Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2011 with funding from Boston Library Consortium Member Libraries http://www.archive.org/details/principlesofzoolOOagas IV. Modern Age. III. Tertiary Age. II. Secondary Age. I Palaeozoic Age. |_ Upper Tertiary Formation. Lower Tertiary Cretaceous Oolitic Trias Carboniferous Devonian Upper Silurian Lower Silurian Metamorphic Rocks. PRINCIPLES OP ZOOLOGY TOUCHING THE STRUCTURE, DEVELOPMENT, DISTRIBUTION, AND NATURAL ARRANGEMENT RACES OF ANIMALS, LIVING AND EXTINCT WITH NUMEROUS ILLUSTRATIONS. PART 1. COMPARATIVE PHYSIOLOGY. FOR THE USE OF SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES. BY LOUIS AGASSIZ and A. A. GOULD. REVISED EDITION. BOSTON: GOULD AND LINCOLN NEW YORK: SHELDON, LAltfPORT, AND BLAKEMAN. 1855. Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year 1851, By Gould and Lincoln, In the Clerk's Office of the District Court for the District of Massachusetts; G. C. Rand & Co., Printers, Cornhill. PREFACE. The design of this work is to furnish an epitome of the leading principles of the science of Zoology, as deduced from, the present state of knowledge, so illustrated as to be intelligible to the begin- ner. No similar treatise now exists in this country, and, indeed, some of the topics have not been touched upon in the English lan- guage, unless in a strictly technical form, and in scattered articles. On this account, some of the chapters, like those on Embryology and Metamorphosis, may, at first, seem too abstruse for scholars in our common schools. This may be the case, until teachers shall have made themselves somewhat familiar with subjects comparatively new to them. But so essential have these subjects now become to a correct interpretation of philosophical zoology, that the study of them will hereafter be indispensable. They furnish a key to many phenomena which have been heretofore locked in mystery. Being intended for American students, the illustrations have been drawn, as far as possible, from American objects : some of them are presented merely as ideal outlines, which convey a more definite idea than accurate sketches from nature ; others have been left im- perfect, except as to the parts especially in question ; a large propor- tion of them, however, are accurate portraits from original drawings. Popular names have been employed as far as possible, and to the scientific names an English termination has generally been given ; but the technical terms have been added, in brackets, whenever mis- understanding was apprehended. Definitions of those least likely to be understood, may be found in the Index. The principles of Zoology developed by Professor Agassiz in his published works have been generally adopted in this, and the results of many new researches have been added. The authors gratefully acknowledge the aid they have received, in preparing the illustrations and working out the details, from Mr. 1* 6 PREFACE.. E. Desor for many years an associate of Professor Agassiz, from Count Pourtales and E. C. Cabot, Esq., and also from Professor Asa Gray, by valuable suggestions in the revision of the letter-press. The first part is devoted to Comparative Anatomy, Physiology, and Embryology, as the basis of Classification, and also to the illus- tration of the geographical distribution and the geological succession of Animals ; the second to Systematic Zoology, in which the prin- ciples of Classification will be applied, and the principal groups of animals will be briefly characterized. Should our aim be attained, this work will produce more enlarged ideas of man's relations to Nature, and more exalted conceptions of the Plan of Creation and its Great Author. Boston, June 1, 1848. PREFACE TO THE REVISED EDITION. In revising the present work, the authors have endeavored to render more precise those passages which admitted of too broad a signification or of a double interpretation ; and to correct such errors as had arisen from inadvertence, or such as the rapid progress of Sci- ence has disclosed. They are indebted for many suggestions on these points to several distinguished teachers who have used the work as a text book, and more especially to Professor Wyman, of Harvard University. Several entirely new paragraphs have also been added. A list of some of the principal authors who have made original researches, or of treatises which enter more into detail than was ad- missible in an elementary work, has been given at the close of the volume, for the use of those who would pursue the subject of Zoology in a more extended manner. The work having thus been revised and enlarged, the authors sub- mit it to the public with increased confidence in its accuracy and usefulness. Boston, February 1, 1851. TABLE OP CONTENTS. Pa^e INTRODUCTION . . . . 17 CHAPTER FIRST. The Sphere and fundamental Principles of Zoology . 25 CHAPTER SECOND. General Properties of Organized Bodies .... 35 SECTION I. Organized and Unorganized Bodies 35 SECTION II. Elementary Structure of Organized Bodies 36 SECTION III. Differences between Animals and Plants ..... 41 CHAPTER THIRD. Functions and Organs of Animal Life .... 44 SECTION I. OJ the Nervous System and General Sensation .... 44 8 TABLE OF CONTENTS. SECTION II. Page Of the Special Senses 48 1. Of Sight 48 2. Of Hearing 55 3. Of Smell 60 4. Of Taste 62 5. OfTouch 63 6. Of the Voice . .64 CHAPTER FOURTH. Of Intelligence and Instinct 67 CHAPTER FIFTH. Of Motion 73 SECTION I. Apparatus of Motion 73 SECTION II. Of Locomotion 79 1. Plan of the Organs of Locomotion . . 82 2. Of Standing, and the Modes of Progression ... 88 Walking 90 Running 91 Leaping 91 Climbing 92 Flying . . .... . . , . . - 92 Swimming ... 93 CHAPTER SIXTH. Of Nutrition 96 SECTION I. Of Digestion 97 Digestive Tube 97 Chymification 100 Chylification 100 Mastication ... 101 Insalivation 108 Deglutition 108 TABLE OF CONTENTS. 9 CHAPTER SEVENTH. Page Of the Blood and Circulation Ill CHAPTER EIGHTH. Of Respiration 118 CHAPTER NINTH. Op the Secretions 126 CHAPTER TENTH. Embryology '."-.'■ 131 SECTION I. Of the Egg 131 Form of the Egg . 133 Formation of the Egg . 13J Ovulation 134 Laying 135 Composition of the Egg . . .... 137 SECTION II. Development of the Young within the Egg 139 SECTION III. Zoological Importance of Embryology 153 CHAPTER ELEVENTH. Peculiar Modes op Reproduction 156 SECTION I. Gemmiparous and Fissiparous Reproduction .... 156 SECTION II. Alternate and Equivocal Reproduction 158 10 TABLE OF CONTENTS. SECTION' III. Page Consequences of Alternate Generation 167 CHAPTER TWELFTH. Metamorphoses of Animals 174 CHAPTER THIRTEENTH. Geographical Distribution of Animals .... 186 SECTION I. General Laws of Distribution ....... 186 SECTION II. Distribution of the Faunas 194 I. Arctic Fauna 197 II. Temperate Faunas 198 III. Tropical Faunas 204 SECTION III. Conclusions 207 CHAPTER FOURTEENTH. Geological Succession of Animals ; or, their Distribution ■" in Time . 214 SECTION I. Structure of the Earth's Crust 214 SECTION II. 4.ffes of Nature 221 Palaeozoic Age 223 Secondary Age 227 Tertiary Age 233 Modern Age 235 Conclusions 237 EXPLANATION OF THE FIGURES. Frontispiece. — The diagram opposite the title page is intended to present, at one view, the distribution of the principal types of animals, and the order of their successive appearance in the layers of the earth's crust. The four Ages of Nature, mentioned at page 221, are represented by four zones, of different shades, each of which is subdivided by circles, indicating the number of formations of which they are composed. The whole disk is divided by radiating lines into four segments, to include the four great departments of the Animal Kingdom ; the Vertebrates, with Man at their head, are placed in the upper compartment, the Articulates at the left, the Mollusks at the right, and the Radiates below, as being the lowest in rank.- Each of these compartments is again subdivided to include the different classes belonging to it, which are named at the outer circle. At the centre is placed a figure to represent the primitive egg, with its germinative vesicle and germinative dot, (278,) indicative of the universal origin of all animals, and the epoch of life when all are appar- ently alike, (275, 276.) Surrounding this, at the point from which each 'department radiates, are placed the symbols of the several departments, as explained on page 155. The zones are traversed by rays which repre- sent the principal types of animals, and their origin and termination in- dicates the age at which they first appeared or disappeared, all those which reach the circumference being still in existence. The width of *he ray in- dicates the greater or less prevalence of the type at different geological ages. Thus, in the class of Crustaceans, the Trilobites appear to com- mence in the earliest strata, and to disappear with the carboniferous for- mation. The Ammonites also appeared in the Silurian formation, and did not become extinct before the deposition of the Cretaceous rocks. The Belemnites appear in the lower Oolitic beds ; many forms commence in the Tertiary ; a great number of types make their appearance only in the Modern age ; while only a few have continued from the Silurian, through every period to the present. Thus, the Crinoids were very nu- merous in the Primary Age, and are but slightly developed in the Tertiary and Modern Age. It is seen, at a glance, that the Animal Kingdom is much more diversified in the later than in the earlier Ages. Below the circle is a section, intended to show more distinctly the rel- ative position of the ten principal formations of stratified rocks (461) composing the four great geological ages ; the numerals corresponding to those on the ray leading to Man, in the circular figure. See also figure 154. 12 EXPLANATION OF THE FIGURES. The Chart of Zoological Regions, page 195, is intended to show the limits of the several Faunas of the American Continent, correspond- ing to the climatal regions. And as the higher regions of the mountains correspond in temperature to the climate of higher latitudes, it will be seen that the northern temperate fauna extends, along the mountains of Mexico and Central America, much farther towards the Equator than it does on the lower levels. In the same manner, the southern warm fauna extends northward, along the Andes. Fig. ■ 1. Simple cell, magnified, as seen in the house-leek. 2. Cells when altered by pressure upon each other ; from the pith of elder. 3. Nucleated cells, (a,) magnified; b, nucleolated cells. 4. Cartilaginous tissue from a horse, magnified 120 diameters. 5. Osseous tissue from a horse, magnified 450 diameters. 6. Nervous fibres, showing the loops as they terminate in the skin of a frog. 7. Gray substance of the brain, magnified. 8. Head of an embryo fish, to show its cellular structure throughout. 9. Diagram, to show the nervous system of the Vertebrates, as found in a monkey. 10. Diagram of the nervous system of the Articulates, as seen in a lobster. 11. Diagram of the nervous system of the Mollusks, as found in Natica heros. 12. Diagram of the nervous system of the Radiates, as found in Scutella, (Echinarachnius parma.) 13. Section of the eye. a, optic nerve ; b, sclerotic coat ; c, choroid coat; d, retina ; e, crystalline lens ; f, cornea ; g, iris ; h, vitreous body ; i, chamber, divided by the iris. 14. Diagram, showing the effect of the eye on rays of light. 15. Position of the eye of the snail. 16. Eyes (ocelli) of the spider. 17. Eye-spots of a star-fish, (Echinaster sanguinolentus.) 18. Compound eyes, showing the arrangement of the faeettes, and their connection with the optic nerve, as seen in a crab's eye. 19. Diagram of the human ear, to show the different chambers, canals, and bones. 20. Tympanum and small bones of the ear, twice the natural size ; c, tympanum ; m, malleus ; n, incus ; o, orbiculare : s, stapes. 21. Section of the brain of a crow, showing the origin of the nerves of the special senses. 22. Diagram of the larynx, in man. 23. Larynx of the merganser, (Mergus merganser.) 24. Nests of Ploceus Philippinus, male and female. 25. Distribution of nerves to the muscular fibres. 26. Test, or crust-like covering of an Echinoderm, (Cidaris.) EXPLANATION OF THE FIGURES. 13 Fig 27. Muscular ribbons of the willow-moth, (Cossus ligniperda.) 28. Vertebra of a cod-fish. 29. Disposition of the muscles of the trout, (Salmo trutta.) 30. Disposition of the muscles of an owl, (Strix brachyotis.) 31. Jelly-fishes, (Stomobrachium cruciatum, Hippocrene Bougammllii.) 32. Leech, showing the terminal cups. 33. Portion of a Nereis, showing the gills as organs of motion. 34-43. Modifications of the fore-arm. 34. Monkey. 35. Deer. 36. Tiger. 37. Whale. 38. Bat. 39. Pigeon. 40. Turtle. 41. Sloth. 42. Mole. 43. Whale. 44. Leg of a beetle. 45. Leg of a lizard. 46. Skeleton of a tiger. 47. Cuttle-fish, {Loligo illecebrosa.) 48. Sea-anemone, {Actinia marginata ;) a, mouth; b, stomach; c, general cavity of the body. 49. Planaria, showing the mouth, stomach, and its branches. 50. Jaws, stomach, and intestine of a sea-urchin, {Echinus lividus.) 51. Plan of the digestive organs of an insect. 52. Plan of the digestive organs of a land-slug, ( Tebennqpkorus Carolini- ensis. ) 53. Globules of chyle. 54. Portion of intestine, showing the lacteals of man, and their entrance into a vein. 55. Jaws of an Echinoderm, {Echinarachnius parma.) 56. Jaws of a sea-ur.chin, {Echinus granulatus.) 57. Beak of a cuttle-=fish. 58. Portion of the tongue of a mollusk, {Natica heros,) magnified. 59. Jaws of an Annelide, {Nereis.) 60. Trophi (organs for taking food) of a beetle. 61. " of a bee. 62. 63. " of a squash-bug. 64. " of a butterfly. 65. " of a Rotifer, (Brachionus.) 66. Jaws of ditto, magnified. 67. Skull of a tiger, showing the muscles for mastication. 68. Head of a snapping-turtle, (Emysaurus serpentina.) 69. Head of a Whale, showing the whalebone. 70. Head of an ant-eater. 71. Head of an alligator. 72. Head of a skate-fish, {Myliobatis,) showing the palate bone. 73. Head of a monkey, showing the three different kinds of teeth. 74. Teeth of an insectivorous animal, the mole. 75. Teeth of a carnivorous animal, the tiger. 76. Teeth cf a rodent. 14 EXPLANATION OF THE FIGURES. Fig. 77. A polyp, {Tiibularia indivisa;) m, mouth ; o, ovaries ; p, tentacles 78. Blood disks in man, magnified. 79. " " in birds, " 80. " " in reptiles, " 81. " " in fishes, " 82. Portion of a vein opened, to show the valves. 83. Network of capillary vessels. 84. Dorsal vessel of an insect, with its valves. 85. Cavities of the heart of mammals and birds. 86. " " « of a reptile. 87. " " " of a fish. 88. Heart and bloodvessels of a gasteropod mollusk, {Natica.) 89. Trachea?, or air tubes of an insect ; s, stigmata ; t, trachea. 90. Relative position of the heart and lungs in man. 91. Respiratory organs of a naked mollusk, {Polycera illuminata.) 92. Respiratory organs (gills) of a fish. 93. Vesicles and canals of the salivary glands. 94. Section of the skin, magnified, to show the sweat glands ; a, the cutis ; 6, blood-layer ; c,epidermis ; g, gland imbedded in the fat-layer,^.) 95. Egg of a skate-fish, {Myliobatis.) 96. Egg of hydra. 97. Egg of snow-flea, {Podurella.) 98. Section of an ovarian egg ; d, germinative dot ; g, germinative vesi- cle ; s, shell membrane ; v, vitelline membrane. 99. Egg cases of Pyrula. 100. Monoculus bearing its eggs, a a. 101. Section of a bird's egg ; a, albumen ; c, chalaza ; e, embryo ; s, shell ; y, yolk. 102. Cell-layer of the germ. 103. Separation of the cell-layer into three layers ; s, serous or nervous layer; m, mucous or vegetative layer; avascular or blood layer. 104. Embryo of a crab, showing its incipient rings. 105. Embryo of a vertebrate, showing the dorsal furrow. 106 - 8. Sections of the embryo, showing the formation of the dorsal canal. 109. Section, showing the position of the embryo of a vertebrate, in re- lation to the yolk. 110. Section, showing the same in an articulate, (Podurella.) 111-22. Sections, showing the successive stages of development of the embryo of the white-fish, magnified. 123. Young white-fish just escaped from the egg, with the yolk not yet fully taken in. 124, 125; Sections of the embryo of a bird, showing the formation of the allantois ; e, embryo ; x x, membrane rising to form the amnios ; a, allantois ; y, yolk. 126. The same more fully developed. The allantois (a) is further de- EXPLANATION OF THE FIGURES. 15 Fig. veloped, and bent upwards. The upper part of the yolk (d d ) is nearly separated from the yolk sphere, and is to become the in- testine. The heart (h) is already distinct, and connected by threads with the blood-layer of the body. 127. Section of the egg of a mammal ; v, the thick vitelline membrane, or chorion ; y, yolk ; s, germinative dot ; g, germinative vesicle. 12S. The same, showing the empty space (k) between the vitelline sphere and chorion. 129. Shows the first indications of the germ already divided in two layers, the serous layer, (s,) and the mucous layer, (m.) 130. The mucous layer (m) expands over nearly half of the yolk, and be- comes covered with many little fringes. 131. The embryo (e) is seen surrounded by the amnios, (&,) and covered by a large allantois, (a;) p e, fringes of the chorion ; p m, fringes of the matrix. 132. Hydra, showing its reproduction by buds. 133. Vorticella, showing its reproduction by division. 134. Polyps, showing the same. 135. A chain of Salpse. 136. An individual salpa ; m, the mouth ; a, embryos. 137. Cercaria, or early form of the Distoma. 138. Distoma, with its two suckers. 139. Nurse of the Cercaria. 140. The same, magnified, showing the included young. 141. Grand nurses of the Cercaria, enclosing the young nurses. 142. Stages of development of a jelly-fish, (Medusa ;) a, the embryo in its first stage, much magnified ; b, summit, showing the mouth ; <>ij\ 9t tentacles shooting forth ; e, embryo adhering, and form- ing a pedicle; h, i, separation into segments; d, a segment be- come free ; k, form of the adult. 143. Portion of a plant-like polyp, ( Campanularia ) a, the cup which bears tentacles ; b, the female cup, containing eggs ; c, the cups in which the young are nursed, and from which they issue. 144. Young of the same, with its ciliated margin, magnified. 145. Eye of the perch, containing parasitic worms, (Distoma.) 146. One of the worms magnified. 147. Transformations of the canker-worm, (Geometra vemalis.-) a, the canker worm ; b, its chrysalis ; c, female moth ; d, male moth. 1 18. Metamorphoses of the duck-barnacle, (Anatifa ;) a, eggs, magnified ; b, the animal as it escapes from the egg ; c, the stem and eye ap- pearing, and the shell enclosing them ; d, animal removed from the shell, and further magnified ; e, f, the mature barnacle, affixed. 149. Metamorphoses of a star-fish, (Echinaster sanguinolentus,) showing the changes of the yolk, (e ;) the formation of the pedicle, {p;) and the gradual change into the pentagonal and rayed form. 16 EXPLANATION OF THE FIGURES. Fig. 150. Comatula, a "West India species, in its early stage, with its stem. 151. The same detached, and swimming free. 152. Longitudinal section of the sturgeon, to show its cartilaginous ver- tebral column. 153. Amphioxus, natural size, showing its imperfect organization. 154. Section of the earth's crust, to show the relative positions of the rocks composing it ; E, plutonic or massive rocks ; M, metamor- phic rocks ; T, trap rocks ; L, lava. 1. Lower Silurian forma- tion ; 2. Upper Silurian ; 3. Devonian ; 4. Carboniferous ; 5. Trias, or Saliferous ; 6. Oolitic ; 7. Cretaceous ; 8. Lower Terti- ary or Eocene ; 9. Upper Tertiary, or Miocene, and Pleiocene ; 10. Drift. 155. Fossils of the Palaeozoic age ; a, Lingula prima ; b, Leptama alter- nata ; c, Euomphalus hemisphericus ; d, Trocholites ammonius; e, Avicula decussata ; f, Bucania expansa ; g, Orthoceras fusi- forme ; i, Cyathocrinus ornatissimus, Hall ; j, Cariocrinus orna- tus, Say ; k, Melocrinus amphora, Goldf. ; I, Columnaria alveo- lata ; m, Cyathophyllum quadrigeminum, Goldf. ; n, o, Caninia flexuosa ; p, Chsetetes lycoperdon. 156. Articulata of the Palaeozoic age ; a, Harpes ; b, Arges ; c, Brontes ; d, Platynotus ; e, Eurypterus remipes. 157. Fishes of the Palaeozoic age ; a, Pterichthys ; b, Coccosteus ; c, Dipterus ; d, palatal bone of a shark ; e, spine of a shark. 158. Representations of the tracks of supposed birds and reptiles in the sandstone rocks. 