The spider is another insect which is often examined with the microscope, and certainly affords much matter for observation. “Formed for a life of rapacity, and incapable of living but by blood, all its habits are calculated to deceive and surprize; it spreads toils to entangle its prey; it is endued with patience to expect its coming, and is possessed of arms and strength to destroy it when fallen into the snare.”

“———— To heedless flies the window proves
A constant death; where, gloomily retired,
The villain spider lives, cunning and fierce,
Mixture abhorr’d; amid a mangled heap
Of carcases, in eager watch he sits,
O’erlooking all his waving snares around.
Near the dire cell the dreadless wanderer oft
Passes, as oft the ruffian shews his front;
The prey at last ensnar’d, he dreadful darts
With rapid glide along the leaning line;
And fixing in the wretch his cruel fangs,
Strikes backward grimly pleas’d: the flutt’ring wing
And shriller sound declare extreme distress,
And ask the helping hospitable hand.” Thomson.

The eyes of the spider have been described in [page 199], they are a very beautiful microscopic object, viewed either as transparent or opake. The spider has eight legs with three joints, thickly beset with hairs, and terminating in three crooked moveable claws, which have little teeth like a saw; at a small distance from these claws, but placed higher up, is another something like a cock’s spur, by the assistance of which it adheres to its webs; but the weapon wherewith it seizes and kills its prey is a pair of sharp crooked claws or forceps placed in the fore-part of the head. The insect can open or extend these pincers as occasion may require; when undisturbed, it suffers them to lie one upon another, concealed in two cases constructed for their reception. Leeuwenhoeck says, that each of these claws has a small aperture or slit, through which he supposes a poisonous juice is injected into the wound it makes.

The exuvia, or cast-off skin of the spider, which may be found in cobwebs, being transparent, is an excellent object; and the fangs or forceps may be more easily separated from it, and examined with greater exactness than in a living subject. The contexture of the spider’s web, and the manner of weaving it, have been discovered by the microscope. The spider is supplied with a large quantity of glutinous matter within its body, and five tubercles or nipples for spinning it into thread, of what size it pleases, either by opening or contracting the sphincter muscles. This substance, when examined accurately, will be found twisted into many coils, of an agate colour, and which from its tenacity may be easily drawn out into threads. The five nipples are placed near the extremity of the tail; from these the aforesaid substance proceeds; it adheres to any thing against which it is pressed, and being drawn out hardens in the air. The threads unite at a small distance from the body, so that those which appear to us so fine and single, are, notwithstanding, composed of five joined together, and these are many times doubled when the web is in formation. The web serves him for the double purpose of an habitation and of a machine for catching his food; for in the center of this web it dwells in dismal solitude, like a dragon in his lonely den, an image of the evil one, wasting all things round about it, and eager to destroy every appearance of life. When first hatched, even these loathsome insects seem endued with a principle of association, spinning a web in common; but this connection is of short duration, and soon terminates by their destroying one another. If, like the silk-worm, they were disposed to live together peaceably, it is possible that their labours might be productive of advantages nearly similar to that valuable insect; for which purpose repeated attempts have been made, though they proved ineffectual.

OF THE CULEX, OR GNAT.

The gnat is a beautiful object for the microscope. The curious manner in which it disposes its eggs upon the surface of the water has been noticed in [page 288]. From the egg proceeds the larva, in which state it is most happily suited to shew the several operations of life; for a moderate magnifying power will discover what passes within its transparent body. It has a large scaly head, with two large antennæ, besides several hairy parts, and articulated bristles near the mouth, which are in continual motion. If the worm be dissected, the feet of the gnat may be found folded up in the divisions of the thorax; the abdomen is divided into eight rings, from the edges of each of which three or four bristles proceed. The tail is divided into two parts of very different forms; by one of these it can steer itself in any direction; in the other, two pulmonary tubes may be discovered, through which the insect breathes. The larva has a power of moistening the tail with an oleaginous liquor, by which means it can suspend itself on the surface of the water. On agitating the water, the worms descend with precipitation to the bottom; but they soon return to the surface, to breathe the air through the tube that is annexed to their tail. From this state, they pass into that of the pupa, which is the gnat enclosed in a third skin, under which it is formed and strengthened; the organs of respiration are changed, breathing at this period through a couple of horns, which are placed near the head, keeping itself rolled upon the surface of the water, though on the least motion it unrolls itself and descends, aided by the oars near the tail.

From the spoils of the pupa, a little winged insect proceeds, whose every part is active to the highest degree, and whose entire structure is the just object of our admiration. Its head, adorned with feathers, is a fine microscopic object; but the proboscis may be deemed one of the most curious instruments in the insect creation. This formidable apparatus has been particularly described in [page 187].

The exuviæ or cast-off skins of insects, being exceedingly transparent, are well adapted for observation, as they exhibit the external appearance of the little animal; among these, may be reckoned those of spiders and cimices, but particularly the forficula auricularia or earwig, which is an elegant exuvia; a magnified view of the beautiful wing of this insect is exhibited in [Plate XIV.] and described in [page 205]. The stings of insects vary not only in their form, but also in their apparatus; most of them require dissection; as the stings, for they have generally two, are inclosed in a hard sheath or case, to which is added a pair of feelers. The stings of bees, wasps, &c. are barbed, while those of the chrysis are serrated, or notched like a saw. The head of insects is furnished with an instrument or proboscis various as the insects themselves, but all meriting attention, as being admirably adapted to their different uses and purposes. Among the most remarkable are those of the bed bug, flea, gnat, empis, conops, &c. to which may be added the singular one of the tabanus, described in [page 188], and figured in [Plate XVI.] A description of the apparatus of the bee has also been given in [page 181], and of that of the butterfly in [page 186].

The antennæ of moths, butterflies, and most other insects, display as great beauty in their formation as they are endless in their variety; the distinguishing characters of many of them have been described in [pages 190]-[193], and that of the lepas anatifera in particular in [page 345], and exhibited in [Plate XIII.]

The eyes of insects are singularly constructed, but this structure is not discoverable without the assistance of the microscope; the eyes of the libellula are hexagonal, see [Plate XVI.] Fig. 3, and their description in [page 195]; those of the lobster are square, as exhibited in Fig. 5 of the same plate, and described in [page 197].