HEMIPTERA. 93 



enough in France. It keeps to the houses, and is found especially 

 near ovens and chimney-pieces. It is about three-quarters of an inch 

 in length, oblong, flat on its upper side, brownish, has horizontal 

 hemelytra crossed over each other, and very fully developed wings, 

 which serve for flight. Its head, narrow, supported by a well-defined 

 neck, is provided with two composite and two simple eyes. It 

 requires, no doubt, to see very clearly, as it flies by night. It should 

 not be caught without great caution. If you desire to examine it 

 closely, when, in the hottest part of the summer, it comes in the 

 evening and flutters round the lights, you must be careful how you 

 seize it, for it wounds. The wounds inflicted by it are very painful — ■ 

 more painful than those of the bee — and they immediately cause a 

 numbness. 



As the Redtiviiis kifls different insects very rapidly, by piercing 

 them with its long beak, it is probable that it secretes some kind of 

 venom. But as yet the organ that produces this poison has not been 

 discovered. However that may be, its beak is curved, and about the 

 tenth of an inch long, the surface bristling with hairs. It is composed 

 of three joints, and contains four stiff, lanceolate, and very pointed 

 squamose hairs. 



This insect often seeks its prey in places where spiders spin their 

 webs. When they walk on, or are caught in, the spiders' webs, the 

 spiders take care not to seize them, for they fear their beak. They 

 prudently allow them to struggle about the nets, where they very 

 soon die of hunger. The Rechivius is often seen, either a prisoner 

 or dead, in the midst of a spider's web. 



"This bug," says Charles de Geer, "has, in the pupal condition, 

 or before its wings are developed, an appearance altogether hideous 

 and revolting. One would take it, at the first glance, for one of the 

 ugliest of spiders. That which above all renders it so disagreeable 

 to the sight is that it is entirely covered, and, as it were, enveloped 

 with a greyish matter, which is nothing else but the dust which cue 

 sees in the corners of badly-swept rooms, and which is general]}- 

 mixed with sand and particles of wool, or silk, or other similar 

 matters which come from furniture and clothes, renderinoj the leG;s of 



1 • . . ... o o 



this msect thick and deformed, and giving to its whole body a very 

 smgular appearance." 



What instincts ! what habits ! Under this borrowed costume, 

 under this cloak, which is no part of itself, the insect, as it were, 

 masked, has becom.e twice its real size. What becomes of its 

 disguise, and how does it manage to walk ? Of what use to it is this 

 dirty and grotesque fancy dress 1 



