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Toward Mother: Gestation takes 16 days; 7-15 in litter; young born pink, naked, and blind. Do not disturb young or mother for at least a week after birth; if disturbed mother will either kill and eat the young or ne¬glect them and allow them to die. After 3 weeks, remove young from mother; otherwise, mother fights with them and often kills them. Sexes should be separated before young reach maturity at 43 days.
After school, on their way home the child asked timidly, "Mother, choc¬olate malted?" and looked up at her mother beseechingly.
"No pea soup, no chocolate malted," her mother answered firmly.
At home the mother began to prepare dinner. The child stayed around, asked for water and got it. Seeing that she was going to get nothing else, she went to play quietly with her blocks. Sitting on the Floor she put the blocks one on top of another forming a tower and then suddenly she smashed them down on the floor. She did the same thing five times, perhaps as an expression of aggression that she dared not even feel toward mother her mother.See Also Aspect Of Mother Earth:The agricultural Romans create a new relation between the heavens which ser the invigorating rains upon the earth and th great earth mother who received them; and the; made the sky and the earth husband and wife father and mother. But the moon goddess dii not thereby lose all her ancient power; she stil remained the patroness of hunters and of person taking long journeys.
Cult objects, like the axe, are prominent in Minoan religion, which was primarily concerned with nature. The chthonic aspect of mother Earth was not very prominent, except insofar as the great goddess was thought of as Mother Earth. Minoans may have believed in life after death; they buried their dead (often in large jars within the house) and offered them libations.
On The Other Hand See Mi¬grant Mother Surrounded:Lange could make a deserted farmhouse, abandoned in acres of machine-plowed land, an eloquent definition of the phrase "tractored-out," which was on the lips of hun¬dreds of dispossessed farmers. Her photograph of a mi¬grant mother surrounded by her children, huddled in a tent, became the most widely reproduced of all the FSA pictures. She wrote:
My own approach is based upon three considerations. First—hands off! Whatever I photograph, I do not molest or tamper with or arrange. Second—a sense of place. Whatever I photograph, I try to picture as part of its surroundings, as having roots. Third—a sense of time. Whatever I photograph, I try to show as having its posi¬tion in the past or in the present.
Simple burrows under logs or stones; some dig tunnels several inches deep; always lined with silk and surrounded by little Wall of soil, sticks or stones; some species build a sizable turret about mouth of burrow
Reproduction: Females of all species spin tough, silken sacs in which eggs are placed; mother attaches sac to her spinnerets and drags it with her for a week or so, often sunning it; when eggs hatch, spiderlings break out of sac and cling to hairs on mother's back where they are carried for 2-3 more weeks. |
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