When shaving was more in fashion than it is in these more sensible days, there were many inventions to lessen the trouble, not to say the perils, of shaving. To use the razor in a hurry was anything but an agreeable occupation, especially if the weather were frosty, and the fingers so chilled that they hardly knew whether or not they had the razor between them.
In order to render this very unpleasant task less disagreeable, some ingenious individual invented the Guard Razor. The principal part of the invention consisted in a plate of metal sufficiently thin not to add materially to the weight of the razor, and sufficiently strong to resist a moderate amount of pressure. This was fixed along the blade of the razor in such a way that it just allowed the edge to show itself, and, in fact, converted the razor into a plane or spokeshave. The exact amount of edge which might be shown was regulated by screws, and the guard itself could be removed at pleasure, so as to allow of the razor being sharpened.
Now let us see if we can find any examples of the Plane or Spokeshave in Nature.
I trace at least one example of the Plane in the insect world. More than a hundred years ago, that very observant naturalist, Gilbert White, noticed a bee performing a curious task. She was running up the stem of the garden campion, holding her jaws extended, and stripping off the down with all the dexterity of a hoop-shaver. She collected a bundle nearly as large as herself, and then flew away with it. What she did with her burden he knew not, but the history of the insect has been told fully, though briefly, by Mr. F. Smith, in his “Catalogue of British Hymenoptera:”—
“Although the species belonging to this genus are numerous, and are found both in the Old and New World, there is only one found in this country, Anthidium manicatum; this is truly a summer bee, not making its appearance before the latter part of June or beginning of July.
“This insect, so far as my own observation has enabled me to ascertain, does not construct its own burrow, but makes use of any hole which is adapted to its purpose. I once detected a bee entering the hole above the wheel of the sash-line in a summer-house; but its nests are most commonly formed in the holes bored in old willow stumps by Cossus ligniperda (the Goat-moth): formerly they were easily obtained in Battersea Fields, where the willows abounded.
“It is probable that when the parent insect has selected one of these ready-formed tunnels, she enlarges the end used as the depository of the nest, and this is easily effected, as the stumps in question, at the depth of a couple of inches, consist of soft decayed wood.
“The chamber being formed, the bee collects a quantity of down from woolly-stemmed plants, with which she forms an outer coating. She then constructs a number of cells for the reception of the pollen, or food of the larva; they consist of a woolly material, mixed with some glutinous matter which resists the moisture of the food they contain, and in which the larva, being full fed, spins a brown silken cocoon. These bees pass the winter in a larva state, and do not appear until midsummer.
“In one respect, the sexes of this genus differ from most other bees, the males being much larger than the females.”
The reader will see from this account how exact is the analogy between the carpenter’s plane and the jaws of the bee. In consequence of the simile employed by Mr. White, the insect has been popularly known by the title of the Hoop-shaver Bee. It is a tolerably common insect, and abounds in the South of England.