beetle’s elytra, and its darkness is augmented by
association with “black Hecate,” the queen
of witches.
These three examples span
more than 200 years, but an
entomologist is immediately
struck by how commonplace
large, evening-flying beetles
must have been to the writers,
and their audiences, to
acquire such symbolism. Big
beetles such as Geotrupes are no
longer very frequently seen or
heard, but in an era before
electric-light pollution, agricultural
intensification, and pesticides, they must
have been, in season, familiar and everyday
harbingers of twilight.
Other literary uses of beetles are more diverse.
Wordsworth (in 1802) discusses their detail under
magnification: “The beetle panoplied in gems and
gold, A mailed angel on a battle-day,” and Gregor
Samsa, the unfortunate protagonist of Franz
Kafka’s Metamorphosis (1915), wakes up to find
himself transformed into a gigantic insect, which
is often interpreted or illustrated as a beetle.
More recently, M.G. Leonard’s popular Beetle
Boy trilogy of children’s books follows the
adventures of three children, Darkus, Virginia,
and Bertolt, and their beetle companions, Baxter,
Marvin, and Newton, as they try to rescue the
Natural History Museum director and save the
world from eco-terrorism.
above right | A stag beetle
from the 1491 medieval
treatise Hortus Sanitatis
(Garden of Health), which
attributes dubious medical
properties to its mandibles.
right | Battle of the Beetles, the
final book in The Beetle Boy
Trilogy. In modern children’s
literature, the insects are often
characters rather than just
background.