159. Supposed outlines of Ichthyosaurus, (a,) and Plesiosaurus, (5.) 160. Supposed outline of Pterodactyle. 161. Shells of the Secondary age ; a, Terebratula ; 6, Goniomya ; c, Trigonia ; d, Ammonite. 162. Supposed outline of the cuttle-fish, (a,) furnishing the Belemnite. 163. Radiata from the Secondary age ; a, Lobophyllia fiabellum ; b, Litho- dendron pseud ostylina; c, Pentacrinus briareus ; d, Pterocoma pinnata ; e, Cidaris ; /, Dysaster ; g, Nucleolites. 164. Shells of the Cretaceous formation ; a, Ammonites ; b, Crioceras ; c, Scaphites ; d, Ancyloceras ; e, Hamites ; jf, Baculites ; g, Turrilites. 165. Shells of the Cretaceous formation ; a, Magas ; b, Inoceramus ; c, Hippurites ; d, Spondylus ; e, Pleurotomaria. 166. Radiata from the Cretaceous formation ; a, Diploctenium cordatum ; b, Marsupites ; d, Galerites ; c, Salenia ; c, Micraster cor- anguinum. 167- Nummulite. 168. Supposed outline of Paleotherium. 169. Supposed outline of Anoplotherium. '70 Skeleton of the Mastodon, in the cabinet of Dr. J. C. Warren. INTRODUCTION Every art and science has a language of technical terms peculiar to itself. With those terms every student must make himself familiarly acquainted at the outset ; and, first of all, he will desire to know the names of the objects about which he is to be engaged. The names of objects in Natural History are double ; that is to say, they are composed of two terms. Thus, we speak of the white-bear, the black-bear, the hen-hawk, the sparrow- hawk ; or, in strictly scientific terms, we have Felis leo, the lion, Felis tigris, the tiger, Felis catus, the cat, Canis lupus, the wolf, Canis vulpes, the fox, Canis familiaris, the dog, &c. They are always in the Latin form, and consequently the adjective name is placed last. The first is called the generic name ; the second is called the trivial, or specific name. These two terms are inseparably associated in every object of which we treat. It is very important, therefore, to have a clear idea of what is meant by the terms genus and species ; and although the most common of all others, they are not the easiest to be clearly understood. The Genus is 2* 18 INTRODUCTION. founded upon some of the minor peculiarities of anatomical structure, such as the number, disposition, or proportions of the teeth, claws, fins, &c, and usually includes several kinds. Thus, the lion, tiger, leopard, cat, &c, agree in the structure of their feet, claws, and teeth, and they belong to the genus Felis ; while the dog, fox, jackal, wolf, &c, have another and a different peculiarity of the feet, claws, and teeth, and are arranged in the genus Canis. The Species is founded upon less important distinctions, such as color, size, proportions, sculpture, &c. Thus we have different kinds, or species, of duck, different species of squirrel, different species of monkey, &c, varying from each other in some trivial circumstance, while those of each group agree in all their general structure. The specific name is the lowest term to which we descend, if we except certain peculiarities, generally induced by some modification of native habits, such as are seen in domestic animals. These are called varieties, and seldom endure beyond the causes which occasion them. Several genera which have certain traits in common are combined to form a family. Thus, the alewives, herrings, shad, &c, form a family called Clupeidse ; the crows, black- birds, jays, &c, form the family Corvidse. Families are combined to form orders, and orders form classes, and finally, classes are combined to form the four primary divisions, or departments, of the Animal Kingdom. For each of these groups, whether larger or smaller, we involuntarily picture in our minds an image, made up of the traits which characterize the group. This ideal image is called a type, a term which there will be frequent occasion to employ in our general remarks on the Animal Kingdom. This image may correspond to some one member of the group ; but it is rare that any one species embodies all our deas of the class, family, or genus to which it belongs. INTRODUCTION. 19 Thus, we have a general idea of a bird ; but this idea does not correspond to any particular bird, or any particular character of a bird. It is not precisely an ostrich, an owl, a hen, or a sparrow ; it is not because it has wings, or feathers, or two legs; or because it has the power of flight, or builds nests. Any, or all, of these characters would not fully represent our idea of a bird ; and yet every one has a distinct ideal notion of a bird, a fish, a quadruped, &c. It is common, however, to speak of the animal which embodies most fully the characters of a group, as the type of that group. Thus we might, perhaps, regard an eagle as the type of a bird, the duck as the type of a swimming-bird, and the mallard as the type of a duck, and so on. As we must necessarily make frequent allusions to ani- mals, with reference to their systematic arrangement, it seems requisite to give a sketch of their classification in as popular terms as may be, before entering fully upon that subject, and with particular reference to the diagram fronting the tute- lage. The Animal Kingdom consists of four great divisions, which we call Departments, namely : I. The department of Vertebrates. II. The department of Articulates. III. The department of Mollusks. IV. The department of Radiates. I. The department of Vertebrates includes all animals which have an internal skeleton, with a back-bone for its axis. It is divided into four classes : 1. Mammals, (animals which nurse their young.) 2. Birds. 20 INTRODUCTION. 3. Reptiles. 4. Fishes. The class of Mammals is subdivided into three orders : a. Beasts of prey, ( Carnivora.) b. Those which feed on vegetables, (Herbivora.) c. Animals of the whale kind, (Cetaceans.) The class of Birds is divided into four orders, namely, a. Perching Birds, (lnsessores.) b. Climbers, (Scansores.) c. Waders, (Grallatores.) d. Swimmers, (Natatores.) The class of Reptiles is divided into five orders : a. Large reptiles with hollow teeth, most of which are now extinct, (Rhizodonts.) b. Lizards, (Lacertians.) c. Snakes, (Ophidians.) d. Turtles, (Chelonians.) e. Frogs and Salamanders, (Batrachians.) The class of Fishes is divided into four orders : a. Those with enamelled scales, like the gar-pike, (Ganoids,) fig. 157, c. b. Those with the skin like shagreen, as the sharks and skates, (Placoids.) c. Those which have the edge of the scales toothed, and usually with some bony rays to the fins, as the perch, (Ctenoids.) INTRODUCTION. 21 d. Those whose scales are entire, and whose fin rays are soft, like the salmon, {Cycloids.) II. Department of Articulates. Animals whose body is composed of rings or joints. It embraces three classes: 1. Insects. 2. Crustaceans, like the crab, lobster, &c. 3. Worms. The class of Insects includes three orders : a. Those with a trunk for sucking fluids, like the butter- fly, (Suctoria,) fig. 62-64. b. Those which have jaws for dividing their food, (Mcm- ducata,) fig. 60. c. Those destitute of wings, like spiders, fleas, millipedes, &c, (Aptera.) The class Crustaceans may be divided as follows : a. Those furnished with a shield, like the crab and lob- ster, (Malacostraca.) b. Such as are not thus protected, (Entomostraca.) c. An extinct race, intermediate between these two, (Trilobites,) fig. 156. The class of Worms comprises three orders : a. Those which have thread-like gills about the head, ( Tubulibranchiates.) b. Those whose gills are placed along the sides, (Dor' sibranchiates.) c. Those who have no exterior gills, like the earth-worm (Abranchiates,) and also the Intestinal Worms. 22 INTRODUCTION. III. The department of Molltjsks is divided into three classes, namely : 1 . Those which have arms about the mouth, like the cuttle-fish, (Cephalopoda,) fig. 47. 2. Those which creep on a flattened disk or foot, like snails, (G aster op ods,) fig. 88. 3. Those which have no distinct head, and are inclosed in a bivalve shell, like the clams, (Acephals.) The Cephalopods may be divided into a. The cuttle-fishes, properly so called, (Teuthideans,) fig. 47. b. Those having a shell, divided by sinuous partitions into numerous chambers, (Ammonites,) fig. 164. c. Those having a chambered shell with simple par- titions, (Nautilus.) The Gasteropods contain four orders : a. The land snails which breathe air, (Pulmonates.) b. The aquatic snails which breathe water, (Branch- ifers,) fig. 88. c. Those which have wing-like appendages about the head, for swimming, (Pteropods.) d. A still lower form allied to the Polyps by their gen- eral appearance, (Rhizopods or Foraminifera.) The class of Acephals contains three orders : a. Those having shells of two valves, (bivalves,) like the clam and oyster, (Lamellibranchiates.) b. Those having two unequal valves, and furnished with peculiar arms, (Brachiopods.) INTRODUCTION. 23 c. Mollusks living in chains or clusters, like the Salpa, fig. 135 ; or upon plant-like stems, like Flustra, (Bryo- zoa.) IV. The department of Radiates is divided into three classes : 1. Sea-urchins, bearing spines upon the surface, (Echiw oderms,) figs. 12, 26. 2. Jelly-fishes, (Acalejjhs,) fig. 31. 3. Polyps, fixed like plants, and with a series of flexible arms around the mouth, figs. 48, 77, 143. The Echinoderms are divided into four orders : a. Sea-slugs, like biche-le-mar, (Holothurians.) b. Sea-urchins, (Echini,) fig. 26. c. Free star-fishes, (Asteridce,) fig. 17. d. Star- fishes mostly attached by a stem, (Crinoids,) figs. 150, 151. The Acalephs include the following orders : a. Those furnished with vibrating hairs, by which they move, (Ctenophorce.) b. The Medusae, or common jelly-fishes, (Discophorce,) figs. 31, 142. c. Those provided with aerial vesicles, (Siphonophorce.) The class of Polyps includes two orders. a. The so-called fresh-water polyps, and similar marine forms, with lobed tentacles, (Hydro'ids,) fig. 143. b. Common polyps, like the sea-anemone and coral- polyp, (Actinoids,) fig. 48. In addition to these, there are numberless kinds of micro- 24 INTRODUCTION. scopic animalcules, commonly united under the name of infusory animals, (Infusoria,) from their being found specially abundant in water infused with vegetable matter. These minute beings do not, however, constitute a natural group in the Animal Kingdom. Indeed, a great many that were for- merly supposed to be animals are now found to be vegetables. Others are ascertained to be crustaceans, mollusks, worms of microscopic size, or the earliest stages of development of larger species. In general, however, they are exceedingly minute, and exhibit the simplest forms of animal life, and are now grouped together, under the title of Protozoa. But, as they are still very imperfectly understood, notwithstand- ing the beautiful researches already published on this sub- ject, and as many of them are likely to be finally distributed among vegetables, and the legitimate classes in the Animal Kingdom to which they belong, we have not assigned any special place for them. PHYSIOLOGICAL ZOOLOGY ___ CHAPTER FIRST. THE SPHERE AND FUNDAMENTAL PRINCIPLES OF ZOOLOGY. 1. Zoology is that department of Natural History which relates to animals. 2. To enumerate and name the animals which are found on the globe, to describe their forms, and investigate their habits and modes of life, are the principal, but by no means the only objects of this science. Animals are worthy of our regard, not merely when considered as to the variety and ele- gance of their forms, or their adaptation to the supply of our wants ; but the Animal Kingdom, as a whole, has a still higher signification. It is the exhibition of the divine thought, as carried out in one department of that grand whole which we call Nature ; and considered as such, it teaches us most important lessons. 3. Man, in virtue of his twofold constitution, the spiritual and the material, is qualified to comprehend Nature, 3 26 SPHERE AND FUNDAMENTAL Being made in the spiritual image of God, he is competent to rise to the conception of His plan and purpose in the works of Creation. Having also a material body, like that of other animals, he is also in a condition to understand the mechanism of organs, and to appreciate the necessities of matter, as well as the influence which it exerts over the in- tellectual element throughout the domain of Nature. 4. The spirit and preparation we bring to the study of Nature, is a matter of no little consequence. When we would study with profit a work of literature, we first endeavor to make ourselves acquainted with the genius of the- author ; and in order to know what end he had in view, we must have regard to his previous labors, and to the circumstances under which the work was executed. Without this, although we may perhaps enjoy its perfection as a whole, and ad- mire the beauty of its details, yet the spirit which pervades it will escape us, and many passages may even remain un- intelligible. 5. So, in the study of Nature, we may be astonished at the infinite variety of her products ; we may even study some portion of her works with enthusiasm, and neverthe- less remain strangers to the spirit of the whole, ignorant of the plan on which it is based, and fail to acquire a proper conception of the varied affinities which combine beings together, so as to make of them that vast picture in which each animal, each plant, each group, each class, has its place, and from which nothing could be removed without destioying the proper meaning of the whole. 6. Besides the beings which inhabit the earth at the pres- ent time, this picture also embraces the extinct races which are now known to us by their fossil remains only. And these axe of the greatest importance, since they furnish us with the means of ascertaining the changes and modifica- tions which the Animal Kingdom has undergone in the sue- PRINCIPLES OF ZOOLOGY. 27 cessive creations, since the first appearance of living beings. 7. It is but a short time since it was not difficult for a man to possess himself of the whole domain of positive knowledge in Zoology. A century ago, the number of known animals did not exceed 8000 ; that is to say, from* the whole Animal Kingdom, fewer species were then known than are now contained in many private collections of certain families of insects merely. At the present day, the number of living species which have been satisfac- torily made out and described, is more than 50,000.* The fossils already described exceed 6000 species ; and if we * The number of. vertebrate animals may be estimated at 20,000, About 1500 species of mammals are pretty precisely known, and the num- ber may probably be carried to about 2000. The number of Birds well known is 4 or 5000 species, and the probable number is 6000. The Reptiles number about the same as the Mammals, 1500 described species, and they will probably reach the number of 2000. . The Fishes are more numerous : there are from 5 to 6000 species in the museums of Europe, and the number may probably amount to 8 or 10,000. The number of Mollusks already in collections probably reaches 8 or 10,000. There are collections of marine shells, bivalve and univalve, which amount to 5 or 6000 ; and collections of land and fluviatile shells, which count as many as 2000. The total number of mollusks would, therefore, probably exceed 15,000 species. Among the articulated animals it is difficult to estimate the number of species. There are collections of coleopterous insects which number 20 to 25,000 species ; and it is quite probable, that by uniting the principal col- lections of insects, 60 or 80,000 species might now be counted; kr the whole department of articulata, comprising the Crustacea, the cirrhipeda, the insects, the red-blooded worms, the intestinal worms, and the infuso- ria so far as they belong to this department, the number would already amount to 100,000 ; and we might safely compute the probable number of species actually existing at double that sum. Add to these about 10,000 for radiata, including echini, star-fishes, me- dusse, and polypi, and we have about 250,000 species of living animals ; and supposing the number of fossil species only to equal them, we have, at a very moderate computation, half a million of species. 28 SPHERE AND FUNDAMENTAL consider that wherever any one stratum of the earth has been well explored, the number of species discovered has not fallen below that of the living species which now inhabit any particular locality of equal extent, and then bear in mind that there is a great number of geological strata, we may anticipate the day when the ascertained fossil species will far exceed the living species.* 8. These numbers, far from discouraging, should, on the contrary, encourage those who study Natural Histoiy. Each new species is, in some respects, a radiating point which throws additional light on all around it; so that, as the picture is enlarged, it at the same time becomes more intelligible to those who are competent to seize its promi- nent traits. 9. To give a detailed account of each and all of these animals, and to show their relations to each other, is the task of the Naturalist. The number and extent of the vol- umes already published upon the various departments of Natural History show, that only a mere outline of a domain so vast could be fully sketched in an elementary work, and that none but those who make it their special study can be expected to survey its individual parts. 10. Every well-educated person, however, is expected to have a general acquaintance with the great natural phe- nomena constantly displayed before his eyes. There is a general knowledge of man and the subordinate animals? embracing their structure, races, habits, distribution, mutual relations, &c, which is not only calculated to conduce es- * In a separate work, entitled " Nomenclator Zoologicus" by L. Agas- Siz, the principles of nomenclature are discussed, and a list of the names of genera and families proposed by authors is given. To this work those are referred who may desire to become more familiar with nomenclature, and to know in detail the genera and families in each class of the Animal Kingdom. PRINCIPLES OF ZOOLOGY. 29 sentially to our happiness, but which it would be quite inex- cusable to neglect. This general view of Zoology, it is the purpose of this work to afford. 11. A sketch of this nature should render prominent the more general features of animal life, and delineate the ar- rangement of the species according to their most natural relations and their rank in the scale of being ; thus giving a panorama, as it were, of the entire Animal Kingdom. To accomplish this, we are at once involved in the question, What is it that gives an animal precedence in rank ? 12. In one sense, all animals are equally perfect. Each species has its definite sphere of action, whether more or less extended, — its own peculiar office in the economy of nature ; and a complete adaptation to fulfil all the purposes of its creation, beyond the possibility of improvement. In this sense, every animal is perfect. But there is a wide difference among them, in respect to their organization. In some it is very simple, and very limited in its operation ; in 'others, extremely complicated, and capable of exercising a great variety of functions. 13. In this physiological point of view, an animal may be said to be more perfect in proportion as its relations with the external world are more varied ; in other words, the more numerous its functions are. Thus, an animal, like a quad- ruped, or a bird, which has the five senses fully developed, and which has, moreover, the faculty of readily trans- porting itself from place to place, is more perfect than a snail, whose senses are very obtuse, and whose motion is very sluggish. 14. In like manner, each of the organs, when separately considered, is found to have every degree of complication, and, consequently, every degree of nicety in the perform- ance of its function. Thus, the eye-spots of the star-fish and jelly-fish are probably endowed with merely the fac . 3* 30 SPHERE AND FUNDAMENTAL ulty of perceiving light, without the power of distinguishing objects. The keen eye of the bird, on the contrary, dis- cerns minute objects at a great distance, and when compared with the eye of a fly, is found to be not only more perfect, but constructed on an entirely different plan. It is the same with every other organ. 