidable problem of her sewage, which sooner or
later will become a question of life or death for the monstrous city.
One asks one’s self whether the centre of light is not doomed to be
extinguished some day in the reeking exhalations of a soil saturated
with putrescence. What this agglomeration of millions of men cannot
obtain, with all its treasures of wealth and talent, the smallest
hamlet possesses without going to any expense or even troubling to
think about it.

Nature, so lavish of her cares in respect of rural health, is
indifferent to the welfare of cities, if not actively hostile to it.
She has created for the fields two classes of scavengers, whom nothing
wearies, whom nothing repels. One of these, consisting of Flies,
Silphæ, Dermestes, Necrophori, Histers is charged with the dissection
of corpses. They cut and hash, they elaborate the waste matter of death
in their stomachs in order to restore it to life.

A Mole ripped open by the ploughshare soils the path with its entrails,
which soon turn purple; a Snake lies on the grass, crushed by the foot
of a wayfarer who thought, the fool, that he was performing a good
work; an unfledged bird, fallen from its nest, lies, a crushed and
pathetic heap, at the foot of the tree that carried it; thousands of
other similar remains, of every sort and kind, are scattered here and
there, threatening danger through their effluvia, if no steps be taken
to put things right. Have no fear: no sooner is a corpse signalled in
any direction than the little undertakers come trotting along. They
work away at it, empty it, consume it to the bone, or at least reduce
it to the dryness of a mummy. In less than twenty-four hours, Mole,
Snake, bird have disappeared and the requirements of health are
satisfied.

The same zeal for their task exists in the second class of scavengers.
The village hardly knows those ammonia-scented refuges to which the
townsman repairs to relieve his sordid needs. A little bit of a wall, a
hedge, a bush is all that the peasant asks as a retreat at the moment
when he would fain be alone. I need say no more to suggest the
encounters to which such free and easy manners expose you! Enticed by
the patches of lichen, the cushions of moss, the tufts of houseleek and
other pretty things that adorn old stones, you go up to a sort of wall
that supports a vineyard. Faugh! At the foot of the daintily-decked
shelter, what an unconcealed abomination! You flee: lichens, mosses and
houseleek tempt you no more. But come back on the morrow. The thing has
disappeared, the place is clean: the Dung-beetles have been that way.

To preserve the eyes from a frequent recurrence of offensive sights is,
to these stalwart workers, the least of their tasks: a loftier mission
is incumbent on them. Science tells us that the most dreadful scourges
of mankind have their agents of dissemination in tiny organisms, the
microbes, near neighbours of must and mould, on the extreme confines of
the vegetable kingdom. At times of epidemic, the terrible germs
multiply by countless myriads in the intestinal discharges. They
contaminate those main necessities of life, the air and the water; they
spread over our linen, our clothes, our food and thus diffuse
contagion. We have to destroy by fire, to sterilize with corrosives or
to bury underground such things as are infected with them.

Prudence even demands that we should never allow ordure to linger on
the surface of the ground. It may be harmless or it may be dangerous:
when in doubt, the best thing is to put it out of sight. That is how
ancient wisdom seems to have understood the thing, long before the
microbe explained to us the need for vigilance. The nations of the
east, more liable than we to epidemics, had formal laws in these
matters. Moses, apparently echoing Egyptian knowledge in this case,
tabulated the rules of conduct for his people wandering in the Arabian
desert:


   ‘Thou shalt have a place without the camp,’ he says, ‘to which thou
    mayst go for the necessities of nature, carrying a paddle at thy
    girdle. And, when thou sittest down, thou shalt dig round about and
    with the earth that is dug up thou shalt cover that which thou art
    eased of’ (Deut. xxiii. 12–14).


The simple precept touches a matter of grave concern; and we may well
believe that, if Islam, at the time of its great pilgrimages to the
Kaaba, were to take the same precaution and a few more of a similar
character, Mecca would cease to be an annual seat of cholera and Europe
would not need to mount guard on the shores of the Red Sea to protect
herself against the scourge.

Heedless of hygiene as the Arab, who was one of his ancestors, the
Provençal peasant does not suspect the danger. Fortunately, the
Dung-beetle, that faithful observer of the Mosaic law, is at work. It
is his to remove from sight, it is his to bury the microbe-laden
matter. Supplied with digging-implements far superior to the paddle
which the Israelite was to carry at his girdle when urgent business
called him from the camp, he hastens to the spot and, as soon as man is
gone, excavates a pit wherein the infection is swallowed up and
rendered harmless.

The services rendered by these sextons are of the highest importance to
the health of the fields; yet we, who are those most interested in this
constant work of purification, hardly vouchsafe the sturdy toilers a
contemptuous glance. Popular language overwhelms them with harsh
epithets. This appears to be the rule: do good and you shall be
misjudged, you shall be traduced, stoned, trodden underfoot, as witness
the Toad, the Bat, the Hedgehog, the Owl and other helpers who, for
their services, ask nothing but a little tolerance.

Now, of our defenders against the dangers of filth flaunted shamelessly
in the rays of the sun, the most remarkable in our climes are the
Geotrupes: not that they are more zealous than the others, but because
their size makes them capable of heavier work. Moreover, when it is
simply a question of their nourishment, they resort by preference to
the materials which we have most to fear.

My neighbourhood is worked by four species of Geotrupes. Two of them,
G. mutator, Marsh, and G. sylvaticus, Panz., are rarities on which we
had best not count for connected studies; the two others, on the
contrary, G. stercorarius, Lin., and G. hypocrita, Schneid., are
exceedingly common. Black as ink above, both of them are magnificently
garbed below. We are quite surprised to find such a jewel-case among
the professional scavengers. The under surface of the Stercoraceous
Geotrupes is of a splendid amethyst-violet, while that of the Mimic
Geotrupes makes a generous display of the ruddy gleams of copper
pyrites. These two species are the inmates of my insect-houses.

Let us ask them first of what feats they are capable as buriers. There
are a dozen of them in all. The cage is previously swept clean of what
remains of the former provisions, hitherto supplied without stint. This
time, I propose to find out what a Geotrupes can stow away in one
night. At sunset, I serve to my twelve captives the whole of a heap
which a Mule has just dropped in front of my door. There is plenty of
it, enough to fill a basket.

On the morning of the next day, the mass has disappeared underground.
There is nothing left outside, or very nearly nothing. I am able to
make a fairly close estimate and I find that each of my Geotrupes,
presuming each of the twelve to have done an equal share of the work,
has buried pretty nearly sixty cubic inches of matter: a Titanic task,
when we remember the insignificant size of the insect, which, moreover,
has to dig the warehouse to which the booty must be lowered. And all
this is done in the space of a night.

Having feathered their nests so well, will they remain quietly
underground with their treasure? Not they! The weather is magnificent.
The hour of twilight comes, gentle and calm. Now is the time when long
flights are undertaken, when joyous humming fills the air, when the
insects go afar, searching the roads by which the herds have lately
passed. My lodgers abandon their cellars and mount to the surface. I
hear them buzzing, climbing up the wirework, bumping wildly against the
walls. I have anticipated this twilight animation. Provisions have been
collected during the day, plentiful as those of yesterday. I serve
them. There is the same disappearance during the night. On the morrow,
the place is once again swept clean. And this would continue
indefinitely, so fine are the evenings, if I always had at my disposal
the wherewithal to satisfy these insatiable hoarders.

Rich though his booty be, the Geotrupes leaves it at sunset to dally in
the last gleams of daylight and to go in search of a new workplace.
With him, one would say, the wealth acquired does not count; the only
thing of value is that to be acquired. Then what does he do with his
warehouses, renewed each twilight in favourable weather? It is obvious
that the Dung-beetle is incapable of consuming all those provisions in
a single night. He has such a superabundance of victuals in his larder
that he does not know how to dispose of them; he is surfeited with good
things by which he will not profit; and, not satisfied with having his
store crammed, the acquisitive plutocrat slaves, night after night, to
store away more.

From each warehouse, set up here, set up there, as things happen, he
deducts the daily meal beforehand; the rest, which means almost the
whole, he abandons. My cages testify to the fact that this instinct for
burying is more imperative than the consumer’s appetite. The ground is
soon raised, in consequence; and I am obliged, from time to time, to
lower the level to the desired limits. If I dig it up, I find it choked
throughout its depth with hoards that have remained intact. The
original earth has become a hopeless conglomeration, which I must prune
freely, if I would not go astray in my future observations.

Allowing for errors, either of excess or deficiency, which are
inevitable in a subject that does not admit of exact measurement, one
point stands out very clearly as the result of my enquiry: the
Geotrupes are enthusiastic buriers; they take underground a great deal
more than is necessary for their consumption. As this work is
performed, in varying degrees, by legions of collaborators, large and
small, it is evident that the purification of the soil must benefit to
a considerable extent and that the public health is to be congratulated
on having this army of auxiliaries in its service.

In addition, the plant and, indirectly, a host of different existences
are interested in these interments. What the Geotrupes buries and
abandons the next day is not lost: far from it. Nothing is lost in the
world’s balance-sheet; at stock-taking, the total never varies. The
little lump of dung buried by the insect will make the nearest tuft of
grass grow a luxuriant green. A Sheep passes, crops the bunch of grass:
all the better for the leg of mutton which man is waiting for; the
Dung-beetle’s industry has procured us a savoury mouthful.

Even that is something, though we are making our usual mistake of
comparing everything with our own standard. How much more it becomes,
once we begin to think and get away from this narrow point of view! To
enumerate all those who benefit, directly or indirectly, by the
Dung-beetle’s work would be impossible, so inextricably interlinked is
all that exists. I think of the Warbler, who will stuff the mattress of
his nest with the tiny stalks retted by the rain and sun; the
caterpillar of some Psyche, which will construct its Moth-case by
imbricating the remnants of those same stalks; little Cockchafers, who
will nibble the anthers of the tall grasses; tiny Weevils, who will
turn the ripe seeds into cradles for their grubs; tribes of Aphides,
who will settle under the leaves; and Ants, who will come and slake
their thirst at the sugary cornicles of the last-named herd.

Let us be content with this list, or we shall never have done. A whole
world is benefited by the agricultural industry of the Dung-beetle,
that burier of manure: first the plant and then all that live upon the
plant. A small world, a very small world, as small as you please, but
after all not a negligible world. It is of such trifles that the great
integral of life is composed, even as the integral of the
mathematicians is composed of quantities neighbouring on 0.

Agricultural chemistry teaches us that, to employ the stable-dung to
the best purpose, we should put it into the ground, so far as possible,
while fresh. When diluted by the rain and dissipated by the air, it
becomes lifeless and devoid of fertilizing elements. This highly
important agronomic truth is quite familiar to the Geotrupes and his
colleagues. In their burying-work they invariably aim at materials of
recent date. Just as they are eager to put away the produce of the
moment, all saturated with its potassium, its nitrates and its
phosphates, even so do they scorn the stuff hardened into brick by the
sun or rendered infertile by long exposure to the air. The valueless
residue does not interest them; they leave this barren rubbish to
others.

We now know about the Geotrupes as a sanitary expert and a collector of
manure. We are going to see him in a third aspect, that of the
sagacious weather-prophet. It is popularly believed, in the
country-side, that a swarm of agitated Geotrupes, skimming the ground
with an air of great business in the evening, is a sign of fine weather
on the morrow. Is this rustic prognostication worth anything? My cages
shall tell us. I watch my boarders closely all through the autumn, the
period when they build their nests; I note the state of the sky on the
day before and register the weather of the next day. I use no
thermometer, no barometer, none of the scientific implements employed
in the meteorological observatories. I confine myself to the summary
information derived from my personal impressions.

The Geotrupes do not leave their burrows until after sundown. With the
last glimmer of daylight, if the air be calm and the temperature mild,
they roam about, flying low with a humming noise, seeking the materials
which have accumulated for them in the course of the day. If they come
upon something that suits them, they drop down heavily, tumbling over
in their clumsy eagerness, thrust themselves into their new treasure
and spend the best part of the night in burying it. In this way the
dirt of the fields is made to disappear in a single night.

There is one condition indispensable to this purging-process: the
atmosphere must be still and warm. Should it rain, the Geotrupes will
not stir out of doors. They have sufficient resources underground for a
prolonged holiday. Should it be cold, should the north-wind blow, they
will not sally forth either. In both cases my cages remain deserted on
the surface. We will leave out of the question these periods of
enforced leisure and consider only those evenings on which the
atmospheric conditions are favourable to foraging-expeditions, or at
least seem to me as though they ought to be. I will summarize the
details in my note-book in three general cases.

First case. A glorious evening. The Geotrupes fuss about the cages,
impatient to hasten to their nocturnal task. Next day, magnificent
weather. The prophecy, of course, is of the simplest. To-day’s fine
weather is only the continuation of yesterday’s. If the Geotrupes know
nothing more than this, they hardly deserve their reputation. However,
let us pursue the experiment before drawing any conclusions.

Second case. Again a fine evening. My experience seems to say that the
condition of the sky forebodes a fine morning. The Geotrupes think
otherwise. They do not come out. Which of the two will be right, man or
Dung-beetle? The Dung-beetle: thanks to the keenness of his
perceptions, he foresees, he scents a downpour. Rain comes during the
night and lasts for part of the day.

Third case. The sky is overcast. Will the south-wind, gathering its
clouds, bring us rain? I am of that opinion, appearances seem so much
to point that way. The Geotrupes, however, fly and buzz around their
cages. Their prophecy is correct and I am wrong. The threat of rain is
dispelled and the sun next morning rises radiantly.

They seem to be influenced above all by the electric tension of the
atmosphere. On hot and sultry evenings, when a storm is brewing, I see
them moving about even more than usual. The morrow is always marked by
violent claps of thunder.

There you have the upshot of my observations, which were continued for
three months. Whatever the condition of the sky, whether clear or
clouded, the Geotrupes announce fair weather or storm by their excited
movements in the evening twilight. They are living barometers, more
worthy of belief perhaps, in such contingencies, than the barometer of
our scientists. The exquisite sensitiveness of life is mightier than
the brute weight of a column of mercury.

I will end by mentioning a fact that well deserves further
investigation when circumstances permit. On the twelfth, thirteenth and
fourteenth of November 1894, the Geotrupes in my cages are in an
extraordinarily agitated condition. Never before and never since have I
seen such animation. They clamber wildly up the wires; at every moment
they take wing and at once bump against the walls and are flung to the
ground. Their restlessness continues until a late hour of the night, a
very unusual thing with them. Out of doors, a few free neighbours run
up and complete the riot in front of my house. What can be happening to
bring these strangers here and especially to throw my cages into such a
state of excitement?

After a few hot days, which are most exceptional at this time of the
year, the south-wind prevails, foretelling that rain is at hand. On the
evening of the fourteenth, an endless procession of broken clouds
passes before the face of the moon. It is a magnificent sight. During
the night the wind drops. There is not a breath of air. The sky is a
uniform grey. The rain pours straight down, monotonously, continuously,
depressingly. It looks as though it would never stop. And it goes on,
in fact, until the eighteenth of the month.

Did the Geotrupes, who were so restless on the twelfth, foresee this
deluge? They did. But as a rule they do not quit their burrows at the
approach of rain. Something very extraordinary must have happened,
therefore, to upset them in this way.

The newspapers explained the riddle. On the twelfth a storm of
unprecedented violence burst over the north of France. The great
barometrical depression which caused it was echoed in my district; and
the Geotrupes marked this profound disturbance by their exceptional
display of emotion. They told me of the hurricane before the papers
did, had I but been able to understand them. Was this simply a chance
coincidence, or was it a case of cause and effect? In the absence of
sufficient evidence, I will end on this note of interrogation.



CHAPTER XIII

THE GEOTRUPES: NEST-BUILDING


In September and October, when the first autumn rains soak the ground
and allow the Sacred Beetle to split his natal casket, the
Stercoraceous Geotrupes and the Mimic Geotrupes found their
family-establishments: somewhat makeshift establishments, in spite of
what we might have expected from the name of these miners, so well
styled earth-borers. When he has to dig himself a retreat that shall
shelter him against the rigours of winter, the Geotrupes really
deserves his name: none can compare with him for the depth of the pit
or the perfection and rapidity of the work. In sandy ground, easily
excavated, I have dug up some that were buried over a yard deep. Others
carried their digging farther still, tiring both my patience and my
implements. There you have the skilled well-sinker, the inimitable
earth-borer. When the cold sets in, he will be able to descend to some
stratum where the frost has lost its terrors.

The family-lodging is another matter. The propitious season is a short
one; time would fail, if each individual grub had to be endowed with
one of those mansions. Nothing could be more satisfactory than for the
insect to devote the leisure which the approach of winter gives it to
digging a hole of unlimited depth: this makes the retreat doubly safe;
and for the moment its energies, which are not yet suspended, have no
other outlet. But at laying-time these laborious undertakings are
impossible. The hours pass swiftly. In four or five weeks a numerous
family has to be housed and victualled, which puts the sinking of a
deep pit that requires time and patience quite out of the question.

In any case, precautions will be taken against the dangers of the
surface. Once its family is settled, the unprotected adult insect is
obliged to establish its winter quarters at great depths, whence it
will emerge in spring accompanied by its young ones, like the Sacred
Beetle; but neither the egg nor the grub needs this costly refuge in
the wet season, being well protected by the parents’ industry.

The burrow dug by the Geotrupes for the benefit of her grub is hardly
deeper than that of the Copris or the Sacred Beetle, notwithstanding
the difference of the seasons. Eleven or twelve inches, roughly
speaking, is the most that I find in the fields, where nothing occurs
to restrict the depth. My cages, with their limited thickness of soil,
are less trustworthy in this respect, since the insect has no option
but to use the layer of earth at its disposal. Many a time, however, I
perceive that this layer is not fully traversed down to the floor of
the box, thus furnishing a fresh proof of the slight depth needed.

In the open fields as in the confinement of my cages, the burrow is
always dug under the heap of dung that is being exploited. No outward
sign betrays its presence, concealed as it is beneath the voluminous
droppings of the Mule. It is a cylindrical passage, the same width as
the neck of a claret-bottle, straight and perpendicular in a
homogeneous soil, bent and winding irregularly in rough ground where a
root or stone may bar the way and necessitate an abrupt change of
direction. In my cages, when the layer of earth is insufficient, the
pit, at first vertical, bends at right angles on touching the wooden
floor and is continued horizontally. There is no precise rule therefore
in the boring. The accidents of the soil determine the shape.

