Facts and Thoughts about Spiders. 179 
It is somewhat strange that although, where 
other tribes of living creatures are concerned, I am 
something of a naturalist, spiders I have always 
observed and admired in a non-scientific spirit, and 
this must be my excuse for mentioning the habits 
of some spiders without giving their specific names 
—an omission always vexing to the severely-techni- 
cal naturalist. They have ministered to the love of 
the beautiful, the grotesque, and the marvellous in 
me; but I have never collected a spider, and if I 
wished to preserve one should not know how to do 
it. Ihave been ‘familiar with the face” of these 
monsters so long that [ have even learnt to love 
them; and I beheve that if Emerson rightly predicts 
that spiders are amongst the things to be expelled 
from earth by the perfected man of the future, then 
a great charm and element of interest will be lost 
to the world. Though loving them, I cannot, of 
course, feel the same degree of affection towards all 
the members of so various a family. The fairy 
gossamer, scarce seen, a creature of wind and sun- 
shine; the gem-like Hpeira in the centre of its 
starry web; even the terrestrial Salticus, with its 
puma-like strategy, certainly appeal more to our 
esthetic feelings than does the slow heavy Myeale, 
looking at a distance of twenty yards away, as he 
approaches you, like a gigantic cockroach mounted 
on stilts. The rash fury with which the female 
wolf-spider defends her young is very admirable; 
but the admiration she excites is mingled with other 
feelings when we remember that the brave mother 
proves to her consort a cruel and cannibal spouse. 
Possibly my affection for spiders is due in a great 
(4 
Nee 