15. We understand the faculties of animals, and appre- ciate their value, just in proportion as we become acquainted with the instruments which execute them. The study of the functions or uses of organs, therefore, requires an exam- ination of their structure; they must never be disjoined, and must precede the systematic distribution of animals into classes, families, genera, and species. 16. In this general view of organization, we must ever bear in mind the necessity of carefully distinguishing be- tween affinities and analogies, a fundamental principle re- cognized even by Aristotle, the founder of scientific Zoology. Affinity or homology is the relation between organs or parts of the body which are constructed on the same plan, how- ever much they vary in form, or even serve for very dif- ferent uses. Analogy, on the contrary, indicates the simi- larity of purposes or functions performed by organs of dif- ferent structure. 17. Thus, there is an analogy between the wing of a bird and that of a butterfly, since both of them serve for flight. But there is no affinity between them, since, as we shall hereafter see, they differ totally in their anatomical relations. On the other hand, there is an affinity between the bird's wing and the hand of a monkey ; since, although they serve for different purposes, the one for flight, and the other for climbing, they are both constructed on the same plan. Accordingly, the bird is more nearly allied to the monkey than to the butterfly, though they both have in common the faculty of flight. Affinities, and not analogies, therefore, must £pide us in the arrangement of animals. PRINCIPLES OF ZOOLOGY. 31 18. Our investigations should not be limited to adult animals, but should also include the changes which they undergo during the whole course of their development. Otherwise, we shall be liable to exaggerate the importance of certain peculiarities of structure which have a predomi- nant character in the full-grown animal, but which are shaded off, and vanish, as we revert to the earlier periods of life. 19. Thus, for example, by regarding only adult individu- als, we might be induced to divide all animals into two groups, according to their mode of respiration ; uniting, on the one hand, all those which breathe by gills, and, on the other, those which breathe by lungs. But this distinction loses its importance, when we consider that various animals, for example, frogs, which respire by lungs in the adult state, have only gills when young. It is thence evident that the respiratory organs cannot be taken as a satisfactory basis of our fundamental classification. They are, as we shall see, subordinate to a more important system, namely, the nervous system. 20. Again, we have a means of appreciating the relative grade of animals by the comparative study of their devel- opment. It is evident that the caterpillar, in becoming a butterfly, passes from a lower to a higher state. Clearly, therefore, animals resembling the caterpillar, the worms, for instance, must occupy a lower rank than those approaching the butterfly, like most insects. There is no animal which does not undergo a series of changes similar to those of the caterpillar or the chicken ; only, in many of them, the most important ones occur before birth, during what is called the embryonic period. 21. The life of the chicken has not just commenced when it issues from the egg ; for if we break the egg some days previous to the time of hatching, we find in it a living ani- irial, which, although imperfect, is nevertheless a chicken : 32 SPHERE AND FUNDAMENTAL it has been developed from a hen's egg, and we know that, should it continue to live, it would infallibly display all the characteristics of the parent bird. Now, if there existed in Nature an adult bird as imperfectly organized as the chicken on the day, or the day before it was hatched, we should assign to it an inferior rank. 22. In studying the embryonic states of the mollusks or worms, we observe in them points of resemblance to many animals of a lower grade, to which they at length be- come entirely dissimilar. For example, the myriads of minute aquatic animals embraced under the name of Infu- soria, generally very simple in their organization, remind us of the embryonic forms of other animals. We shall have occasion to show that the Infusoria are not to be considered as a distinct class of animals, but that among them are found members of all the lower classes of animals, mollusks, crustaceans, worms, &c. ; and many of them are even found to belong to the Vegetable Kingdom. 23. Not less striking are the relations that exist between animals and the regions they inhabit. Every animal has its home. Animals of the cold regions are not the same as those of temperate climates; and these latter, in their turn, differ from those of tropical regions. Certainly, no one will maintain it to be the effect of accident that the monkeys, the most perfect of all brute animals, are found only in hot countries ; or that by chance merely the white bear and reindeer inhabit only cold regions. 24. Nor is it by chance that most of the largest animals, of every class, the whales, the aquatic birds, the sea-turtles, the crocodiles, dwell in the water rather than on the land. And while the water affords freedom of motion to the largest, it is also the home of the smallest of living beings, allow- ing a degree of liberty to their motion, which they could not enjoy elsewhere. PRINCIPLES OF ZOOLOGY. . 33 25. Nor are our researches to be limited to the animals now living. There are buried in the crust of the earth the remains of a great number of animals belonging to species which do not exist at the present day. Many of these remains present forms so extraordinary that it is almost im- possible to trace their alliance with any animal now living. In general, they bear a striking analogy to the em- bryonic forms of existing species. For example, the curi- ous fossils known under the name of Trilobites (Fig. 156) have a shape so singular that it might well be doubted to what group of articulated animals they belong. But if we compare them with the embryo crab, we find so remarkable a resemblance that we do not hesitate to refer them to the crustaceans. We shall also see that some of the Fishes of ancient epochs present shapes altogether peculiar to them- selves, (Fig. 157,) but resembling, in a striking manner, the embryonic forms of our common fishes. A determination of the successive appearance of animals in the order of time is, therefore, of much importance in assisting to decide the relative rank of animals. 26. Besides the distinctions to be derived from the varied structure of organs, there are others less subject to rigid analysis, but no less decisive, to be drawn from the imma- terial principle with which every animal is endowed. It is this which determines the constancy of species from genera- tion to generation, and which is the source of all the varied exhibitions of instinct and intelligence which we see dis- played, from the simple impulse to receive the food which is brought within their reach, as observed in the polyps, through the higher manifestations, in the cunning fox, the sagacious elephant, the faithful dog, to the exalted intellect of man, which is capable of indefinite expansion. 27. Such are some of the general aspects in which we are to contemplate the animal creation. Two points of 34 FUNDAMENTAL PRINCIPLES OF ZOOLOGY. view should never be lost sight of, nor disconnected, namely, the animal in respect to its own organism, and the animal in its relations to creation as a whole. By adopting too exclusively either of these points of view, we are in danger of falling either into gross materialism, or into vague and profitless pantheism. He who beholds in Nature nothing besides organs and their functions, may persuade himself that the animal is merely a combination of chemical and mechanical actions and reactions, and thus becomes a mate- rialist. 28. On the contrary, he who considers only the manifes- tations of intelligence and of creative will, without taking into account the means by which they are executed, and the physical laws by virtue of which all beings preserve their characteristics, will be very likely to confound the Creator with the creature. 29. It is only as it contemplates, at the same time, matter and mind, that Natural History rises to its true character and dignity, and leads to its worthiest end, by indicating to us, in Creation, the execution of a plan fully matured in the beginning, and undeviatingly pursued ; the work of a God infinitely wise, regjlating Nature according to immutable laws, which He ha? himself imposed on her. CHAPTER SECOND. GENERAL PROPERTIES OF ORGANIZED BODIES. SECTION I. ORGANIZED AND UNORGANIZED BODIES. 30. Natural History, in its broadest sense, embraces the study of all the bodies which compose the crust of the earth, or which are dispersed over its surface. 31. These bodies may be divided into two great groups ; inorganic bodies, (minerals and rocks,) and living or organ- ized bodies, (vegetables and animals.) These two groups have nothing in common, save the universal properties of matter, such as weight, extension, &c. They differ at the same time as to their form, their structure, their chemical composition, and their mode of existence. 32. The distinctive characteristic of inorganic bodies is rest; the distinctive trait of organized bodies is independent motion, life. The rock or the crystal, once formed, never changes from internal causes : its constituent parts or mole- cules invariably preserve the position which they have once taken in respect to each other. Organized bodies, on the contrary, are continually in action. The sap circulates in 36 ELEMENTARY STRUCTURE OF ORGANIZED BODIES. the tree, the blood flows through the animal, and in both there is, besides, the incessant movement of growth, decom- position, and renovation. 33. Their mode of formation is also entirely different. Unorganized bodies are either simple or made up of ele- ments unlike themselves ; and when a mineral is en- larged, it is simply by the outward addition of particles constituted like itself. Organized bodies are not formed m this manner. They always, and necessarily, are derived from beings similar to themselves ; and once formed, they always increase interstitially, by the successive assimilation of new particles, derived from various sources. 34. Finally, organized bodies are limited in their duration. Animals and plants are constantly losing some of their parts by decomposition during life, which at length cease to be supplied, and they die, after having lived for a longer or shorter period. Inorganic bodies, on the contrary, contain within themselves no principle of destruction ; and unless subjected to some foreign influence, a crystal or a rock would never change. The limestone and granite of our mountains remain just as they were formed in ancient geological epochs ; while numberless generations of plants and ani- mals have lived and perished upon their surface. . SECTION II. ELEMENTARY STRUCTURE OF ORGANIZED BODIES. 35. The exercise of the functions of life, which is the essential characteristic of organized bodies, (32,) requires a degree of flexibility of the organs. This is secured by means of a certain quantity of watery fluid, which pene- ELEMENTARY STRUCTURE OF ORGANIZED BODIES. 37 trates all parts of the body, and forms one of its principal constituents. 36. All living bodies, without exception, are made up of tissues so constructed as to be permeable to liquids. There is no part of the body, no organ, however hard and compact it may appear, which has not this peculiar structure. It ex- ists in the bones of animals, as well as in their flesh and fat ; in the wood, however solid, as well as in the bark and flowers of plants. It is to this general structure that the term or- ganism is now applied. Hence the collective name of organized beings,* which includes both the animal and the vegetable kingdoms. 37. The vegetable tissues and most of the organic struc- tures, when examined by the microscope in their early states of growth, are found to be composed of hollow vesicles or cells. The natural form of the cells is that of a sphere. or of an ellipsoid, as may be easily seen in many plants ; for example, in the tissue of the house-leek, (Fig. 1.) The intervals which sometimes separate them Fig- 1. from each other are called intercellular passages or spaces (m.) When the cellules are very numerous, and crowd each other, their outlines become angular, and the intercel- lular spaces disappear, as seen in figure 2, which represents * Formerly, animals and plants were said to be organized, because they are furnished with definite parts, called organs, which execute particular functions. Thus, animals have a stomach, a heart, lungs, &c. ; plants have leaves, petals, stamens, pistils, roots, &c, which, are indispensable to the maintenance of life and the perpetuation of the species. Since the discovery of the fundamental identity of structure of animal and vesptable tissues, a common denomination for this uniformity of texture has been justly preferred ; and the existence of tissues is now regarded as the basis of organization. 4 38 ELEMENTARY STRUCTURE OF ORGANIZED BODIES. the pith of the elder. They then have the form of a honey-comb ; whence they have derived their name of cellules. 38. All the organic tissues, whether animal or vegetable, originate from cells. The cell is to the organ- Fig. 2. ized body what the primary form of the crystal is to the secondary, in minerals. As a general fact, it may be stated j that animal cells are smaller than vegetable ^-r. /gv cells ; but they alike contain a central dot or h® (£0 vesicle, called nucleus. Hence such cells are called nucleated cells. (Fig;. 3, a.) Sometimes Fi°\ 3. . ' the nucleus itself contains a still smaller dot, called nucleolus, (h.) 39. The elementary structure of vegetables may be ob- served in every part of a plant, and its cellular character has been long known. But with the animal tissues there is far greater difficulty. Their variations are so great, and their transformations so diverse, that after the embryonic period it is sometimes impossible, even by the closest exam- ination, to detect their original cellular structure. 40. Several kinds of tissues have been designated in the animal structure ; but their differences are not always well marked, and they pass into each other by insensible shades. Their modifications are still the subject of investigation, and we refer only to the most important distinctions. 41. The areolar tissue consists of a network of delicate fibres, intricately interwoven so as to leave numberless communicating interstices, filled with fluid. It is inter- posed in layers of various thickness, between all parts of the body, and frequently accompanied by clusters of fat cells. The fibrous and the serous membranes are mere modifications of this tissue. 42. The cartilaginous tissue is composed of nucleated ELEMENTARY STRUCTURE OF ORGANIZED BODIES. 39 Fig. 4. Fig. 5. cells, the intercellular spaces being filled with a more com- pact substance, called the hyaline matter. Figure 4 repre- sents a slip of cartilage from the horse, under a magnifying power of one hundred and twen- ty diameters. 43. The osseous or bony tissue differs from the cartilaginous tissue, in having its meshes filled with salts of lime, instead of hyaline sub- stance, whence its compact and solid appear- ance. It contains, besides, minute, rounded, or star-like points, improperly called bone- corpuscles, which are found to be cavities or canals, sometimes radiated and branched, as is seen in figure 5, representing a section of a bone of a horse, magnified four hundred times. 44. The muscular tissue, which forms the flesh of ani- mals, is composed of bundles of parallel fibres, which pos- sess the peculiar property of contracting or shortening them- selves, under the influence of the nerves. In the muscles under the control of the will, the fibres are commonly crossed by very fine lines or wrinkles ; but not so in the involuntary muscles. Every one is sufficiently familiar with this tissue, in the form of lean meat. ' 45. The nervous tissue is of different kinds. In nerves proper, it is composed of very delicate fibres, which return back at their extremities, and form loops, as shown in figure 6, representing nervous threads as they terminate in the skin of a frog. The same fibrous structure is found in the white portion of the brain. the gray substance of the brain is composed of very minute granulations, interspersed with clusters of larger cells, as seen in figure 7. the Fig. 6. But 40 ELEMENTARY STRUCTURE OF ORGANIZED BODIES. 46. The tissues above enumerated differ from each other more widely, in proportion as they are examined in animals of a higher rank. As we descend in the scale of being, the differences become gradually effaced. The soft body of a snail is much more uniform in its composition than the body of a bird or a quadruped. Indeed, multitudes of animals are known to be made up of nothing but cells in contact with each other. Such is the case with the polyps; yet they contract, secrete, absorb, and repro- duce; and most of the Infusoria nove freely, by means of little fringes on their surface;, arising from a peculiar kind of cells. 47. A no less remarkable uniformity of structure is to be observed in the higher animals, in the earlier periods of their existence, before the body has arrived at its definite form. The head of the adult salmon, for instance, con- tains not only all the tissues we have mentioned, namely, bone, cartilage, muscle, nerve, brain, and membranes, but also bloodves- sels, glands, pigments, &c. Let us, however, examine it during the embryonic state, while it is yet in Fig- 8. the egg, and we find that the whole head is made up of cells which differ merely in their dimen- sions ; those at the top of the head being very small, those sur- rounding the eye a little larger, and those beneath being still larger, (Fig. 8.) It is only at a later period, after still further development, that these cellules become transformed, some of them into bone, others into blood, others into flesh, &c. 48. Again : the growth of the body, the introduction of various tissues, the change of form and structure, proceed in such a manner as to give rise to several cavities, variously combined among themselves, and each containing, at the end of these transformations, peculiar organs, or peculiar systems of organs. DIFFERENCES BETWEEN ANIMALS AND PLANTS. 41 SECTION III. DIFFERENCES BETWEEN ANIMALS AND PLANTS. 49. At first glance, nothing would seem more widely different than animals and plants. What is there in com- mon, for instance, between an oak or an elm, and the bird which seeks shelter amid their foliage ? 50. The differences are usually so obvious, that this question would be superfluous if applied only to the higher forms of the two kingdoms. But this contrast diminishes, in proportion as their structure is simplified ; and as we descend to the lower forms, the distinctions are so few and so feebly characterized, that it becomes at length dif- ficult to pronounce whether the object we have before us is an animal or a plant. Thus, the sponges have so great a resemblance to some of the polypi, that they have generally been classed among animals, although in reality they be- long to the vegetable kingdom. 51. Animals and plants differ in the relative predomi- nance of the elements, oxygen, carbon, hydrogen and nitro- gen, of which they are composed. In vegetables, only a small proportion of nitrogen is found ; while it enters largely into the composition of the animal tissues. 52. Another peculiarity of the Animal Kingdom is, the presence of large, distinctly limited cavities, usually intended for the lodgment of certain organs ; such is the skull and the chest in the higher animals, the cavity of the gills in fishes, and of the abdomen, or general cavity of the body, which exists in all animals, without exception, for the pur- pose of digestion, or the reception of the digestive organs. 