At the end of the gallery again there is nothing to remind us of the
spacious hall, the workshop where Copres, Scarabæi and Gymnopleuri
fashion their artistic pears and ovoids, but a mere cul-de-sac of the
same diameter as the nest. A veritable drill-hole, if we make
allowances for the occasional knots and twists inevitable in boring
through stuff that offers more resistance at some places than at
others; a winding channel: that is what the Geotrupes’ burrow is.

The contents of the crude dwelling take the form of a sort of sausage
or pudding, which fills the lower part of the cylinder and fits it
exactly. Its length is not far short of eight inches and its width
about an inch and a half, when the thing belongs to the Stercoraceous
Geotrupes. The dimensions are a little smaller in the work of the Mimic
Geotrupes. In either case, the sausage is nearly always irregular in
shape, now curved, now more or less dented. These imperfections of the
surface are due to the accidents of a stony ground, which the insect
does not always excavate according to the canons of its art, which
favours the straight line and the perpendicular. The moulded material
faithfully reproduces all the irregularities of its mould. The lower
end is rounded off like the bottom of the burrow itself; the upper end
is slightly concave, through being packed more closely in the middle.

The voluminous object is put together in layers rather suggestive, as
regards curve and arrangement, of a pile of watch-glasses. Each of them
obviously corresponds with a load of materials gathered in the heap
above the burrow, carried down separately, placed in position on the
previous layer and then vigorously trampled flat. The edges of the
disk, which adapt themselves less well to this work of compression,
remain at a higher level; and all this tends to form something like a
concave lens. These same less-compressed edges give a sort of rind,
which is soiled with earth owing to its contact with the walls of the
tunnel. Altogether, the structure tells us the method of manufacture.
The Geotrupes’ sausage, like our own, is obtained by moulding in a
cylinder. It results from layers introduced one after the other and
duly compressed, especially in the middle, which is more easily
accessible to the manipulator’s legs. Direct observation will presently
confirm these inferences and supplement them with details of
considerable interest, which we should never suspect from simply
examining the work.

Before continuing, let us note how well inspired the insect is in
always boring its burrow under the heap whence the materials for the
sausage are to be extracted. The number of loads successively carried
down and pressed is considerable. Allowing a thickness of a sixth of an
inch for each layer—a figure which is near enough—I see that some fifty
journeys are needed. If the provisions had each time to be fetched from
a distance, the Geotrupes would be unable to cope with her task, which
would be too long and tiring. Her sort of work is incompatible with all
that travelling, after the fashion of the Sacred Beetle’s. She is wise
to settle beneath the heap. She has only to climb up from her well to
find under her feet, at her very door, enough to make her
black-pudding, however large she may wish it to be.

This, it is true, presupposes a copiously supplied workyard. When
toiling on behalf of her grub, the Geotrupes keeps a look-out for one
of this kind and accepts no purveyors except the Horse and the Mule,
never the Sheep, who is too niggardly. It is not a question here of the
quality of the foodstuffs; it is a question of quantity. My cages, in
fact, tell me that the Sheep would have the preference, if she were
more generous. What she does not give normally I create artificially by
piling sheaf upon sheaf. Beneath this extraordinary treasure, the like
of which is never offered by the fields, my captives work with a zest
that shows how well they appreciate the windfall. They enrich me with
more sausages than I know what to do with. I arrange them in strata in
great pots, so that, when winter comes, I may study the actions of the
larva; I lodge them separately in glass tubes and test-tubes; I pack
them in tins. The shelves of my study are crammed with them. My
collection reminds me of an assortment of potted meats.

The unfamiliarity of the material involves no change in the structure.
Because of its finer grain and greater plasticity, the surface is more
regular and the inside more homogeneous; and that is all.

At the lower end of the sausage, which end is always rounded off, is
the hatching-chamber, a circular cavity which could hold a fair-sized
hazel-nut. The respiratory needs of the germ demand that the side-walls
should be thin enough to allow the air to enter freely. Inside, I catch
the gleam of a greenish, semifluid plaster, a simple exudation from the
porous mass, as in the Copris’ ovoids and the Sacred Beetle’s pears.

In this round hollow lies the egg, without adhering in any way to the
surrounding walls. It is a white, elongated ellipsoid and is of
remarkable bulk in proportion to the insect. In the case of the
Stercoraceous Geotrupes, it measures seven to eight millimetres in
length by four at its widest point. [49] The egg of the Mimic Geotrupes
is a little smaller.

This little hollow contrived in the substance of the sausage, at the
lower end, does not agree at all with what I have read about the
Geotrupes’ nest-building. Quoting an old German writer, Frisch, [50] an
author whom the poverty of my library does not allow me to consult,
Mulsant, [51] speaking of the Stercoraceous Geotrupes, says:


   ‘At the bottom of her perpendicular gallery, the mother builds,
    usually with earth, a sort of nest, or egg-shaped shell, open at
    one side. On the inner wall of this shell she glues a whitish egg,
    the size of a grain of wheat.’


What can this shell be, usually made of earth and open at one side so
that the grub may reach the column of provisions overhead? I am at an
utter loss to know. Shell, especially made of earth, there is none, nor
any opening. I see and see again, as often as I wish, a round cell,
closed everywhere and built at the lower end of the food-cylinder, but
nothing else, nothing that even vaguely resembles the structure
described.

Which of the two is responsible for the imaginary construction? Can the
German entomologist have sinned through superficial observation? Or did
the Lyons entomologist misinterpret the older author? I lack the
necessary documents to bring the mistake home to the right person. Is
it not pathetic to see these masters, who are so punctilious about a
joint of the palpi, so cantankerous about the first claim to some
barbaric appellation, almost indifferent when they come to treat of
habits and industry, which are the supreme expression of an insect’s
life? Nomenclators’ entomology is making enormous strides: it
overwhelms us, swamps us. The other, biologists’ entomology, the only
interesting branch of the science, the only one really worthy of our
attention, is neglected to such an extent that the commonest species
has no history or calls for serious revision of the little that has
been written about it. Vain lamentations: things will go on in the same
old way for a long time to come.

To return to the Geotrupes’ sausage. Its shape is diametrically
opposite to that which we have studied in the case of the Copris and
the Sacred Beetle, who are sparing of material but very generous with
their labour, taking great care to give their work the shape best
suited to preserve it against dryness. With their ovoids and their
spheres surmounted by a neck, they are able to keep the modest
family-ration fresh. The Geotrupes knows nothing of these scientific
methods. More primitive in her ways, she sees well-being only in
overabundance. Provided that the gallery be crammed with food, she
little cares how shapeless her pile may be.

Instead of avoiding dryness, she appears to go in search of it. Just
look at the sausage. It is inordinately long and clumsily put together.
There is no compact, impermeable rind; and there is an excessive amount
of surface, touching the earth for the whole length of the cylinder.
This is exactly what is needed to bring about quick desiccation; it is
the converse of the problem of the smallest surface, solved by the
Sacred Beetle and the others. Then what becomes of my views on the
shape of those provisions, views so well founded, according to our
logic? Can I have been taken in by a blind geometry, which achieves a
rational result by chance?

To any one who says so let the facts reply. Here is their answer: the
manufacturers of spheres build their nests at the height of the summer,
when the ground is parched; the manufacturers of cylinders build theirs
in the autumn, when the earth becomes saturated with rain. The first
have to guard their family against the danger of bread too hard to eat.
The second know nothing of starvation through desiccation; their
provisions, potted in cool earth, retain indefinitely the proper degree
of softness. The moistness, not the shape, of the sheath is the
safeguard of the ration inside it. The rainfall at this time of the
year is in inverse ratio to that of summer; and this is enough to
render useless the precautions taken in the dog-days.

Let us probe deeper and we shall see that the cylinder is preferable to
the sphere in autumn. When October and November come, the rains are
frequent and persistent; but a day’s sunshine is enough to dry the soil
to the shallow depth where the Geotrupes’ nest lies. It is a serious
matter not to lose the enjoyment of this fine day. How will the grub
benefit by it?

Imagine the larva enclosed in the big ball which the copious quantity
of food placed at its disposal might well supply. Once saturated with
moisture by a shower, this sphere would retain it stubbornly, for its
form is that of least evaporation and of least contact with the
sun-warmed soil. In vain, within twenty-four hours, will the surface
layer of the ground be restored to its normal coolness: the globular
mass will retain its excess of water, for lack of adequate contact with
the sun- and air-dried earth. In the too-humid and too-thick recess,
the provisions will go musty; the heat from outside will be
inopportune, as will the air; and the larva will derive little
advantage from this late autumn sun, whose tardy rays ought to ripen it
to perfection and give it the necessary vigour to brave the trials of
winter.

What was a good quality in July, when it was necessary to guard against
excessive dryness, becomes a bad one in October, when excessive damp is
to be avoided. The cylinder is therefore substituted for the sphere.
The new shape, with its exaggerated length, fulfils the converse
condition of that beloved by the pill-makers: here, with a similar
volume, the surface is developed to its extreme limits. Is there a
reason for this complete change? No doubt; and I seem to perceive it.
Now that dryness is no longer to be feared, will not this kind of
shape, with its large surface, enable the mass of foodstuff to get rid
of its superfluous moisture more readily? Should it rain, its wide area
certainly will make it liable to more rapid saturation; but also, when
the fine weather returns, the surplus water will soon disappear thanks
to the extensive contact with a quickly-drained soil.

Let us conclude by enquiring how the roly-poly is manufactured. To
watch the performance in the fields appears to me a very difficult, not
to say impracticable undertaking. With my cages, success is certain,
provided that we exercise a little patience and dexterity. I let down
the board which keeps the artificial soil in place at the back. This
now reveals its vertical surface, which I explore bit by bit with the
point of a knife until I strike a burrow. If the operation be
cautiously conducted, without the disturbance due to an ill-calculated
landslip, the labourers are discovered at their toil, paralysed, it is
true, by the sudden flood of light and as it were petrified in the
attitude of work. The arrangement of the workshop and the materials,
the position and posture of the workers enable us easily to reconstruct
the scene, though it be abruptly suspended and not renewed so long as
our inspection lasts.

One fact, to begin with, thrusts itself upon our attention, a fact of
deep interest and so exceptional that this is the first example with
which my entomological studies have presented me. In each burrow laid
bare I always find two collaborators, a pair: I find the male lending
the mother his assistance. The household duties are divided between the
two. My notes give the following scene, to which we can easily restore
its animation according to the pose of the immobilized actors.

The male is at the back of the gallery, squatting on a length of
sausage measuring barely an inch. He occupies the basin formed through
the stuff’s being packed more tightly in the centre of each stratum.
What was he doing before the violation of his home? His attitude tells
us clearly: with his sturdy legs, especially the hind-legs, he was
pressing down the last layer placed in position. His mate occupies the
upper floor, almost at the opening of the burrow. I see her holding
between her legs a great lump of material which she has just gathered
at the bottom of the heap surmounting the house. The scare caused by my
intrusion has not made her let go. Hanging up there, above space,
braced against the walls of the pit, she clasps her burden with a sort
of cataleptic obstinacy. The nature of the interrupted work is easily
guessed: Baucis was carrying down to Philemon, the stronger of the two,
the wherewithal to continue the arduous work of piling and trampling.
After laying the egg and surrounding it with those delicate precautions
of which a mother alone possesses the secret, she had handed over the
construction of the cylinder to her companion, confining herself to
playing the humble part of a caterer’s man.

Similar scenes, observed during different phases of the work, enable me
to draw a general picture. The sausage begins with a short, wide casing
which closely lines the bottom of the burrow. In this bag, with its
yawning mouth, I find the two sexes in the midst of materials crumbled
and possibly weeded before being pressed, so that the grub may have
first-class victuals within its reach as soon as it starts feeding. The
couple between them plaster the walls and increase their thickness
until the cavity is reduced to the size needed for the
hatching-chamber.

This is the moment for laying the egg. Withdrawing discreetly, the male
waits with materials ready to close the cell that has just been filled.
The closing is done by bringing the edges of the sack nearer together
and adding a ceiling, a hermetically cemented lid. This is the delicate
part of the work, calling for knack much more than strength. The mother
alone attends to it. Philemon is now a mere journeyman-mason: he passes
the mortar, without being allowed on the ceiling, which his brutal
pressure might cause to fall in.

Soon the roof, duly thickened and reinforced, has nothing more to fear
from pressure. Then the ruthless stamping begins, the rough work which
transfers the leading part to the male. In the Stercoraceous Geotrupes
the difference in size and vigour between the sexes is striking. Here
indeed we have a very exceptional case: Philemon belongs to the
stronger sex. He is distinguished by his portly figure and muscular
energy. Take him in your hand and squeeze. I defy you to stand it, if
your skin is at all sensitive to pain. With his sharp-toothed and
convulsively stiffened legs, he digs into your flesh; he slips like an
irresistible wedge into the spaces between your fingers. It is more
than you can bear; and you have to let the creature go.

In the household he performs the function of an hydraulic press. We
subject our packs of fodder to the action of the press in order to
reduce their cumbrous bulk; he likewise compresses and reduces the
stringy materials of his sausage. It is most often the male that I find
at the top of the cylinder, a top excavated to form a deep basket. This
basket receives the load brought down by the mother; and, like the
labourer trampling on the grapes at the bottom of the vintage-tub, the
Geotrupes presses and amalgamates his materials with the convulsive
effort of his galvanic movements. The operation is so well conducted
that the new load, at first not unlike a voluminous mass of coarse
lint, becomes a compact layer uniform with the one before it.

The mother, however, does not abdicate her rights: I find her now and
then at the bottom of the basin. Perhaps she has come to see how the
work is going on. Her touch, which is better-suited for the delicate
part of the rearing, will more readily discover the mistakes that need
correcting. Very likely also she comes to relieve her husband in these
exhausting compressive operations. She herself is strong, sturdy in the
legs and capable of working turn and turn about with her valiant
companion.

However, her usual place is at the top of the gallery. I find her there
at one time with the armful which she has just gathered, at another
with a heap made up of several loads placed in reserve for the work
down below. As and when it is wanted, she draws upon the heap and
gradually carries the materials down to be pressed by the male.

Between this temporary warehouse and the basin at the bottom there is a
long empty space, the lower part of which supplies us with another bit
of information as to the progress of the work. The walls are lavishly
coated with a wash extracted from the most plastic portion of the
materials. This detail is not without value. It tells us that, before
packing the food-sausage layer by layer, the insect begins by cementing
the rough and porous wall of the mould. It putties its well to protect
the grub against the damp which might ooze through in the rainy season.
Finding it impossible by pressure to harden the skin of the
tightly-packed sausage to the requisite degree, it adopts a means
unknown to the Beetles that labour in large workshops; it coats the
earthy casing with cement. In this way it avoids, so far as lies in its
power, the risk of drowning on rainy days.

This waterproofing is done at intervals, as the cylinder grows in
length. The mother appears to me to attend to it whenever her warehouse
of provisions is sufficiently stocked to give her the time. While her
companion is pressing, she, an inch higher up, is plastering.

At last the combined efforts of husband and wife result in a cylinder
of the regulation length. The greater part of the well above remains
empty and uncemented. Nothing tells me that the Geotrupes trouble about
this unoccupied area. Scarabæi and Copres shoot into the
entrance-passage to the underground chamber a portion of the rubbish
extracted; they build a barricade in front of the dwelling. The
sausage-makers seem to be unfamiliar with this precaution. All the
burrows which I inspect are empty in the upper part. There is no sign
of excavated earth put back and pressed into position; there is merely
a little fallen rubbish, coming either from the dung-heap above or from
the crumbling walls.

This neglect might well be ascribed to the thick roof that surmounts
the house. Remember that the Geotrupes generally settle under the
copious provender which the Horse and the Mule bestow upon them. Under
such a shelter, is it really necessary to bolt one’s door? Besides, the
rough weather looks after the closing for them. The roof falls in, the
earth slips and the yawning pit soon fills up without the assistance of
those who dug it.

Just now my pen ventured to write the names of Philemon and Baucis. As
a matter of fact, the Geotrupes couple do in certain respects recall
the peaceful mythological household. What is the male, in the insect
world? Once the wedding has been celebrated, he is an incompetent, an
idler, a good-for-nothing, a drug in the market whom others shun and
sometimes even get rid of by atrocious means. The Praying Mantis [52]
tells us tragic enough things in this connection.

Now here, by a very curious exception, the sluggard becomes a toiler;
the lover of the moment a faithful husband; the careless parent a
serious paterfamilias. The brief meeting changes into a lasting
partnership. Married life, domestic life comes into being: a glorious
innovation; and the pioneer is a Dung-beetle! Go downwards: there is
nothing resembling it; go upwards: for a long time there is still
nothing. We have to mount to the top of the scale.

Take that little fish of our brooks, the Stickleback. The male knows
very well how to build out of algæ and different water-weeds a nest, a
snuggery, in which the female will come and spawn; but he knows nothing
of work shared in common. The cares of a family in which the mother
takes little interest fall upon him alone. No matter: there is one step
gained, a great one and especially a very remarkable one among fishes,
who are so supremely indifferent to family-affection and substitute an
appalling fecundity for the trouble of breeding. Fabulous numbers make
good the voids due to the lack of industry in the parents, even in the
mother, a mere bag for eggs.

Certain Toads attempt the duties of paternity; and then we have nothing
more till we come to the bird, that paragon of the domestic virtues.
Here we find married life in all its moral beauty. A contract turns the
couple into two collaborators, both equally zealous for the prosperity
of the family. The father takes just as much part as the mother in the
building of the nest, the quest of provisions, the distribution of each
mouthful and the supervision of the youngsters as they try their wings
preliminary to their first flight.

Standing still higher in the animal scale, the mammal carries on the
wonderful example without adding to it; on the contrary, it often
simplifies things. Man remains and has no prouder title to nobility
than his unwearying care for the family, that alliance which is never
dissolved. To our shame, I admit, a few individuals deny their
responsibility and sink below the level of the Toad.

