1. There was a great stir at dinner one day. A wasp came in, begging for sugar and plum-tart. Harry and Dora ran this way and that. 2. At last their father got the wasp out into the garden, and, when all was quiet again, he asked if they would like to hear its story. 'Oh yes, father!' said Dora. 3. Harry was busy with his plums, but he nodded, as much as to say, 'I shall be glad to hear it too!' 4. So the father began: 'All last winter the wasp was asleep, but when spring came she waked up and set out to look for a home. I am not quite sure where she found it, but it was in the ground, I think. 5. 'She began to dig in the soft earth, and she dug on till she had made a long passage. She had to carry out 6. 'Next she looked about for some old wood, and found it in a tree, perhaps, or post, or bit of fence. She rubbed away at it with her jaws till she got some of it off in powder. 7. 'She made this powder into a paste with a sort of gum which came out of her mouth, and off she went with it to her room.' 8. 'What did she do with it?' 'She spread it out in sheets of thin brown paper, and with these she made a comb like a bee's.' Wasp's Nest. 'She made paper of it.' 'Only a bee's is made of wax. I know that!' said Harry. 9. 'She put many layers of paper on the top to keep the rain out, and pillars under it to hold it up. Then she laid an egg in each cell. When the eggs were hatched'— 'Little wasps came flying out,' said Dora. 'No; little grubs came crawling out! 10. 'The wasp was now more busy than ever. She fed each baby in turn, and as they all grew bigger she had to get more and more food for them.' |