This is the lowest class of animal life; and yet, even here, we find
man's benefit most markedly considered.
man's benefit most markedly considered.
Childrens - The Creation
3. Lepidopterous Insects, (from lepis, a scale, and pteron, a wing. )
All those having four wings covered with fine scales, as the butterflies
and moths.
4. Neuropterous Insects, (from neuron, a nerve, and pteron, a wing,)
have four membranaceous transparent naked wings, in which the mem-
branes cross each other, so as to appear like net-work. The tail has
no sting; but is frequently furnished with appendices, like pincers, by
which the males are distinguished. The common dragon-fly is the
best example that can be brought to illustrate this order; and the
genus phryganea forms an exception with respect to the net-work
appearance of the wings.
5. Hymenopterous Insects, (from umeen, a membrane, and pteron,
a wing. )* The insects belonging to this order have generally four
membranaceous naked wings: the neuters, however, in some of the
? Some derive it from umeen, Hymen; referring to the connexion of the wings
together hy small hooks.
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? LETTER XI.
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genera, and in others the males or females, want wings. The wings
do not so much resemble net-work as those of the last order. The
tail, except in the male, is armed with a sting. The bee, the wasp,
and the ant, are of this tribe.
6. Dipterous Insects (from dtploos, double, and pteron, a wing) are
those having only two wings, each of which is furnished, at its root,
with a poise or balancer. The common house-fly and the gnat, are
familiar examples of this order.
7. Apterous Insects, (from a, without, and pteron, a wing. ) This
order contains all such insects as want wings to both sexes, as the
flea, spider, &c. --Bingley, vol. iii. p. 227.
To attempt to go into a full description of this innumerable race
will be impossible; but I will just name the several families, and then
select one or more for special consideration.
1. Coleoptera; comprising the Beetles generally: Leather-eater,
Death-watch, Water-flea, Carrion-beetle, Fire-fly, Water-clock,
Earwig.
Ptinus, the Death-watch. This is a dusky brown little insect, some-
what hairy, about a quarter of an inch long. The noise we sometimes
hear in a room, like the ticking of a clock, arises from this little insect
tapping with its head against the drawer or cupboard where he is
located. Like the call of birds, it is the language of affection.
To the superstitious, however, it, (with a thousand other things,)
is a cause of dread. Hence its name, the Death-watch. But,
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THE CREATION.
beloved children, remember there was one who said, " I have a desire
to depart, and to be with Christ, which is far better. " What gave
Paul that peace ? He shall answer the question,--" This is a faithful
saying, and worthy of all acceptation, that Christ Jesus came into the
world to save sinners, of whom I am chief. Howbeit for this cause
I obtained mercy, that in me first Jesus Christ might show forth all
long-suffering, for a pattern to them which should hereafter believe
on him to life everlasting. " (1 Tim. i. 15,16. )
" Death cannot come to him untimely who is fit to die.
The less of this cold world the more of heaven;
The briefer life the longer immortality. "
2. Hemiptera; comprising the Cockroach, Locust, Grasshopper,
Cricket, Lanthorn-fly, Boat-fly, Water-scorpion, Bug, and Plant-louse.
Gryttus. --The Locust. This most destructive insect feeds almost
entirely on vegetables. It has six legs, as also have all Insects, and
resides principally on the ground.
Syria, Egypt, and Persia, are occasionally visited by these terrible
insects. One of the seven Plagues of Egypt was locusts; and the
destructive army of God, prophesied of in Joel, was the innumerable
hordes of this family; and so, also, in the book of Revelation.
The facts concerning this singular insect are innumerable. I select
two, illustrative of their numbers and devastation. In 1797, Mr.
Barrow, who was in southern Africa, says, that " for two thousand
square miles the whole surface of the ground was literally covered by
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? LETTER XI.
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them, and the water of a very wide river was scarcely visible, on
account of the dead carcasses of this innumerable horde, that were
drowned on attempting to come at the reeds that covered it.
In the year 1650 a cloud of locusts was seen to enter Russia,
in three different places, and thence they spread over Poland and
Lithuania, in such astonishing multitudes that the air was darkened,
and the earth covered by their numbers; in some places they lay
dead on the earth to the extent of four feet in depth; in others they
covered the earth as with a black cloth; the trees bent with their
weight, and the damage done by them was beyond computation.
In Africa the natives feed on the locust, and boil them in milk.
Dear children, how thankful we should be that we only know of the
locust by reading, but never, in this country, have experienced its
dreadful ravages.
3. Lepidoptera; comprising the Butterfly, the Hawk-moth,
the Moth. Of this last genus the silk-worm is a species.
