The Life of the Spider
The Spider has a bad name: to most of us, she represents an odious, noxious animal, which every one hastens to crush under foot. Against this summary verdict the observer sets the beast’s industry, its talent as a weaver, its wiliness in the chase, its tragic nuptials and other characteristics of great interest. Yes, the Spider is well worth studying, apart from any scientific reasons; but she is said to be poisonous and that is her crime and the primary cause of the repugnance wherewith she inspires us. Poisonous, I agree, if by that we understand that the animal is armed with two fangs which cause the immediate death of the little victims which it catches; but there is a wide difference between killing a Midge and harming a man. However immediate in its effects upon the insect entangled in the fatal web, the Spider’s poison is not serious for us and causes less inconvenience than a Gnat-bite. That, at least, is what we can safely say as regards the great majority of the Spiders of our regions.
Must we take these queer things seriously or laugh at them? From the little that I have seen, I hesitate to pronounce an opinion. Nothing tells us that the bite of the Tarantula may not provoke, in weak and very impressionable people, a nervous disorder which music will relieve; nothing tells us that a profuse perspiration, resulting from a very energetic dance, is not likely to diminish the discomfort by diminishing the cause of the ailment. So far from laughing, I reflect and enquire, when the Calabrian peasant talks to me of his Tarantula, the Pujaud reaper of his Theridion lugubre , the Corsican husbandman of his Malmignatte. Those Spiders might easily deserve, at least partly, their terrible reputation.
Would I have greater riches, I have but to walk a hundred yards from my house, on the neighbouring plateau, once a shady forest, to-day a dreary solitude where the Cricket browses and the Wheat-ear flits from stone to stone. The love of lucre has laid waste the land. Because wine paid handsomely, they pulled up the forest to plant the vine. Then came the Phylloxera, the vine-stocks perished and the once green table-land is now no more than a desolate stretch where a few tufts of hardy grasses sprout among the pebbles. This waste-land is the Lycosa’s paradise: in an hour’s time, if need were, I should discover a hundred burrows within a limited range.
Jean-Henri Fabre
THE LIFE OF THE SPIDER
CHAPTER I: THE BLACK-BELLIED TARANTULA
CHAPTER II: THE BANDED EPEIRA
CHAPTER III: THE NARBONNE LYCOSA
CHAPTER IV: THE NARBONNE LYCOSA: THE BURROW
CHAPTER V: THE NARBONNE LYCOSA: THE FAMILY
CHAPTER VI: THE NARBONNE LYCOSA: THE CLIMBING-INSTINCT
CHAPTER VII: THE SPIDERS’ EXODUS
CHAPTER VIII: THE CRAB SPIDER
CHAPTER IX: THE GARDEN SPIDERS: BUILDING THE WEB
CHAPTER X: THE GARDEN SPIDERS: MY NEIGHBOUR
CHAPTER XI: THE GARDEN SPIDERS: THE LIME-SNARE
CHAPTER XII: THE GARDEN SPIDERS: THE TELEGRAPH-WIRE
CHAPTER XIII: THE GARDEN SPIDERS: PAIRING AND HUNTING
CHAPTER XIV: THE GARDEN SPIDERS: THE QUESTION OF PROPERTY
CHAPTER XV: THE LABYRINTH SPIDER
CHAPTER XVI: THE CLOTHO SPIDER
APPENDIX: THE GEOMETRY OF THE EPEIRA’S WEB
FOOTNOTES