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<h2> CHAPTER I. THE HARMAS </h2>
<p>This is what I wished for, hoc erat in votis: a bit of land, oh, not so
very large, but fenced in, to avoid the drawbacks of a public way; an
abandoned, barren, sun scorched bit of land, favored by thistles and by
wasps and bees. Here, without fear of being troubled by the passersby, I
could consult the Ammophila and the Sphex [two digger or hunting wasps]
and engage in that difficult conversation whose questions and answers have
experiment for their language; here, without distant expeditions that take
up my time, without tiring rambles that strain my nerves, I could contrive
my plans of attack, lay my ambushes and watch their effects at every hour
of the day. Hoc erat in votis. Yes, this was my wish, my dream, always
cherished, always vanishing into the mists of the future.</p>
<p>And it is no easy matter to acquire a laboratory in the open fields, when
harassed by a terrible anxiety about one's daily bread. For forty years
have I fought, with steadfast courage, against the paltry plagues of life;
and the long-wished-for laboratory has come at last. What it has cost me
in perseverance and relentless work I will not try to say. It has come;
and, with it—a more serious condition—perhaps a little
leisure. I say perhaps, for my leg is still hampered with a few links of
the convict's chain.</p>
<p>The wish is realized. It is a little late, O my pretty insects! I greatly
fear that the peach is offered to me when I am beginning to have no teeth
wherewith to eat it. Yes, it is a little late: the wide horizons of the
outset have shrunk into a low and stifling canopy, more and more
straitened day by day. Regretting nothing in the past, save those whom I
have lost; regretting nothing, not even my first youth; hoping nothing
either, I have reached the point at which, worn out by the experience of
things, we ask ourselves if life be worth the living.</p>
<p>Amid the ruins that surround me, one strip of wall remains standing,
immovable upon its solid base: my passion for scientific truth. Is that
enough, O my busy insects, to enable me to add yet a few seemly pages to
your history? Will my strength not cheat my good intentions? Why, indeed,
did I forsake you so long? Friends have reproached me for it. Ah, tell
them, tell those friends, who are yours as well as mine, tell them that it
was not forgetfulness on my part, not weariness, nor neglect: I thought of
you; I was convinced that the Cerceris [a digger wasp] cave had more fair
secrets to reveal to us, that the chase of the Sphex held fresh surprises
in store. But time failed me; I was alone, deserted, struggling against
misfortune. Before philosophizing, one had to live. Tell them that; and
they will pardon me.</p>
<p>Others again have reproached me with my style, which has not the
solemnity, nay, better, the dryness of the schools. They fear lest a page
that is read without fatigue should not always be the expression of the
truth. Were I to take their word for it, we are profound only on condition
of being obscure. Come here, one and all of you—you, the sting
bearers, and you, the wing-cased armor-clads—take up my defense and
bear witness in my favor. Tell of the intimate terms on which I live with
you, of the patience with which I observe you, of the care with which I
record your actions. Your evidence is unanimous: yes, my pages, though
they bristle not with hollow formulas nor learned smatterings, are the
exact narrative of facts observed, neither more nor less; and whoever
cares to question you in his turn will, obtain the same replies.</p>
<p>And then, my dear insects, if you cannot convince those good people,
because you do not carry the weight of tedium, I, in my turn, will say to
them: 'You rip up the animal and I study it alive; you turn it into an
object of horror and pity, whereas I cause it to be loved; you labor in a
torture chamber and dissecting room, I make my observations under the blue
sky to the song of the cicadas, you subject cell and protoplasm to
chemical tests, I study instinct in its loftiest manifestations; you pry
into death, I pry into life. And why should I not complete my thought: the
boars have muddied the clear stream; natural history, youth's glorious
study, has, by dint of cellular improvements, become a hateful and
repulsive thing. Well, if I write for men of learning, for philosophers,
who, one day, will try to some extent to unravel the tough problem of
instinct, I write also, I write above all things for the young. I want to
make them love the natural history which you make them hate; and that is
why, while keeping strictly to the domain of truth, I avoid your
scientific prose, which too often, alas seems borrowed from some Iroquois
idiom.</p>
<p>But this is not my business for the moment: I want to speak of the bit of
land long cherished in my plans to form a laboratory of living entomology,