Papilio. --The Butterfly. There are countless varieties in this
family; and some, even in our country, of exquisite beauty, but
much more so in South America. Butterflies are produced from
their chrysalids, and appear about April; they flutter around, full of
pleasure and happiness, revelling amid the most beautiful flowers.
About the beginning of May they lay their eggs, and then shortly
after die. The eggs are hatched by the intense summer's heat, in
two or three weeks, and may be seen as little green caterpillars at
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THE CREATION.
that time. They soon cast their first skin, and then the second, and
so on to the sixth; all this is the work of a few days; for in the first
or second week of June they take the chrysalis state, and remain thus
for twenty days, in a death-like sleep, and then emerge from their
prison-house and come forth as butterflies, some in the most dazzling
beauty. I have referred to this in a previous letter, as perhaps the
most beautiful setting forth of the resurrection that can be found in
all the face of nature.
The Silk-worm. This most valuable insect is found in China, on
the mulberry trees. It was brought into Europe so early as the reign
of Justinian, Emperor of Rome; and to it alone are we indebted for
the article which has given it its name. The changes that the silk-
worm passes through ere it reaches the cocoon state, are several. At
its birth it is a little caterpillar, quite black, and the size of an ant;
at the end of eight days it reaches the size of half an inch; it now
sleeps for four days, and on awakening is very hungry, and feeds thus
for five or six days, when a second change or sickness comes on, and
then a third and a fourth; by this time it has reached its full size ;
it now feeds most voraciously for five or six days more, after
which it refuses food, and becomes a transparent yellow colour,
and leaves traces of silk behind it. (This is a joyful sight to the little
proprietors of a few families of this insect, and the intelligence soon
runs through the house. ) These industrious creatures, on this, are
furnished with little brooms or sticks, which they climb, and in five
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? LETTER XI.
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days spin their cocoon; and here, hidden from the eye of man, they
commence their work, and spin in forty-five days, round their own
bodies (which have been transformed the while), a most delicate and
beautiful thread of the finest silk; which, in general, measures about
three hundred yards long. The apparatus with which the animal is
furnished for spinning this thread is, first, two long bags that lie above
the intestines, which are filled with a gummy liquid of the colour of
a marigold; secondly, an orifice, through which the little animal draws
out (like a wire drawer) from its bags, two beautiful and fine threads,
which it winds around its body. The cocoons generally are formed
within five days of each other. After the silk is wound off, fifteen or
twenty days elapse, and then the transformed silk-worm breaks the
prison-house, and comes forth a Moth, and in that state lays eggs, and
becomes the founder of another generation.
4. Neuroptera; comprising the Dragon-fly, Day-fly, and the
Lion-ant.
The Ephemera, or Day-flies. These prolific insects are found in
great abundance near waters. They are called, as their name
implies, the " fly of a day. " But perhaps it should be the night-
fly, as very rarely they ever see the day: for they have their
birth, maturity, and death, as I have before said, within the set-
ting and rising of the sun. About Luz, in Carniola, a province
in Germany, we are informed by Scopoli that they are so numerous
in the month of June, that they are used as manure; and if each
Q3
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THE CREATION.
farmer cannot obtain some cart-loads the harvest is considered a
bad one.
5. Hymenoptera ; comprising, principally, the Bee, Wasp, Ant;
the Gad-fly, Saw-fly, Tailed-wasp, and Golden-fly.
Apis. --The Bee. If the silk-worm aids man in one way, this indus-
trious little insect does so in another. Many large books have been
written on the subject of their habits and management:--as to the
hive, the government of the bee, and their preservation. The bee is
a geometrician of the very first order. Imagine this problem put
before them:--" A quantity of wax being given, to make of it equal
and similar cells, of determined capacity, but of the largest size, in
proportion to the quantity of matter employed, and disposed in such
a manner as to occupy in the hive the least possible space. " Now
look at the hive, and in it you will have the problem answered. The
hive is a family of one parent; the form of government is monarchi-
cal, and the reigning queen is the mother of the family. The atten-
tion of the bees to the offspring, as they come to maturity, is most
remarkable. The love between the queen and her subjects is perfect:
if she is separated from them she dies of sorrow, the hive all disperse,
and the family circle is broken. I refer you again to Bingley, vol. iii.
p. 371, for a most interesting account of all this varied family. *
* Sometimes persons in eating fruit have been stung in the throat; the following
receipt, in the absence of a medical man, has been found invaluable, and has been
known to save life: mix honey, sweet oil, and vinegar together, in equal parts,
and sup the mixture for an hour.