53. The well-defined and compact forms of the organs 4* 42 DIFFERENCES BETWEEN ANIMALS AND PLANTS. lodged, in these cavities, is a peculiarity belonging to animals only. In plants, the organs designed for special purposes are never embodied into one mass, but are distributed over various parts of the individual. Thus, the leaves, which answer to the lungs, instead of being condensed into one organ, are scattered independently in countless numbers over the branches. Nor is there any organ corresponding to the brain, the heart, the liver, or the stomach. 54. Moreover, the presence of a proper digestive cavity involves marked differences between the two kingdoms, in respect to alimentation or the use of food. In plants, the fluids absorbed by the roots are carried, through the trunk and all the branches, to the whole plant, before they arrive at the leaves, where they are to be digested. In animals, on the contrary, the food is at once received into the diges- tive cavity, where it is elaborated ; and it is only after it has been thus dissolved and prepared, that it is introduced into the other parts of the body. The food of animals consists of organized substances, while that of vegetables is derived from inorganic substances ; and they produce albumen, sugar, starch, &c, while animals consume them. 55. Plants commence their development from a single point, the seed, and, in like manner, all animals are devel- oped from the egg. But the animal germ is the result of successive transformations of the yolk, while nothing similar takes place in the plant. The subsequent development of individuals is for the most part different in the two kingdoms. No limit is usually placed to the increase of plants ; trees put out new branches and new roots as long as they live. Animals, on the contrary, generally have a limited size and figure ; and these once attained, the subsequent changes are accomplished without any increase of volume, or essential alteration of form ; while the appearance of most vegetables is repeatedly modified, in a notable manner, by the develop- DIFFERENCES BETWEEN ANIMALS AND PLANTS. 43 ment of new branches. Some of the lowest animals, how- ever, the polyps for instance, increase in a somewhat analo- gous manner, (§ 329, 330.) 56. In the effects they produce upon the air by respira- tion, there is an important difference. Animals consume the oxygen, and give out carbonic acid gas, which is de- structive to animal life ; while plants, by respiration, which they in most instances perform by means of the leaves, reverse the process, and thus furnish oxygen, which is so essential to animals. If an animal be confined in a small portion of air, or water containing air, this soon becomes so vitiated by respiration, as to be unfit to sustain life ; but if living plants are enclosed with the animal at the same time, the air is maintained pure, and no difficulty is experienced. The practical effect of this compensation, in the economy of Nature, is obviously most important ; vegetation restoring to the atmosphere what is consumed by animal respiration, combustion, &c, and vice versa. ' 57. But there are two things which, more than all others, distinguish the animal from the plant, namely, the power of moving itself or its parts at will, and the power of perceiv- ing other objects or their influences ; in other words, volun- tary motion and sensation. 58. All animals are susceptible of undergoing pleasure and pain. Plants have also a certain sensibility. They wither and fade under a burning sun, or when deprived of moisture ; and they die when subjected to too great a de- gree of cold, or to the action of poisons. But they have no consciousness of these influences, and suffer no pain ; while animals under similar circumstances suffer. Hence they have been called animate deings, in opposition to plants, which are inanimate oeings. CHAPTER THIRD. FUNCTIONS AND ORGANS OF ANIMAL LIFE. SECTION I. OF THE NERVOUS SYSTEM AND GENERAL SENSATION. 59. Life, in animals, is manifested by two sorts of func- tions, viz. : First, the peculiar functions of animal life, or those of relation, which include the functions of sensation and voluntary motion ; those which enable us to approach, and perceive our fellow beings and the objects about us, and to bring us into relation with them : Second, the functions of vegetative life, which are nutrition in its widest sense, and reproduction ;* those indeed which are essential to the maintenance and perpetuation of life. 60. The two distinguishing characteristics of animals, namely, sensation and motion, (57,) depend upon special systems of organs, which are wanting in plants, the nervous system and the muscular system under its influence. The nervous system, therefore, is the grand characteristic of the animal body. It is the centre from which all the commands of the will issue, and to which all sensations tend. * This distinction is the more important, inasmuch as the organs of animal life, and those of vegetative life, spring from very distinct layers of the embryonic membrane. The first are developed from the upper layer, and the second from the lower layer of the germ of the animal. See Chapter on Embryology, p. 112. NERVOUS SYSTEM AND GENERAL SENSATION. 45 61. Greatly as the form, the arrangement, and the vol- ume of the nervous system vary in different animals, they may all be reduced to four principal types, which correspond, moreover, to the four great departments of the Animal Kingdom. In the vertebrate animals, namely, the fishes, reptiles, birds, and mammals, the nervous sys- tem is composed of two prin- cipal masses, the spinal mar- row, (Fig. 9, c,) which runs along the back, and the brain, contained within the skull.* The volume of the brain is proportionally larger as the animal occupies a more elevated rank in the scale of being. Man, who stands at the head of Crea- tion, is in this respect also the most highly endowed being. Fig. 9. 62. With the brain and spinal marrow are connected the nerves, which are distributed, in the form of branching threads, through every part of the body. The branches which unite with the brain are twelve pairs, called the cere- * The brain is composed of several distinct parts which vary greatly, in their relative proportions, in different animals, as will appear hereafter. They are — 1. The medulla oblongata; 2. Cerebellum; 3. Optic lobes; 1. Cerebral hemispheres; 5. Olfactory lobes; 6. the pituitary body ; 7- the pineal body. (See figures 9 and 21.) The spinal marrow is made up by the union of four nervous columns. 46 NERVOUS SYSTEM AND GENERAL SENSATION. bral nerves, and are designed chiefly for the organs of sense located in the head. Those which join the spinal marrow are also in pairs, one pair for each vertebra or joint of the back. The number of pairs varies, therefore, in different classes and families, according to the number of vertebrae. Each nerve is double, in fact, being composed of two threads, which at their junction with the spinal mar- row are separate, and afterwards accompany each other throughout their whole course. The anterior thread trans- mits the commands of the will which induce motion; the other receives and conveys impressions to the brain, to pro- duce sensations. 63. In the Articulated animals, comprising the crabs, barnacles, worms, spi- ders, insects, and oth- er animals formed of rings, the nervous sys- Fig. 10. tern consists of a se- ries of small centres or swellings, called ganglions, (Fig. 10,) placed beneath the alimentary canal, on the floor of the gen- eral cavity of the body, and connected by threads ; and of a more considerable mass placed above the oesophagus or throat, connected with the lower ganglions by threads which form a collar around the alimentary canal. The number of ganglions generally corresponds to the number of rings. 64. In the Mollusks, (Fig. II,) the nervous system con- sists of a single ganglionic circfe, the principal swell- ings of which are placed symmetrically above and below the oesophagus, and from whence the filaments, FiS- n- which supply the organs in different directions, take their origin. NERVOUS SYSTEM AND GENERAL .jfiNSATION. 47 65. In the Radiata, (Fig. 12,) the nervous system is re- duced to a single ring, encircling the mouth, and giving off threads towards the circumference. It dif- fers essentially from that of the Mollusks, by being disposed in a horizontal position, and by its star- like form. 66. The nerves branch off and diffuse sensibility to every portion of the body, and thereby men and Fig. 12- the higher animals are enabled to gain a knowledge of the general properties of the objects which surround them ; every point of the body being made capable of determining whether an object is hot or cold, dry or moist, hard or soft, &c. There are some parts, however, the ends of the fingers, for exam- ple, in which this sensibility is especially acute, and these also receive a larger supply of nerves. ' 67. On the contrary, those parts which are destitute cf sensibility, such as the feathers of birds, the wool of ani- mals, or the hair of man, are likewise destitute of nerves. But the conclusive proof that sensibility resides in the nerves is, that when the nerve which supplies any member of the body is severed, that member at once becomes insensible. 68. There are animals in which the faculty of percep- tion is limited to this general sense ; but their number is small, and, in general, they occupy the lowest place in the series. Most animals, in addition to the general sensibility, are endowed with peculiar organs for certain kinds of per- ceptions, which are acted upon by certain kinds of stimuli, as light, sound and odor, and which are called the senses. These are live in number, namely : sight, hearing, smell, taste, and touch. 48 SPECIAL SENSES. SECTION II. OF THE SPECIAL SENSES. 1. Of Sight. 69. Sight is the sense by which light is perceived, and by means of which the outlines, dimensions, relative posi- tion, color and brilliancy of objects are discerned. Some of these properties may be also ascertained, though in a less perfect manner, by the sense of touch. We may obtain as idea of the size and shape of an object, by handling it ; but the properties that have a relation to light, such as color and brilliancy, and also the form and size of bodies that are be- yond our reach, can be recognized by sight only. 70. The eye is the organ of vision. The number, struc- ture, and position of the eyes in the body is considerably varied in the different classes. But whatever may be their position, these organs in all the higher animals are in connec- tion with particular nerves, called the optic nerves, (Fig. 13, a.) In the vertebrates, these are the second pair of the cer- ebral nerves, and arise directly from the middle mass of the brain, (Fig. 21, Z>,) which, in the embryo, is the most con- siderable of all. 71. Throughout the whole series of vertebrate animals, the eyes are only two in num- ber, and occupy bony cavities of the skull, called the orbits. The organ is a globe or hollow sphere formed by three princi- pal membranes, enclosed one within the other, and filled with transparent matter. Figure 13 represents a vertical section OF SIGHT. 49 through the eye, from before backwards, and will give an dea of the relative position of these different parts. 72. The outer coat is called the sclerotic, (b ;) it is a thick, firm, white membrane, having its anterior portion transparent. Th^s transparent segment, which seems set in the opaque portion, like a watch-glass in its rim, is called the cornea, (f.) 73. The inside of the sclerotic is lined by a thin, dark- colored membrane, the choroid, (c.) It becomes detached from the sclerotic when it reaches the edge of the cornea, and forms a curtain behind it. This curtain gives to the eye its peculiar color, and is called the iris, (g.) The iris read- ily contracts and dilates, so as to enlarge or diminish an open- ing at its centre, the pupil, according as more or less light is desired. Sometimes the pupil is circular, as in man, the dog, the monkey ; sometimes in the form of a vertical ellipse, as in the cat ; or it is elongated sidewise, as in the sheep. 74. The third membrane is the retina, (d.) It is formed 'by the optic nerve, which enters the back part of the eye, by an opening through both the sclerotic and choroid coats, and expands upon the interior into a whitish and most delicate membrane. It is upon the retina that the images of objects are received, and produce impressions, which are conveyed by the nerve to the brain. 75. The fluids which occupy the cavity of the eye are of different densities. Behind, and directly opposite to the pupil, is placed a spheroidal body, called the crystalline lens, (e.) It is tolerably firm, perfectly transparent, and composed of layers of unequal density, the interior being always more compact than the exterior. Its form varies in different classes of animals. In general, it is more convex in aquatic than in land animals ; whilst with the cornea it is directly the con- trary, being flat in the former, and convex in the latter. 76. By means of the iris, the cavity, (i,) in front of the crys- 5 50 SPECIAL SENSES. talline lens is divided into two compartments, called .he an terior and posterior chambers. The fluid which fills these chambers is a clear watery liquid, called the aqueous humor. The portion of the globe behind the lens, which is much the largest, is filled by a gelatinous liquid, perfectly transparent, like that of the chambers, but somewhat more dense. This is called the vitreous humor, (h.) 77. The object of this apparatus is to receive the rays of light, which diverge from all points of bodies placed before it, and to bring them again to a point upon the retina. It is a well-known fact, that when a ray of light passes obliquely from one medium to another of different density, it will be refracted or turned out of its course more or less, according to the difference of this density, and the obliquity at which the ray strikes the surface. This may be illustrated by the following figure, (Fig. 14.) A/ E Fig. 14. The ray a c, which strikes the cornea A B perpendicularly, continues without deviation, until it reaches the bottom of the eye at c. But the rays a m and a n, which strike the eye obliquely, change their direction, and instead of proceeding onward to m g and n d, take the direction m i and n f. A still further refraction, though less considerable, is occasioned by passing through the crystalline lens C D, and the vitreous humor, so that the two rays, m i and nf, will at last meet in a point. This point is called the focus, (c,) and in distinct vision is always precisely at the retina, E F. 78. From this arrangement, the image found upon the OF SIGHT. 51 retina will be inverted. We may satisfy ourselves cf this by direct observation. The eye of the white rabbit being destitute of the black pigment of the choroid, is quite trans- parent. Take the eye, soon after the death of the animal, and arrange it in one end of a tube, so that the cornea will face outwards ; then if we look in at the other end of the tube, we may see objects to which it is directed exactly pictured upon the retina, but in a reversed position. 79. The mechanical structure of the eye may be per- fectly imitated by art. Indeed, the camera obscura is an instrument constructed on the very same plan. By it, exter- nal objects are pictured upon a screen, placed at the bottom of the instrument, behind a magnifying lens. The screen represents the retina ; the dark walls of the instrument represent the choroid ; and the cornea, the crystalline lens and the vitreous humor combined, are represented by the magnifying lens. But there is this important difference, that the eye has the power of changing its form, and of adapt- ing itself so as to discern with equal precision very remote, as well as very near, objects. 80. By means of muscles which are attached to the ball, the eyes may be rolled in every direction, so as to view ob- jects on all sides, without moving the head. The eyes are usually protected by lids, which are two in the mammals, and generally furnished with a range of hairs at their edges, called eye-lashes. Birds have a third lid, which is vertical; this is also found in most of the reptiles and a few mam- mals. In fishes, the lids are wanting, or immovable. 81. The eye constructed as above described is called a simple eye, and belongs more especially to the vertebrate animals. In man, it arrives at its highest perfection. In him, the eye also performs a more exalted office than mere vision. It is a mirror, in which the inner man is reflected. His passions, his joys, and his sorrows, his inmost self, are 52 SPECIAL SENSES. revealed, with the utmost fidelity, in the expression of his eye, and it has been rightly called " the window of the soul." 82. Many of the invertebrate animals have the eye constructed upon the same plan as that of the vertebrate animals, but with this essential difference, that the optic nerve which forms the retina is not derived from a ner- vous centre, analogous to the brain, but arises from one of the ganglions. Thus, the eye of the cuttle-fish contains all the essential parts, of the eye of the superior animals, and, what is no less important, they are only two in number, placed upon the sides of the head. 83. The snail and kindred animals have, in like manner, only two eyes, mounted on the tip of a long stalk, (the tentacle,) or situated at its base, or on a short pedestal by its side. Their struc- ture is less perfect than in the cuttle- Fig. 15. fisn? but still there is a crystalline lens, and more or less distinct traces of the vitreous body. Some bivalve mollusks, the scollops for example, have likewise a crystalline lens, but instead of two eyes, they are furnished with numerous eye-spots, which are arranged like a border around the lower margin of the animal. 84. In spiders, the eyes are likewise simple, and usually „ ^tk eight in number. These little organs, usually called ocelli, instead of being placed on the sides of the body or of the head, occupy the anterior part of the back. All the essen- tial parts of a simple eye, ihe corner, the crystalline lens, the vitreous body, are found in OF SIGHT. 53 them, and even the choroid, which presents itself in the form of a black ring around the crystalline lens. Many in sects, in their caterpillar state, also have simple eyes. 85. Rudiments of eyes have been observed in very many of the worms. They generally appear as small black spots on the head ; such as are seen on the head of the Leech, the Planaria and the Nereis. In these latter animals there are four spots. According to Muller, they are small bodies, rounded behind, and flattened in front, composed of a black, cup-shaped membrane, containing a small white, opaque body, which seems to be a continuation of the optic nerve. It cannot be doubted, therefore, that these are eyes ; but as they lack the optical apparatus which produces images, we must suppose that they can only receive a general impression of light, without the power of discerning objects. 86. Eye-spots, very similar to those of the Nereis, are found at the extremity of the rays of some of the star-fishes, in the sea-urchins, at the mar- gin of many Medusae, and in some Polypi. Ehrenberg has shown that similar spots also exist in a large number of the Infusoria. FiS- V?- 87. In all the above-mentioned animals, the eyes, what- ever their number, are apart from each other. But there is still another type of simple eyes, known as aggregate eyes. In some of the millipedes, the pill-bugs, for instance, the eyes are collected into groups, like those of spiders ; each eye inclosing a crystalline lens and a vitreous, body, surrounded by a retina and choroid. Such eyes consequently form a 5* 54 SPECIAL SENSES. natural transition to the compound eyes of insects, to which we now give our attention. 