82 INSECT TRANSFORMATIOXS. 



with the greatest regularity, after the manner of a candle 

 shade, and the down tiled upon it all round. Another 

 of our prisoners, though precisely in the same circum- 

 stances as to space, instead of Ibrming a wheel, piled 

 up her eggs in form of a circular mound; but as the 

 number of her eggs was not a sixth part of those of the 

 other, (probably from her having deposited part before 

 we caught her,) this may have induced her to vary 

 the shape of the group. Like the others, however, 

 the regular slope and tiling of the down was carefully 

 preserved.* We have now (April, 1830) a numerous 

 brood of caterpillars from these very eggs. 



The eggs, which are thus deposited with so much 

 care, are destined to abide all the pitiless pelting of 

 the storms of winter; ibr, although they are laid in 

 August, they are not hatched till the elm comes into 

 leaf in the following spring. The covering of down, 

 accordingly, from the manner in which it is tiled and 

 brushed smooth by the mother moth, not only protects 

 them from wet, but from severe cold, being one of the 

 best non-conductors of heat. The experiments of 

 modern chemical philosophers have proved beyond a 

 doubt, that the warmest material for clotbing is not 

 what imparts most heat to the body, but wiiat best 

 prevents the escape of the heat generated there. The 

 feeling of cold, therefore, does not, as might be sup- 

 posed, arise from anything positively cold, but solely 

 from a dciiciency of heat. On putting the hand, for 

 example, on a piece of ice, the feeling of cold docs 

 not arise from cold given out by the ice to the hand, 

 but from the heat which the ice takes from the hand, 

 which heat can be actually traced in the water formed 

 by the melting of the ice. But when the hand is laid 

 upon wool, feathers, or down, these do not feel cold, 

 because they do not carry off the heat of the skin so 

 rapidly as the ice. 



* J. R. 