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? LETTER XI.
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6. Diptera; comprising the Gad-fly, the Breeze-fly, the Fly,
and the Gnat.
Culex. --The Gnat. This is a troublesome companion, not only in
warm climates, but also as far north as Lapland and Norway; in the
short-lived summers of these northern regions the air teems with
them. The musquito is of this family. The bite of the gnat some-
times inflames the flesh greatly; it has been found useful, as a remedy,
to rub the part affected with fuller's-earth mixed in water. The tube
through which the gnat sucks the blood of the animal he lights on,
acts much like a pump, and when once the sucker is down the gnat
never leaves until he is gorged with blood, unless driven away.
7. Aptera; comprising, principally, the Spring-tail, White Ant,
the Tick, the Harvest-bug, the Flea, &c.
Termes. --The White Ant. This extraordinary family are met with
in the East Indies and South America. Its natural history is most
singular. Mr. Smeathman says, that in the great community in which
they live, there are threedietinct orders: 1st, the Labourers; 2nd, the
Army; 3rd, the Gentry. The first is the ant, in its earliest progression;
as it advances in being, it assumes the second, and finally the third
form. As in the bees, the form of government is monarchical. In their
third, or perfect state, which is with wings, their bodies are three-
quarters of an inch long, and their wings, from tip to tip, two inches.
The sixth and last class in Linnreus's arrangement of animated life
is designated--
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THE CREATION.
VERMES.
This class is divided into five orders; i. e. , Intestina, Mollusca,
Testacea, Zoopkyta, and Infusoria. The last four, existing in the
waters, we considered on the fifth day.
Intestina ; comprising, principally, the Gourd-worm, the Tape-
worm, the Hair-worm, the Lark-worm, the Dew-worm, the Tube-
worm, the Leech.
This is the lowest class of animal life; and yet, even here, we find
man's benefit most markedly considered. Supposing to-day every
leech in the world were to die, or there were to be a prohibition from
using it, what consternation would there be in many cases. Yes, my
dear children, even this common worm of the waters oftentimes gives
relief to the human frame when nothing else can. May we, then,
praise our God, in the survey of this day's creation! How countless
have been the mercies that have passed before us: and even now, the
very worm--the last link of animated life, comes in, and willingly
lends man the very assistance he needs!
Having thus, my beloved children, considered the three great
divisions of the creation of this day, i. e. the quadruped, serpent, and
insect tribes, we come to a being of altogether a different order--a
being made in the image of God. This is the account of his creation,
as particularized in Gen. ii. :-- " And the Lord God formed man out
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? LETTER XI.
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of the dust of the ground, and breathed into his nostrils the breath of
life, and man became a living soul. " This was the crowning act of the
sixth day. The previous days, God having brought the world into
being, furnished it and filled it with animated life. He now places
Adam in it, to rule and have dominion over every living thing. Of
the extent of Adam's blessedness we can have no conception; but this
is revealed, that he was perfect the day he was created. The imme-
diate time of Eve being brought to Adam, having been previously
created in him, bone of his bone and flesh of his flesh, is not recorded.
Thus the Lord saw every thing that He had made, and behold it
was very good; " and God rested on the seventh day from all His work
which He had made, and God blessed the seventh day and sanctified
it; because that in it He rested from all His work which God created
and made. " (Gen. ii. 1--3. )
At this time, all was peace and happiness in Eden; for, as it shall
be when restored, so was it ere it fell. The leopard and the kid lay
down together, and the lion ate straw like the ox; and all was peace.
Adam had a soul capable of communion with God, and a body of
perfect symmetry and beauty; no sin had sullied the one, nor sick-
ness marred the other. How long this blessed state continued is
unrevealed; for though Adam was created upright, yet his standing
depended on his obedience. Genesis ii. 15, 17, gives us the pro-
hibitory law of Eden:--" And the Lord God commanded the man,
saying, Of every tree of the garden thou mayest freely eat; but of
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THE CREATION.
the tree of the knowledge of good and evil thou shalt not eat of
it; for in the day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely die. "
Genesis iii. opens with the great enemy of God and man tempting
Eve, and by his subtlety beguiling her; and she ate of the tree in
answer to his temptation, and in violation of God's command; and
she gave to her husband, and he did eat; and dying, they died: that is,
the soul instantly was cut off from God; the body became mortal or
dying; and both body and soul were exposed to the judgment of
God and the second death. Thus sin entered into the world, and
death by sin; and so death passed upon all men, for that all have
sinned. And the history of all mankind is summed up in these words
--He was begotten, and he died--the earth is at once their cradle and
their grave. How affecting is the picture given by the afflicted
Patriarch Job ! --" Man that is born of a woman is of few days, and
full of trouble. He cometh forth like a flower, and is cut down: he
fleeth also as a shadow, and continueth not. And dost thou open
thine eyes upon such an one, and bringest me into judgment with
thee ? Who can bring a clean thing out of an unclean ? not one. "
(Job xiv. 1--4. )
But, my beloved children, amid all the gloom and sorrow of the
first day of man's wretchedness, see the dawning of that hope--that
Day-star, that arose even amid the horrors of that great darkness.
