220 
LIFE AND HER CHILDREN. 
and fall in and out in a mazy dance ; for they have 
but a few hours to live, and their mouths are too soft 
for them to take food. In fact, the whole end and 
aim of their winged life is to form and lay eggs in 
Fig. 75- 
May-fly* and Caddis-fly, t 
mg> May-grub, with its fringe of breathing gills ; m/, May-fly ; 
eg, caddis-grub in its case ; cf t caddis-fly. 
little packets on the water to hatch into future young 
ones. And yet they are not really mere " creatures 
of a day " as they have been called, for before they 
obtained their wings they lived for nearly two years 
Ephemera. 
t Phryganea. 