The Geotrupes rivals the bird. The nest is the joint production of
husband and wife. The father puts the various layers together and
compresses them; the mother plasters the walls, fetches fresh loads and
places them under the presser’s feet. This home, the outcome of the
couple’s efforts, is also a storehouse of provisions. Here we see no
mouthfuls distributed to the children from day to day, but the
food-problem is solved none the less: the united labours of the two
partners result in the sumptuous sausage. Father and mother have done
their duty splendidly; they bequeath to the grub an eminently
well-furnished larder.

A pair that continue to exist as such, a couple that join forces and
unite their industry for their offspring’s welfare, certainly represent
enormous progress, perhaps the greatest in the animal kingdom. One day,
in the midst of the isolated existences, the household appeared, the
invention of an inspired Dung-beetle. How is it that his magnificent
acquirement is the property of a few, instead of extending all around,
from one species to another, throughout the guild? Can it be that
Scarabæi and Copres would have nothing to gain, in saving of time and
labour, if the mother, instead of working alone, had an assistant?
Things would move faster, so it seems to me, and a more numerous family
would be permissible, a possibility not to be despised when one has an
eye to the prosperity of the species.

How, on his side, did the Geotrupes think of combining the two sexes in
building the nest and stocking the larder? The abrupt transformation of
the usual airy paternity of the insect into something that rivals
motherhood in tenderness is so serious and so rare an event that we
long to discover the cause of it, if indeed we may hope to do so with
the sorry means of information at our disposal. One idea occurs to us
at once: may there not be some connection between the male’s superior
size and his liking for hard work? Endowed with greater robustness and
vigour than the mother, he who is usually so lazy has become a zealous
helper; the love of work has come from a surplus of unspent strength.

Take care: this apparent explanation will not hold water. The two sexes
of the Mimic Geotrupes scarcely differ in size; the advantage is often
even in the female’s favour; and nevertheless the male lends assistance
to his companion: he is as eager a well-sinker, as energetic a presser
as his big stercoraceous kinsman.

And here is a still more conclusive argument: among the Anthidia, [53]
those Bees who weave cotton-stuffs or knead resin, the male, though
much larger than the female, is an absolute idler. He, so strong, so
stout of limb, take part in the work! Never! Let the mother, the feeble
mother, wear herself out while he, powerful fellow that he is, frolics
among the speedwell and the lavender.

It is not physical strength, therefore, that has made the Geotrupian
paterfamilias into a worker devoted to his children’s welfare. And this
is as much as our investigations tell us. To pursue the problem would
be a vain endeavour. The origin of faculties escapes us. Why is this
gift bestowed here and that gift there? Who knows? Can we indeed ever
hope to know?

One point alone stands out clearly: instinct is not dependent on
structure.

The Geotrupes have been known from time immemorial; conscientious
entomologists, peering through their magnifying-glasses, have examined
them down to their smallest details; and no one has yet suspected their
marvellous privilege of keeping house in common. Above the monotonous
level of the ocean suddenly emerge the headlands of lonely little
islands, scattered here and there, whose existence none can suspect
until geography has added them to her charts. Even so do the peaks of
instinct rear their crests above the ocean of life.



CHAPTER XIV

THE GEOTRUPES: THE LARVA


The egg takes from one to two weeks to hatch, according as it is laid
in October or September. As a rule the hatching takes place in the
first fortnight of October. The larva grows pretty quickly and soon
manifests very different characteristics from those displayed by the
other Dung-beetles. We find ourselves in a new world, full of
surprises. The grub is folded in two, it is bent into a hook, as
required by the narrowness of the cell, which is scooped out gradually
as the inside of the sausage is consumed.

Even so did the grubs of the Sacred Beetle, the Copris and the others
comport themselves; but the larva of the Geotrupes has not the hump
that gave the first-named such an ungainly figure. Its back is curved
regularly. This entire absence of a knapsack, of a putty-bag, points to
different habits. The larva, in fact, is not acquainted with the art of
plugging crevices. If I contrive an opening in the part of the sausage
which it occupies, I do not see it taking note of the hole, turning
round and forthwith repairing the damage with a few pats of a trowel
well supplied with cement. The access of the air does not trouble it
apparently, or rather there is no provision against this in its means
of defence.

You have only to take a glance at its dwelling. What would be the use
of the plasterer’s art of stopping up crannies, when the house simply
cannot crack? Closely moulded in the cylinder of the burrow, the
sausage is preserved from crumbling to dust by the support of its
mould. The Sacred Beetle’s pear, which is free on every side in a large
underground cavity, often swells, splits, peels off. The Geotrupes’
sausage, being packed in a casing, is free from these imperfections.
Besides, if it were to burst, the accident would not be serious, for
now, in autumn and winter, in a soil that is always damp and fresh,
there is no fear of that desiccation which is so greatly dreaded by the
pill-rollers. Hence there is no special industry designed to circumvent
a peril that is unlikely and of little consequence; no excessively
docile intestine to keep the trowel supplied; no ugly hump to act as a
mortar-magazine. The inexhaustible evacuator of our earlier studies
disappears and is replaced by a grub whose motions are more moderate.

Obviously, big eater as the larva is and, moreover, sequestered in a
cell allowing of no communication with the outside, it is utterly
ignorant of what we call cleanliness. Let us not take this to mean that
it is disgustingly filthy, soiled with excrement: we should be making a
grave mistake. Nothing could be neater or glossier than its satiny
skin. We wonder what pains it must take over its toilet, or else what
special grace enables all these eaters of ordure to keep themselves so
clean. Seeing them outside their usual environment, no one would
suspect their sordid life.

We must look elsewhere for any defect in cleanliness, if indeed it is
right to give the name of defect to a quality which, all things
considered, makes for the creature’s good. Language, the one and only
mirror of our thoughts, easily goes astray and becomes treacherous when
attempting to express reality. Let us substitute the larva’s point of
view for our own, let us throw off the man and become the Dung-beetle:
offensive epithets will disappear forthwith.

The grub, that mighty eater, has no relations with the outside world.
What is it to do with the remains of what it has digested? Far from
being embarrassed by them, it takes advantage of them, as do many other
solitaries cabined in a shell. It uses them to keep out the draughts
from its hermitage and to pad it with quilting. It spreads them into a
soft couch, grateful to its delicate skin; it builds them into a
polished niche, a water-tight alcove which will protect the long winter
torpor. I told you that one had but to imagine one’s self a Dung-beetle
for a moment in order to change one’s language utterly. Behold that
which was hateful and burdensome turned into something of value, which
will contribute largely to the grub’s welfare. Onthophagi and Copres,
Scarabæi and Gymnopleuri have accustomed us to this kind of industry.

The sausage is in an upright position, or nearly so. The
hatching-chamber is at the bottom end. As the grub grows, it attacks
the provisions overhead, but does not touch the wall around, which is
of considerable thickness. It has indeed so huge a dish at its disposal
that abstinence becomes no difficult matter. The Sacred Beetle’s grub,
which has no occasion to take precautions against the winter, has a
very skimpy helping. Its little pear is a niggardly ration and is
consumed throughout, all but a slender wall, which the inmate, however,
takes care to thicken and strengthen with a good layer of its mortar.
The grub of the Geotrupes is very differently situated. It is supplied
with a colossal sausage, representing nearly a dozen times as much as
the other provisions. However well endowed it be with stomach and
appetite, it could not possibly consume the whole lot. Besides, the
question of food is not the only one to be considered this time: there
is also the serious matter of the hibernation. The parents foresaw the
severity of the winter and bequeathed their sons the wherewithal to
face it. The giant roly-poly will become a blanket against the cold.

The grub, as a matter of fact, gnaws bit by bit the part above and
scoops out a corridor just wide enough to pass through. In this way, a
very thick wall is left intact, the central part alone being consumed.
As the sheath is bored, the sides are at the same time cemented and
lined with the evacuations of the intestine. Any excess product
accumulates and forms a rampart behind.

So long as the weather remains favourable, the grub moves about in its
gallery; it takes its stand above or below and attacks the provisions
with a tooth that grows daily more languid. Five or six weeks are thus
passed in banqueting; then comes the cold weather, bringing the winter
torpor with it. The grub now digs itself an oval recess, polished by
much wriggling of its body, at the lower end of its case, in the mass
of material which digestion has transformed into a fine paste; it
protects itself with a curved canopy; and it is ready to enjoy its
winter slumbers. It can sleep in peace. If its parents have installed
it underground at an inconsiderable depth to which the frost
penetrates, at any rate they have increased the supply of victuals to
the utmost. The effect of this enormous superfluity is to provide an
excellent dwelling for the bad weather.

In December the grub is full-grown, or not far short of it. If the
temperature only lent a hand, the nymphosis would now be due. But times
are hard; and the grub, in its wisdom, decides to defer the delicate
work of transformation. Sturdy creature that it is, it will be able to
resist the cold much better than the nymph, that frail beginning of a
new life. It therefore has patience and tarries in a state of torpor. I
take it from its cell to examine it.

Convex on top and almost flat below, the larva is a semicylinder bent
into a hook. There is an entire absence of the hump belonging to the
previous Dung-beetles; likewise of any terminal trowel. The plasterer’s
art of repairing crevices being unknown here, there is no need for the
cement-pot or the spreading-utensil. The creature’s skin is smooth and
white, clouded in the hinder half by the dark contents of the
intestines. Sparse hairs, some fairly long, others very short, stand up
on the median and dorsal region of the segments. They apparently serve
to help the grub move about its cell by the mere wriggling of its
hinder part. The head is neither big nor small and is pale-yellow in
colour; the mandibles are large and brown at the tip.

But let us leave these details, which are of no great interest, and say
at once that the creature’s prominent characteristic is supplied by its
legs. The first two pairs are pretty long, especially for an animal
leading a sedentary life in a narrow cabin. They are normally
constructed; and it must be their strength that allows the grub to
clamber about inside its pudding, converted into a sheath by eating.
But the third pair presents a peculiarity of which I know no example
elsewhere.

The limbs forming this pair are rudimentary legs, crippled from birth,
impotent, arrested in their development. They give one the impression
of lifeless stumps. Their length is hardly a third of that of the
others. More remarkable still, instead of pointing downwards like the
normal legs, they shrivel upwards, turning towards the back, and remain
indefinitely in that queer attitude, twisted and stiff. I cannot
succeed in seeing the animal make the slightest use of them.
Nevertheless they show the same joints as the others; but this is all
on a greatly reduced scale, pale and inert. In short, a couple of words
will distinguish the Geotrupes’ larva without any possibility of
confusion: hind-legs atrophied.

This feature is so plain, so striking, so extraordinary that the least
observant among us cannot mistake it. A grub crippled by nature and so
evidently crippled enforces itself on our attention. What do the books
say about it? Nothing, so far as I know. The few which I have with me
are silent on this point. Mulsant, it is true, described the larva of
the Stercoraceous Geotrupes; but he makes no mention of its exceptional
structure. In his anxiety to describe the minutest details of the
organism, has he lost sight of this monstrosity? Labrum, palpi,
antennæ, the number of joints, the hairs: all this is set down and
scrutinized; and the lifeless legs reduced to stumps are passed over in
silence. Are the experts then so busy with the Gnat that they cannot
see the Camel? I give it up.

Observe also that the hind-legs of the perfect insect are longer and
stronger than the middle-legs and vie with the fore-legs in vigour. The
atrophied limbs of the grub, therefore, become the adult’s powerful
pressing-machine; the impotent stumps change into strong
stamping-tools.

Who will tell us the origin of these anomalies now thrice observed
among the dung-workers? The Sacred Beetle, who is sound in every limb
during his infancy, loses his fore-fingers when the adult form appears;
the Onthophagus, who sports a horn on his thorax in his nymphal stage,
drops it and does without the ornament in the end; the Geotrupes, at
first a limping grub, turns his useless stumps into the best of his
levers. The last-named makes progress; the others retrocede. Why does
the cripple become able-bodied and why do the able-bodied become
cripples?

We make chemical analyses of the suns; we surprise the nebulæ in labour
and watch the birth of worlds; and shall we never know why a miserable
grub is born limping? Come, ye divers who fathom life’s mysteries,
descend a little lower into the depths and at least bring us back that
humble pearl, the reply to the problems of the Geotrupes and the Sacred
Beetle!

When the weather is severe, what becomes of the larva in the retreat
which it has succeeded in making at the far end of its box? The
exceptional cold of January and February 1895 will answer this
question. My cages, always left in the open air, had repeatedly
undergone a drop in temperature of some ten degrees below
freezing-point. In this arctic weather, I conceived a wish to go in
search of information and learn how things were progressing in my
unprotected cages.

I could not manage it. The bed of earth, wetted by the earlier rains,
had become a compact block throughout, which I should have had to break
up like a stone with a hammer and chisel. Extraction by violent means
was not practicable: I should have endangered everything with my
hammering. On the other hand, if any life remained in the frozen mass,
I should have placed it in jeopardy by changing the temperature too
suddenly. It was better to await the very slow natural thaw.

Early in March I inspect the cages again. This time there is no ice
left. The earth is yielding and easy to dig. All the adult Geotrupes
have died, bequeathing me a fresh supply of sausages, almost as
plentiful as that which I had gathered and placed in safety in October.
They have all perished; there is not a single survivor. Is cold or old
age to blame?

At this very time and later, in April and May, when the new generation
is wholly in the larval or at most in the nymphal stage, I often find
adult Geotrupes busy in their scavenging-works. The old ones therefore
see a second spring; they live long enough to know their children and
to work with them, as do the Scarabæi, the Copres and others. These
early ones are veterans. They have escaped the hardships of winter
because they have been able to bury themselves far enough underground.
Mine, kept captive between a few boards, have died for want of a
sufficiently deep pit. At a time when they needed three feet of earth
to shelter themselves, they had less than twelve inches. It was cold,
therefore, that killed them, rather than age.

The low temperature, while fatal to the adult, has spared the larva.
The few sausages left in position after my October diggings contain the
grub in excellent condition. The protecting sheath has fulfilled its
office to perfection: it has preserved the sons from the catastrophe
that caused the death of the parents.

The other cylinders, fashioned in the course of November, contain
something even more remarkable. In their hatching-chamber, at the
bottom, they hold an egg, all plump and shiny and as healthy-looking as
though it had been laid that day. Can life still exist there? Is it
possible, after the best part of the winter has been passed in a block
of ice? I dare not believe it. The sausage itself has not an attractive
appearance. It is darkened by fermentation, smells musty and does not
suggest food worth having.

At all events, I will take the precaution of bottling the miserable
puddings, after ascertaining that the egg is there in each case. I was
well-advised. The fresh aspect of the germs, after wintering under such
rude conditions, did not belie them. The hatching was soon effected;
and early in May the late arrivals were almost as well-developed as
their seniors, hatched in the autumn.

Some interesting facts are revealed by this piece of observation. First
of all, the laying-period of the Geotrupes is a fairly long one,
lasting from September to some time in November. At that date the first
hoar-frosts begin; the soil is not warm enough to hatch the eggs; and
the last ones, unable to hatch as swiftly as their predecessors, wait
for the return of the fine weather. A few mild April days are enough to
reawaken their suspended vitality. Then the usual evolution goes on,
and this so rapidly that, notwithstanding a delay of five or six
months, the backward larvæ are very nearly as big as the others by May,
when the first nymphs appear.

Secondly, the Geotrupes’ eggs are capable of enduring the trials of
severe cold unscathed. I do not know the exact temperature inside the
frozen block which I tried to tackle with a mason’s chisel. Outside,
the thermometer sometimes fell to ten degrees below freezing-point;
and, as the cold period lasted a long time, we may believe that the
layer of earth in my boxes was equally cold. Now the Geotrupes’
puddings were enclosed in that frozen mass turned to a block of stone.
A generous allowance must no doubt be made for the non-conductivity of
these puddings composed of thready materials; the wall of dung did, to
a certain extent, protect the larva and the egg against the biting
cold, which, if experienced direct, would have been fatal. No matter:
in that atmosphere the dung-cylinders, damp at the start, must in the
long run have acquired the hardness of stone. In their
hatching-chamber, in the tunnel made by the larva, the temperature
undoubtedly sank below freezing-point.

Then what became of the grub and the egg? Were they really frozen?
Everything seems to tell us so. That this most delicate of all delicate
things, a germ, a rudiment of life in a blob of glair, should harden,
turn into a bit of stone and then resume its vitality and continue its
evolution after thawing seems inadmissible. And yet circumstances
confirm it. We should have to credit the Geotrupes’ sausages with
athermanous properties unequalled by any other substance to regard them
as a sufficient protection against such intense and lasting
refrigeration. What a pity that we could derive no information from the
thermometer in this instance! After all, if complete freezing is
unproven, one point has been established for certain: the egg and the
grub of the Geotrupes can support and survive very low temperatures in
their protecting sheath.

Since the occasion presents itself, let me say a few more words on the
insect’s powers of resisting cold. Some years ago, while looking for
Scolia-cocoons in a heap of mould, I had made a large collection of the
grubs of Cetonia aurata. [54] I placed my loot in a flower-pot with a
few handfuls of decayed vegetable matter, just enough to cover the
insects’ backs. I intended to draw upon them for certain enquiries
which I was making at the time. The pot remained in the open air; and I
forgot all about it. A cold snap came, accompanied by sharp frost and
snow. Then I remembered my Cetoniæ, so ill-protected against this kind
of weather. I found the contents of the pot hardened into a
conglomeration of earth, dead leaves, ice, snow and shrivelled grubs.
It was a sort of almond-rock, in which the larvæ stood for the almonds.
Sorely tried by the cold as they were, the colony ought to have
perished. But no: when the thaw arrived, the frozen larvæ came to life
again and began to swarm about as though nothing unusual had happened.

The insect’s powers of endurance are less great than the larva’s. As
the organization becomes more refined, it loses its robustness. My
cages, which went through such a bad time in the winter of 1895,
provided me with a striking instance. A few species—Scarabæi, Copres,
Pilularii and Onthophagi—were represented at the same time by newcomers
and old stagers. All the Geotrupes, without an exception, died in the
earthy bed which had turned into a block of stone; the Minotaurs also
succumbed, every one of them. And yet both find their way up north and
are not afraid of cold climates. On the other hand, the southern
species, the Sacred Beetle, the Spanish Copris and Pilularius
flagellatus, the younger generation as well as the veterans, withstood
the winter better than I dared hope. Many of them died, it is true;
they formed the majority; but at any rate there were survivors whom I
marvelled to see recovering from their icy paralysis, trotting about
under the first kisses of the sun. In April, those specimens which have
escaped from freezing resume their labours. They teach me that, when at
liberty, Copres and Scarabæi have no need to retire to winter quarters
at great depths underground. A moderate screen of earth, in some
sheltered nook, is enough for them. Less skilful diggers than the
Geotrupes, they are better provided with the power to resist a passing
spell of cold.