the bit of land which I have at last obtained in the solitude of a little
village. It is a harmas, the name given, in this district [the country
round Serignan, in Provence], to an untilled, pebbly expanse abandoned to
the vegetation of the thyme. It is too poor to repay the work of the plow;
but the sheep passes there in spring, when it has chanced to rain and a
little grass shoots up.</p>
<p>My harmas, however, because of its modicum of red earth swamped by a huge
mass of stones, has received a rough first attempt at cultivation: I am
told that vines once grew here. And, in fact, when we dig the ground
before planting a few trees, we turn up, here and there, remains of the
precious stock, half carbonized by time. The three pronged fork,
therefore, the only implement of husbandry that can penetrate such a soil
as this, has entered here; and I am sorry, for the primitive vegetation
has disappeared. No more thyme, no more lavender, no more clumps of kermes
oak, the dwarf oak that forms forests across which we step by lengthening
our stride a little. As these plants, especially the first two, might be
of use to me by offering the Bees and Wasps a spoil to forage, I am
compelled to reinstate them in the ground whence they were driven by the
fork.</p>
<p>What abounds without my mediation is the invaders of any soil that is
first dug up and then left for a long time to its own resources. We have,
in the first rank, the couch grass, that execrable weed which three years
of stubborn warfare have not succeeded in exterminating. Next, in respect
of number, come the centauries, grim looking one and all, bristling with
prickles or starry halberds. They are the yellow-flowered centaury, the
mountain centaury, the star thistle and the rough centaury: the first
predominates. Here and there, amid their inextricable confusion, stands,
like a chandelier with spreading, orange flowers for lights, the fierce
Spanish oyster plant, whose spikes are strong as nails. Above it, towers
the Illyrian cotton thistle, whose straight and solitary stalk soars to a
height of three to six feet and ends in large pink tufts. Its armor hardly
yields before that of the oyster plant. Nor must we forget the lesser
thistle tribe, with first of all, the prickly or 'cruel' thistle, which is
so well armed that the plant collector knows not where to grasp it; next,
the spear thistle, with its ample foliage, ending each of its veins with a
spear head; lastly, the black knapweed, which gathers itself into a spiky
knot. In among these, in long lines armed with hooks, the shoots of the
blue dewberry creep along the ground. To visit the prickly thicket when
the Wasp goes foraging, you must wear boots that come to mid-leg or else
resign yourself to a smarting in the calves. As long as the ground retains
a few remnants of the vernal rains, this rude vegetation does not lack a
certain charm, when the pyramids of the oyster plant and the slender
branches of the cotton thistle rise above the wide carpet formed by the
yellow-flowered centaury saffron heads; but let the droughts of summer
come and we see but a desolate waste, which the flame of a match would set
ablaze from one end to the other. Such is, or rather was, when I took
possession of it, the Eden of bliss where I mean to live henceforth alone
with the insect. Forty years of desperate struggle have won it for me.</p>
<p>Eden, I said; and, from the point of view that interests me, the
expression is not out of place. This cursed ground, which no one would
have had at a gift to sow with a pinch of turnip seed, is an earthly
paradise for the bees and wasps. Its mighty growth of thistles and
centauries draws them all to me from everywhere around. Never, in my
insect hunting memories, have I seen so large a population at a single
spot; all the trades have made it their rallying point. Here come hunters
of every kind of game, builders in clay, weavers of cotton goods,
collectors of pieces cut from a leaf or the petals of a flower, architects
in pasteboard, plasterers mixing mortar, carpenters boring wood, miners
digging underground galleries, workers handling goldbeater's skin and many
more.</p>
<p>Who is this one? An Anthidium [a tailor bee]. She scrapes the cobwebby
stalk of the yellow-flowered centaury and gathers a ball of wadding which
she carries off proudly in the tips of her mandibles. She will turn it,
under ground, into cotton felt satchels to hold the store of honey and the
egg. And these others, so eager for plunder? They are Megachiles
[leaf-cutting bees], carrying under their bellies their black, white or
blood red reaping brushes. They will leave the thistles to visit the
neighboring shrubs and there cut from the leaves oval pieces which will be
made into a fit receptacle to contain the harvest. And these, clad in
black velvet? They are Chalicodomae [mason bees], who work with cement and
gravel. We could easily find their masonry on the stones in the harmas.
