The Project Gutenberg eBook of Comic Insects

This ebook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this ebook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this eBook.

Title: Comic Insects

Author: F. A. S. Reid

Illustrator: Berry F. Berry

Release date: September 28, 2013 [eBook #43834]

Language: English

Credits: Produced by Chris Curnow, Emmy and the Online Distributed
Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
produced from images generously made available by The
Internet Archive)

*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK COMIC INSECTS ***

Cover

insects looking at an open book

bugs
bugs


THE ILLUSTRATIONS ENGRAVED BY DALZIEL BROTHERS.

THE COLOURED PLATES BY KRONHEIM & CO.

bugs by a beehive and flowering tree

COMIC INSECTS.

BY
The Rev. F. A. S. REID, M.A.

WITH ILLUSTRATIONS

BY
BERRY F. BERRY.


Frederick Warne Emblem


LONDON:
FREDERICK WARNE AND CO.,
BEDFORD STREET, STRAND.

Camden Press DALZIEL BROTHERS  ENGRAVERS & PRINTERS









CONTENTS.

  PAGE

THE CATERPILLAR

1

THE MOTH

7

THE SNAIL

13

THE BEE

19

THE BLACK-BEETLE

25

THE SPIDER

31
















Beetles dancing around sight that reads "Preface"
OH, wonder I much what this book contains!
Can Insects talk, and do they have brains?
I always thought that these queer little things
Were made up entirely of legs, wings, and stings.
A Black-Beetle teach me! And what, Bumble-Bee,
In all the wide world can you say unto me?
And surely a Caterpillar never has read?
With green leaves for books, he would eat them instead;
While neither a Moth nor a Spider could tell
How a pen should be held, or correctly could spell.
And as for poor Snailey,—it's more than absurd,
He never could read a one-syllable word!
But I've heard of the School Board, and now it's appalling
To think that a Moth or a Snail may be calling
And telling me too, as their little eyes glisten,
Their funny wee lessons, if only I'll listen.
*               *              *              *              *              *
Yes! they talk in a language that all is their own,
And here into English you'll find it has grown;
Where pictures will shew, and the rhymes they will say,
How Insects can work, talk, and laugh, and be gay.
Tiles with drawings of bugs

Caterpillar smoking a pipe in front of a fan that reads "Introduction"

COMIC INSECTS.

How queer a procession is passing this way,
Of insects all talking; come, hear what they say!
The sight is as strange as their words they are true,
And you'll laugh as they offer their lessons to you.

Girl talking to large caterpillar

[1]

Caterpillar floating away on lily pad
"Led astray."

THE CATERPILLAR.

I'm a Caterpillar green,
Not the prettiest you have seen,
And my Chrysalis I enter rather loth;
Though I know that in the spring
I shall rise on feathered wing
In the costume of a fascinating Moth.

[2]

Caterpillar and chyrsalis
"I'm a Caterpillar green."

Little likeness you will spy,
With the cleverest little eye,
'Twixt your green-coated friend of to-day
And the airy form that sails
When the golden sunlight pales,
And the owl flies abroad for his prey.

[3]

Caterpillar climbing into chrysalis
"And my Chrysalis I enter rather loth."

Yet the same we are indeed,
Though the riddle's hard to read,
One, the Moth and the Caterpillar green;
And still stranger things than this,
Which no little one should miss,
In the Picture Book of Nature can be seen.

[4]

Caterpillar as large as girl whispering in her ear
"If you'll only deign to lend your ear."

So I think, my little friend,
If you'll only deign to lend
Your ear to these few words that I say,
Ne'er again will you rely
For convictions on the eye,
As appearances have often led astray.

[5]
[6]

Girl riding on moth

[7]

Moth looking in mirror
"Oh, what a beautiful Moth am I."

THE MOTH.

Oh, what a beautiful Moth am I!
Colours so gay, and sparkling each eye,
Nobody ever would guess, I ween,
I once was a Caterpillar all in green.

[8]

moth on table with jewelry wearing ring around shoulders
"With silver and gold I have decked me too."


I've taken me feathers of brightest hue,
With silver and gold I have decked me too:
No, no! you never would guess, I ween,
I once was a Caterpillar all in green.

With a tardy foot no longer I crawl
'Neath the shady leaves, or on ivied wall;
But, joyously floating in airy height,
I wander abroad in the pale moonlight;

[9]

moth flying by flower in moonlight
"I wander abroad in the pale moonlight."

Or join the Elves as they dance and sing
In the circle green of the fairy ring,
Or tease a poor Daisy that's trying to keep
Its big yellow eye from my curious peep.

[10]

Moth dead with singed wing from candle
"Want of discretion."