The guilty Adam and his wife, and Satan, stood before their great
Creator; but ere one word of judgment is pronounced on the
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? LETTER XL
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tempted and fallen, the Tempter is thus addressed,--" I will put
enmity between thee and the woman, and between thy seed and her
seed; it shall bruise thy head, and thou shalt bruise his heel. " This
was the great prophecy of the Messiah--the Lord--the Woman's
Seed--the Virgin's Son--the Emmanuel, God with us--God mani-
fest in the flesh. All subsequent prophecy went back to this
primary one, which testified of the sufferings of Christ, and the glory
that should follow. (Gen. iii. 15; Isa. vii. 14; 1 Pet. i. 11. )
After this, the ground was cursed for Adam's sake, and Adam and
Eve, clothed with coats of skin, were banished from the garden,--
then came the birth of Cain and Abel,--and now, for the first time,
we expressly read of sacrifice. Abel offers, and offers by faith,
a Lamb; and as " faith is the substance of things hoped for, the
evidence of things not seen," (Heb. xi. 1,) Abel's faith must have
rested on a promise; and, beyond all doubt, as Abraham did, so Abel
saw the day of Christ afar off, and was glad. The lamb lay on his
altar; and the death which he deserved, the lamb suffered. But Cain
also brought his offering ; here was no blood ; and there could be no
faith, for there was no promise--no substance of things hoped for;
and his offering was rejected. And Cain was wroth with God, and
his countenance fell. On this, the devil, the murderer from the
beginning, led him to kill Abel, God's accepted child, and he died. --
It was the just one who died; and O, blessed thought I his spirit went
to God who gave it. Yes, the spirit of the first man who died, in a
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THE CREATION.
world that had fallen, went to God--went to God in triumph--went
up justified, doubtless, amid the songs of millions round the throne.
How could this be ? Even thus: the Son of God had covenanted-
had purposed (and being God, his purpose was immutable) to
become man, and die, as a lamb, the Just for the unjust, and so pay,
as the kinsman Redeemer, the price of redemption ; and in virtue of
this sacrifice, so certain to be offered, the holy and just God received
into paradise the spirit of the justified Abel. The next important
scene in the world's history is the birth of Seth, born in Adam's
likeness--the likeness of a dead man. Five generations were then
born; and Adam died. This was the first death of nature; for 900
years Adam had lived; but now the hour came, and he died.
After this is the translation of Enoch,--" And Enoch walked with
God, and he was not, for God tookhim. " (Gen. v. 24. ) The commentary
on this passage by the Holy Spirit in the Epistle to the Hebrews, is,
" By faith Enoch was translated, that he should not see death, and
was not found, because God had translated him; for before his trans-
lation, he had this testimony, that he pleased God. " (Heb. xi. 5. )
There is here something full of joy,--that whilst the grave opened
to receive the first man because of death; the heavens opened to
receive the second without tasting death. Was it not the earnest that
even the dead should live again ? Surely it was. If you compare the
dates of the fifth of Genesis, you will find that Adam died fifty-seven
years before the translation of Enoch, and Seth fifty-five years after.
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? LETTER XI.
353
The next great event is the call of Noah, who also walked with
God,--one of God's saints who had made a covenant with him by
sacrifice. (Ps. 1. 5. ) Then follows the building of the ark; and Noah
and his family's safety, and the world's destruction: for while the ark
floated on the bosom of the waters, the wicked perished. When the
waters had abated, and God had assuaged the flood, Noah came out;
and the first thing that went up to God was the sweet savour of the
burnt offering; and God accepted the sacrifice: and as it was Christ,
God's Lamb, that was placed in faith on Abel's altar, so on Noah's;
and the rainbow, as a consequence, encircled the earth with blessing.
