8 BRITISH BUTTERFLIES. 



of twenty-four hours, he will have consumed more than 

 twice 'his own weight of food : and with such persevering 

 avidity does he ply his pleasant task, that, as it is stated, 

 a caterpillar in the course of one month has increased 

 nearly ten thousand times his original weight on leaving 

 the egg ; and, to furnish this increase of substance, hap 

 consumed the prodigious quantity of forty thousand 

 times his weight of food truly, a ruinous rate of living, 

 only that green leaves are so cheap. 



But the life of a caterpillar, after all, is not merely 

 the smooth continual feast he would doubtless prefer it 

 to be ; it is interrupted, several times in its course, by 

 the necessity nature has imposed upon him of now and 

 then changing his coat to him a very troublesome, il 

 not a painful affair. 



For some time previous to this phenomenon, even 

 eating is nearly or quite suspended, the caterpillar 

 becomes sluggish and shy, creeping away into some 

 more secluded spot, and there remaining till his time ol 

 trouble is over. Various twitchings and contortions oi 

 the body now testify to the mal-aise of the creature in 

 his old coat, which, though formed of a material capa bio 

 of a moderate amount of stretching, soon becomes out- 

 grown, and most uncomfortably tight-fitting, with sucl? 

 a quick-growing person inside it : so off it must come , 

 but it being unprovided with buttons, there's the rub. 

 However, with a great deal of fidgeting and shoulder- 

 shrugging, he manages to tear his coat down the back, 

 and lastly, by patient efforts, shuffles off the old rag ; 