And these noisily buzzing with a sudden flight? They are the Anthophorae
[wild bees], who live in the old walls and the sunny banks of the
neighborhood.</p>
<p>Now come the Osmiae. One stacks her cells in the spiral staircase of an
empty snail shell; another, attacking the pith of a dry bit of bramble,
obtains for her grubs a cylindrical lodging and divides it into floors by
means of partition walls; a third employs the natural channel of a cut
reed; a fourth is a rent-free tenant of the vacant galleries of some mason
bee. Here are the Macrocerae and the Eucerae, whose males are proudly
horned; the Dasypodae, who carry an ample brush of bristles on their hind
legs for a reaping implement; the Andrenae, so manifold in species; the
slender-bellied Halicti [all wild bees]. I omit a host of others. If I
tried to continue this record of the guests of my thistles, it would
muster almost the whole of the honey yielding tribe. A learned
entomologist of Bordeaux, Professor Perez, to whom I submit the naming of
my prizes, once asked me if I had any special means of hunting, to send
him so many rarities and even novelties. I am not at all an experienced
and, still less, a zealous hunter, for the insect interests me much more
when engaged in its work than when struck on a pin in a cabinet. The whole
secret of my hunting is reduced to my dense nursery of thistles and
centauries.</p>
<p>By a most fortunate chance, with this populous family of honey gatherers
was allied the whole hunting tribe. The builders' men had distributed here
and there in the harmas great mounds of sand and heaps of stones, with a
view to running up some surrounding walls. The work dragged on slowly; and
the materials found occupants from the first year. The mason bees had
chosen the interstices between the stones as a dormitory where to pass the
night, in serried groups. The powerful eyed lizard, who, when close
pressed, attacks both man and dog, wide mouthed, had selected a cave
wherein to lie in wait for the passing scarab [a dung beetle also known as
the sacred beetle]; the black-eared chat, garbed like a Dominican,
white-frocked with black wings, sat on the top stone, singing his short
rustic lay: his nest, with its sky blue eggs, must be somewhere in the
heap. The little Dominican disappeared with the loads of stones. I regret
him: he would have been a charming neighbor. The eyed lizard I do not
regret at all.</p>
<p>The sand sheltered a different colony. Here, the Bembeces [digger wasps]
were sweeping the threshold of their burrows, flinging a curve of dust
behind them; the Languedocian Sphex was dragging her Ephippigera [a green
grasshopper] by the antennae; a Stizus [a hunting wasp] was storing her
preserves of Cicadellae [froghoppers]. To my sorrow, the masons ended by
evicting the sporting tribe; but, should I ever wish to recall it, I have
but to renew the mounds of sand: they will soon all be there.</p>
<p>Hunters that have not disappeared, their homes being different, are the
Ammophilae, whom I see fluttering, one in spring, the others in autumn,
along the garden walks and over the lawns, in search of a caterpillar; the
Pompili [digger or hunting wasp], who travel alertly, beating their wings
and rummaging in every corner in quest of a spider. The largest of them
waylays the Narbonne Lycosa [known also as the black-bellied tarantula],
whose burrow is not infrequent in the harmas. This burrow is a vertical
well, with a curb of fescue grass intertwined with silk. You can see the
eyes of the mighty Spider gleam at the bottom of the den like little
diamonds, an object of terror to most. What a prey and what dangerous
hunting for the Pompilus! And here, on a hot summer afternoon, is the
Amazon ant, who leaves her barrack rooms in long battalions and marches
far afield to hunt for slaves. We will follow her in her raids when we
find time. Here again, around a heap of grasses turned to mould, are
Scoliae [large hunting wasps] an inch and a half long, who fly gracefully
and dive into the heap, attracted by a rich prey, the grubs of
Lamellicorns, Orycotes and Ceotoniae [various beetles].</p>
<p>What subjects for study! And there are more to come. The house was as
utterly deserted as the ground. When man was gone and peace assured, the
animal hastily seized on everything. The warbler took up his abode in the
lilac shrubs; the greenfinch settled in the thick shelter of the
cypresses; the sparrow carted rags and straw under every slate; the Serin
finch, whose downy nest is no bigger than half an apricot, came and
chirped in the plane tree tops; the Scops made a habit of uttering his
monotonous, piping note here, of an evening; the bird of Pallas Athene,
the owl, came hurrying along to hoot and hiss.</p>
<p>In front of the house is a large pond, fed by the aqueduct that supplies
the village pumps with water. Here, from half a mile and more around, come