88. Compound eyes have the same general form as simple eyes ; they are placed either on the sides of the head, vis in insects, or supported on pedestals, as in the crabs. But if we examine an eye of this kind by a magnifying lens, we find its surface to be composed of an infinite number of angular, usually six-sided faces. If these facettes are re- moved, we find beneath a corresponding number of cones, (c,) side by side, five or six times as long as they are broad, and arranged like rays around the optic nerve, from which each one receives a little filament, so as to present, according to Miiller, the following disposition. (Fig. 18.) The cones are per- fectly transparent, but sepa- rated from each other by walls of pigment, in such a manner that only those rays which are parallel to the axes can reach the retina A ; all those which enter ob- liquely are lost ; so that of Fig. 18. all the rays which proceed from the points a and 5, only the central ones in each pencil will act upon the optic nerve, (d ;) the others will strike against the walls of the cones. To compensate for the disadvantage of such an arrangement, and for the want of motion, the number of facettes is greatly multi- plied, so that no less than 25,000 have been counted in a single eye. The image on the retina, in this case, may be compared to a mosaic, composed of a great number of small images, each of them representing a portion of the figure. The entire picture is, of course, more perfect, OF HEARING. 55 in proportion as the pieces are smaller and more nu- merous. 89. Compound eyes are destitute of the optical apparatus necessary to concentrate the rays of light, and cannot adapt themselves to the distance of objects ; they see at a certain distance, but cannot look at pleasure.- The perfection of their sight depends on the number of facettes or cones, and the manner in which they are placed. Their field of vision is wide, when the eye is prominent ; it is very limited, on the contrary, when the eye is flat. Thus the dragon-flies, on account of the great prominency of their eyes, see equally well in all directions, before, behind, or laterally ; whilst the water-bugs, which have the eyes nearly on a level with the head, can see to only a very short distance before them. 90. If there be animals destitute of eyes, they are either of a very inferior rank, such as most of the polypi, or else they are animals which live under unusual circumstan- ces, such as the intestinal worms. Even among the ver- tebrates, there are some that lack the faculty of sight, as the Myxine glutinosa, which has merely a rudimentary eye concealed under the skin, and destitute of a crystalline lens. Others, which live in darkness, have not even rudimentary eyes, as, for example, that curious fish (Amblyopsis spelaus,) which lives in the Mammoth Cave, and which appears to want even the orbital cavity. The craw-fishes, (Astacus pellucidus,) of this same cave, are also blind ; having merely the pedicle for the eyes, without any traces of fagettes. 2. Hearing. 91. To hear, is to perceive sounds. The faculty of per- ceiving sounds is seated in a peculiar apparatus, the Ear, which is constructed with a view to collect and augment the sonorous vibrations of the atmosphere, and convey them to 56 SPECIAL SENSES. the acoustic or auditory nerve, which arises from the poste- rior part of the brain. (Fig. 21, c.) 92. The ears never exceed two in number, and are placed, in all the vertebrates, at the hinder part of the head. In a large proportion of animals, as the dog, horse, rabbit, and most of the mammals, the external parts of the ear are generally quite conspicuous ; and as they are, at the same time, quite movable, they become one of the promi- nent features of physiognomy. 93. These external appendages, however, do not consti- tute the organ of hearing, properly speaking. The true seat of hearing is deeper, quite in the interior of the head. It is usually a very complicated apparatus, especially in the supe- rior animals. In mammals it is composed of three parts, the external ear, the middle ear, and the internal ear ; and its structure is as follows : (Fig. 19.) 94. The external ear, which is popularly regarded as the ear, consists of the conch, (a,) and the canal which leads from it the external auditory passage, (b.) The first is a OF HEARING 57 gristl j expansion, in the form of a horn or a funnel, the object of which is to collect the waves of sound ; for this reason , animals prick up their ears when they listen. The ear of man is remarkable for being nearly immovable. Therefore, persons, whose hearing is deficient, employ an artificial trumpet, by which the vibrations from a much more extended surface may be collected. The external ear is peculiar to mammals, and is wanting even in some aquatic species of these, such as the seals and the Orni- thorhyncus. 95. The middle ear has received the name of the tym- pajiic cavity, (k.) It is separated from the auditory passage by a membranous partition, the tympanum or drum, (c ;) though it still communicates with the open air by means of a narrow canal, called the Eustachian tube, (i,) which opens at the back part of the mouth. In the interior of the chamber are- four little bones, of singular forms, which anatomists have distinguished by the names of malleus, (Fig. 20, c,) incus, (n,) stapes, (s,) and 05 orbicu- lare, (0 ;) which are articulated to- gether, so as to form a continuous chain, as here represented, magnified. 96. The internal ear, which is lg" also denominated the labyrinth, is an irregular cavity formed in the most solid part of the temporal bone, beyond the chamber of the middle ear, from which it is separated by a bony partition, which is perforated by two small holes, called, from their form, the round and the oval apertures, the fora- men rotundum, (Fig. 19, g,) and the foramen ovale, (h.) The first is closed by a membrane, similar to that of the tympa- num, while the latter is closed by the stapes, one of the little bones in the chamber. 58 SPECIAL SENSES. 97. Three parts are to be distinguished in the labyrinth, namely, the vestibule, which is the part at the entrance of the cavity ; the semicircular canals, (d,) which occupy its upper part, in the form of three arched tubes ; and the cochlea, which is a narrow canal placed beneath, at the lower part of the vestibule, having exactly the form of a snail-shell, (e.) The entire labyrinth is filled with a watery fluid, in which membranous sacs or pouches float. Within these sacs, the auditory nerve (f) terminates. These pouches, therefore, are the actual seat of hearing, and the most essential parts of the ear. The auditory nerve is admitted to them by a long passage, the internal auditory canal. 98. By this mechanism, the vibrations of the air are first collected by the external ear, whence they are conveyed along the auditory passage, at the bottom of which is the tympanum. The tympanum, by its delicate elasticity, aug- ments the vibrations, and transmits them to the internal ear, partly by means of the little bones in the chamber, which are disposed in such a manner that the stapes exactly fits the oval aperture, (foramen ovale;) and partly by means of the air which strikes the membrane covering the round aperture, (g,) and produces vibrations there, corresponding to those of the tympanum. After .all these modifications, the sonorous vibrations at last arrive at the labyrinth and the" auditory nerve, which transmits the impression to the brain. 99. But the mechanism of hearing is not so complicated in all classes of animals, and is found to be more and more simplified as we descend the series. In birds, the middle and interior ears are constructed on the same plans as in the mammals ; but the outer ear no longer exists, and the audi- tory passage, opening on a level with the surface of the head behind the eyes, is merely surrounded by a circle of peculi- arly formed feathers. The bones of the middle ear are also 'ess n -merous, there being generally but one. OF HEARING. 59 100. In reptiles, the whole exterior ear disappears ; the auditory passage is always wanting, and the tympanum be- comes external. In some toads, even the middle ear also is compfetely wanting. The fluid of the vestibule is charged with salts of lime, which frequently give it a milky appear- ance, and which, when examined by the microscope, are found to bo composed of an infinite number of crystals. 101. In fishes, the middle and external ear are both wanting; and the organ of hearing is reduced to a mem- branous vestibule, situated in the cavity of the skull, and surmounted by semicircular canals, from one to three in number. The liquid of the vestibule contains chalky con- cretions of irregular forms, which are called Otolites, the use of which is doubtless to render the vibration of sounds more sensible. 102. In crabs, the organ of hearing is found on the lower face of the head, at the base of the large antenna?. It is a bony chamber closed by a membrane, in the interior of which is suspended a membranous sac filled with water. On this sac, the auditory nerve is expanded. In the cuttlefish, the vestibule is a simple excavation of the cartilage of the head, containing a little membranous sac, in which the audi- tory nerve terminates. 103. Finally, some insects, the grasshopper for instance, have an auditory apparatus, no longer situated in the head, as with other animals, but in the legs ; and from this fact, we may be allowed to suppose, that if no organ of hearing has yet been found in most insects, it is because it has beer sought for in the head only. 104. It appears from these examples, that the part of the organ of hearing which is uniformly present in all animals furnished with ears, is precisely that in which the auditory nerve ends. This, therefore, is the essential part of the or- gan. The other parts of the apparatus, the tympanum, auditory passage, and even the semicircular canals, have for 60 SPECIAL SENSES. their object merely to aid the perception of sound with more precision and accuracy. Hence we may conclude that the sense of hearing is dull in animals where the organ is re- duced to its most simple form ; and that animals which have merely a simple membranous sac, without tympanum and auditory passage, as the fishes, or without semicircular canals, as the crabs, perceive sounds in but a very imper- fect manner. 3. Of Smell 105. Smell is the faculty of perceiving odors, and is a highly important sense to many ani- mals. Like sight and hearing, smell depends upon special nerves, the olfacto- ry, (a,) which are the first pair of cer- ebral nerves, and which, in the em- bryo, are direct pro- longations of the brain. 106. The organ of smell is the Nose. Throughout the series of vertebrates, it makes a part of the face, and in man, by reason of its prominent form, it becomes one of the dominant traits of his countenance ; in other mammals, the nose loses this prominency by degrees, and the nostrils no longer open downwards, but forwards. In birds, the position of the nostrils is a little different ; they open farther back and higher, at the origin of the beak, (f) 107. The nostrils are usually two in number. Some fishes have four. They are similar openings, separated by a par- tition upon the middle line of the body. In man and the Fig. 21. a, olfactory nerve ; b, optic nerve ; c, audi- tory nerve ; d, cerebrum ; e, cerebellum ; f, nostril. OF SMELL. 61 mammals, the outer walls of the nose are composed of carti- lage ; but internally, the nostrils communicate with bony cav- ities situated in the bones of the face and forehead. These cavities are lined by a thick membrane, the pituitary mem brane, on which are expanded the nerves of smell, namely, the olfactory nerves, and some filaments of the nerve which goes to the face. . 108. The process of smelling is as follows. Odors are particles of extreme delicacy which escape from very many bodies, and are diffused through the air. These particles excite the nerves of smell, which transmit the impressions made on them to the brain. To facilitate the perception of odors, the nostrils are placed in the course of the respiratory passages, so that all the odors which are diffused in the air inspired, pass over the pituitary membrane. 109. The acuteness of the sense of smell depends on the extent to which the membrane is developed. Man is not so well endowed in this respect as many animals, which have the internal surface of the nostrils extremely complicated, as it is especially among the beasts of prey. 110. The sense of smell in Reptiles is less delicate than in the mammals ; the pituitary membrane, also, is less de- veloped. Fishes are probably still less favored in this respect. As they perceive odors through the medium of water, we should anticipate that the structure of their apparatus would be different from that of animals which breathe in the air. Their nostrils are mere superficial pouch- es, lined with a membrane gathered into folds which gen- erally radiate from a centre, but are sometimes arranged in parallel ridges on each side of a central band. As the perfection of smell depends on the amount of surface exposed, it follows that those fishes which have these folds most multiplied are also those in which this sense is most acute. 6 62 SPECIAL SENSES. 111. No special apparatus for smell has yet been found in Invertebrates. And yet there can be no doubt that insects, crabs, and some mollusks perceive odors, since they are attracted from a long distance by the odor of objects. Some of these animals may be deceived by odors similar to those of their prey ; which clearly shows that they are led to it by this sense. The carrion fly will deposit its eggs on plants which have the smell of tainted flesh. 4. Of Taste. 112. Taste is the sense by which the flavor of bodies is perceived. That the flavor of a body may be perceived, it must come into immediate contact with the nerves of taste ; these nerves are distributed at the entrance to the digestive tube, on the surface of the tongue and the palate. By this sense, animals are guided in the choice of their food, and warned to abstain from what is noxious. There is an inti- mate connection between the taste and the smell, so that both these senses are called into requisition in the selection of food. 113. The nerves of taste are not so strictly special as those of sight and hearing. They do not proceed from one single trunk, and, in the embryo, do not correspond to an isolated part of the brain. The tongue, in particular, receives nerves from several trunks'; and taste is perfect in proportion as the nerves which go to the tongue are more minutely dis- tributed. The extremities of the nerves generally terminate in little asperities of the surface, called papillce. Sometimes these papillae are very harsh, as in the cat and the ox ; and again they are very delicate, as in the human tongue, in that of the dog, horse, &c. 114. Birds have the tongue cartilaginous, sometimes be- set with little stiff points; sometimes fibrous or fringed at the edges. In the parrots, it is thick and fleshy; OF TOUCH. 63 or it is even barbed at its point, as in the woodpeckers. In some reptiles, the crocodile for example, the tongue is adherent ; in others, on the contrary, it is capable of extensive motion, and serves as an organ of touch, as in the serpents, or it may be thrust out to a great length to take prey, like that of the chameleon, toad, and frog. In fishes, it is usually cartilaginous, as in birds, generally adherent, and its surface is frequently covered with teeth. 115. It is to be presumed, that in animals which have a cartilaginous tongue, the taste must be very obtuse, especial- ly in those which, like most fishes, and many granivorous birds, swallow their prey without mastication. In fishes, especially, the taste is very imperfect, as is proved by theii readily swallowing artificial bait. It is probable that they are guided in the choice of their prey by sight, rather than by taste or smell. 116. Some of the inferior animals select their food with no little discernment. Thus, flies will select the sugary portions of bodies. Some of the mollusks, as the snails f6r example, are particularly dainty in the choice of their food. In general, the taste is but imperfectly developed, except in the mammals, and they are the only animals which enjoy the flavor of their food. With man, this sense, like others, may be greatly improved by exercise ; and it is even capable of being brought to a high degree of delicacy. 5. Of Touch. 117. The sense of touch is merely a peculiar manifesta- tion of the general sensibility, seated in the skin, and dependent upon the nerves of sensation, which expand over the surface of the body. By the aid of this general sensi- bility, we learn whether a body is hot or cold, wet or dry. We may also, by simple contact, gain an idea, to a certain 64 SPECIAL SENSES. extent, of the form and consistence of a body, as, for exam- ple, whether it be sharp or blunt, soft or hard. 118. This faculty resides more especially in the hand, which is not only endowed with a more delicate tact, but, owing to the disposition of the fingers, and the opposition of the thumb to the other fingers, is capable of so moulding itself around objects, as to multiply the points of contact. Hence, touch is an attribute of man, rather than of other animals ; for among these latter, scarcely any, except the monkeys, have the faculty of touch in their hands, or, as it is technically termed, of palpation. 119. In some animals, this faculty is exercised by other organs. Thus the trunk of the elephant is a most perfect organ of touch ; and probably the mastodon, whose numer- ous relics are found scattered in the superficial layers of the earth's crust, was furnished with a similar organ. Serpents make use of their tongue for touch ; insects employ their palpi, and snails their tentacles, for the same purpose. 6. The Voice. 120. Animals have not only the power of perceiving, but many of them have also the faculty of producing sounds of every variety, from the roaring of the lion to the song of the bird as it salutes the rising sun. It is moreover to be remarked that those which are endowed with a voice, likewise have the organ of hearing well developed. 121. Animals employ their voice either for communica- tion with each other, or to express their sensations, their en- joyments, their sufferings. Nevertheless, this faculty is en- joyed by but a small minority of animals ; with but very few exceptions, only the mammals, the birds, and a few reptiles are endowed with it. All others are dumb. Worms ard insects have no true voice ; for we must not OF THE VOICE. 65 mistake for it the buzzing of the bee, which is merely a noise created by the vibration of the wings ; nor the grating shriek of the Locust, (grasshopper,) caused by the friction of his legs against his wings ; nor the shrill noises of the cricket, or the tell-tale call of the katydid, produced by the friction of the wing covers upon each other, and in numerous similar cases which might be cited. 122. Consequently, were the mammals, the birds, and the frogs to be struck out of existence, the whole Animal King- dom would be dumb. It is difficult for us, living in the midst of the thousand various sounds which strike our ear from all sides, to conceive of such a state. Yet such a state did doubtless prevail for thousands of ages, on the surface of our globe, when the watery world alone was inhabited, and be- fore man, the birds, and the mammals were called into being. 123. In man and the mammals, the voice is formed in an organ called the larynx, situated at the upper part of the windpipe, below the bone of the tongue, (a.) The human larynx, the part called Adam's apple, is composed of several cartilaginous pieces, called the thyroid cartilage, (&,) the cricoid cartilage, (e,) and the small arytenoid cartilages. Within these are found two large folds of elastic substance, known by the name of the vocal cords, (m.) Two other analogous folds, the superior ligaments of the glottis, (n,) are situated a little above the preceding. The glottis (o) is the space between these four folds. The arrangement of the vocal cords, and of the interior of the glottis in man, is indicated by dotted lines, in Fig. 22. 124. The mechanism of the voice is as follows : the air, on its way to the lungs, passes the vocal cords. So long as these are in repose, no sound is produced; but the mome.it they are made tense they narrow the aperture, and oppose 6* 66 OF THE VOICE. an obstacle to the current of air, and it cannot pass without causing them to vibrate. These vibrations produce the voice ; and as the vocal cords are susceptible of different degrees of tension, these tensions determine different sounds ; giving an acute tone when the tension is great, but a grave and dull one when the tension is feeble. 125. Some mammals have, in addition, large cavities which communicate with the glottis, and into which the air reverberates, as it passes the larynx. This arrangement is especially remarkable in the howling monkeys, which are dis- tinguished above all other animals for their deafening howls. 