hunting spiders, I entangled 
him--I didn't then know it was her, so let it pass--in the web, and 
carried it to my tent. The insect was very quiet, and did not attempt to 
escape; but presently, after crawling slowly along my sleeve, she let 
herself down to the floor, taking first the precaution, after the prudent 
fashion of most spiders, to attach to the point she left a silken line, 
which, as she descended, came from her body. Rather than seize the 
insect itself, I caught the thread and pulled. The spider was not moved, 
but the line readily drew out, and, being wound upon my hands, 
seemed so strong that I attached the end to a little quill, and, having 
placed the spider upon the side of the tent, lay down on my couch and 
turned the quill between my fingers at such a rate that in one minute six 
feet of silk were wound upon it. At the end of an hour and a half I 
estimated, with due allowance for stop-pages, that I had four hundred 
and fifty feet, or one hundred and fifty yards, of the most brilliant and 
beautiful golden silk I had ever seen. 
During all this operation the spider had remained perfectly quiet, but 
finally put an end to my proceedings by grasping the line with the tip of 
one of her hind legs so that it snapped. I was tired, however, and 
contented myself with the quantity already obtained, which now 
formed a raised band of gold upon the quill. This specimen is now in 
my possession, but has been removed from the quill to ascertain its 
weight, which is one third of a grain. 
It is worthy of notice, perhaps, that in all this was involved no new fact, 
but only a happy deduction from one known ages ago; namely, that a 
spider, when dropping, leaves her line attached, and so allows it to be 
drawn from her body. Nothing was more natural than to simply reverse 
the position of the fixed point, and, instead of letting the spider go 
away from the end of her line, to take the end of her line away from her. 
So natural, indeed, did it seem, that my gratification at having been (as 
was then supposed) the first to do it was, on reflection, mixed with 
surprise that no one had ever thought of it before, and I am very glad to 
find that at least four individuals have, within the last century, pulled 
silk out of a spider, though of these only one, whose researches I hope
to make known, regarded the matter as anything more than a curious 
experiment. 
I had never before seen such a spider, nor even paid attention to any 
geometrical species; though one large black and yellow variety is, or 
used to be, common enough in our fields at the North. Neither had I 
ever heard of such a method of obtaining silk. But though my first 
specimen was not preserved, and a second was never seen on Folly 
Island, yet I was so impressed with its size and brilliant colors, and 
especially with the curious brushes of black hairs on its legs, that when, 
during the following summer, another officer described to me a great 
spider which was very common on Long Island, where he was 
stationed, I knew it was the same, and told him what I had done the 
year before, adding that I was sure something would come of it in time. 
With leisure and many spiders at his command, this officer improved 
upon my suggestion, by substituting for my quill turned in the fingers a 
wooden cylinder worked by a crank, and by securing, at a proper 
distance, (between pins, I think,) one or more spiders, whose threads 
were guided between pins upon the cylinder. He thus produced more of 
the silk, winding it upon rings of hard rubber so as to make very pretty 
ornaments. With this simple machine I wound the silk in two grooves 
cut on a ring of hard rubber and parallel except at one point, where they 
crossed so as to form a kind of signet. Another officer now suggested 
and put in operation still another improvement, in the shape of the 
"gear-drill-stock" of our armorer's chest. This, being a machine for 
drilling iron, was rough in its construction and uneven in its action, but, 
having cog-wheels, a rapid and nearly steady motion could be given to 
its shaft. To this shaft he attached a little cross of rubber, and covered it 
with silk, which was of a silver-white color instead of golden-yellow, 
as in other cases. The difference in color was then supposed to depend 
upon individual peculiarities, but the true explanation will be given 
farther on. With    
    
		
	
	
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