We will end this digression by remarking, as so many others have done,
that agriculture cannot reckon on the cold weather to rid it of its
dread enemy, the insect. Very hard frosts, lasting a long time and
penetrating well beneath the surface of the soil, can destroy various
species which are not able to go down low enough; but a great many
survive. Moreover, the grub and especially the egg in many cases defy
our severest winters.

The first five days of April put an end to the torpor of the larvæ of
both Geotrupes, snuggling on the bottom floor of their cylinder, in a
temporary cell. Activity returns, bringing with it a last flicker of
appetite. The remains of the autumn banquet are plentiful. The grub
makes use of them no longer for greedy feasting, but just as a midnight
snack between two slumbers, that of winter and the deeper sleep of the
metamorphosis. Hence the sides of the sheath are attacked
spasmodically. Breaches yawn, sections of wall come tumbling down, and
soon the edifice is nothing but an unrecognizable ruin.

The lower portion of the original sausage remains, however, with its
walls intact for a length of an inch or two. Here, in a thick layer,
the grub’s excreta are accumulated, held in reserve for the final work.
In the centre of this mass a hollow is dug, carefully polished inside.
With the excavated rubbish the grub builds not just a canopy, like that
with which the winter alcove was protected, but a solid lid, with a
rough outer surface, in appearance not unlike the work of the Cetoniæ
when they wrap themselves in a shell of mould. This lid, with what is
left of the pudding, forms a habitation which would remind us pretty
closely of the Cockchafer’s dwelling, were it not truncated in the
upper part, which moreover is most often topped by a few remnants from
the destroyed cylinder.

The grub is now shut in for the transformation, motionless, with its
body emptied of all dross. In a few days a blister appears on the
dorsal surface of the last abdominal segments. This swells, spreads and
gradually extends as far as the thorax. It is the work of excoriation
beginning. Distended by a colourless liquid, the blister gives an
uncertain glimpse of a sort of milky cloud, the first blurred outline
of the new organism.

The thorax splits in front, the cast skin is slowly pushed backwards,
and at last we have the nymph, all white, half-opaque and
half-crystalline. I obtain my first nymphs about the beginning of May.

Four or five weeks later, the perfect insect arrives, white on the
wing-cases and belly, while the rest of the body already possesses the
normal colouring. The chromatic evolution is quickly completed; and,
before the end of June, the Geotrupes, now perfectly matured, emerges
from the soil at twilight and flies off to start on his scavenger’s job
without delay. The laggards, those whose egg has gone through the
winter, are still in the white nymphal stage when their elders effect
their release. Not before September is nigh will they burst their natal
shell and, in their turn, sally forth to aid in the cleansing of the
fields.



CHAPTER XV

THE SISYPHUS: THE INSTINCT OF PATERNITY


The duties of paternity are hardly ever imposed on any except the
higher animals. The bird excels in them; and the furred folk perform
them honourably. Lower in the scale, the father is generally
indifferent to his family. Very few insects form exceptions to this
rule. Whereas all display a frenzied ardour in propagating their
species, nearly all, having satisfied the passion of the moment,
promptly break off domestic relations and retire, heedless of their
brood, which must do the best that it can for itself.

This paternal coldness, which would be detestable in the higher ranks
of the animal kingdom, where the weakness of the young demands
prolonged assistance, has here as its excuse the robustness of the
new-born insect, which is able unaided to gather its food, provided
that it be in a propitious place. When all that the Pieris need do, to
safeguard the prosperity of the race, is to lay her eggs on the leaves
of a cabbage, what use would a father’s solicitude be? The mother’s
botanical instinct requires no assistance. At laying-time, the other
parent would be an obstacle. Let him go and flirt elsewhere; he would
only be in the way at this critical season.

Most insects are equally summary in their educational methods. They
have but to choose the refectory which will be the home of the family
once it is hatched, or else a place that will allow their young to find
suitable fare for themselves. There is no need for the father in these
cases. After the wedding, therefore, the unoccupied male, henceforth
useless, drags out a languid existence for a few days more and at last
dies without lending the least assistance in the work of setting up his
offspring in life.

Things do not always happen in quite such a primitive fashion. There
are tribes that provide a dower for their families, that prepare board
and lodging for them in advance. The Bees and Wasps, in particular, are
masters in the industry of making cellars, jars and satchels in which
the mess of honey for the young is hoarded; they are perfect in the art
of creating burrows stocked with the game that forms the food of their
grubs.

Well, this enormous labour, which is one of building and provisioning
combined, this toil, in which the insect’s whole life is spent, is done
by the mother alone. It wears her out, it utterly exhausts her. The
father, drunk with sunlight, stands by the edge of the workyard
watching his plucky helpmate at her job and considers himself to have
done all the work that he is called upon to do when he has toyed a
little with his fair neighbours.

Why does he not lend the mother a helping hand? It is now or never. Why
does he not follow the example of the Swallow couple, both of whom
bring their bit of straw, their blob of mortar to the building, their
Midge to the brood? He does nothing of the kind, perhaps alleging his
comparative weakness as an excuse. It is a poor argument, for to cut a
disk out of a leaf, to scrape some cotton from a downy plant, to
collect a little bit of cement in muddy places would not overtax his
strength. He could very easily help, at any rate as a labourer; he is
quite fit to gather the materials for the mother, with her greater
intelligence, to fix in place. The real reason of his inactivity is
sheer ineptitude.

It is strange that the Hymenopteron, the most gifted of the industrial
insects, should know nothing of paternal labour. The male, in whom one
would think that the needs of the young ought to develop the highest
aptitudes, remains as dull-witted as a Butterfly, whose family is
established at so small a cost. The bestowal of instinct baffles our
most reasonable conjectures.

It baffles them so thoroughly that we are extremely surprised when we
find in the muck-raker the noble prerogative denied to the
honey-gatherer. Various Dung-beetles are accustomed to help in the
burden of housekeeping and know the value of working in double harness.
Remember the Geotrupes couple, preparing their larva’s portion
together; think of the father lending his mate the assistance of his
powerful press in the manufacture of the tight-packed sausages, a
splendid example of domestic habits and one extremely surprising amid
the general egoism.

To this example, hitherto unique, my constant studies of the subject
enable me to-day to add three others, which are equally interesting;
and all three are likewise furnished by the Dung-beetle guild. I will
describe them, but briefly, for in many particulars their story is the
same as that of the Sacred Beetle, the Spanish Copris and the others.

The first case is that of the Sisyphus (S. Schæfferi, Lin.), the
smallest and most zealous of our pill-rollers. He is the liveliest and
most agile of them all, recking nothing of awkward somersaults and
headlong falls on the impossible tracks to which his obstinacy brings
him back again and again. It was in memory of these wild gymnastics
that Latreille gave him the name of Sisyphus, famous in the annals of
Tartarus. The unhappy wretch had the terrible task of having to roll a
huge stone up hill; and each time he had toiled to the top of the
mountain the stone would slip from his grasp and roll to the bottom.
Try again, poor Sisyphus, try again and go on trying: your punishment
will not be over until the rock is firmly fixed up there.

I like this myth. It is in a fashion the history of a good many of us,
not detestable scoundrels worthy of eternal torments, but decent,
hard-working folk, doing their duty by their neighbours. They have one
crime only to expiate: that of poverty. So far as I am concerned, for
half a century and more I have painfully climbed that steep ascent,
leaving garments stained with blood and sweat on its sharp crags; I
have strained every nerve, drained myself dry, spent my strength
recklessly in the struggle to hoist up to safety that crushing burden,
my daily bread; and hardly is the loaf balanced when it slips off,
slides down and is lost in the abyss. Try again, poor Sisyphus, try
again until the load, falling for the last time, smashes your head and
sets you free at last.

The Sisyphus of the naturalists knows none of these bitter trials.
Untroubled by the steep slopes, he gaily trundles his load, at one time
bread for himself, at another for his children. He is very scarce in
these parts; and I should never have managed to procure a suitable
number of subjects for my purpose, but for an assistant whom I ought to
present to the reader, for he will play his part more than once in
these narratives.

I speak of my son Paul, a little chap of seven. My assiduous companion
on my hunting-expeditions, he knows better than any one of his age the
secrets of the Cicada, the Locust, the Cricket and especially the
Dung-beetle, his great delight. Twenty paces away, his sharp eyes will
distinguish the real mound that marks a burrow from casual heaps of
earth; his delicate ears catch the Grasshopper’s faint stridulation,
which to me remains silence. He lends me his sight and hearing; and I,
in exchange, present him with ideas, which he receives attentively,
raising wide, blue, questioning eyes to mine.

Oh, what an adorable thing is the first blossoming of the intellect;
what a beautiful age is that when innocent curiosity awakens, enquiring
into all things! So little Paul has his own vivarium, in which the
Sacred Beetle makes pears for him; his own little garden, no larger
than a pocket-handkerchief, where he grows beans, often digging them up
to see if the tiny roots are growing longer; his forest plantation, in
which stand four oaks a hand’s-breadth high, still furnished on one
side with the twin-breasted acorn that feeds them. It all makes a
welcome change from dry grammar, which gets on none the worse for it.

What beautiful and delightful things natural history could put into
children’s heads if science would but stoop to charm the young; if our
barracks of colleges would but add the living study of the fields to
the lifeless study of books; if the red tape of the curriculum beloved
by bureaucrats did not strangle any eager initiative! Little Paul, my
boy, let us study as much as we can in the open country, among the
rosemary- and arbutus-shrubs. By so doing, we shall gain in vigour of
body and mind; we shall find more of the true and the beautiful than in
any old musty books.

To-day we are giving the blackboard a rest; it is a holiday. We get up
early, in view of the contemplated expedition, so early indeed that you
will have to start without your breakfast. Have no fear: when your
appetite comes, we will call a halt in the shade and you shall find in
my bag the usual viaticum, an apple and a piece of bread. The month of
May is near at hand; the Sisyphus must have appeared. What we have to
do now is to explore, at the foot of the mountain, the lean meadows
where the flocks have been; we shall have to break with our fingers,
one by one, the cakes dropped by the Sheep and baked by the sun, but
still retaining a kernel of crumb under their crust. There we shall
find the Sisyphus huddled, waiting for the fresher windfall with which
the evening grazers will supply him.

Instructed in this secret, which I learnt long ago from chance
discoveries, little Paul forthwith becomes a master in the art of
shelling Sheep-droppings. He displays such zeal and such an instinct
for the best morsels that, after a very few halts, I am rich beyond my
fondest hopes. Behold me the proud owner of six couples of Sisyphi, an
unprecedented treasure, which I was far from expecting.

It will not be necessary to rear these in the vivarium. A wire-gauze
cover is enough, with a bed of sand and a supply of victuals to their
liking. They are so small, hardly the size of a cherry-stone! And so
curious in shape withal! Dumpy body: the hinder end pointed; and very
long legs, resembling a Spider’s when outspread: the hind-legs are of
inordinate length and curved, which is most useful for clasping and
squeezing the pellet.

Pairing takes place about the beginning of May, on the surface of the
ground, amid the remains of the cake on which the couple have been
feasting. Soon the time comes for establishing the family. With equal
zeal, husband and wife alike take part in kneading, carting and stowing
away the bread for the children. With the cleaver of the fore-legs a
morsel of the right size is cut from the lump placed at their disposal.
Father and mother manipulate the piece together, giving it little pats,
pressing it and fashioning it into a ball as large as a big pea.

As in the Sacred Beetle’s workshop, the mathematically round shape is
obtained without the mechanical trick of rolling the ball. The fragment
is modelled into a sphere before it is moved, before it is even
loosened from its support. Here again we have an expert in geometry
familiar with the form that is best adapted to make preserved
foodstuffs keep for a long time.

The pellet is soon ready. It must now, by vigorous rolling, be made to
acquire the crust which will protect the crumb from too-rapid
evaporation. The mother, who can be recognized by her slightly larger
size, harnesses herself in the place of honour, in front. With her long
hind-legs on the ground and her fore-legs on the ball, she hauls it
towards her backwards. The father pushes behind in the reverse
position, head downwards. It is precisely the same method as the Sacred
Beetle’s, when working in twos, but with another object. The Sisyphus
team convey a larva’s dowry, whereas the big pill-rollers trundle a
banquet which the two fortuitous partners will eat up underground.

The couple start, for no definite goal, across such impediments as the
ground may present. These obstacles are impossible to avoid in this
backward march; and, if they were perceived, the Sisyphus would not try
to go round them, as witness her obstinacy in trying to climb the
wirework of the cage. This is an arduous and impracticable enterprise.
Clawing the meshes of the gauze with her hind-legs, the mother pulls
the load towards her; then, putting her fore-legs round it, she holds
it suspended. The father, finding nothing to stand upon, clings to the
ball, encrusts himself in it, so to speak, adding his weight to that of
the lump and taking no further pains. The effort is too great to last.
The ball and its rider, forming one mass, fall to the floor. The
mother, from above, looks for a moment in surprise and forthwith drops
down to recover the load and renew her impossible attempt to scale the
side. After repeated falls, the ascent is abandoned.

The carting on level ground is not effected without impediment either.
At every moment the load swerves on the mound made by a bit of gravel;
and the team topple over and kick about, with their bellies in the air.
This is a trifle, the veriest trifle. The two pick themselves up and
resume their positions as cheerily as ever. These tumbles, which so
often fling the Sisyphus on his back, cause him no concern; one would
even think that they were sought for. After all, the pill has to be
matured, to receive consistency. And, under these conditions, bumps,
blows, falls and jolts are all part of the programme. This mad
steeplechasing goes on for hours.

At last the mother, regarding the work as completed, goes off a little
way in search of a favourable site. The father mounts guard, squatting
on the treasure. If his companion’s absence be prolonged, he relieves
his boredom by spinning the ball nimbly between his uplifted hind-legs.
He juggles after a fashion with the precious pellet; he tests its
perfection with the curved branches of his compasses. To see him
frisking in that jubilant attitude, who can doubt his lively
satisfaction as a paterfamilias assured of the future of his children?

‘It’s I,’ he seems to say, ‘it’s I who kneaded this round, soft loaf;
it’s I who made this bread for my sons!’

And he lifts on high, for all to see, this magnificent testimonial to
his industry.

Meanwhile, the mother has selected the site. A shallow pit is made, a
mere beginning of the projected burrow. The ball is rolled near it. The
father, that vigilant guardian, does not let go, while the mother digs
with her legs and forehead. Soon the hollow is big enough to hold the
pellet, the sacred thing which she insists on having quite close to
her: she must feel it bobbing up and down behind her, on her back, safe
from parasites, before she decides to go farther. She is afraid of what
might happen to the little loaf if it were left on the threshold of the
burrow until the home was completed. There are plenty of Aphodii and
Midges to grab it. One cannot be too careful.

The pellet therefore is inserted, half in and half out of the
partly-formed basin. The mother, underneath, gets her legs round it and
pulls; the father, above, lets it down gently and sees that the hole is
not choked up with falling earth. All goes well. The digging is resumed
and the descent continues, always with the same caution, one of the
Sisyphi pulling the load, the other regulating the drop and clearing
away anything that might hinder the operation. A few more efforts; and
the ball disappears underground with the two miners. What follows for
some time to come can be only a repetition of what we have just seen.
Let us wait half a day or so.

If we have kept careful watch, we shall see the father come up again to
the surface by himself and crouch in the sand near the burrow. Detained
below by duties in which her companion can be of no assistance to her,
the mother usually postpones her appearance till the morrow. At last
she shows herself. The father leaves the place where he was snoozing
and joins her. The reunited couple go back to the heap of victuals,
refresh themselves and then cut out another piece, on which again the
two work together, both as regards the modelling and the carting and
storing.

I am delighted with this conjugal fidelity. That it is really the rule
I dare not declare. There must be flighty Beetles who, in the
hurly-burly under a spreading cake, forget the first fair pastry-cook
whom they helped with her baking and devote themselves to others, met
by chance; there must be temporary couples, who divorce each other
after producing a single pill. No matter: the little that I have seen
gives me a high opinion of the Sisyphus’ domestic habits.

Let us recapitulate these habits before passing on to the contents of
the burrow. The father works just as hard as the mother at extracting
and modelling the lump that is to constitute a larva’s dowry; he shares
in the carting, even though he plays a secondary part; he keeps watch
over the loaf when the mother is absent looking for a spot at which to
dig the burrow; he helps in the work of excavation; he carries outside
the rubbish from the cavity; and lastly, to crown these good qualities,
he is to a large extent faithful to his spouse.

The Scarabæus displays some of these characteristics. He readily helps
in manipulating the pill; when it has to be carted, he takes his place
in a team of two, one pulling and one pushing. But let me repeat that
the motive of this mutual service is selfishness: the two
fellow-workers labour and cart the lump only for their own purpose. To
them it is a gala cake and nothing more. In that part of her work which
concerns the family, the Scarabæus mother has no assistant. Alone she
rounds her sphere, extracts it from the pile, rolls it backwards by
herself in the head-downward posture adopted by the male of the
Sisyphus couple; alone she digs her burrow; alone she stores away its
contents. Heedless of the laying mother and the brood, the other sex
does not assist at all in the exhausting task. How different from the
pigmy pill-roller!

It is time to inspect the burrow. At no great depth we find a tiny
niche, just large enough to allow the mother to move around her work.
The smallness of the chamber tells us that the father cannot remain
there for long. When the studio is ready, he must go away to leave the
sculptress room to turn. We have already seen him coming back to the
surface some time before the mother.

The contents of the cellar consist of a single pill, a masterpiece of
plastic art. It is a copy of the Sacred Beetle’s pear on a very much
reduced scale, its smallness making the polish of the surface and the
elegance of the curves all the more striking. Its main diameter varies
between one-half and three-quarters of an inch. It is the most artistic
achievement of the Dung-beetle’s art.