126. In birds, the proper larynx is very simple, destitute of vocal cords, and incapable of producing sounds ; but at the lower end of the windpipe there is a second or inferior larynx, which is very complicated in structure. It' is a kind of bony drum, (a,) having with- in it two glottides, formed at the top of the two branches (bb) of the windpipe, (c,) each provided with two vocal cords. The dif- ferent pieces of this apparatus are moved by peculiar muscles, the number of which varies in different families. In birds which have a very monotonous cry, such as the gulls, the herons, FlS- 23- the cuckoos, and the mergansers, (Fig. 23,) there is but one or two pairs ; parrots have three ; and the birds of song have five. 127. Man alone, of all the animal creation, has the power of giving to the tones he utters a variety of definite or ar- ticulate sounds ; in other words, he alone has the gift of speech. CHAPTER FOURTH. OF INTELLIGENCE AND INSTINCT. 128. Besides the material substance of which the body is constructed, there is also an immaterial principle, which, though it eludes detection, is none the less real, and to which wc are constantly obliged to recur in considering the phenomena of life. It originates with the body, and is de- veloped with it, while yet it is totally apart from it. The study of this inscrutable principle belongs to one of the highest branches of Philosophy ; and we shall here merely allude to some of its phenomena which elucidate the devel- opment and rank of animals. 129. The constancy of species is a phenomenon depend- ing on the immaterial nature. Animals, and plants also, produce their kind, generation after generation. We shall hereafter show that all animals may be traced back, in the embryo, to a mere point in the yolk of the egg, bearing no resemblance whatever to the future animal ; and no in- spection would enable us to declare with certainty what that animal is to be. But even here an immaterial principle is present, which no external influence can essentially modify, and determines the growth of the future being. The egg of the hen, for instance, cannot be made to produce any other animal than a chicken, and the egg of the codfish produces only the cod. It may therefore be said with truth, that the chicken and the cod existed in the egg before their formation as such. 130. Perception is a faculty springing from this princi- ple. The organs of sense are the instruments for receiving 68 INTELLIGENCE AND INSTINCT. sensations, but they are not the faculty itself, without which they would be useless. We all know that the eye and ear may be open to the sights and sounds about us; but if the mind happens to be preoccupied, we perreive them not. We may even be searching for something which actually lies within the compass of our vision; the light enters the eye as usual, and the image is formed on the retina ; but, to use a common expression, we look without seeing, unless the mind that perceives is directed to the object. 131. In addition to the faculty of perceiving sensations, the higher animals have also the faculty of recalling past impressions, or the power of memory. Many animals retain a recollection of the pleasure or pain they have experi- enced, and seek or avoid the objects which may have pro- duced these sensations ; and, in doing so, they give proof of judgment. 132. This fact proves that animals have the faculty of comparing their sensations and of deriving conclusions from them ; in other words, that they carry on a process of reasoning. 133. These different faculties, taken together, constitute intelligence. In man, this superior principle, which is an emanation of the divine nature, manifests itself in all its splendor. God " breathed into him the breath of life, and man became a living soul." It is man's prerogative, and his alone, to regulate his conduct by the deductions of reason ; he has the faculty of exercising his judgment not only upon the objects which surround him, and of apprehending the many relations which exist between himself and the ex- ternal world ; he may also apply his reason to immaterial things, observe the operations of his own intellect, and, by the analysis of his faculties, may arrive at the conscious- ness of his own nature, and even conceive of that Infinite Spirit, " whom none by searching can find out." INTELLIGENCE AND INSTINCT. 69 13 i. Other animals cannot aspire to conceptions of this kind , they perceive only such objects as immediately strike their senses, and are incapable of continuous efforts of the reasoning faculty in regard to them. But their conduct is frequently regulated by another principle of inferior order, still derived from the immaterial principle, called Instinct. 135. Under the guidance of Instinct, animals are enabled to perform certain operations, without instruction, in one undeviating manner. When man chooses wood and stone, as the materials for his dwelling, in preference to straw and leaves, it is because he has learned by experience, or be- cause his associates have informed him, that these materials are more suitable for the purpose. But the bee requires no instructions in building her comb. She selects at once the fittest materials, and employs them with the greatest econo- my ; and the young bee exhibits, in this respect, as much discernment as those who have had the benefit of long experience. She performs her task without previous study, and, to all appearances, without the consciousness of its utility, being in some sense impelled to it by a blind impulse. 136. If, however, we judge of the instinctive acts of ani- mals when compared with acts of intelligence, by the relative perfection of their products, we may be led into gross errors, as a single example will show. No one will deny that the honey-comb is constructed with more art and care than the huts of many tribes of men. And yet, who would presume to conclude from this that the bee is superior in intelligence to the inhabitant of the desert or of the primitive forest ? It is evident, on the contrary, that in this particular case we are not to judge of the artisan by his work. As a work of man, a structure as perfect in all respects as the honey-comb would indicate very complicated mental operations, and probably would require numerous preliminary experiments. 137. The instinctive actions of animals relate either to 70 INTELLIGENCE AND INSTINCT. the procuring of food, or to the rearing of their young ; in other words, they have for their end the preservation of the individual and of the species. It is by instinct that the leopard conceals himself and awaits the approach of his prey. It is equally by instinct that the spider spreads his web to entangle the flies which approach it. 138. Some animals go beyond these immediate precau- tions ; their instinct leads them to make provision for the future. Thus the squirrel lays in his store of nuts and acorns during autumn, and deposits them in cavities of trees, which he readily finds again in winter. The hamster digs, by the side of his burrow, compartments for magazines, which he arranges with much art. Finally, the bee, more than any other animal, labors in view of the future ; and she has become the emblem of order and domestic economy. 139. Instinct exhibits itself, in a no less striking manner, in the anxiety which animals manifest for the welfare of their anticipated progeny. All birds build nests for the shelter and nurture of their young, and in some cases these nests are made exceedingly comfortable. Others show very great ingenuity in concealing their nests from the eyes of their enemies, or in placing them beyond their reach. There is a small bird in the East Indies, the tailor bird, (Sylvia sutoria,) which works wool or cotton into threads, with its feet and beak, and uses it to sew together the leaves of trees for its nest. 140. The nest of the fiery hang-bird, (Icterus Baltimore,) dangling from the extremity of some slender, inaccessible twig, is familiar to all. The beautiful nest of the humming- bird, seated on a mossy bough, and itself coated with lichen and lined with the softest down from the cotton-grass or the mullein leaf, is calculated equally for comfort and for es- caping observation. An East Indian bird, (PloceusPhilippi- aus,) not only exhibits wonderful devices in the construction, INTELLIGENCE AND INSTINCT. 71 security, and comfort of its nest, but displays a still further advance towards intelligence. The nest is built at the tips of long pendulous twigs, usually hanging over the water. It is composed of grass, in such a manner as to form a com- plete thatch. The entrance is through a long tube, run- ning downwards from the edge of the nest ; and its lower end is so loosely woven, that any serpent or squirrel, attempting to enter the aper- ture, would detach the fibres, and fall to the ground. The male, however, who has no occasion for such protection, builds his thatched dome, sim- ilar to that of the female, and FiS- 24. by its side ; but makes simply a perch across the base of the dome, without the nest-pouch or tube. 141. But it is among insects that this instinctive solici- tude for the welfare of the progeny is every where exhibited in the most striking manner. Bees and wasps not only prepare cells for each of their eggs, but take care, before closing the cells, to deposit in each of them something ap- propriate for the nourishment of the future young. 142. It is by the dictate of instinct, also, that vast numbers of animals of the same species associate, at certain periods of the year, for migration from one region to another ; as the swallows and passenger pigeons, which are sometimes met with in countless flocks. 143. Other animals live naturally in large societies, and labor in common. This is the case with the ants and bees. Among the latter, even the kind of labor for each member of the community is determined beforehand, by instinct 72 INTELLIGENCE AND INSTINCT Some of them collect only honey and wax ; while others are charged with the care and education of the young ; and still others are the natural chiefs of the colony. 144. Finally, there are certain animals so guided by their instinct as to live like pirates, on the avails of others' labor. The Lestris or Jager will not take the trouble to catch fish for itself, but pursues the gulls, until, worn out by the pursuit, they eject their prey from their crop. Some ants make war upon others less powerful, take their young away to their nests, and oblige them to labor in slavery. 145. There is a striking relation between the volume of the brain compared with" the body, and the degree of intelli- gence which an animal may attain. The brain of man is the most voluminous of all, and among other animals there is every gradation in this respect. In general, an animal is the more intelligent, in proportion as its brain bears a greater resemblance to that of man. 146. The relation between instinct and the nervous? system does not present so intimate a correspondence as exists between the intellect and the brain. Animals which have a most striking development of instinct, as the ants and bees, belong to a division of the Animal Kingdom where the nervous system is much less developed than that of the ver- tebrates, since they have only ganglions, without a proper brain. There is even a certain antagonism between instinct and intelligence, so that instinct loses its force and peculiar character, whenever intelligence becomes developed. 147. Instinct plays but a secondary part in man. He is not, however, entirely devoid of it. Some of his actions are entirely prompted by instinct, as, for instance, the attempts of the infant to nurse. The fact, again, that these instinctive actions mostly belong to infancy, when intelligence is but slightly developed, goes to confirm the two last propositions. CHAPTER FIFTH. OF MOTION. SECTION I. APPARATUS OF MOTION. 148. The power of voluntary motion is the second grand characteristic of animals, (57.) Though they may not all have the means of transporting themselves from place to place, there is no one which has not the power of executing some motions. The oyster, although fixed to the ground, opens and closes its shell at pleasure ; and the little coral animal protrudes itself from its cell, and retires again at its will. 149. The movements of animals are effected by means of muscles, which are organs designed expressly for this pur- pose, and which make up that portion of the body which is commonly called flesh. They are composed of threads, which are readily seen in boiled meat. These threads are again composed of still more delicate fibres, called mus- cular fibres, (45,) which have the property of elongating and contracting. 150. The motions of animals and plants depend, therefore, upon causes essentially different. The expansion and cloemg of the leaves and blossoms of plants, which are their most 7 74 APPAKATUS OF MOTION. Fig. 25. obvious motions, are due to the influence of ligl , heat, moisture, cold, and similar external agents ; but all the mo- tions peculiar to animals are produced by a cause residing within themselves, namely, the contractility of muscular fibres. 151. The cause which excites contractility resides in the nerves, although its nature is not precisely understood. We only know that each muscular bundle receives one or more nerves, whose filaments pass at intervals across the muscular fibres, as seen in Fig. 25. It has also been shown, by experi- ment, that when a nerve entering a muscle is sev- ered, the muscle instantly loses its power of contracting under the stimulus of the will, or, in other words, is par- alyzed. 152. The muscles may be classified, according as they are more or less under the control of the will. The con- tractions of some of them are entirely dependent on the will, as in the muscles of the limbs used for locomotion. Others are quite independent of it, like the contractions of the heart and stomach. The muscles of respiration ordinarily act inde- pendently of the will, but are partially subject to it : thus, when we attempt to hold the breath, we arrest, for the mo- ment, the action of the diaphragm. 153. In the great majority of animals, motion is greatly aided by the presence of solid parts, of a bony or horny structure, which either serve as firm attachments to the muscles, or, being arranged so as to act as levers, to in- crease the precision and sometimes the force of movements. The solid parts are usually so arranged as to form a sub- APPARATUS OF MOTION. 75 stantial framework for the body, which has been variously designated in the several classes of animals, as the test, shell, carapace, skeleton, Sfc. The study of these parts is one of the most important branches of comparative anatomy. Their characters are the most constant and enduring of all others. Indeed, these solid parts are nearly all that remains of the numerous extinct races of animals of past geological eras ; and from these alone are we to determine the struc- ture and character of the ancient fauna. 154. Most of the Radiata have a calcareous test or crusty shell. In the Polypi, this structure, when it exists, is usually very solid, sometimes assuming the form of a simple inter- nal skeleton, or forming extensively branched stems, as in the sea-fans ; or giving rise to solid masses, furnished with numerous cavities opening at the surface, from which the movable parts of the animals are protruded, with the power, however, of retracting themselves at pleasure, as in the corals. In the Echinoderms, the test is intimately con- nected with the structure of the soft parts. It is composed of numer- ous little plates, sometimes con- solidated and immovable, as in the sea-urchins, (Fig. 26,) and sometimes so combined, as to -pio. ~^T allow of various motions, as in the star-fishes, (Fig. 17,) which use their projecting rays, both for crawling and swimming. 155. In the Mollusks, the solid parts are secreted by the skin, most frequently in the form of a calcareous shell of one, two, or many pieces, serving for the protection of the soft parts which they cover. These shells are generally so constructed as to afford complete protection to the animal within their cavities. In a few, the shell is too small for this purpose ; and in some it exists only at a very early period, 76 APPARATUS OF MOTION. and is lost as the animal is developed, so that at last here is no other covering than a slimy skin. In others, the skin becomes so thick and firm as to have the consistence of elastic leather ; or it is gelatinous or transparent, and, what is very curious, these tissues may be the same as those of woody fibre, as, for example, in the Ascidia. As a general thing, the solid parts do not aid in locomotion, so that the mcl- lusks are mostly sluggish animals. It is only in a few rare cases that the shell becomes a true lever, as in the Scollops, (Pecten,) which use their shells to propel themselves in swimming. 156. The muscles of mollusks either form a flat disk un- der the body, or large bundles across its mass, or are dis- tributed in the skin so as to dilate and contract it, or are arranged about the mouth and tentacles, which they put in motion. However varied the disposition may be, they always form veiy considerable masses, in proportion to the size of the body, and have a soft and mucous appearance, such as is not seen in the contractile fibres of other animals. This peculiar aspect no doubt arises from the numerous small cavities extending between the muscles, and the secre- tion of mucus which takes place in them. 157. In the Articulated animals, the solid parts, are ex- ternal, in the form of rings, generally of a horny structure, but sometimes calcareous, and successively fitting into each other at their edges. The tail of a lobster gives a good idea of this structure. The rings differ in the severa classes of this department, merely as to volume, form, solid- ity, number of pieces, and the degree of motion which one has upon another. In some groups they are consolidated, so as to form a shield or carapace, such as we see in the crabs. In others, they are membranous, and the body is capable of assuming various forms, as in the leeches and worms generally APPARATUS OF MOTION. 77 158. A variety of appendages are attached to these rings, such as jointed legs, or in place of them stiff bristles, oars fringed with silken threads, wings either firm or mem- branous, antennse, movable pieces which perform the office of jaws, &c. But however diversified this solid apparatus may be, it is universally the case that the rings, to which every segment of the body may be referred as to a type, com- bine to form but a single internal cavity, in which all the or- gans are enclosed, the nervous system, as well as the organs of vegetative life, (63.) 159. The muscles which move all these parts have this peculiar- ity, that they are all enclosed with- in the more solid framework, and not external to it, as in the verte- brates ; and also that the muscular bundles, which are very consider- able in number, have the form of ribbons, or fleshy strips, with par- allel fibres of remarkable white- ness. Figure 27 represents the Fig. 27. disposition of the muscles of the caterpillar wjiich destroys the willow, (Cossus ligniperda.) The right side represents the superficial layer of muscles, and the left side the deep- seated layer. 160. The Vertebrata, like the articulated animals, have solid parts at the surface, as the hairs and horns of mam- mals, the coat of mail of the armadillo, the feathers and claws of birds, the bucklers and scales of reptiles and fishes, &c. But they have besides this, along the interior of the whole body, a solid framework not found in the invertebrates, well known as the Skeleton. 