How to See the British Museum in Four Visits by W. Blanchard Jerrold
page 57 of 221 (25%)
page 57 of 221 (25%)
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terrible tropical white ants, caddis flies, wasps, saw-flies, bees,
hornets, and sand wasps. BUTTERFLIES AND MOTHS. Then follow three tables (5-7) of splendid butterflies, with their brilliant tints. The two tables (8, 9) ranged next in order to those upon which the butterflies are distributed, are covered with varieties of the moth. Here are the silkworm moth and its cocoon as kept in Siberia; the ghost moth of our hop grounds; the hawk moth, the death's head moth, and the large Brazilian owl moth. The next table (10) is covered with a great variety of flies and bugs, including the Chinese lantern flies. The eleventh table is given up to Spiders in all their varieties, including the tarantula, a formidable insect with a power of severe biting; and the curious spider that bores a nest in the ground, lines it sumptuously with its own silk, and then constructs a lid that closes inevitably, as the insect leaves its house. Here too are the scorpions. The last table of the series (12) is covered also with varieties of the spider, including the land and shepherd spiders; the African scarlet tick, and the centipedes. The visitor has now completed his survey of the contents of this room, and should at once pass forward in an easterly direction, traverse the British zoological room, which he has already examined throughout, and pass into the fourth room of the gallery. The table-cases in this room present nothing that can greatly interest the unscientific visitor. They are covered with varieties of |
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