But this perfection is of brief duration. Soon the pretty pear is
covered with knotty excrescences, black and twisted, which disfigure it
with their blotchy lumps. A part of the surface, otherwise intact,
disappears beneath an amorphous mass of eruptions. The origin of these
ugly warts baffled me at first. I suspected some fungous growth, some
Sphæriacea, for instance, recognizable by its black and pimply crust.
The larva showed me my mistake.

As usual, this is a grub bent into a hook and carrying on its back a
large pouch or hump, the emblem of a ready evacuator. Like the Sacred
Beetle’s, indeed, it excels at stopping up any accidental holes in its
shells with an instantaneous spray of stercoral cement, of which it
always keeps a supply in its knapsack. It practises moreover an art of
vermicelli-making which is unknown to the pill-rollers, except the
Broad-necked Scarab, who however but seldom makes use of it.

The larvæ of the various Dung-beetles employ their digestive residues
for plastering their cell, whose dimensions lend themselves to this
method of riddance, without the necessity of opening temporary windows
through which to expel the ordure. Whether because of insufficient
space or for other reasons which escape me, the Sisyphus-larva, after
allowing for the regulation coating of the interior, ejects the excess
of its products outside.

Let us keep a close eye on a pear whose inmate is already growing
fairly big. Sooner or later we shall see that the surface at one point
is getting thinner and softer; and then, through the frail screen,
there is a spurt of dark-green fluid, which subsides with corkscrew
evolutions. One more wart has been formed. It will turn black as it
dries.

What has happened? The larva has made a temporary breach in the wall of
its shell; and through the ventilator, which is still covered with a
thin veil, it has excreted the superfluous cement which it was unable
to use indoors. It has evacuated through the wall. The window
deliberately opened in no way affects the safety of the grub, as it is
at once closed and hermetically sealed with the base of the spout,
which is compressed by a stroke of the trowel. With a stopper so
quickly placed in position the food will keep fresh however many holes
are made in the body of the pear. There is no danger of the dry air
entering.

The Sisyphus also seems to be aware of the peril which later, in torrid
weather, would threaten her tiny pear, buried at so slight a depth. She
is a very early arrival. She works in April and May, when the
atmosphere is mild. In the first fortnight of July, before the terrible
dog-days have arrived, her family burst their shells and go in search
of the heap that will furnish them with board and lodging during the
scorching time of the year. Then comes the brief spell of autumn
revelry, followed by the withdrawal underground for the winter sleep,
the awakening in spring, and lastly, to complete the cycle, the
pill-rolling festival.

One more observation about the Sisyphus. My six pairs under the
wire-gauze cover gave me fifty-seven inhabited pellets. This census
shows an average of over nine births to each couple, a figure which the
Sacred Beetle is far from reaching. To what cause are we to attribute
this flourishing brood? I can see but one: the fact that the male works
as well as the mother. Family burdens that would exceed the strength of
one are not too heavy when there are two to bear them.



CHAPTER XVI

THE LUNARY COPRIS; THE BISON ONITIS


Smaller than the Spanish Copris and less particular about a mild
climate, the Lunary Copris (C. lunaris, Lin.) will confirm what the
Sisyphus has told us of the part played by the father’s collaboration
in the prosperity of the family. Our country districts cannot show his
match for oddity of male attire. Like the other, he wears a horn on his
forehead; in addition, he has an embattled promontory in the middle of
his corselet and a halberd-point and a deep, crescent-shaped groove on
his shoulders. The climate of Provence and the niggardly supply of food
in a wilderness of thyme do not suit him. He wants a country that is
less dry, with meadows where the patches of cattle-dung will supply him
with plenty of provender.

Unable to reckon on the rare specimens which we meet here from time to
time, I have stocked my insect-house with strangers sent from Tournon
by my daughter Aglaé. When April comes, she conducts an indefatigable
search at my request. Seldom have so many Cow-claps been lifted with
the point of the sunshade; seldom have delicate fingers with so much
affection broken the cakes on the pastures. I thank the heroine in the
name of science!

Her zeal meets with due reward. I become the proud possessor of six
couples, which are immediately installed in the insect-house where the
Spanish Copris used to work last year. I serve up the national dish,
the superlative loaf furnished by my neighbour’s Cow. There is not a
sign of home-sickness among the exiles, who bravely begin their labours
under the mysterious shelter of the cake.

I make my first excavation in the middle of June and am delighted with
what my knife gradually lays bare as it cuts up the soil in thin
slices. Each couple has dug itself a splendid vaulted room in the sand,
more spacious than any that the Sacred Beetle or the Spanish Copris
ever showed me and with a bolder arch. The greatest breadth is fully
six inches; but the ceiling is very low, rising to hardly two inches.

The contents correspond with the extravagant dimensions of the hall.
They form a dish worthy of the wedding of Camacho the Rich, a cake as
broad as one’s hand, of no great thickness and varying in outline. I
have found them oval-shaped, kidney-shaped, shaped like a Starfish,
with short, thick rays, and long and pointed, like a Cat’s tongue.
These minor details represent the pastry-cook’s fancies. The essential
and constant fact is this: in the six bakeries of my insect-house, the
sexes are always both present beside the lump of paste, which, after
being kneaded according to rule, is now fermenting and maturing.

What does this long cohabitation prove? It proves that the father has
taken part in digging the cellar, in storing the victuals gathered by
separate armfuls on the threshold of the door, and in kneading all the
scraps into a single lump, which is more likely to improve by keeping.
Were he a useless, idle incubus, he would not stay there, he would go
back to the surface. The father therefore is a diligent fellow-worker.
His assistance even looks as if it ought to extend farther still. We
shall see.

Dear insects, my curiosity has disturbed your housekeeping. But you
were only starting, you were having your house-warming, so to speak.
Perhaps you may be able to make good the damage which I have wrought.
Let us try. I will restore the condition of the establishment by
supplying fresh provisions. It is for you now to dig new burrows, to
carry down the wherewithal to replace the cake of which I have robbed
you, and afterwards to divide the lump, improved by time, into rations
suited to the needs of your larvæ. Will you do all this? I hope so.

My faith in the perseverance of the sorely-tried couples is not
disappointed. A month later, in the middle of July, I venture on a
second inspection. The cellars have been rebuilt, as spacious as at
first. Moreover, by this time they are padded with a soft lining of
dung on the floor and on a part of the side-walls. The two sexes are
still there; they will not separate until the rearing is completed. The
father, who has less family-affection, or perhaps is more timid, tries
to steal off by the back-way as the light enters the shattered
dwelling; the mother, squatting on her precious pellets, does not
budge. These pellets are oval-shaped plums, very like those of the
Spanish Copris, but not quite so large.

Knowing how few compose the latter’s collection, I am greatly surprised
at the sight that now meets my eyes. In a single cell I count seven or
eight ovoids, standing one against the other and lifting up their
nippled tops, each with its hatching-chamber. Notwithstanding its size,
the hall is cram-full; there is hardly room left for the two guardians
to move about. It may be compared with a bird’s nest containing its
eggs and no empty spaces.

The comparison is inevitable. What indeed are the Copris’ pills but
eggs of another sort, in which the nutritive mass of the white and the
yolk is replaced by a pot of preserved foodstuffs? Here the
Dung-beetles rival the birds and even surpass them. Instead of
producing from within themselves, merely by the mysterious processes of
nature, that which will provide for the latter growth of their young,
they are actively and openly industrious, and by dint of their own
skill provide food for their grubs which will achieve the adult form
without other assistance. They know nothing of the long and tortuous
process of incubation; the sun is their incubator. They have not the
continual worry of providing food, for they prepare this in advance and
make only one distribution. But they never leave the nest. Their watch
is incessant. Father and mother, those vigilant guardians, do not quit
the house until the family is fit to sally forth.

The father’s usefulness is manifest so long as there is a house to dig
and wealth to amass; it is less evident when the mother is cutting up
her loaf into rations, shaping her ovoids, polishing them and watching
over them. Can it be that the cavalier also takes part in this delicate
task, which would rather seem to be a feminine monopoly? Is he able,
with his sharp leg, to slice up the cake, to remove from it the
requisite quantity for a larva’s sustenance and to round the piece into
a sphere, thus shortening the work, which could be revised and
perfected by the mother? Does he know the art of stopping up chinks, of
repairing breaches, of soldering slits, of scraping pellets and
clearing them of any dangerous vegetable matter? Does he show the brood
the same attentions which the mother lavishes by herself in the burrows
of the Spanish Copris? Here the two sexes are together. Do they both
take part in bringing up the family?

I tried to obtain an answer by installing a couple of Lunary Copres in
a glass jar screened by a cardboard sheath, which enabled me readily
and quickly to produce light or darkness. When suddenly surprised, the
male was perched upon the pellets almost as often as the female; but,
whereas the mother would frequently go on with her ticklish
nursery-work, polishing the pellets with the flat of her leg and
feeling and sounding them, the father, more cowardly and less engrossed
in his duties, would drop down as soon as the daylight was admitted and
run away to hide in some corner of the heap. There is no way of seeing
him at work, so quick is he to shun the unwelcome light.

Still, though he refused to display his talents on my behalf, his very
presence on the top of the ovoids betrays them. Not for nothing was he
in that uncomfortable attitude, so ill-adapted to an idler’s slumbers.
He was then watching like his companion, touching up the damaged parts,
listening through the walls of the shells to find out how the
youngsters were progressing. The little that I saw assures me that the
father almost rivals the mother in domestic solicitude until the family
is finally emancipated.

The offspring gain in numbers by this paternal devotion. In the Spanish
Copris’ mansion, where the mother alone resides, we find four
nurselings at most, often two or three, sometimes only one. In that of
the Lunary Copris, where the two sexes cohabit and help each other, we
count as many as eight, twice the largest population of the other. The
hard-working father enjoys a magnificent proof of his influence upon
the fate of the household.

Apart from labour in common, this prosperity demands another condition
without which the zeal of the couple would be ineffectual. Before
everything, if you want a big family you must have enough to feed it
on. Remember the victualling methods of the Copris-tribe generally.
They do not, like the pill-rollers, go gathering here and there a booty
which is rounded into a ball and subsequently rolled to the burrow;
they settle immediately underneath the heap which they find, and there,
without leaving the threshold of the house, carve themselves slices
which they carry down singly to their store until they have collected
enough.

The Spanish Copris, at least in my neighbourhood, handles the product
of the Sheep. It is of high quality, but not plentiful, even when the
purveyor’s intestines are in their most generous mood. The whole of it,
therefore, is packed into the cavern and the insect does not come out
again, being kept underground by family-cares, even though there be but
one youngster to attend to. The niggardly morsel as a rule supplies
material only for two or three larvæ. Consequently the family is a
small one, through the difficulty in procuring provisions.

The Lunary Copris works under different conditions. His part of the
country provides the Cow-clap, that rich patch of dung in which the
insect finds inexhaustible supplies of the food needed by a flourishing
offspring. This prosperity is assisted by the size of the abode, whose
ceiling, with its exceptional breadth, is able to shelter a number of
pills that would never fit into the Spanish Copris’ much less roomy
burrow.

For lack of space at home and of a well-furnished flour-bin, the latter
restricts the number of her children, which is sometimes reduced to
one. Can this be due to impotence of the ovaries? No. I have shown in
an earlier chapter that, given free scope and a well-spread table, the
mother is capable of producing twice her usual family and more. I
described how for the three or four ovoids I substituted a loaf kneaded
with my paper-knife. By means of this artifice, which increased the
space in the narrow enclosure of the jar and provided fresh materials
for modelling, I obtained from the mother a family of seven in all. It
was a magnificent result, but far inferior to that derived from the
following experiment, which was better managed.

This time I take away the pellets as they are formed, all but one, so
as not to discourage the mother by my kidnapping. If she found nothing
at all left of her previous products, she might perhaps weary of her
fruitless labour. When the main loaf, of her constructing, has all been
used, I replace it with another, made by myself. I go on doing this,
removing the ovoid that has just been completed and renewing the
finished lump of food until the insect refuses to accept any more. For
five or six weeks the sorely tried mother never loses her patience and
each time begins all over again and perseveringly restocks her empty
nursery. At last the dog-days arrive, the brutal season which arrests
all life by its excessive heat and dryness. My loaves, however
carefully made, are scorned. The mother, overcome with torpor, refuses
to work. She buries herself in the sand, at the foot of the last
pellet, and there, motionless, awaits the liberating September rain.
The indefatigable creature has bequeathed me thirteen ovoids, each
modelled to perfection, each supplied with an egg; thirteen, a number
unparalleled in the Copris’ annals; thirteen, ten more than the normal
laying.

The proof is established: if the horned Dung-beetle strictly limits her
family, it is not through penury of the ovaries, but through fear of
famine.

Is it not thus that things happen in our country, which, the
statisticians tell us, is threatened with depopulation? The clerk, the
artisan, the civil servant, the workman, the small shopkeeper are a
daily increasing multitude with us; and all of them, having hardly
enough to live upon, refrain as far as possible from adding to the
numbers gathered around their ill-furnished table. When bread is short,
the Copris is not wrong in becoming almost a celibate. Why should we
cast a stone at his imitators? The motive is one of prudence on either
side. It is better to live alone than surrounded by hungry mouths. The
man who feels strong enough to struggle with poverty for himself
shrinks in dismay from the poverty of a crowded home.

In the good old days, the tiller of the soil, the peasant, the backbone
of the nation, found that a numerous family added to his wealth. All
used to work and bring their bit of bread to the frugal repast. While
the eldest drove the team afield, the youngest, clad in his first pair
of breeches, took the brood of Ducklings to the pond. [55]

These patriarchal ways are becoming rare. Progress sees to that. Of
course, it is an enviable thing to scorch along on a bicycle, working
your legs up and down like a distracted Spider; but there is a reverse
to the medal: progress brings luxury, but creates expensive tastes. In
my village, the commonest factory-girl, earning her ten-pence a day,
sports on a Sunday sleeves puffed at the shoulders and feathers in her
hat like the fine ladies’; she has a sunshade with an ivory handle, a
padded chignon, patent-leather shoes, with open-work stockings and lace
flounces. O Goose-girl, I in my short linen jacket dare not look at you
as you pass my door on your Sunday parade along the high-road! You make
me feel too small with your smart raiment.

The young men, on the other hand, are assiduous frequenters of the
café, which is much more luxurious than the old-fashioned pot-house.
Here they find vermouth, bitters, absinthe, amer Picon, in short the
whole collection of stupefying drugs. Such tastes as these make the
fields seem too humble and the soil too stubborn. Since the receipts no
longer come up to the expenses, they leave the land for the town, which
is better-suited, so they imagine, for money-making. Alas, saving is no
more practicable there than here! The workshop, where opportunities of
spending money lie in wait by the score, makes a man no richer than the
plough. But it is too late: you have made your bed; and you remain a
poverty-stricken townsman, in terror of paternity.

And yet this country, with its glorious climate, fertility, and
geographical position, is invaded by a host of cosmopolitans, sharks
and sharpers of every sort. Long ago, it used to attract the sea-roving
Phœnicians; the peace-loving Greeks, who brought us the alphabet, the
vine and the olive-tree; the Romans, those harsh rulers, who handed
down to us barbarities very difficult to eradicate. Swooping on this
rich prey came the Cymri, the Teutons, the Vandals, the Goths, the
Huns, the Burgundians, the Suevi, the Alani, the Franks, the Saracens,
hordes driven hither by every wind that blows. And all this
heterogeneous mixture was melted down and absorbed by the Gallic
nation.

To-day the foreigner is stealthily making his way into our midst. We
are threatened with a second barbarian invasion, peaceful, it is true,
but yet disturbing. Will our language, so clear and so harmonious,
become an obscure jargon, harsh with exotic gutturals? Will our
generous character be dishonoured by rapacious hucksters? Will the land
of our fathers cease to be a country and become a caravanserai? There
is a fear of it, unless the old Gallic blood runs swift and strong once
more and engulfs the stream of invaders.

Let us hope that it may be so and let us listen to what the horned
Dung-beetle has to teach us. A large family demands food. But progress
brings new needs, which cost much to satisfy; and our revenues are far
from increasing at the same rate. When men have not enough for six or
five or four, they are content to live as a family of three or two, or
even to remain single. Guided by such principles as these, a nation, in
its successive stages of progress, is on the road to suicide.

Let us go back then to where we were, suppress our artificial needs,
those unwholesome fruits of a hot-house civilization, honour rustic
frugality once again and remain on the land, where we shall find the
soil bountiful enough to satisfy us if we moderate our desires. Then
and not till then will the family flourish once more; then will the
peasant, delivered from the town and its temptations, be our salvation.

The third Dung-beetle that has shown me the gift of paternal instinct
is likewise a stranger. He comes to me from near Montpellier. He is the
Bison Onitis, or, according to others, the Bison Bubas. Taking no
interest in nomenclature subtleties, I shall not choose between the two
generic names, but will retain the specific denomination of Bison,
which has the sound which Linnæus wanted. I made his acquaintance many
years ago in the country around Ajaccio, [56] among the saffrons and
cyclamens that bloom so sweetly under the shade of the myrtles. Come
hither and let me admire you yet once again, O beauteous insect! You
recall my youthful enthusiasm on the shores of the glorious gulf, so
rich in shell-fish. Far was I from suspecting at the time that it would
one day fall to my share to sing your praises! I have not seen you
since. Welcome to my vivarium! And now tell us something about
yourself.

You are a sturdy little chap, short-legged and packed into a solid
rectangle, a sign of strength. On your head you wear two abbreviated
horns, curved like a Steer’s; and you prolong your corselet into a
blunt forehead adorned with two pretty dimples, one on the right and
one on the left. Your general appearance and your male finery make you
a near neighbour of the coprinary group. The entomologists, in fact,
class you immediately after the Copres and a long way from the
Geotrupes. Does your trade tally with the place which the systematists
allot to you? What can you do?