But sometimes I fly to a treacherous light,
That mimics a star in a darkling night;
And too late I learn, with my poor singed wings,
The evil that want of discretion oft brings.

[11]
[12]

Girl and very large snail

[13]

snail with broken shell and bird flying above
"How very pale."

THE SNAIL.

Poor little Snail,
How very pale,
Your cheek is blanched with fear!
What horrid dread
Has made you shed
So many a slimy tear?

Come! faster crawl
Along the wall,
Leave care behind,—all's well!
That seeming pack
Upon your back
Is near an empty shell.

[14]

Snail weeping with hanky and leaving long trail
"Leave care behind."

Come! smile again,
And let the rain
Of tears at once be dry;
Faint-hearted quite,
And far from right,
Before you're hurt to cry.

No one will doubt
Who thinks about
This great world spinning round,
That all have hours
When sorrow's showers
Make April all around.

[15]

Snail on long reed
"That seeming pack
Upon your back
Is near an empty shell."

But May and June
Follow full soon,
And joy succeeds to sorrow;
So dry the tear,
And from the year
Your cheering lesson borrow.

[16]

snail on tall flower looking through spy glass
"Ah, Snailey! see."

Ah, Snailey! see
To you and me
Our burdens oft appear
Much heavier far
Than what they are,
When we give way to fear.

[17]
[18]

Girl looking at beehive

[19]

bees and apple blossoms
"Buz! buz! buz!
Over blossoms heavy laden."

THE BEE.

Buz! buz! buz!
Over blossoms heavy laden with their treasures;
Hear its music as it rifles
From the flowers their seeming trifles;
We may watch it in the sunshine at our leisure.

[20]

bees with wheelbarrows and carts full of honey and pollen
"Hearty toil."

See! their secrets it espying
In their tinted depths while prying,
As it works thro' the long summer day;
"Be in earnest in your quest,
Hearty toil brings well-earned rest,"
Seems the burden of its light-hearted lay.

[21]

Bees eating honey and smoking pipe
"Well-earned rest."

Lessons here of self-reliance,
And "defence but not defiance,"
As Volunteers are taught by the Bee.
As it works on active wing,
Self-protected with its sting,
'Tis a grand working model, good to see;

[22]

bee sitting on flower playing a trumpet
". . . Its music as it rifles."

Pointing out how each is sharing
In the common task, and bearing
His just portion; where no idler is seen:
All are busy in the hive
Where these happy workmen thrive,
And they're loyal, every one, to their Queen.

[23]
[24]

Kitten looking at beetle at dish of milk

[25]

beetle sitting in corner
"This poor Black-Beetle's ill!."

THE BLACK-BEETLE.

Oh, dear! Oh, dear!
I sadly fear
This poor Black-Beetle's ill;
And to him now
No use, I trow,
Is the cleverest doctor's skill.

[26]

man looking at beetle on its back on table
"No medical sage
His pain can assuage."

No medical sage
His pain can assuage.
You can see at a glance how bad
He's made himself,
All thro' his pelf:
Isn't it dreadfully sad?

[27]

lots of beetles climbing up on to table while cook sleeps in a chair
"When the cook was asleep."

For wandering wide
On the floor he spied,
Last night when the cook was asleep,
And rejoiced to find
Some cucumber rind,
And now no more he will creep!

[28]

beetle on cucumber
"Cucumber at night."

Yes! sad though it be,
This little "B-B"
Would follow his own appetite;
He could never say "no,"
When it tempted him; so
His epitaph is, "Serve him right!"

And thus tearfull-ee,
He begs you and me
His case as a warning to mind;
Cucumber at night
To regard with affright,
And never to eat up the rind.

[29]
[30]

bugs caught in web in flowering cherry tree

[31]

Lots of spiders making webs
"Spiders,—heugh!"

THE SPIDER.

Sp . . . i . . . ders,—heugh!
Horrible forms that creep and crawl,
And hang their webs from ceiling and wall!

[32]

spider walking across webline as on a high-wire
"As they joy in the breeze."

From leaf and fern as they joy in the breeze,
From moss-grown arch and ivy-clad trees,
And catch the flies—the poor little things—
That carelessly use their gossamer wings.

[33]

a lot of webs on bush
"Their beautiful nets."

It makes one shudder to think of the fate
That giddy bluebottles and gnats may await.
Yet wonder we must, as we watch them spread
Their beautiful nets with their silken thread;

[34]

female bug in black dress with wings and male bug in suit heading toward web behind drapes
"It makes me shudder to think of the fate
That giddy blue-bottles and gnats may await."

And happier feel at the sign of that Power
That guides each to weave such a fairy-like bower;
And think of that Hand, that no eye can see,
Which fashioned these Insects, and made you and me.
decoration