(Gen. ix. 13. )
The three sons of Noah became the sources from which the earth
was peopled. (See Gen. x. )*
And from Shem sprang Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Judah, David, and
the Messiah, to whom Nathanael said, " Rabbi, thou art the Son of
God; thou art the King of Israel. " Thus, after the lapse of 4000
years, when the fulness of time was come, was this blessed word
fulfilled, " To us a Child is born, to us a Son is given, and the govern-
ment shall be upon his shoulders, and he shall be called Wonderful,
Counsellor, the Mighty God, the Everlasting Father, the Prince of
Peace. " (Compare Isa. ix. 6 with Luke i. 32, 33. )
? The descendants of Shem peopled Asia, and a small part of Africa. Japhet
came to the West; and Europe, as it is now called, was his lot, while Canaan went
over to Africa. Compare the history of these nations: Oh! how true the prophecy.
America is, doubtless, of Shemitic origin, as the two continents, at the Straits of
Behring are visible one from the other.
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THE CREATION.
All heaven gazed on that wondrous birth. But not only were the
angels spectators of the mighty scene, but in a measure were made
partakers of the joy of God and man. One of them, doubtless, high
among the ranks of those principalities and powers that the Lord had
created, was sent with the glorious tidings. And this was his message,
--" Fear not, behold I bring you good tidings of great joy, which
shall be to all people; for unto you is born this day, in the city of
David, a Saviour, which is Christ the Lord. . . And, suddenly, there
was with the angel a multitude of the heavenly host, praising God,
and saying, Glory to God in the highest; and on earth peace, good-
will toward men. " (Luke ii. 10--14. )
The Gospels relate the life, death, resurrection, and ascension of this
blessed Saviour; and the book of the Acts opens with the promise,
that in like manner as he ascended, so shall he descend. And this has
been his people's hope ever since his absence,--looking for, and
hasting unto the coming of the day of God.
And thus, my dear children, are we brought up to the history of
man at the present moment. The Lord Jesus is now at the right
hand of Power; and his people are looking for him; and, in all sim-
plicity of faith, resting alone in his precious blood and righteousness,
are seeking to adorn the doctrine of God, their Saviour, in all things;
and with their talents, to occupy until he comes. The sorrows of 6000
years are well nigh over; and a blessed sabbath is at hand. " Sweet
is the harp of prophecy" that celebrates this time. You remember
those most beautiful lines of Cowper:--
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? LETTER XI.
355
" The groans of nature in this nether world,
Which heaven has heard for ages, have an end :
Foretold by prophets, and by poets sung--
The time of rest, the promised sabbath comes.
Six thousand years of sorrow have well nigh
Fulfilled their tardy and disastrous course
Over a sinful world; and what remains
Of this tempestuous state of human things,
Is merely as the working of a sea
Before a calm that rocks itself to rest
For He whose car the winds are, and the clouds
The dust that wait upon his sultry march,
When sin has moved him, and his wrath is hot,
Shall visit earth in mercy; shall descend
Propitious in his chariot paved with love;
And what his storms have blasted and defaced
For man's revolt, shall with a smile repair. "
That you, my beloved children, may, when that day appeareth, be
enabled to look up with confidence, and say, " It is my God, and
I have waited for him; it is the Lord, I will rejoice in his salvation,"
is the sincere prayer of
Your affectionate Father.
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? 356
THE CREATION.
LETTER XII.
" WORTHY IS THE LAMB THAT WAS SLAIN TO RECEIVE POWER, AND RICHES, AND
WISDOM, AND STRENGTH, AND HONOUR, AND GLORY, AND BLESSING. AND EVERY
CREATURE WHICH IS IN HEAVEN, AND ON THE EARTH, AND UNDER THE EARTH,
AND SUCH AS ARE IN THE SEA, AND ALL THAT ARE IN THEM, HEARD I SAYING,
BLESSING, AND HONOUR, AND GLORY, AND POWER, BE UNTO HIM THAT SITTETH
UPON THE THRONE, AND UNTO THE LAMB FOR EVER AND EVER. "--Revelation
v. 12, 13.
My dear Children,
Do you remember, when living in Ireland, the circumstance of a dear
little boy at D. , who, having received a present of Noah's Ark, was
observed by his father very busy arranging the ferocious beasts of
prey with the gentler ones; and when the question was put to him,
as to what he was engaged in, he innocently replied, " Papa, I am
placing the animals as they will be in the happy time, when the leopard
shall lie down with the lamb, and the lion shall eat straw like the
ox. " (Isa. xi. 6--9. )
It interested us all at the time; it was a little child taking the word
in simplicity, which, indeed, is the only true way to profit by it. Yes,
dear children, that day is rapidly hastening; every thing around us
indicates its near approach; and then, in truth, shall " the groaning
creation be delivered from the bondage of corruption into the glorious
?