161. The skeleton is composed of a series of separate bones, called vertebrae, united to each other by ligaments, 78 APPARATUS OF MOTION. Each vertebra has a solid centre with four branches, two of which ascend and form an arch above, and two descend, forming an arch below the body of the vertebra. The upper arches form a continuous cavity (a) along the region of the trunk, which encloses the spinal marrow, and in the head re- ceives the brain, (61.) The lower arches (b) form another cavity, similar to the superior one, which contains the organs of nutrition and reproduction ; their branch- es generally meet below, and when dis- joined, the deficiency is supplied by fleshy walls. Every part of the skeleton may be reduced to this fundamental type the vertebra, as will be shown, when treating specially of the vertebrate animals ; so that between the pieces composing the head, the trunk, or the tail, we have only differences in the degree of development of the body of the ver- tebra, or of its branches, and not in reality different plans of organization. 162. The "muscles which move this solid framework of the vertebrata are disposed around the vertebrae, as is Fig. 28. Fig. 29. well exemplified among the fishes, where there is a band of muscles for each vertebra. In proportion as limbs LOCOMOTION. 79 are developed, this intimate relation between the muscles and the vertebrae diminish- es. The muscles are un- equally distributed and are concentrated about the limbs, where the greatest amount of muscular force is required. For this rea- son, the largest masses of flesh in the higher verte- brates are found about the shoulders and hips ; while in fishes they are concen- trated about the base of the tail, which is the part principally employed in locomotion. SECTION II. OF LOCOMOTION. 163. One of the most curious and important applications of this apparatus of bones and muscles is for Locomo- tion. By this is understood the movement which an animal makes in passing from place to place, in the pursuit of pleas- ure, sustenance, or safety, in distinction from those motions which are performed equally well while stationary, such as the acts of respiration, mastication, &c. 164. The means which nature has brought into action to effect locomotion under all the various circumstances in which animals are placed, are very diversified ; and the study of their adaptation to the necessities of animals is highly interesting in a mechanical, as well as in a zoological point of view. Two general plans may be noticed, under which these varieties may be arranged. Either the whole body is 80 LOCOMOTION. Fig. 31. equally concerned in effecting locomotion, or only some of its parts are employed for the purpose. 165. The jelly-fishes (Medusa?) swim by contracting their umbrella-shaped bodies upon the water below, and its resistance urges them forwards. Other animals are provided with a sac or siphon, which they may fill with water, and suddenly force out, producing a jet, which is resisted by the surrounding water, and the animal is thus propelled. The Biche-le-mar, (Holothuria,) the cuttle-fishes, the Salpse, &c, move in this way. 166. Others contract small portions of the body in suc- cession, which being thereby rendered firmer, serve as points of resistance, against, which the animal may strive, in urging the body onwards. The earth-worm, whose body is composed of a series of rings united by muscles, and shutting more or less into each other, has only to close up the rings at one or more points, to form a sort of fulcrum, against which the rest of the body exerts itself in extending forwards. 167. Some have, at the extremities of the body, a cup or some other organ for maintaining a firm hold, each extremity acting in turn as a fixed point. Thus the Leech has a cup or sucker at its tail, by which it fixes itself ; the body is then elongated by the contraction of the muscular fibres which encircle the animal ; the mouth is next fixed by a similar suck- Fig- 32- er and by the contraction of muscles running lengthwise the body is shortened, and the tail, losing its hold, is brought forwards to repeat the same nrocess. Most of the bivalve mollusks, such as the clams, LOCOMOTION. 81 move from place to place, in a similar way. A fleshy organ, called the foot, is thrust forward, and its extremity fixed in rh3 mud, or to some firm object, when it contracts, and thus draws along the body and the shell enclosing it. Snails, and many similar animals, have the fleshy under surface of their body composed of an infinitude of very short muscles, which, by successive contractions, so minute, indeed, as scarcely to be detected, enable them to glide along smoothly and silently, without any apparent muscular effort. 168. In the majority of animals, however, locomotion is effected by means of organs specially designed for the pur- pose. The most simple are the minute, hair-like cilia, which fringe the body of most of the microscopic infu- sory animalcules, and which, by their incessant vibrations, cause rapid movements. The sea-urchins and star-fishes have little thread-like tubes issuing from every side of the body, furnished with a sucker at the end. By attaching these to some fixed object, they are enabled to draw or roll themselves along ; but their progress is always slow. Insects are distinguished for the number and great perfection of their organs of motion. They have at least three pairs of legs, and usually wings also. But those that have numerous feet, like the centipedes, are not distinguished for agility. The Crustacea generally have at least five pairs of which are used for both swimming and crawling. The Worms are much less active ; some of them have only short bristles at their sides. Some of the marine species use their fringe-like gills for paddles. (Fig. 33.) 169. Among the Vertebrata, we find the greatest diversity in the organs of locomotion and the modes of their applica- tion, as well as the greatest perfection, in whatever element 82 ORGANS OF LOCOMOTION. they may be employed. The sailing of the eagle, the bound- ing of the antelope, the swimming of the shark, are not equalled by any movements of insects. This superiority is clue to the internal skeleton, which, while it admits a great display of force, gives to the motions, at the same time, a great degree of precision. 1. Plan of the Organs of Locomotion. 170. The organs of progression in vertebrated animals never exeeed four in number, and to them the term limbs is more particularly applied. The study of these organs, as characteristic of the different groups of vertebrate animals, is most interesting, especially when prosecuted with a view to trace them all back to one fundamental plan, and to ob- serve the modifications, oftentimes very slight, by which a very simple organ is adapted to every variety of move- ment. No part of the animal structure more fully illustrates the unity of design, or the skill of the Intellect which has so adapted a single organ to such multiplied ends. On this account, we shall illustrate this subject somewhat in detail. 171. It is easy to see that the wing which is to sustain the bird in the air must be different from the leg of the stag, which is to serve for running, or the fins of the fish that swims. But, notwithstanding their dissimilarity, the wing of the bird, the leg of the stag, and the shoulder fin of the fish, may still be traced to the same plan of structure ; and if we examine their skeletons, we find the same fundamental parts. In order to show this, it is necessary to give a short de- scription of the composition of the arm or anterior extremity. 172. The anterior member, in the vertebrates, is invaria- bly composed of the following bones : 1. The shoulder- blade, or scapula, (a,) a broad and flat bone, applied upon the bones of the trunk • 2. The arm, (b,) formed of a single ORGANS OF LOCOMOTION. 83 long cylindrical bone, the humerus ; 3. The fore-arm, com- posed of two long bones, the radius, (c,) and ulna, (d,) which are often fused into one ; 4. The hand, which is composed of a series of bones, more or less numerous in different classes, and which is divided into three parts, namely, the carpus, or wrist, (e,) the metacarpus, or palm, (/,) and the pha- langes, or fingers, (g.) The clavicle or collar-hone, (o,) when it exists, belongs also to the anterior member. It is a bone of a cylindrical form, fixed as a brace between the breast-bone and shoulder-blade. Its use is to keep the shoulders separated ; to this end, we find it fully developed in all animals which raise the limbs from the sides, as the birds and the bats. On the other hand, it is rudimentary, or entirely want- ing in animals which move them back- wards and forwards only, as with most quadrupeds. 173. The following outlines, in which corresponding bones are indicated by the same letters, will give an idea of the modifications which these bones present in different classes. In the arm of man, (Fig. 34,) the shoulder-blade is flat and triangular ; the bone of the arm is cylindrical, and en- larged at its extremities ; the bones of the fore -arm are somewhat shorter than the humerus, but more slender ; the hand is composed of the following pieces, namely, eight small bones of the carpus, arranged in two rows, five meta- carpal bones, which are elongated, and succeed those of the wrist ; five fingers of unequal length, one of which, the thumb, is opposed to the four others. Fig. 34. Fig. 35. 84 ORGANS OF LOCOMOTION. 174. In the stag, (Fig. 35,) the bones of the fore-arm are rather longer than that of the arm, and the radius no longer turns upon the ulna, but is blended with it; the meta- carpal, or cannon bone, is greatly developed ; and, being quite as long as the fore-arm, it is apt to be mistaken for it. The fingers are reduced to two, each of which is surrounded by a hoof, at its extremity. 175. In the arm of the lion, (Fig. 36,) the arm bone is Fig. 36. stouter, the carpal bones are less numerous, and the fingers are short, and armed with strong, retractile claws. In the whale, (Fig. 37,) the bones of the arm and fore-arm are much shortened, and very massive ; the hand is broad, the fingers strong, and distant from each other. 1--1 Fig. 38. Fig. 39. In the bat, the thumb, which is represented by a small hook, is entirely free, (Fig. 38 ;) but the fingers are elon- gated in a disproportionate manner, and the skin is stretched ORGANS OF LOCOMOTION. 85 across them, so as to serve the purpose of a wing. In birds, the pigeon for example, (Fig. 39,) there are but two fingers, which are soldered together, and destitute of nails ; and the thumb is rudimentary. 176. The arm of the turtle (Fig. 40) is peculiar, in having, a J Q* Fig. 42. besides the shoulder-blade, two clavicles ; the arm-bone is twisted outwards, as well as the bones of the fore-arm, so that the elbow, instead of being behind, is turned forwards ; the fingers are long, and widely separated. In the Sloth, (Fig. 41,) the bones of the arm and fore-arm are very greatly elongated, and at the same time very slender ; the hand is likewise very long, and the fingers are terminated by enor- mous non-retractile nails. The arm of the Mole (Fig. 42) is still more extraordinary. The shoulder-blade, which is usually a broad and flat bone, becomes very narrow ; the arm-bone, on the contrary, is contracted so much as to seem nearly square ; the elbow projects backwards, and the hand is excessively large and stout. 177. In fishes, the form and arrangement of the bones is so peculiar, that it is often difficult to trace their correspond- ence to all the parts found in other animals ; nevertheless, the bones of the fore-arm are readily recognized. In the Cod 8 86 ORGANS OF LOCOMOTION. (Fig. 43) there are two flat and broad bones, one of which, the ulna, (d,) presents a long point, anteriorly. The bones of c 9 c Fig. 43. the carpus are represented by four nearly square little bones. But m these again there are considerable variations in dif- ferent fishes, and in some genera they are much more irreg- ular in form. The fingers are but imperfectly represented by the rays of the fin, (g,) which are composed of an infini- tude of minute bones, articulated with each other. As to the humerus and shoulder, their analogies are variously in- terpreted by different anatomists. 178. The form of the members is so admirably adapted to the special offices which they are designed to perform, that by a single inspection of the bones of the arm, as repre- sented in the preceding sketches, one might infer the uses to which they are to be put. The arm of man, with its radius turning upon its ulna, the delicate and pliable fingers, and the thumb opposed to them, bespeak an organ for the purpose of handling. The slender and long arm of the sloth, with his monstrous claws, would be extremely incon- venient for walking on the ground, but appropriate for seizing upon the branches of the trees, on which these animals live. The short fingers, armed with retractile nails, indicate the lion, at first glance, to be a carnivorous animal. The arm of the stag, with his very long cannon-bone, and that of the horse, also, with its solitary finger enveloped in a hoof, are organs especially adapted for running. The very slender and greatly elongated fingers of the bat are admirably con- ORGANS OF LOCOMOTION. 87 trived for the spread of a wing, without increasing the weight of the body. The more firm and solid arm of the bird indicates a more sustained flight. The short arm of the whale, with his spreading fingers, resembles a strong oar. The enormous hand of the mole, with its long elbow, is con- structed for the difficult and prolonged efforts requisite in bur- rowing. The twisted arm of the tortoise can be applied to no other movement than creeping. And finally, the arm of the fish, completely enveloped in the mass of the flesh, presents, externally, a mere delicate balancer, the pectoral fin. 179. The posterior members are identical in their structure with the anterior ones. The bones of which they are composed, are, 1. The pelvis, (Fig. 46,) which corresponds to the shoulder blade ; 2. The thigh bone, or femur, which is a single bone, like the humerus ; 3. The bones of the leg, the tibia and fibula, which, like the radius and ulna, some- times coalesce into one bone ; and lastly, the bones of the foot, which are divided, like those of the hand, into three parts, the tarsus or ankle, the metatarsus or instep, and the toes. The modifications are generally less marked than in the arm, inasmuch as there is less diversity of function ; for in all animals, without exception, the posterior extremities are used exclusively for support or locomotion. 180. The anterior extremity of the vertebrates, however varied in form, whether it be an arm, a wing, or a fin, is thus shown to be composed of essen- tially the same parts, and con- structed upon the same general plan. This affinity does not ex- tend to the invertebrates ; for al- though in many instances their Fig. 44. Fig. 45. limbs bear a certain resemblance to those of the vertebrates, and are even used for similar purposes, yet they have no real 88 OF STANDING AND PROGRESSION. affinity. Thus the leg of an insect, (Fig. 44,) and that of a lizard, (Fig. 45 ;) the wing of a butterfly and the wing of a bat, are quite similar in form, position, and use; but in the bat and the lizard, the organ has an internal bony support, which is a part of the skeleton ; while the leg of the insect has merely a horny covering, proceeding from one of the rings of the body, and the wing of the butterfly is merely a fold of the skin, showing that the limbs of the Articulata are constructed upon a different plan, (157.) It is by ascertaining and regarding these real affinities, or the fundamental differences, existing between similar organs, that the true natural grouping of animals is to be attained. 2. Of Standing, and the Modes of Progression. 181. Standing, or the natural attitude of an animal, de- pends on the form and functions of the limbs. Most of the terrestrial mammals, and the reptiles, both of which employ all four limbs in walking, have the back-bone horizontal, and resting at the same time upon both the anterior and poste- rior extremities. Birds, whose anterior limbs are intended for a purpose very different from the posterior, stand upon the latter, when at rest, although the back-bone is still verjT nearly horizontal. Man alone is designed to stand upright, with his head supported on the summit of the vertebral col- umn. Some monkeys can rise upon the hind legs into the erect posture ; but it is evidently a constrained one, and not their habitual attitude. 182. That an animal may stand, it is requisite that the limbs should be so disposed that the centre of gravity, in other words, the point about which the body balances itself, should fall within the space included by the feet. If the centre of gravity is outside of these limits, the animal falls to he side to which the centre of gravity inclines. On thifc account, the albatross, and some other aquatic birds OF STANDING. 89 which have the feet placed very far back, cannot use them for walking. 183. The more numerous and the more widely separated are the points of support, the firmer an animal stands. On this account, quadrupeds are less liable to lose their balance than birds. If an animal has four legs, it is not necessary that they should have a broad base. Thus we see that most quadrupeds have slender legs, touching the earth by only a small surface. Broad feet would interfere with each other, and only increase the weight of the limbs, without adding to their stability. Birds are furnished with long toes, which, as they spread out, subserve the purpose of tripods. Moreover, the muscles of the toes are so disposed that the weight of the bird causes them to grasp firmly ; hence it is enabled to sleep standing in perfect security upon the roost, without effort. Fig. 46. 184. In quadrupeds, the joints at the junction of the limbs with the body bend freely in only one direction, that is, to- wards the centre of gravity ; so that if one limb yields, the tendency to fall is counteracted by the resistance of the limbs at the other extremity of the body. The same antag- onism is observed in the joints of the separate limbs, which are flexed alternately in opposite directions. Thus the thigh bends forwards, and the leg backwards ; while the arm bends 8* 90 MODES OF PROGRESSION. backwards, and the fore-arm forwards. Different terms have been employed to express the various modes of progression, accoid:"ng to the rapidity or the succession in which the limbs are advanced. 185. Progression is a forward movement of the body, effected by successively bending and extending the limbs. Walking is the ordinary and natural gait, and other paces are only occasionally employed. When walking is accom- plished by two limbs only, as in man, the body is inclined forwards, carrying the centre of gravity in that direction ; and while one leg sustains the body, the other is thrown forwards to prevent it from falling, and to sustain it in turn. For this reason, walking has been defined to be a continual falling forwards, continually interrupted by the projection of the legs. 186. The throwing forwards of the leg, which would require a very considerable effort, were the muscles obliged to sustain the weight of the limbs also, is facilitated by a very peculiar arrangement ; that is, the joints are perfectly closed up ; so that the external pressure of the atmosphere is suffi- cient of itself to maintain the limbs in place, without the as- sistance of the muscles. This may be proved by experi- ment. If we cut away all the muscles around the hip joint, the thigh bone still adheres firmly to the pelvis, but separates the moment a hole is pierced, so as to admit air into the socket. 187. In ordinary walking, the advancing leg touches the ground just before the other is raised ; so that there is a moment when the body rests on both limbs. It is only when the speed is very much accelerated, that the two actions become simultaneous. The walking of quadrupeds is a similar process, but with this difference, that the body always rests on at least two legs. The limbs are raised in a deter- minate order, usually in such a manner that the hind-leg of one side succeeds the fore-leg of the opposite side. Some mo ;es or progression. 91 animals, as the giraffe, the lama, and the bear, raise both legs of one side at the same moment. This is called am- bling, or pacing. 