"Wolf spider crouch in your funnel nest
if I knew you once, now I know you less."
As a long enemy of the wolf spider (they LOVE my room), I thought it was odd that in Go Long, it mentioned their "funnel nests" since I didn't recall them living in nests as opposed to dark cubbies. So I looked it up, and while wolf spiders can reside in burrows of sorts, (under rocks, in logs, etc.) they don't really build nests. Then I found this website. Says this spider common in Kentucky can resemble the wolf spider
http://www.uky.edu/Ag/CritterFiles/casefile/spiders/funnel/funnel.htm
Maybe this is what that verse meant? That easy confusion? It also fits with the Kentucky theme. I feel like i'm on to something.