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JOURNEY FROM 
and the neighbouring villages. The destruction occasioned by' a 
large swarm of locusts can scarcely be imagined by those who 
have not witnessed it ; and the account which we subjoin of them, 
extracted from Shaw, may not perhaps be unacceptable to our 
readers 
* “ Those which I saw, ann. 1724 and 1725, were much bigger than our common 
grasshoppers, and had brown-spotted wings, with legs and bodies of a bright yellow. 
Their first appearance was towards the latter end of March, the wind having been for 
some time from the south. In the middle of April their numbers were so vastly 
increased, that in the heat of the day they formed themselves into large and numerous 
swarms, flew in the air like a succession of clouds, and, as the prophet Joel expresses it, 
(ii. 10,) they darkened the sun. When the wind blew briskly, so that these swarms 
were crowded by others, or thrown one upon another, we had a lively idea of that 
comparison of the Psalmist (Psalm cix. 23), of being tossed up and down as the locust. 
In the month of May, when the ovaries of those insects were ripe and turgid, each of 
these swarms began gradually to disappear, and retired into the Mettijiah, and other 
adjacent plains, where they deposited their eggs. These were no sooner hatched, in 
June, than each of the broods collected itself into a compact body, of a furlong or more 
in square; and marching afterwards directly forward towards'the sea, they let nothing 
escape them, eating up everything that was green and juicy; not only the lesser kinds 
of vegetables, but the vine likewise, the fig-tree, the pomegranate, the palm, and the 
apple-tree — even all the trees of the field, (Joel i. 12,) — in doing which they kept their 
ranks like men of war, climbing over, as they advanced, every tree or wall that was in 
their way ; nay, they entered into our very houses and bed-chambers, like so many 
thieves. The inhabitants, to stop their pi’ogress, made a variety of pits and trenches all 
over their fields and gardens, which they filled with water ; or else they heaped up 
therein heath, stubble, and such like combustible matter, which they severally set on 
fire upon the approach of the locusts. But this was all to no purpose; for the trenches 
were quickly filled up, and the fires extinguished by infinite swarms succeeding one 
another ; whilst the front was regardless of danger, and the rear pressed on so close 
that a retreat was altogether impossible. A day or two after one of these broods was 
in motion, others were already hatched to march and glean after them, gnawing off the 
very bark and the young branches of such trees as had before escaped with the loss 
only of their fruit and foliage. So justly have they been compared by the prophet 