In common with others, I admire the classifier who, studying the mouth,
the legs and the antennæ in the dead insect, is sometimes happy in his
grouping and able, for instance, to include in the same family the
Scarab and the Sisyphus, who differ so greatly in appearance and so
little in habits. Yet this method, which ignores the higher
manifestations of life in order to pore over the smallest details of
the corpse, too often misleads us as to the insect’s real talent, which
is a much more important characteristic than a joint more or less in
the antennæ. The Bison, like many others, warns us to be careful where
we are going. Though akin to the Copris in structure, he is much nearer
the Geotrupes in his industry. Like them, he packs sausages in a
cylindrical mould; like them again, he has the paternal instinct.

I inspect my one couple in the middle of June. Under a plentiful pile
provided by the Sheep is a perpendicular shaft a finger’s-breadth in
diameter, open freely throughout its length and running some nine
inches down. The bottom of this well branches out into five different
galleries, each occupied by a roly-poly pudding similar to the
Geotrupes’, but less bulky and not so long. The mass of fodder has a
warty surface, is rounded off clumsily and has a hatching-chamber
scooped out of it at the lower end. This chamber is a little round
cell, coated with a semifluid wash. The egg is oval, white and
comparatively large, as is the rule among Dung-beetles. In short, the
Bison’s rustic work is a very close reproduction of the Geotrupes’.

I am disappointed: I expected better things. The insect’s elegance
seemed to promise something more artistic, a finer craftsmanship,
skilled in the modelling of pears, gourds, balls and ovoids. Once
again, be careful how you judge animals, any more than men, by
appearances. The structure gives us no idea of the insect’s all-round
ability.

I surprise the couple at the cross-roads where the five blind-alleys,
the sausages, start. The intrusion of the light has frightened them
into immobility. Before the disturbance caused by my excavations, what
were the two faithful partners doing at this spot? They were watching
over the five cells, ramming down the last column of provisions,
completing it with new contributions of material, brought down from
above and taken from the heap that forms a cover to the shaft. They
were perhaps preparing to dig a sixth chamber, if not more, and to
stock it like the others. I realize at any rate that there must be many
ascents from the bottom of the pit to the rich warehouse on the
surface, whence the bundles of material are carried down in the legs of
the one to be methodically pressed on top of the egg by the other.

The shaft indeed is open throughout its length. Moreover, to prevent
the crumbling of the walls which would result from frequent journeys,
the sides are plastered with stucco from end to end. This coat is made
of the same material as the puddings and is more than a twenty-fifth of
an inch thick. It is continuous and fairly even, without having too
elaborate a finish. It keeps the surrounding earth in place, so much so
that big fragments of the tunnel can be removed without losing their
shape.

In the hamlets on the Alps, the south fronts of the buildings are
coated with Cow-dung, which, after drying in the summer sun, becomes
the winter fuel. The Bison knows this pastoral method, but practises it
with another object: he hangs his house with manure to keep it from
crumbling. The father might well be entrusted with this work in the
intervals of rest which the mother leaves him while she is busy in the
ticklish work of making her pudding layer by layer. The Geotrupes, by
way of yet another industrial resemblance, has already shown us a
similar consolidating plaster. Hers, it is true, is less regular and
less complete.

After being ousted by my curiosity, the Bison couple set to work again
and, by the middle of July, supplied me with three more puddings,
making a total of eight. This time I find my two captives dead, one on
the surface, the other in the ground. Can it be an accident? Or is it
not more likely that the Bison constitutes an exception to the
longevity of the Scarabs, Copres and others, who behold their offspring
and even fly away to their second wedding in the following spring?

I incline to the belief that we come back here to the general insect
law of a short life deprived of the chief joy of parenthood, the sight
of one’s children, for no regrettable incident happened, so far as I
know, in the vivarium. If I am right in my conjectures, why does the
Bison, though a near kinsman of the Copris, who attains a green old
age, die so quickly, like the common herd, once the future of his
family is assured? Here again we have an unsolved mystery.

A rapid sketch of the larva is preferable to long descriptions of its
jaws and palpi, which make dull reading. I shall have said enough, I
think, on the subject if I mention that it is bent into a crook, that
it carries a knapsack on its back, that it is a quick evacuator and
that it is clever at stopping up any cracks in the dwelling:
characteristics and talents which are a general rule among the
Dung-beetles. In August, when the pudding has been consumed in the
middle and has become something of a ruin, the grub retires to the
lower end and here isolates itself from the remainder of the cavity by
means of a spherical enclosure, of which the mortar-bag supplies the
materials.

The work, a graceful sphere about the size of a large cherry, is a
masterpiece of stercoral architecture and may be compared with that
which the Bull Onthophagus has already shown us. Little nodes, arranged
in concentric lines and alternating like the tiles of a roof, adorn the
object from pole to pole. Each of them must correspond with a stroke of
the trowel putting its load of mortar in place. If you did not know
what it was, you would take the thing for the chiselled kernel of some
tropical fruit. A sort of rough pericarp completes the illusion. It is
the rind of the pudding which surrounds the central jewel but is easily
removed, just as the husk separates from the nut. When we have done the
shelling, we are quite surprised to find this splendid kernel under its
rustic wrapper.

Such is the chamber built with a view to the metamorphosis. The larva
spends the winter there in a state of torpor. I hoped to obtain the
adult insect in the spring. To my great surprise, the larval stage
continued until the end of July. It takes about a year, therefore, for
the nymph to make its appearance.

This slowness in maturing surprises me. Can it be the rule in the open
fields? I think so, for in the confinement of my insect-house nothing
happened, to my knowledge, that would occasion this delay. I therefore
enter the result of my manœuvres without any fear of making a mistake:
lying lifeless in its elegant and solid casket, the larva of the Bison
Onitis takes twelve months to develop into a nymph, whereas those of
the other Dung-beetles effect their transformation in a few weeks. As
to stating or even suspecting the cause of this strange larval
longevity, these are points which must be left in the limbo of the
unexplained.

Softened by the September rains, the stercoral shell, until now as hard
as a plum-stone, yields to the hermit’s thrust; and the adult Beetle
comes up into the light of day to lead a life of revelry so long as the
mild atmosphere of the last days of summer permits. When the first cold
weather sets in, he retires to his winter quarters underground and
reappears in the spring to begin the cycle of life all over again.



CHAPTER XVII

THE BULL ONTHOPHAGUS: THE CELL


Begun to-day and dropped to-morrow, taken up again later and again
abandoned, according to the chances of the day, the study of instinct
makes but halting progress. The changing seasons bring unwelcome
delays, forcing the observer to wait till the following year or even
longer for the answer to his eager questions. Moreover, the problem
often crops up unexpectedly, as the result of some casual incident of
slight interest in itself, and it comes in a form so vague that it
gives little basis for precise investigation. How can one investigate
what has not yet been suspected? We have no facts to go upon and are
consequently unable to tackle the problem frankly.

To collect these facts by fragments, to subject those fragments to
varied tests in order to try their value, to make them into a sheaf of
rays lighting up the darkness of the unknown and gradually causing it
to emerge: all this demands a long space of time, especially as the
favourable periods are brief. Years elapse; and then very often the
perfect solution has not appeared. There are always gaps in our sheaf
of light; and always behind the mysteries which the rays have
penetrated stand others, still shrouded in darkness.

I am perfectly aware that it would be preferable to avoid repetitions
and to give a complete story every time; but, in the domain of
instinct, who can claim a harvest that leaves no grain for other
gleaners? Sometimes the handful of corn left on the field is of more
importance than the reaper’s sheaves. If we had to wait until we knew
every detail of the question studied, no one would venture to write the
little that he knows. From time to time, a few truths are revealed,
tiny pieces of the vast mosaic of things. Better to divulge the
discovery, however humble it be. Others will come who, also gathering a
few fragments, will assemble the whole into a picture ever growing
larger but ever notched by the unknown.

And then the burden of years forbids me to entertain long hopes.
Distrustful of the morrow, I write from day to day, as I make my
observations. This method, one of necessity rather than choice,
sometimes results in the reopening of old subjects, when new
investigations throw light within and enable me to complete or it may
be to modify the first text.

Years ago, I obtained a few noteworthy particulars about the
Onthophagi, thanks to a very rough and ready method of rearing a few of
them jumbled up with other Beetles in whom I was more interested. One
of the earlier volumes gives a rapid sketch of them. [57] The results,
hurriedly and almost fortuitously acquired, inspired me with a wish to
observe systematically and closely the habits, industry and development
of an insect which I had already introduced to the reader in too
summary a fashion. Let us speak once more of the Onthophagi, that
nation of little horned dung-worshippers.

Lately, I have reared the following species, according as I chanced to
pick them up: Onthophagus taurus, Linn., O. vacca, Linn., O furcatus,
Fabr., O. Schreberi, Linn., O. nuchicornis, Linn., O. lemur, Fabr.
There has been no choice on my part; I accept all that present
themselves in sufficient numbers. The first especially abound. I am
delighted, for the Bull Onthophagus is the chief of the clan. There is
none to equal him, if not in dress, for this may be a richer copper in
the others, at least in the handsome horns which are the masculine
prerogative. He will be the object of special attention in my
menagerie. For the rest, as what he teaches me is repeated elsewhere
without noteworthy variations, his history will be that of the whole
tribe.

I capture him, as well as the others, in the course of May. At this
period of genetic awakening, I find them swarming very busily under the
Sheep-droppings, not those which are moulded into olives and scattered
in trails, but those which are ejected in slabs of some size. The first
are too dry and too scanty and the Onthophagus thinks nothing of them;
the second are goodly messes and he works them in preference to any
other material.

The Mule’s copious heap is also largely utilized; but it is very
stringy and, though the Beetle finds plenty in it for his own feasts,
he very seldom uses it for his offspring. Where the nests are
concerned, the Sheep is the main purveyor. Her exceptionally plastic
product at once attracts the custom of the Onthophagi, who are just as
dainty epicures as the Sacred Beetle, the Copris or the Sisyphus. If,
however, the ovine pottage be lacking, they fall back upon the coarser
lump of the Mule, with the aid of a scrupulous selection.

There is no difficulty about bringing up Onthophagi. A spacious
vivarium that lends itself to frolicsome sports is not necessary here;
it would even be inconvenient and would not favour close observation,
because of the tumult prevailing in a numerous and varied crowd. I
prefer a number of separate establishments, simpler and smaller, which
I can carry into my private workroom. They will lend themselves better
to assiduous inspection, without putting me to the trouble of digging.
What receptacles shall I choose?

There are certain glass pots fitted with a tin lid which you screw over
their mouths. They are used for honey, preserved fruits, jam, jelly and
similar products dear to the heart of materfamilias when the winter
scarcity sets in. I procure a dozen of these by clearing the cupboard
in which the preserves are kept. They hold, on the average, about a
pint and three-quarters.

Half-filled with fresh sand and supplied in addition with provisions
obtained from the Sheep’s pastry-shop, each jar receives its share of
Onthophagi, of separate species and with both sexes present. When the
glass houses are used up and the population becomes too dense, I resort
to ordinary flower-pots, furnished according to rule and closed with a
pane of glass. The whole collection is arranged on my large
laboratory-table. My captives are satisfied with their installation,
which provides them with a mild temperature, a nicely-shaded light and
first-class fare.

What more is needed to complete the Dung-beetles’ happiness? Nothing
but the raptures of pairing. They indulge in these freely. Interned in
the second half of May, with not a thought to the new state of things
which puts a stop to their frolics among the thyme, eagerly they seek
one another out, make their overtures and group themselves in couples.

This is an excellent occasion to find the reply to a primary question:
do the Onthophagus father and mother work in conjunction when looking
after the brood; have they a permanent household, similar to that which
we have seen in the Geotrupes, the Sisyphus and the Minotaur; [58] or
is the mating followed by a sudden and definite rupture? The Bull
Onthophagus shall tell us.

I delicately transfer two insects in the act of coupling and establish
them in another, separate jar, provided with victuals and fresh sand.
The moving is performed safely; the entwined pair remain united. A
quarter of an hour afterwards, they separate; the great job is
finished. The food is close at hand. They refresh themselves for a
moment; and then each, without bothering in the least about the other,
digs his burrow and buries himself in solitude.

A week or so passes. The male reappears on the surface; he is restless,
he makes desperate efforts to climb out; the relations are done, quite
done; he wants to get away. By and by, the female comes up in her turn;
she tries the nearest cake, picks the best of it and takes it
underground. She is building her nest. As to her companion, he does not
even notice what is happening: these things do not concern him.

The other captives, of no matter what species, when consulted in the
same manner, give the same reply. The Onthophagus tribe knows nothing
of household ties.

In what respect are those who know them and who observe them so
faithfully any the better off? I do not quite see; or, to be more
candid, I do not see at all. If, in the case of the Geotrupes, I see in
the bulky pudding some slight excuse for the collaboration of the
father, who is a valuable assistant in the fabrication of this kind of
preserve, and if, in that of the Minotaur, the immensely deep well
might suggest to me the need for the trident-wearing helper, who shoots
out the rubbish while the mother goes on digging, I should still be
without an explanation when I came to the Sisyphus, who is very
economical both in provisions and in the labour of excavation and
requires no help with either. I will not deny that, in this last case,
the male is of some use, watching over the pill, lending occasional
help and encouraging the female with his presence; but, after all, the
part which he plays as a collaborator is a very secondary one, and the
mother, one would say, could do without any assistance, as is the rule
among the Scarabæi. Here, besides, we have the Bull Onthophagus, who is
even smaller than the Sisyphus; and this dwarf, unacquainted with a
partnership that would increase her powers twofold, fulfils a task
which is almost equivalent to that of the Beetles who roll their pills
in double harness.

Then how are talents and industries distributed? If we go on
accumulating fact upon fact, observation upon observation, shall we
ever come to know? I venture to doubt it.

I have friends who sometimes say to me:

‘Now that you have collected such a mass of details, you ought to
follow up analysis with synthesis and promulgate a comprehensive theory
of the origin of instincts.’

There’s a rash proposal for you! Because I have turned over a few
grains of sand on the seashore, am I qualified to talk about the ocean
depths? Life has its unfathomable secrets. Human knowledge will be
struck off the world’s records before we know all that is to be said
about a Gnat.

Equally obscure is the question of nest-building. By a nest we
understand any residence constructed purposely to receive the eggs and
to protect the development of the young. The Bees and Wasps excel in
the art. They know how to make cabins out of cotton-stuffs, wax, leaves
or resin; they build turrets of clay and domes of masonry; they mould
earthenware urns. The Spiders vie with them. Remember the
flying-machines, the rose-patterned paraboloids of certain Epeiræ; the
globular bag of the Lycosa; the Labyrinth Spider’s cloisters with their
Gothic arches; the Clotho Spider’s tent and lentiform pockets. [59]

The Locust makes pits surmounted by a frothy chimney; the Mantis whips
her glair into a frothy mass. [60] The Fly and the Butterfly, on the
other hand, know nothing of these fond attentions: they limit
themselves to laying their eggs at spots where the young can find board
and lodging for themselves. [61] The Beetle also is generally extremely
ignorant of the finer points of nest-building. By a very singular
exception, the Dung-beetles, alone among the immense host of wearers of
armoured wing-cases, have a special art of rearing, a system of
upbringing which can bear comparison with that of the most gifted
insects. How did they come by this industry?

Venturesome minds, deluded by the greatly daring theorists, tell us
that the science of the future, rich in evidence drawn from the
mysteries of fibre and cell, will draw up an affiliation-table in which
the animal kingdom will be classified so that the place occupied by a
creature shall inform us of its instincts, without any need of
preliminary observation. We shall determine the aptitudes by means of
learned formulæ, even as numbers are determined by their logarithms. It
is most impressive; but beware: we are dealing with Dung-beetles; let
us consult them before we draw up the logarithmic table of instincts.
The Onthophagus is related to the Copris, the Scarab and the Sisyphus,
all of whom are versed in the art of making shapely pellets. Let us try
to tell beforehand, according to the place which she occupies in the
insect-table, going merely by the formula, what she is able to do in
the way of nest-building.

She is small, I agree; but littleness does not diminish talent in the
least, as witness the Titmouse, with his pendulous nest, the Wren and
the Canary, who, although among the smallest of our little birds, are
incomparable artists. The near kinswomen of the Onthophagus excel in
making beautiful ovoids and pear-shaped gourds. She herself, so tiny
and so precise, ought to do even better.

Well, the table deceives us, the formula lies: the Onthophagus is a
very indifferent artist; her nest is a rudimentary piece of work,
hardly fit to be acknowledged. I obtain it in profusion from the six
species which I have brought up in my jars and flower-pots. The Bull
Onthophagus alone provides me with nearly a hundred; and I find no two
precisely alike, as pieces should be that come from the same mould and
the same workshop.

To this lack of exact similarity, we must add inaccuracy of shape, now
more now less accentuated. It is easy, however, to recognize among the
bulk the pattern upon which the clumsy nest-builder works. It is a sack
shaped like a thimble and standing erect, with the spherical
thimble-end at the bottom and the circular opening at the top.

Sometimes the insect establishes itself in the central region of my
apparatus, in the heart of the earthy mass; then, the resistance being
the same in every direction, the sack-like shape is pretty accurate.
But, generally, the Onthophagus prefers a solid basis to a dusty
support and builds on the walls of the jar, especially on the bottom.
When the support is vertical, the sack is a longitudinal section of a
short cylinder, with the smooth flat surface against the glass and a
rugged convexity every elsewhere. If the support be horizontal, as is
most frequently the case, the cabin is a sort of undecided oval
lozenge, flat at the bottom, bulging and vaulted at the top. To the
general inaccuracy of these contorted shapes, regulated by no very
definite pattern, we must add the coarseness of the surfaces, all of
which, with the exception of the parts touching the glass, are covered
with a crust of sand.

The manner of procedure explains this uncouth exterior. As laying-time
draws nigh, the Onthophagus bores a cylindrical pit and descends
underground to a moderate depth. Here, working with her forehead, her
chin and her fore-legs, which are toothed like a rake, she forces back
and heaps around her the materials which she has moved, so as to obtain
as best she may a nest of suitable size.

The next thing is to cement the crumbling walls of the cavity. The
insect climbs back to the surface by way of its pit; it gathers on its
threshold an armful of mortar taken from the cake whereunder it has
elected to set up house; it goes down again with its burden, which it
spreads and presses upon the sandy wall. Thus it produces a concrete
casing, the gravel of which is supplied by the wall itself and the
cement by the produce of the Sheep. After a few trips and repeated
strokes of the trowel, the pit is plastered on every side; the walls,
encrusted all over with grains of sand, are no longer liable to give
way.

