Page:The history of silk, cotton, linen, wool, and other fibrous substances 2.djvu/183

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spider will be difficult, and its altitude extremely limited, and the threads propelled will be but little elevated above the horizontal plane. When negative electricity prevails, as in cloudy weather, or on the approach of rain, and the index of De Saussure's hygrometer rapidly advancing towards humidity, the spider is unable to ascend[1]."

Mr. Murray tells us, that "when a stick of excited sealing-*wax is brought near the thread of suspension, it is evidently repelled; consequently, the electricity of the thread is of a negative character," while "an excited glass tube brought near, seemed to attract the thread, and with it the aëronautic spider[2]." His friend, Mr. Bowman, further describes the aërial spider as "shooting out four or five, often six or eight, extremely fine webs several yards long, which waved in the breeze, diverging from each other like a pencil of rays." One of them "had two distinct and widely diverging fasciculi of webs," and "a line uniting them would have been at right angles to the direction of the breeze[3]."

"Such is the chief evidence in support of the electrical theory," says Mr. Rennie; "but though we have tried these experiments, we have not succeeded in verifying any one of them. The following statements of Mr. Blackwall come nearer our own observations.

5. 'Having procured a small branched twig,' says Mr. Blackwall, 'I fixed it upright in an earthen vessel containing water, its base being immersed in the liquid, and upon it I placed several of the spiders which produce gossamer. Whenever the insects thus circumstanced were exposed to a current of air, either naturally or artificially produced, they directly turned the thorax towards the quarter whence it came, even when it was so slight as scarcely to be perceptible, and elevating the abdomen, they emitted from their spinners a small portion of glutinous matter, which was instantly carried out in a line, consisting of four finer ones, with a velocity equal, or nearly

  1. Loudon's Mag. of Nat. Hist., vol. i. p. 322.
  2. Experim. Researches in Nat. Hist., p. 136
  3. Mag. Nat. Hist. vol. i. p. 324.