Page:The history of silk, cotton, linen, wool, and other fibrous substances 2.djvu/182

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must be a mere fancy; at least it is not countenanced by anything which we have observed.

4. An opinion much more recondite is mentioned, if it was not started, by M. D'Isjonval, that the floating of the spider's thread is electrical. "Frogs, cats, and other animals," he says, "are affected by natural electricity, and feel the change of weather; but no other animal more than myself and spiders." In wet and windy weather he accordingly found that they spun very short lines, "but when a spider spins a long thread, there is a certainty of fine weather for at least ten or twelve days afterwards[1]." A periodical writer, who signs himself Carolan[2], fancies that in darting out her thread the spider emits a stream of air, or some subtle electric fluid, by which she guides it as if by magic.

A living writer (Mr. John Murray) whose learning and skill in conducting experiments give no little weight to his opinions, has carried these views considerably farther. "The aëronautic spider," he says, "can propel its thread both horizontally and vertically, and at all relative angles, in motionless air and in an atmosphere agitated by winds; nay more, the aërial traveller can even dart its thread, to use a nautical phrase, in the 'wind's eye.' My opinion and observations are based on many hundred experiments. . . . The entire phenomena are electrical. When a thread is propelled in a vertical plane, it remains perpendicular to the horizontal plane always upright, and when others are projected at angles more or less inclined, their direction is invariably preserved; the threads never intermingle, and when a pencil of threads is propelled, it ever presents the appearance of a divergent brush. These are electrical phenomena, and cannot be explained but on electrical principles."

"In clear, fine weather, the air is invariably positive; and it is precisely in such weather that the aëronautic spider makes its ascent most easily and rapidly, whether it be in summer or winter." "When the air is weakly positive, the ascent of the

  1. Brez, Flore des Insectophiles. Notes, Supp. p. 134.
  2. Thomson's Ann. of Philosophy, vol. iii. p. 306.