The cabin is ready: it now wants only a tenant and stores. First, a
large free space is made at the bottom: the hatching-chamber, where the
egg is laid on the wall. Next comes the collecting of the provisions
intended for the grub, a collecting done with scrupulous care.
Recently, when building, the insect worked upon the outside of the
doughy mass and took no notice of the earthy blemishes. Now, it
penetrates to the very centre of the lump, through a gallery that looks
as though it were made with a punch. When trying a cheese, the buyer
employs a scoop, the hollow, cylindrical taster which is driven well in
and pulled out with a sample taken from the middle of the cheese. The
Onthophagus, when collecting for her grub, goes to work as though
equipped with one of these tasters. She bores an exactly round hole
into the piece which she is exploiting; she goes straight to the
middle, where the material, not being exposed to the contact of the
air, has kept more savoury and pliable. Here and here alone are
gathered the armfuls which, gradually stowed away, kneaded and heaped
up to the requisite extent, fill the sack to the top. Lastly, a plug of
the same mortar, the sides of which are made partly of sand and partly
of stercoral cement, roughly closes the cell, in such a way that an
external inspection does not allow one to distinguish front from back.

To judge of the work and its merit, we must open it. A large empty
space, oval in shape, occupies the rear end. This is the birth-chamber,
huge in dimensions compared with its contents, the egg fixed on the
wall, sometimes at the bottom of the cell and sometimes on the side.
This egg is a tiny white cylinder, rounded at each tip and measuring a
millimetre [62] in length immediately after it is laid. With no other
support than the spot on which the oviduct has planted it, it stands on
its hinder end and projects into space.

A more or less enquiring glance is quite surprised to find so small a
germ contained in so large a box. What does the tiny egg want with all
that room? When carefully examined within, the walls of the chamber
suggest another question. They are coated with a fine greenish pap,
semifluid and shiny, the appearance of which does not agree with either
the external or the internal aspect of the lump from which the insect
has extracted its materials. A similar lime-wash is observed in the
nest which the Scarab, the Copris, the Sisyphus, the Geotrupes and
other makers of stercoraceous preserves contrive in the very heart of
the provisions, to receive the egg; but nowhere have I seen it so
plentiful, in proportion, as in the hatching-chamber of the
Onthophagus. Long puzzled by this brothy wash, of which the Sacred
Beetle provided me with the first instance, I at one time took the
thing for a layer of moisture oozing from the bulk of the victuals and
collecting on the surface of the enclosure without other effort than
capillary action. That was the interpretation of this varnish which I
accepted in various earlier passages.

I was wrong. The truth is something much more remarkable. To-day,
better informed by the Onthophagus, I reopen the question: is this
lime-wash, this semifluid cream, the result of a natural oozing, or is
it the product of maternal foresight? A simple and conclusive
experiment will give us the answer. I ought to have made it at the
outset. I did not think of it, because the simple is usually the last
thing that we call to our aid. Here is the experiment.

I pack a little glass jar, the size of a Hen’s egg, with Sheep-dung as
employed by the Onthophagus. With a glass rod, which leaves a perfectly
smooth impression, I make a cylindrical cavity in the heap about an
inch deep. After withdrawing the rod, I cover the orifice with a slab
of the same material; and I protect the whole against desiccation by
means of an hermetically closed lid. It is the Sacred Beetle’s pear,
with its hatching-chamber, on a larger scale; it is the Onthophagus’
thimble, enormously exaggerated. I may say that, after the withdrawal
of the glass rod, the surface of the cavity is a dull, greenish black,
with not a trace of extravasated shiny moisture. If an oozing by
capillary action really takes place, the semifluid varnish will appear;
if nothing of the kind should occur, the surface will remain dull.

I wait a couple of days to allow the capillary sweating to take effect,
if such a process there be. Then I examine the cavity. There is no
shiny wash on the walls; they look as dull and dry as at the beginning.
Three days later, I make a fresh inspection. Nothing has changed: the
pit made by the glass rod shows no sign of exudation; it is even a
little drier. So capillary action and its extravasations have nothing
to do with the matter.

What then is the lime-wash that is found in every cell? The answer is
inevitable: it is something produced by the mother, a special gruel, a
milk-food elaborated for the benefit of the new-born grub.

The young Pigeon puts his beak into that of his parents, who, with
convulsive efforts, force down his gullet first a casein mash secreted
in the crop and later a broth of grains softened by being partly
digested. He is fed upon disgorged foods, which are kind to the frailty
and inexperience of a young stomach. The grub of the Onthophagus is
brought up in much the same way, at the start. To assist its first
attempts at swallowing, the mother prepares for it, in her crop, a
light and strengthening cream.

To pass the dainty from mouth to mouth is impossible in her case: the
construction of new cells keeps her busy elsewhere. Moreover—and this
is a more serious point—the laying takes place egg by egg, at very long
intervals, and the hatching is pretty slow: time would fail, had the
family to be brought up in the manner of the Pigeons. Another method is
perforce required. The infants’ food is disgorged all over the walls of
the cabin, in such a way that the nurseling finds itself surrounded
with an abundance of bread and jam, in which the bread, the meat for
the strong, is represented by the uncooked material, as supplied by the
Sheep, while the jam, the food for the babe, is represented by the same
material daintily prepared beforehand in the mother’s stomach. We shall
see the grub presently lick first the jam all around it and then
stoutly attack the bread. One of our own children would behave no
otherwise.

I should have liked to catch the mother in the act of disgorging and
spreading her broth. I did not succeed in doing so. The proceedings
take place in a tiny niche; and the busy cook blocks out the view. Also
her fluster at being exhibited in broad daylight at once arrests the
work.

If direct observation be lacking, at least the appearance of the
material and the result of my experiment with the glass rod speak very
plainly and tell us that the Onthophagus, here rivalling the Pigeon,
but with a different method, disgorges the first mouthfuls for her
sons. And the same may be said of the other Dung-beetles skilled in the
art of building a hatching-chamber in the centre of the provisions.

No elsewhere in the insect world, except among the Bees, who prepare
disgorged food in the shape of honey, is such solicitude seen. The
dung-workers edify us with their morals. Several of them practise
association in couples and found a household; several anticipate the
process of suckling, that supreme expression of maternal tenderness, by
turning their crop into a nipple. Life has its freaks. It settles amid
ordure the creatures most highly endowed with domestic qualities. True,
from there it mounts, with a sudden flight, to the sublime virtues of
the bird.

Among the Onthophagi the egg grows considerably larger after it is
laid; it almost doubles its linear dimensions, thus increasing the bulk
eightfold. This growth is general among the Dung-beetles. If you note
the size of an egg recently laid by any species and measure it again
when the grub is about to be born, you will be quite surprised at the
singular progress which it has made. The Sacred Beetle’s egg, for
instance, which at first is lodged pretty spaciously in its
hatching-chamber, swells until it nearly fills the cavity.

The first idea that occurs to the mind is a very simple and tempting
one, namely, that the egg feeds. Surrounded by strongly-flavoured
effluvia, it becomes impregnated with emanations which distend its
flexible tunic; it grows by a sort of alimentary respiration, just as a
seed swells in fertile soil. That is how I pictured things at the
beginning, when the delicate problem presented itself for the first
time. But is this really what happens? Ah, if it were enough, when we
were in need of food, to stand outside a cook-shop and inhale the smell
of the good things that were being prepared inside, what a different
world it would seem, to many of us! It would be too lovely!

The Onthophagus, the Copris and the other Beetles with cream-washed
hatching-chambers are a delusion and a snare to us, with their eggs
which are so ready to swell. The Minotaurus tells me so, somewhat late
in the day; she compels me to reconsider my earlier interpretations
entirely. Her egg is not enclosed in a hollow inside the victuals whose
emanations might explain its growth; it is outside the sausage, a good
way underneath, surrounded by sand on every side; and nevertheless it
increases in size just as well as those lodged in a succulent cabin.

Moreover, the new-born grub surprises me by its chubbiness; it is seven
or eight times as big as the egg whence it comes; the contents vastly
exceed the capacity of the container. Besides, before touching the food
from which it is separated by a ceiling of sand, the grub for a certain
time continues its strange growing, as though new materials were being
added to those which came out of the egg.

Here, in the dry sand, it is impossible to talk of effluvia capable of
providing the wherewithal for the grub to wax big and fat. Then to what
do both the egg and the new-born grub owe their growth? The
Languedocian Scorpion [63] gives us an excellent clue. When passing
from a sort of larval stage to the final form, which is the same as
that of the adult, we have seen him suddenly double his length and
consequently increase eightfold in bulk before taking the least scrap
of nourishment. A highly complex process of co-ordination and
adjustment takes place in the interior of the organism; and the
dimensions increase without the addition of new material.

An animal is a structure capable of becoming more spacious with the
same amount of materials. Everything depends upon the molecular
architecture, which becomes more and more refined by the tremors of
life. The contents of the egg, a compact mass, expand into a creature
which is all the bulkier for its richness in organs for diverse
functions. Even so, the locomotive engine, the creature of industry,
occupies more space than the iron, its raw material, melted down into a
single ingot.

When the shell is able to stretch, the egg swells under the thrust of
its contents, which form into an organic whole and dilate. This is the
case with the various Dung-beetles. When the shell is hard and rigid, a
void is made by evaporation at the thick end; and this excess of space
supplies the room necessary for the increase in volume of the contents.
This is the case with the birds, which develop within a chalky
enclosure that does not alter in size. Both of them dilate, with this
difference that the soft shell allows the inside work to be perceived
outside, whereas the stiff shell reveals nothing.

Lastly, the hatching does not always stop the growth that is not
preceded by feeding. For a little while longer the larva continues to
increase in size; it completes the work of acquiring stability in its
new equilibrium, the equilibrium of a living creature; it improves its
physique by supplementary stretching. The Scorpion has already told us
this; the grub of the Minotaurus and many others assure us of the same
thing. It is, on a smaller scale, what we saw before in the Locust’s
wing, [64] which, issuing from a very small sheath, soon unfurls into a
sail of generous breadth.

Twice, therefore, am I changing my opinions in this history of the
Dung-beetles: first, on the subject of the paste spread on the walls of
the natal chamber; secondly, on the subject of the egg that increases
in size after it is laid. I have corrected my statements without being
greatly ashamed of my mistakes, for it is difficult indeed to reach the
vein of truth at the first tentative boring. There is only one means of
never blundering, which is never to do anything and, above all, to let
ideas alone.



CHAPTER XVIII

THE BULL ONTHOPHAGUS: THE LARVA; THE NYMPH


May is the nesting-month of the different Onthophagi and of the Bull
Onthophagus in particular. The mothers now go underground to some
little depth, under the shelter of the cave whence the building and
victualling-materials are extracted. Unaided by the males, who,
heedless of family cares, continue to lead a life of jollity, they
fashion their cabins and stuff them with provisions after the egg is
laid. The work, for that matter, is crude and elementary and hardly
needs the collaboration of the horned dandies. Five or six
establishments at most, each founded in a couple of days, represent the
whole of a mother’s work and leave plenty of time for spring revelry.

The grub is hatched in about a week; and a strange and paradoxical
little creature it is. On its back it has an enormous sugar-loaf hump,
the weight of which overbalances it each time that it tries to stand on
its legs and walk. At every moment it staggers and falls under the
burden of the hunch. The Sacred Beetle’s larva showed us long ago a
knapsack which was a storehouse of cement to stop up the accidental
cracks in the provision-box and protect the food from drying too
rapidly. The Onthophagus’ grub exaggerates a similar warehouse to the
utmost degree; it makes a cone-shaped monument of it, so extravagant
and grotesque as to border on caricature. Is it some mad masquerader’s
joke or a rational deformity which will have its uses later? The future
will tell us.

Without saying anything more about it, for lack of words to give a
picture of anything so extraordinary, I will refer the reader to the
grub of the Oniticellus, which I sketched in an earlier chapter. [65]
The two hunchbacks are very much alike.

Unable to keep its hump upright, the grub of the Onthophagus lies down
on its side in the cell and licks the cream all around it. There is
cream everywhere, on the ceiling, on the walls, on the floor. As soon
as one spot is thoroughly bared, the consumer moves a little way on
with the help of its well-shaped legs; it capsizes again and starts
licking again. As the cabin is large and plentifully supplied, the
patent-food diet lasts some time.

The fat babies of the Geotrupes, the Copris and the Sacred Beetle
finish at one brief sitting the dainty wherewith their narrow lodge is
hung, a dainty frugally served and just sufficient to whet the appetite
and prepare the stomach for coarser fare; but the Onthophagus’ grub,
that puny dwarf, has enough to last it for a week and more. The
spacious birth-chamber, which is out of all proportion to the
nurseling’s size, has permitted this wastefulness.

At last the real loaf is attacked. In about a month everything is
consumed, except the wall of the sack. And now the splendid part played
by the hump stands revealed. Glass tubes, which I had got ready in
anticipation, allow me to watch the grub at work. Growing plumper and
plumper and more and more humpbacked, it withdraws to one end of the
cell, which has become a crumbling ruin. Here it builds a casket in
which the transformation will take place. Its materials are the
digestive residuum, converted into mortar and heaped up in the hump.
The stercoral architect is about to construct a masterpiece of elegance
out of its own ordure, held in reserve in that receptacle.

I follow its movements with the magnifying-glass. It curves itself into
a loop, closes the circuit of the digestive apparatus, brings its two
ends into contact and, with the tip of its mandibles, seizes a pellet
of dung evacuated at that moment. This pellet is extracted very neatly
and moulded into a brick which is measured most carefully. A slight
bend of the creature’s neck sets the brick in place. Others follow,
laid in the most scrupulously regular courses one above the other.
Giving a tap here and there with its palpi, the grub makes sure of the
steadiness of the parts, their accurate binding, their orderly
arrangement. It turns round in the centre of the work as the edifice
rises, even as a mason does when building a turret.

Sometimes the brick that has been laid becomes loose, because the
cement has given way. The grub takes it up again with its mandibles,
but, before replacing it, coats it with an adhesive moisture. It holds
it to its anus, whence a gummy consolidating-extract trickles
immediately and almost imperceptibly. The hump supplies the materials;
the intestines give, if necessary, the glue that sticks them together.

In this way an attractive house is obtained, ovoid in form, polished as
stucco within and adorned on the outside with slightly projecting
scales, similar to those on a cedar-cone. Each of these scales is one
of the bricks that have been produced from the hump. The casket is not
large: a cherry-stone would about represent its dimensions; but it is
so accurate, so prettily fashioned that it will bear comparison with
the finest products of entomological industry.

The Bull Onthophagus has not a monopoly of this jeweller’s art: all,
throughout the group, excel in it to the same degree. One of the
smallest, the Forked Onthophagus, whose work is hardly larger than a
pepper-corn, is as expert as the others in the manufacture of boxes
shaped like a cedar-cone. It is a family gift, an invariable gift,
despite all differences in size, costume or hornery. The Bison Onitis,
the Yellow-footed Oniticellus and certainly many others retire, for the
transformation, into a residence similar in architecture to that of the
Onthophagi; they too tell us that instincts are independent of
structure.

In the first week of July let us complete the destruction of the Bull
Onthophagus’ cell, already much impaired by the grub, which, after
exhausting the contents of its knapsack, has gnawed the inner layer of
the walls. The ruins are removed as easily as the husk of a ripe
walnut. A sort of shelling process gives us the seed, that is to say,
the nymphal casket, which comes out quite neatly, without sticking to
its wrapper at any point. Break open the gem. The nymph is there,
half-transparent and as it were carved out of crystal. Fortune favours
me with a male, who is more interesting because of his frontal armour.

The horns outline a splendid crescent, leaning backwards and resting on
the shoulders. They are swollen; they are colourless, like everything
that life elaborates in the midst of a generating-fluid; and at their
base are the dark ocular specks, not yet capable of sight, but
promising to become so. The clypeus is expanding and beginning to stand
out. Seen from the front, the head is that of a Bull, with a wide
muzzle and enormous horns, copied from those of the Aurochs.

If the artists in the time of the Pharaohs had known the immature
Onthophagus, they would certainly have used him for their hieratical
images. He is quite as good as the Sacred Beetle and even better from
the point of view of those oddities which offer such scope to
sacerdotal symbolism. On the front edge of the corselet, a single horn
rises, as powerful as the two others and shaped like a cylinder ending
in a conical knob. It points forward and is fixed in the middle of the
frontal crescent, projecting a little beyond it. The arrangement is
gloriously original. The carvers of hieroglyphics would have beheld in
it the crescent of Isis wherein dips the edge of the world.

Some other peculiarities complete the nymph’s curious appearance. To
right and left the abdomen is armed, on either side, with four little
horns resembling crystal spikes. Total, eleven pieces in the creature’s
harness: two on the forehead; one on the thorax; eight on the abdomen.
The beast of yore delighted in queer horns: certain reptiles of the
geological period stuck a pointed spur on their upper eyelids. The
Onthophagus, more greatly daring, sports eight on the sides of his
belly, in addition to the spear which he plants upon his back. The
frontal horns may be excused: they are fairly common; but what does he
propose to do with the others? Nothing at all. They are passing
fancies, jewels of early youth; the adult insect will not retain the
least trace of them.

The nymph matures. The appendages of the fore-head, at first quite
crystalline, now show, when held up to the light, a streak of reddish
brown, curved like a bow. This is the real horn taking shape,
consistency and colour. The appendage of the corselet and those of the
belly, on the other hand, preserve their glassy appearance. They are
barren sacks, void of any germ capable of development. The organism
produced them in a moment of impulse; now, scornful, or perhaps
powerless, it allows its work to wither and become useless.

When the nymph sheds its covering and the delicate tunic of the adult
form is rent, these strange horns crumble into fragments, which fall
away with the rest of the cast clothing. In the hope of finding at
least a trace of the vanished things, the lens vainly explores the
bases but lately occupied. There is nothing appreciable left: the nymph
is now smooth; the real has given place to the non-existent. Of the
accessory panoply so full of promise, absolutely naught remains:
everything has vanished into thin air.

