[Social Life in the Insect World by J. H. Fabre]@TWC D-Link bookSocial Life in the Insect World CHAPTER XIX 1/33
CHAPTER XIX. AN INVADER .-- THE HARICOT-WEEVIL If there is one vegetable on earth that more than any other is a gift of the gods, it is the haricot bean.
It has all the virtues: it forms a soft paste upon the tongue; it is extremely palatable, abundant, inexpensive, and highly nutritious.
It is a vegetable meat which, without being bloody and repulsive, is the equivalent of the horrors outspread upon the butcher's slab.
To recall its services the more emphatically, the Provencal idiom calls it the _gounflo-gus_--the filler of the poor. Blessed Bean, consoler of the wretched, right well indeed do you fill the labourer, the honest, skilful worker who has drawn a low number in the crazy lottery of life.
Kindly Haricot, with three drops of oil and a dash of vinegar you were the favourite dish of my young years; and even now, in the evening of my days, you are welcome to my humble porringer. We shall be friends to the last. To-day it is not my intention to sing your merits; I wish simply to ask you a question, being curious: What is the country of your origin? Did you come from Central Asia with the broad bean and the pea? Did you make part of that collection of seeds which the first pioneers of culture brought us from their gardens? Were you known to antiquity? Here the insect, an impartial and well-informed witness, answers: "No; in our country antiquity was not acquainted with the haricot.
<<Back Index Next>> D-Link book Top TWC mobile books
|