Females of the brown and gold-tailed Moths, showing the bunch of down on the tails.
"Uncle Philip, you said that the moth pulled this hair off to cover its eggs; are they easily frozen?"
"Not very easily, boys; but you are mistaken in thinking that the moth covers these eggs to keep off the cold; for as she lays them in July and August, and covers them at that time, it cannot be to keep off the cold."
"What is it for, then, Uncle Philip?"
"To keep off the summer heat, boys."
"Why, Uncle Philip! who ever heard of covering a thing up in hair or wool to keep off heat?"
"I have heard of it, and seen it too, boys. It may seem strange, but it is true, that down and wool, and such things, are nearly as good to protect an animal from very great outward heat as they are to keep off very severe cold. When I was at Naples, in Italy, it was summer;—the climate is a very warm one.—The country people were in the habit of bringing snow into the city from Mount Vesuvius, and every morning I could see them coming in with their snow, which they sell to the rich to use for cooling things: and they kept it from melting with straw and wool. And in our own country, especially at the south, it is very common when a large lump of ice is brought to the house to be used through the day in midsummer, to wrap it up in a thick blanket until it is wanted.
"But I have not yet told you of the tweezers. The moth has no jaws, like bees and wasps, so that it cannot pull off these hairs as the bee would; but, as I told you, it performs the work with its tweezers, which are placed in its tail, and are like the points of a pair of sugar-tongs. The insects, too, will use them very rapidly, and pull off a little of the down, spread the egg upon it, and then cover it with more down, and smooth it very neatly. Here are pictures of these tweezers."