The Bull Onthophagus is not the only one endowed with these fleeting
appendages, which completely disappear when the nymph sheds its
clothes. The other members of the tribe possess similar horny
manifestations on their bellies and corselets. One of them, the
Spectral Onthophagus, on achieving the perfect state, adorns the front
of his corselet with four tiny studs arranged in a semicircle. The two
end ones stand alone; the two middle ones are together. These last
correspond exactly with the base of the nymph’s thoracic horn and might
easily be taken for the atrophied remnant of the vanished appendage. We
must abandon this idea, however, for the lateral studs, which are more
developed than the middle ones, occupy points where the nymph had no
horns. In this Onthophagus, as in the others, the nymphal armour is
misleading and abortive.

Certain Dung-beetles related to the Onthophagi likewise possess horned
nymphs. One of these is the Yellow-footed Oniticellus, the only one
whom circumstances have allowed me to examine from this point of view.
He wears, in the nymphal stage, a magnificent horn on his corselet and
a row of four spikes on each side of his abdomen, as is the rule among
the Onthophagi. This all disappears entirely in the adult insect.

It seems likely that, if I had known how to improve the occasion some
years ago, when I was successfully rearing the Bison Onitis sent me
from Montpellier, I should have perceived the same armour on the
nymph’s thorax and abdomen. Not having been warned by earlier
observations and being anxious also to disturb the pair of strangers as
little as possible, I let the opportunity slip.

Let us remark lastly that the Onitis, Oniticellus and Onthophagus
genera all three construct for the nymphosis a scaly cabin whose shape
suggests the cedar-cone and the fruit of the alder. One may therefore
admit, without being too venturesome, that the various builders of
similar caskets are all acquainted with the nymphal panoply of a horn
on the corselet and a diadem of eight spikes around the abdomen. This
is not equivalent to saying that the armour determines the casket or
the casket the armour. These curious details go together without
influencing each other.

A simple setting forth of the facts is not enough: we should like to
see the motive of this horned magnificence. Is it a vague reminiscence
of the customs of olden time, when life spent its excess of young sap
upon quaint creations, banished to-day from our better-balanced world?
Is the Onthophagus the dwarfed representative of an ancient race of
horned animals now extinct? Does it give us a faint image of the past?

The surmise rests upon no valid foundation. The Dung-beetle is recent
in the general chronology of created beings; he ranks among the
last-comers. With him there is no means of going back to the mists of
the past, which lends itself to the invention of imaginary precursors.
Geological and even lacustrine schists, rich though the latter be in
Diptera and Weevils, have hitherto furnished not the slightest relic of
the dung-workers. This being so, it is wiser not to claim horned
ancestors from the distant past as accounting for those degenerate
descendants, the Onthophagi.

Since the past explains nothing, let us turn to the future. If the
thoracic horn be not a reminiscence, it may be a promise. It represents
a timid attempt, which the ages will harden into a permanent weapon. It
lets us assist at the slow and gradual evolution of a new organ; it
shows us life in travail of a thing not yet existing on the adult
Beetle’s corselet, a thing which will exist one day. We catch the
genesis of the species in the act; the present teaches us how the
future is prepared.

And what does the Beetle propose to do with this object of his
ambition, this spear which he hopes by and by to place upon his spine?
At any rate as a dazzling piece of masculine finery the thing is
already fashionable among the various foreign Scarabs that feed
themselves and their grubs on decaying vegetable matter. These giants
among the wearers of armoured wing-cases delight in associating their
placid corpulence with halberds terrible to gaze upon.

Look at one, Dynastes Hercules by name, a denizen of rotten tree-stumps
under the scorching skies of the West Indies. The peaceable colossus
well deserves his epithet: he measures three inches long. Of what
service can the threatening rapier of the corselet and the toothed
lifting-jack of the forehead be to him, unless it be to make him look
grand in the presence of his female, herself deprived of these
extravagances? Perhaps also they are of use to him in certain
operations, even as the trident helps the Minotaurus to crumble his
pellets and cart his rubbish. Implements of which we do not know the
use always strike us as singular. Having never been intimate with the
West-Indian Hercules, I must content myself with suspicions touching
the purpose of his fearsome equipment.

Well, one of the subjects in my insect-house would achieve a similar
savage finery if he persisted in his attempts. I speak of the Cow
Onthophagus (O. vacca). His nymph has on its forehead a big horn, one
only, bent backward; on its corselet it possesses a similar horn,
jutting forward. The two, approaching their tips, look like some kind
of pincers. What does the insect lack in order to acquire, on a smaller
scale, the eccentric ornament of the West-Indian Scarab? It lacks
perseverance. It matures the appendage of the forehead and allows that
of the corselet to perish atrophied. It succeeds no better than the
Bull Onthophagus in its attempt to grow a pointed stake upon its back;
it loses a glorious opportunity of making itself fine for the wedding
and terrible in battle.

The others are no more successful. I bring up six different species.
All, in the nymphal state, possess the thoracic horn and the
eight-pointed ventral coronet; not one benefits by these advantages,
which disappear altogether when the adult bursts its wrapping. My near
neighbourhood numbers a dozen species of Onthophagi; the world contains
some hundreds. All, natives and foreigners, have the same general
structure; all most probably possess the dorsal appendage at an early
age; and none of them, in spite of the variety of climate, torrid in
one place, temperate in another, has succeeded in hardening it into a
permanent horn.

Could not the future complete a work whose design is so very clearly
traced? We are the more inclined to ask this, because appearances are
all in favour of the question. Examine under the magnifying-glass the
frontal horns of the Bull Onthophagus in the nymphal state; then with
the same scrupulous care look at the spear upon the corselet. At first,
there is no difference between them, except for the general
configuration. In both cases we find the same glassy aspect, the same
sheath swollen with colourless fluid, the same incipient organ plainly
marked. A leg in process of formation is not more clearly announced
than the horn on the corselet or those on the forehead.

Can time be lacking for the thoracic growth to become organized into a
stiff and permanent appendage? The evolution of the nymph is swift; the
insect is perfect in a few weeks. Could it not be that, though this
brief space suffices to promote the maturity of the horns on the
forehead, the thoracic horn requires a longer time to ripen? Let us
prolong the nymphal period artificially and give the germ time to
develop. It seems to me that a decrease of temperature, moderated and
maintained for some weeks, for months if necessary, should be capable
of bringing about this result, by delaying the progress of the
evolution. Then, with a gentle slowness, favourable to delicate
formations, the promised organ will crystallize, so to speak, and
become the spear promised by appearances.

The experiment attracted me. I was unable to undertake it for lack of
the means whereby to produce a cold, even temperature over a long time.
What should I have obtained if my penury had not made me abandon the
enterprise? A retarding of the progress of the metamorphosis, but
nothing more, apparently. The horn on the corselet would have persisted
in its sterility and, sooner or later, would have disappeared.

I have reasons for my conviction. The abode of the Onthophagus engaged
on his metamorphosis is not deep down; variations of temperature are
easily felt. On the other hand, the seasons are capricious, especially
the spring. Under the skies of Provence, the months of May and June, if
the mistral lend a hand, have periods when the thermometer drops in
such a way as to suggest a return of winter.

To these vicissitudes add the influence of a more northerly climate.
The Onthophagi occupy a wide zone of latitude. Those of the north, less
favoured by the sun than those of the south, might quite possibly have
the date of their transformation postponed by a change in the weather
and consequently be subjected to a lower temperature for several weeks.
This would spin out the work of evolution and give the thoracic armour
time to harden into horn, at rare intervals, as chance may prescribe.
Here and there, then, the requisite condition of a moderate or even low
temperature at the time of the nymphosis actually exists, without the
need of any artificial agency.

Well, what becomes of this surplus time placed at the service of the
organic labour? Does the promised horn ripen? Not a bit of it: it
withers just as it does under the stimulus of a hot sun. In the records
of entomology I find no mention of an Onthophagus carrying a horn upon
his corselet. No one would even have suspected the possibility of such
an armour, if I had not bruited abroad the strange appearance of the
nymph. The influence of climate, therefore, has nothing to do with the
matter.

As we go more deeply into it, the question becomes more complicated.
The horny appendages of the Onthophagus, the Copris, the Minotaurus and
many others are the male’s prerogative; the female is without them or
wears them only on a reduced and very modest scale. We must look upon
these products as personal ornaments rather than as implements of
labour. The male makes himself fine for the pairing; but, with the
exception of the Minotaurus, who pins down the dry pellet that needs
crushing and holds it in position with his trident, I know none that
uses his armour as a tool. Horns and prongs on the forehead, crests and
crescents on the corselet are the male coquette’s jewels and nothing
more. The other sex requires no such baits to attract suitors: its
femininity is enough; and finery is neglected.

Now here is something to give us food for thought. The nymph of the
Onthophagus of the female sex, a nymph with an unarmed forehead,
carries on its thorax a vitreous horn as long, as rich in promise as
that of the other sex. If this latter excrescence be the design of an
incipient ornament, then the former would be so too, in which case the
two sexes, both anxious for self-embellishment, would work with equal
zeal to grow a horn upon their thorax. We should be witnessing the
genesis of a species that would not be really an Onthophagus, but a
derivative of the group; we should be beholding the commencement of
singularities banished hitherto from among the Dung-beetles, none of
whom, of either sex, has thought of planting a spear upon his chine.
Stranger still: the female, always the more humbly attired throughout
the entomological kingdom, would be vying with the male in her
hankering after quaint adornment. An ambition of this sort leaves me
incredulous.

We must therefore believe that, if the possibilities of the future
should ever produce a Dung-beetle carrying a horn upon his corselet,
this upsetter of present customs will not be an Onthophagus who has
succeeded in maturing the thoracic appendage of the nymph, but rather
an insect resulting from a new model. The creative power throws aside
the old moulds and replaces them by others, fashioned with fresh care,
in accordance with plans of an inexhaustible variety. Its laboratory is
not a peddling rag-fair, where the living assume the cast clothes of
the dead: it is a medallist’s studio, where each effigy receives the
stamp of a special die. Its treasure-house of forms, illimitable in its
riches, makes niggardliness impossible: there is no patching up of the
old in order to create the new. It breaks every mould once used; it
does away with it, without resorting to shabby after-touches.

Then what is the meaning of those horny preparations, which are always
blighted before they come to anything? With no great shame I confess
that I have not the slightest idea. My reply may not be couched in
learned phraseology, but it has one merit, that of absolute sincerity.



NOTES


[1] Chapters I. and II. of the present volume, forming the first two
chapters of Vol. I. of the Souvenirs entomologiques. The remaining
chapters on the Sacred Beetle appeared, in the original, in Vol. V. of
that work, for which volume the above was written as a
preface.—Translator’s Note.

[2] A village in the department of the Gard, facing Avignon.—Author’s
Note.

[3] ‘When you and I start housekeeping, alas, what shall we do?
    You in front and I behind, we’ll shove the tub along!’

[4] Pierre Joseph Proudhon (1809–1865), the French socialist, author of
Qu’est-ce que la propriété? etc.—Translator’s Note.

[5] Émile Blanchard (b. 1819), a French naturalist, best known by his
works on entomology.—Translator’s Note.

[6] The Scarabæi also bear the name of Ateuchus.—Author’s Note.

[7] Johann Karl Wilhelm Illiger (1775–1813), a German naturalist,
editor of a Magasin für Insektenkunde and author of Prodromus
systematis mammalium et avium, etc.—Translator’s Note.

[8] Gymnopleurus pilularius is a Dung-beetle nearly related to the
Sacred Beetle, but smaller. As his name suggests, he also rolls pellets
of dung. The Gymnopleurus is very general, even in the north, whereas
Scarabæus sacer is hardly ever found away from the shores of the
Mediterranean.—Author’s Note.

[9] A light opera, with music by Victor Massé and libretto by Jules
Barbier and Michel Carré (1852).—Translator’s Note.

[10] ‘Ah, how sweet is far niente,
     When round us throbs the busy world!’

[11] Cf. The Life of the Grasshopper, by J. Henri Fabre, translated by
Alexander Teixeira de Mattos: chaps. i. to v.—Translator’s Note.

[12] The weekly holiday in the French schools.—Translator’s Note.

[13] This seems the place in which to remind the reader that the first
two chapters of the present volume correspond with Chapters I. and II.
of the first volume of the Souvenirs entomologiques in their original
form. Chapters III. to VII. of the present volume are translations of
Chapters I. to V. of the fifth volume of the Souvenirs, published many
years later, at a time when Fabre had completed his study of the Sacred
Beetle.—Translator’s Note.

[14] Cf. Mulsant’s Coléoptères de France: Lamellicornes.—Author’s Note.

[15] Jean de La Fontaine (1621–1695), author of the famous
Fables.—Translator’s Note.

[16]               ‘... a double chance of gain:
     First, one’s own profit; next, another’s loss.’

[17] .11 to .15 inch.—Translator’s Note.

[18] Close upon 9½ feet.—Translator’s Note.

[19] 1.75 × 1.17 inches.—Translator’s Note.

[20] 1.36 × 1.09 inches.—Translator’s Note.

[21] .39 × .19 inch.—Translator’s Note.

[22] Cf. The Life and Love of the Insect, by J. Henri Fabre, translated
by Alexander Teixeira de Mattos: chap. xi.—Translator’s Note.

[23] Cf. The Hunting Wasps, by J. Henri Fabre, translated by Alexander
Teixeira de Mattos: chaps, iv. to x.—Translator’s Note.

[24] .19 inch.—Translator’s Note.

[25] The last ventral segment of the abdomen.—Translator’s Note.

[26] Cf. Bramble-bees and Others, by J. Henri Fabre, translated by
Alexander Teixeira de Mattos: chap. ix.—Translator’s Note.

[27] Pierre André Latreille (1762–1833), one of the founders of
entomological science, a professor at the Muséum d’histoire naturelle
and member of the Académie des sciences.—Translator’s Note.

[28] Cf. Mémoires du Muséum d’histoire naturelle: vol. v., p.
249.—Author’s Note.

[29] Horapollo Nilous, Orus Apollo, or Horos Apollo (fl. circa 400),
author of the Hieroglyphica.—Translator’s Note.

[30] Etienne Marcel Mulsant (1797–1880), author of the Histoire
naturelle des coléoptères en France (1839–1874) mentioned on page
94.—Translator’s Note.

[31] Hieroglyphics: Book 1., x.; Cory’s translation.—Translator’s Note.

[32] 1.28 × .93 inch.—Translator’s Note.

[33] Cf. inter alia the author’s Some Reflections upon Insect
Psychology, in The Mason-Bees, by J. Henri Fabre, translated by
Alexander Teixeira de Mattos: chap. vii.—Translator’s Note.

[34] Mites or Ticks.—Translator’s Note.

[35] Rove-beetles.—Translator’s Note.

[36] A genus of Dung-beetles.—Translator’s Note.

[37] Cf. Chapters XI., XVII. and XVIII. of the present
volume.—Translator’s Note.

[38] 1.56 × 1.32 inches.—Translator’s Note.

[39] Cf. Chapters XII. to XIV. of the present volume.—Translator’s
Note.

[40] Cf. The Mason-bees and Bramble-bees and Others:
passim.—Translator’s Note.

[41] Rose-chafers.—Translator’s Note.

[42] Or imperial mushroom. For this and the purple boletus, cf. The
Life of the Fly, by J. Henri Fabre, translated by Alexander Teixeira de
Mattos: chap. xviii.—Translator’s Note.

[43] .546 × .273 inch.—Translator’s Note.

[44] .585 × .39 inch.—Translator’s Note.

[45] Pantagruel: chap. i.; Sir Thomas Urquhart’s
translation.—Translator’s Note.

[46] Minotaurus typhœus. Cf. The Life and Love of the Insect: chap.
x.—Translator’s Note.

[47] A genus of Longicorns, or Long-horned Beetles.—Translator’s Note.

[48] Cf. The Life of the Grasshopper, by J. Henri Fabre, translated by
Alexander Teixeira de Mattos: chaps, i. to v.—Translator’s Note.

[49] .273 to .312 × .156 inch.—Translator’s Note.

[50] Johann Leonhard Frisch (1666–1743), a Lutheran clergyman,
lexicologist and natural historian and member of the Berlin Academy.
His Beschreibung von allerlei Insecten in Deutschland was published in
1720 to 1738.—Translator’s Note.

[51] Martial Étienne Mulsant (1797–1880), professor of natural history
at the Lycée de Lyon; author of Histoire naturelle des coléoptères de
France (1839–1846) and other entomological works.—Translator’s Note.

[52] Cf. The Life of the Grasshopper: chaps. vi. to ix.—Translator’s
Note.

[53] Cf. Bramble-bees and Others: chaps. ix. and x.—Translator’s Note.

[54] The Rose-chafer, whose grub forms the prey of the Scolia-wasp. Cf.
The Life and Love of the Insect: chap. xi.—Translator’s Note.

[55] Cf. Fabre’s own youthful experiences, in The Life of the Fly:
chap. vii.—Translator’s Note.

[56] For the author’s stay at Ajaccio, where he was a schoolmaster in
his youth, cf. The Life of the Fly: chap. vi.—Translator’s Note.

[57] Chapter XI. of the present book appeared in the fifth volume of
the Souvenirs entomologiques; this and the following chapter formed
part of the tenth and last volume.—Translator’s Note.

[58] Cf. The Life and Love of the Insect: chap. x.—Translator’s Note.

[59] For the Epeiræ, or Garden Spiders, the Lycosa, or Black-bellied
Tarantula, and the Labyrinth and Clotho Spiders, cf. The Life of the
Spider, by J. Henri Fabre, translated by Alexander Teixeira de Mattos:
passim.—Translator’s Note.

[60] Cf. The Life of the Grasshopper: chaps. viii., ix., xvi. and
xvii.—Translator’s Note.

[61] Cf. The Life of the Fly and The Life of the Caterpillar:
passim.—Translator’s Note.

[62] .039 inch.—Translator’s Note.

[63] Cf. The Life and Love of the Insect: chaps. xvii. and xviii. The
seven essays on the Languedocian Scorpion will be included in the last
volume of this complete edition of Fabre’s entomological
works.—Translator’s Note.

[64] Cf. The Life of the Grasshopper: chap. xix.—Translator’s Note.

[65] Chapter XI. of the present volume.—Translator’s Note.





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