the frogs and Toads in the lovers' season. The natterjack, sometimes as
large as a plate, with a narrow stripe of yellow down his back, makes his
appointments here to take his bath; when the evening twilight falls, we
see hopping along the edge the midwife toad, the male, who carries a
cluster of eggs, the size of peppercorns, wrapped round his hindlegs: the
genial paterfamilias has brought his precious packet from afar, to leave
it in the water and afterwards retire under some flat stone, whence he
will emit a sound like a tinkling bell. Lastly, when not croaking amid the
foliage, the tree frogs indulge in the most graceful dives. And so, in
May, as soon as it is dark, the pond becomes a deafening orchestra: it is
impossible to talk at table, impossible to sleep. We had to remedy this by
means perhaps a little too rigorous. What could we do? He who tries to
sleep and cannot needs becomes ruthless.</p>
<p>Bolder still, the wasp has taken possession of the dwelling house. On my
door sill, in a soil of rubbish, nestles the white-banded Sphex: when I go
indoors, I must be careful not to damage her burrows, not to tread upon
the miner absorbed in her work. It is quite a quarter of a century since I
last saw the saucy cricket hunter. When I made her acquaintance, I used to
visit her at a few miles' distance: each time, it meant an expedition
under the blazing August sun. Today, I find her at my door; we are
intimate neighbors. The embrasure of the closed window provides an
apartment of a mild temperature for the Pelopaeus [a mason wasp]. The
earth-built nest is fixed against the freestone wall. To enter her home,
the spider huntress uses a little hole left open by accident in the
shutters. On the moldings of the Venetian blinds, a few stray mason bees
build their group of cells; inside the outer shutters, left ajar, a
Eumenes [a mason wasp] constructs her little earthen dome, surmounted by a
short, bell-mouthed neck. The common wasp and the Polistes [a solitary
wasp] are my dinner guests: they visit my table to see if the grapes
served are as ripe as they look.</p>
<p>Here, surely—and the list is far from complete—is a company
both numerous and select, whose conversation will not fail to charm my
solitude, if I succeed in drawing it out. My dear beasts of former days,
my old friends, and others, more recent acquaintances, all are here,
hunting, foraging, building in close proximity. Besides, should we wish to
vary the scene of observation, the mountain [Ventoux] is but a few hundred
steps away, with its tangle of arbutus, rock roses and arborescent
heather; with its sandy spaces dear to the Bembeces; with its marly slopes
exploited by different wasps and bees. And that is why, foreseeing these
riches, I have abandoned the town for the village and come to Serignan to
weed my turnips and water my lettuces.</p>
<p>Laboratories are being founded, at great expense, on our Atlantic and
Mediterranean coasts, where people cut up small sea animals, of but meager
interest to us; they spend a fortune on powerful microscopes, delicate
dissecting instruments, engines of capture, boats, fishing crews,
aquariums, to find out how the yolk of an Annelid's egg is constructed, a
question whereof I have never yet been able to grasp the full importance;
and they scorn the little land animal, which lives in constant touch with
us, which provides universal psychology with documents of inestimable
value, which too often threatens the public wealth by destroying our
crops. When shall we have an entomological laboratory for the study not of
the dead insect, steeped in alcohol, but of the living insect; a
laboratory having for its object the instinct, the habits, the manner of
living, the work, the struggles, the propagation of that little world,
with which agriculture and philosophy have most seriously to reckon?</p>
<p>To know thoroughly the history of the destroyer of our vines might perhaps
be more important than to know how this or that nerve fiber of a Cirriped
[sea animals with hair-like legs, including the barnacles and acorn
shells] ends; to establish by experiment the line of demarcation between
intellect and instinct; to prove, by comparing facts in the zoological
progression, whether human reason be an irreducible faculty or not: all
this ought surely to take precedence of the number of joints in a
Crustacean's antenna. These enormous questions would need an army of
workers; and we have not one. The fashion is all for the Mollusk and the
Zoophytes [plant-like sea animals, including starfishes, jellyfishes, sea
anemones and sponges]. The depths of the sea are explored with many drag
nets; the soil which we tread is consistently disregarded. While waiting
for the fashion to change, I open my harmas laboratory of living
entomology; and this laboratory shall not cost the ratepayers one
farthing.</p>
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