188. Running consists in the same succession of motions as walking, so accelerated that there is a moment be- tween two steps when none of the limbs touch the ground. In the horse and dog, and in most mammals, a distinction is made between the walk, the trot, the canter, and the gallop, all of which have different positions or measures. The trot has but two measures. The animal raises a leg on each side, in a cross direction, that is to say, the right fore-leg with the left hind-leg, and so on. The canter has three measures. After advancing the two fore-legs, one after the other, the animal raises and brings forward the two hind-legs, simultaneously. When this movement is greatly urged, there are but two measures ; the fore-limbs are raised to- gether as well as the hind -legs ; it is then termed a gallop. 189. Leaping consists in a bending of all the limbs, fol- lowed by a sudden extension of them, which throws the body forwards with so much force as to raise it from the ground, for an instant, to strike again at a certain distance in advance. For this purpose, the animal always crouches before leaping. Most animals make only an occasional use of this mode of progression, when some obstacle is to be surmounted ; but in a few instances, this is the habitual mode. As the hind-legs are especially used in leaping, we observe that all leaping animals have the posterior members very much more robust than the anterior, as the frog, the kangaroo, jerboa, and even the hare. Leaping is also com- mon among certain birds, especially among the sparrows, the thrushes, &c. Finally, there is also a large number of leaping insects, such as the flea, the large tribe of grass- hoppers and crickets, in which we find that pair of legs with which leaping is accomplished much more developed than the others. 92 MODES OF PROGRESSION. 190. Clibtbing is merely walking upon an inclined or even upright surface. It is usually accomplished by means of sharp nails ; and hence many carnivorous animals climb with great facility, such as the cat tribe, the lizards ; and many birds, the woodpecker, for instance. Others employ their arms for this purpose, like the bears when they climb a tree ; or their hands, and even their tails, like the mon- keys ; or their beaks, like the parrots. Lastly, there are some whose natural mode of progression is climbing. Such are the sloths, with their arms so long, that, when placed upon the ground, they move very awkwardly ; and yet their struc- ture is by no means defective, for in their accustomed move- ments upon trees they can use their limbs with very great adroitness. 191. Most quadrupeds can both walk, trot, gallop, and leap ; birds walk and leap ; lizards neither leap nor gallop, but only walk and run, and some of them with great rapidity. No insect either trots or gallops, but many of them leap. Yet their leaping is not always the effect of the muscular force of their legs, as with the flea and grasshopper ; but some of them leap by means of a spring, in the form of a hook, attached to the tail, which they bend beneath the body, and which, when let loose, propels them to a. great distance, as in the Podurellee. Still others leap by means of a spring, attached beneath the breast, which strikes against the abdomen when the body is bent ; as the spring-beetles, (Elaters.) 192. Flight is accomplished by the simultaneous action of the two anterior limbs, the wings, as leaping is by that of the two hinder limbs. The wings being expanded, strike and compress the air, which thus becomes a support, for the moment,, upon which the bird is sustained. But as this support very soon yields, owing to the slight density of the air, it follows that the bird must make the greater and more MODES OF PROGRESSION. 93 raj id efforts to compensate for this disadvantage. Hence it requires a much greater expenditure of strength to fly than to walk; and, therefore, we find the great mass of muscles in birds concentrated about the breast, (Fig. 30.) To facili- tate its progress, the bird, after each flap of the wings, brings them against the body, so as to present as little surface as possible to the air ; for a still further diminution of resistance, all birds have the anterior part of the body very slender. Their flight would be much more difficult if they had large heads and short necks. 193. Some quadrupeds, such as the flying-squirrel and Galeopithecus, have a fold of the skin at the sides, which may be extended by the legs, and which enables them to leap from branch to branch with more security. But this is not flight, properly speaking, since none of the peculiar operations of flight are performed. There are also some fishes, whose pectoral fins are so" extended as to enable them to dart from the water, and sustain themselves for a consider- able time in the air ; and hence they are called flying-fish. But this is not truly flight. 194. Swimming is the mode of locomotion employed by the greater part of the aquatic animals. Most animals which live in the water swim with more or less facility. Swimming has this in common with flight, that the medium in which it is performed, the water, becomes also the support, and read- ily yields also to the impulse of the fins. Only, as wator is much more dense than air, and as the body of most aquatic animals is of very nearly the same specific gravity as water, it follows that, in swimming, very little effort is requisite to keep the body from sinking. The whole power of the mus- cles is consequently employed in progression, and hence swimming requires vastly less muscular force than flying. 195. Swimming is accomplished by means of various or- gans designated under the general term, Jins, although in an 94 MODES OF PROGRESSION. anatomical point of view these may represent very different parts. In the Whales, the anterior extremities and the tail are transformed into fins. In Fishes, the pectoral fins, which represent the arms, and the ventral fins, which represent the legs, are employed for swimming, but they are not the prin- cipal organs ; for it is by the tail, or caudal fin, that pro- gression is principally effected. Hence the progression of the fish is precisely that of a boat under the sole guidance of the sculling-oar. In the same manner as a succes- sion of strokes alternately right and left propels the boat straight forwards, so the fish advances by striking alternately right and left. To advance obliquely, it has only to strike a little more strongly in the direction opposite to that which he wishes to take. The Whales, on the contrary, swim by striking the water up and down ; and it is the same with a few fishes also, such as the rays and the soles. The air- bladder facilitates the rising and sinking of the fish, by ena- bling it to vary the specific weight of the body. 196. Most land animals swim with more or less ease, by simply employing the ordinary motions of walking or leaping. Those which frequent the water, like the beaver, or which feed on marine animals, as the otter and duck, have webbed feet; that is to say, the fingers are united by a membrane, which, when expanded, acts as a paddle. 197. There is also a large number of invertebrate animals in which swimming is the principal or the only mode of progression. Lobsters swim by means of their tail, and, like the Whales, strike the water up and down. Other Crustacea have a pair of legs fashioned like oars ; as the posterior legs in sea-crabs, for example. Many insects, likewise, swim with their legs, which are abundantly fringed with hairs to give them surface ; as the little water boatmen, (Gyrinus, Dytiscus,) whose mazy dances on the summer streams every me must have observed. The cuttle-fish uses its long ten- MODES OF PROGRESSION. 95 tacles as oars, (Fig. 47 ;) and some star-fishes (Comatula, Euryale) use their arms with great adroitness, (Fig. 151.) Finally, there are some insects which have their limbs con- structed for running on the surface of water, as the water- spiders, (Ranatra, Hydrometra.) Fig. 47. 198. A large number of animals have the faculty of mov- ing both in the air and on land, as is the case with most birds, and a great proportion of insects. Others move with equal facility, and by the same members, on land and in water, as some of the aquatic birds and most of the reptiles, which latter have even received the name Amphibia, on this account. There are some which both walk, fly, and swim, as the ducks and water-hens ; but they do not excel in either mode of progression. 199. However different the movements and offices per- formed by the limbs may appear to us, according to the ele- ment in which they act, we see that they are none the less the effect of the same mechanism. The contraction of the same set of muscles causes the leg of the stag to bend for leaping, the wing of the bird to flap in the air, the arm of the mole to excavate the earth, and the fin of the whale to strike the water. CHAPTER SIXTH. NUTRITION. 200. The second class of the functions of animals are those which relate to the maintenance of life and the per- petuation of the species ; the functions of vegetative life, (59.) 201. The increase of the volume of the body must re quire additional materials. There is also an incessant waste of particles which, having become unfit for further use, are carried out of the system. Every contraction of a muscle expands the energy of some particles, whose place must be supplied. These supplies are derived from every natural source, the animal, vegetable, and even the mineral king- doms ; and are received under every variety of solid, liquid, and gaseous form.- Thus, there is a perpetual interchange (>f substance between the animal body and the world around. The conversion of these supplies into a suitable material, its distribution to all parts, and the appropriation of it to the growth and sustenance of the body, is called Nutrition in the widest sense of that term. 202. In early life, during the period of growth, the amount of substances appropriated is greater than that which is lost At a later period, when growth is completed, an equilibrium between the matters received and those rejected is established. At a still later period, the equilibrium is again disturbed, more is rejected than is retained, decrepitude begins, and at last the organism becomes exhausted, the functions cease, and death ensues. 203. The solids and fluids taken into the body as food are OF DIGESTION. 97 subjected to a process called Digestion, by which the solid portions are reduced to a fluid state also, the nutritive sepa- rated from the excrementitious, and the whole prepared to become blood, bone, muscle, &c. The residue is afterwards expelled, together with those particles of the body which require to be renewed, and those which have been derived from the blood by several processes, termed Secretions. Matters in a gaseous form are also received and expelled with the air we breathe, by a process called Respiration. The nutritive fluids are conveyed to every part of the body by currents, usually confined in vessels, and which, as they return, bring back the particles which are to be either reno- vated or expelled. This circuit is what is termed the Circu- lation. The function of Nutrition, therefore, combines sev- eral distinct processes. - SECTION I. OF DIGESTION. 204. Digestion, or the process by which the nutritive parts of food are elaborated and pre- pared to become part of the body, is effected in certain cavities, the stomach and intestines, or alimen- tary canal. This canal is more or less complicated in the various classes of animals ; but there is no animal, however low its organiza- tion, without it, in some form, (54.) 205. In the polypi, the digestive apparatus is limited to a single cavity. In the Sea Anemone, (Ac- tinia,) for example, it is a pouch, (Fig 48, b,) suspended in 9 Fig. 48. 98 NUTRITION. the interior of the body. When the fooc has been sufficiently digested there, it passes, by imbibition, into the general cav- ity of the body, (c,) which is filled with water, and mingling with it, flows thence into all parts of the an- imal. The jelly-fishes, (Medusse,) and some Worms, have a distinct stomach, with appendages branching off in every direction, (Fig. 31,) in which a more complete elabo- ration takes place. The little worms known by the name of Planaria, present a striking example of these ramifications of the intes- tine, (Fig. 49, e.) But here, likewise, the product of digestion mingles with the fluids of the cavity of the body which surround the intestine (c/) and its branches, and cir- culation is not yet distinct from diges- tion. 206. As we rise in the scale of animals, the functions concerned in nutrition become more and more distinct from each other. Digestion and circulation, no longer confounded, are accomplished separately, in distinct cavities. The most important organs concerned in di- gestion are the stomachy and the small and large intestine. The first indications of such a distinc- tion are perceived in the higher Radiata, such as the sea-urchins, (Fig. 50,) in which the stomach (s) is broader than either extremity of the intestine. The dimensions and form of the cavities of the intestine vary considerably, according to the mode of life of the ani- mal ; but the special functions assigned to them are invaria- ble ; and the three principal cavities succeed each other, in Fig. 50. OF DIGESTION. 99 every animal where they are found, in an invariable order ; first, the stomach, (s,) then the intestine, which is small at first, but often enlarged towards its termination. This arrangement may be seen by the follow- ing diagrams from a bee- tle and a land mollusk, where the same letters indicate corresponding parts, (Figs. 51, 52.) 207. From the mouth, (jn,) the food passes into the stomach through a narrow tube in the neck, called the (Esophagus or gullet, (o.) This is not FiS- 5L FiS-52- always a direct passage of uniform size ; but there is some- times a pouch, the crop, (c,) into which the food is first intro- duced, and which sometimes acquires considerable dimen- sions, especially in birds, and in some insects and mollusks, (Fig. 51.) In the stomach, the true digestive process is be- gun. The food no sooner arrives there than changes com- mence, under the influence of a peculiar fluid called the gas- trie juice, which is secreted by glands lining the interior of the stomach. The digestive action is sometimes aided by the movements of the stomach itself, which, by its strong contrac- tions, triturates the food. This is especially the case in the gizzard of some birds, which, in the hens and ducks, for in- stance, is a powerful muscular organ. In some of the Crus- tacea and Mollusks, as the Lobster and Aplysia, there are even solid organs for breaking down the food within the stomach itself. 208. The result of this process is the reduction of the food 100 NUTRITION. to a pulpy fluid, called chyme, which varies in its nature with tli3 food. Hence the function of the stomach has been named chymijication. With this, the function of digestion is complete in many of the lower animals, and chyme is circu- lated throughout the body ; this is the case in Polypi and Jelly- fishes, and some Worms and Mollusks. In other animals, however, the chyme thus formed is transferred to the intes- tine, by a peculiar movement, like that of a worm in creep- ing, which has accordingly received the name of vermicular or peristaltic motion. 209. The form of the small intestine (i) is less variable than that of the stomach. It is a narrow tube, with thin walls, coiled in various directions in the vertebrate animals, but more simple in the invertebrates, especially the insects. Its length varies, according to the nature of the food, being in general longer in herbivorous than in carnivorous animals. In this portion of the canal, the aliment undergoes its com- plete elaboration, through the agency of certain juices which here mingle with the chyme, such as the bile secreted by the liver, and the pancreatic juice, secreted by the pancreas. The resdit of this elaboration is to produce a complete sepa- ration of the truly nutritious parts, in the form of a milky Jquid called chyle. The process is called chylification ; and there are great numbers of animals, such as the Insects, Crabs, and Lobsters, some Worms, and most of the Mollusks, in which the product of digestion is not further modified by respiration, but circulates throughout the body as chyle. 210. The chyle is composed of minute, colorless globules, of a somewhat flattened form, (Fig. 53.) In the higher animals, the Vertebrates, it is taken up and carried into the blood by means of very minute vessels, called lymphatic vessels or lacieals, which are distributed every where in ^TJ^^™ the walls of the intestine, and communicate OF DIGESTION. 101 with the veins, forming also in their course several glandular masses, as seen in a portion of intestine connected with a vein in Fig. 54 ; and it is not until thus taken up and mingled with the circulating blood, that any of our food really becomes a part of the living body. Thus freed of the nutritive portion of the food, the residue of the product of digestion passes on to the large intestine, from whence it is expelled in the form of excrement. Flg- 54* 211. The organs above described constitute the most es- sential for the process of digestion, and are found more or less developed in all but some of the radiated animals ; but there are, in the higher animals, several additional ones for aiding in the reduction of the food to chyme and chyle, which render their digestive apparatus quite complicated. In the first place, hard parts, of a horny or bony texture, are usually placed about the mouth of those animals that feed on solid substances, which serve for cutting or bruising the food into small fragments before it is swallowed ; and, in many of the lower animals, these organs are the only hard portions of the body. This process of subdividing or chewing the food is termed masti- cation. 212. Beginning with the Radiata, we find the apparatus for mastication partaking of the star-like arrangment which characterizes those animals. Thus in Scutella, (Fig. 55,) we have a pentagon composed of five triangular jaws, con- verging at their summits towards a central aperture which corresponds to the mouth, each one bearing a cutting plate or tooth, like a knife-blade, fitted by one edge into a cleft. The five jaws move towards the centre, and pierce or cut the ob- jects which come between them. In some of the sea-urchins 9* 102 NUTRITION. (Echinus,) this apparatus, which has been called Aristotle's Fig. 55. Fig. 56. lantern, (Fig. 56,) consists of numerous pieces, and is much more complicated. Still, the five fundamental pieces or jaws, each of them bearing a tooth at its point, may be recognized, as in Scutella; only instead of being placed horizontally, they form an inverted pyramid. 213. Among the Mollusks, a few, like the cuttle-fishes, have solid jaws or beaks closely resembling the beak of a parrot, (Fig. 57,) which move up and down as in birds. But a much larger number rasp their food by means of a flat blade coiled up like a watch- spring, the surface of which is covered with innumerable minute tooth-like points of a horny consistence, as seen in a highly magnified portion of the so-called tongue of Natica, (Fig. 58, a,) which, however, is only a modification of the beaks of cuttle-fishes. 214. The Articulata are remarkable, as a class, for the diversity and complication of their apparatus for taking and dividing their food. In some marine worms, Nereis, for exarr pie, the jaws consist of a pair of Fig. 59. curved, horny instruments, lodged in a sheath, (Fig. 59.) In spiders, these jaws are external, and Fig. 51. Fig. 58. OF DIGESTION. 103 sometimes mounted on long, jointed stems. Insects which masticate their food have, for the most part, at least two pairs of horny jaws, (Figs. 60, 61, m,j,) besides several additional pieces which serve for seizing and holding their food. Those which live on the fluids which they extract either from plants or from other animals, have the masticatory organs transformed into a trunk or tube- for that purpose. This trunk is sometimes rolled up in a spiral manner, as in the butterfly, (Fig. 64;) or it is stiff, and folded beneath the ID, p Fig. 60. Fig. 61. Fig. 62. Fig. 63. Fig. 64. chest, as in the squash-bugs, (Fig. 62,) containing several piercers of extreme delicacy, (Fig. 63,) adapted to penetrate the skin of animals or other objects whose juices they extract ; or they are prolonged so as to shield the tongue when thrust out in search of food, as in the bees, (Fig. 61, t.) The crabs have their anterior feet transformed into a kind of jaws, and several other pairs of articulated appendages performing ex- Fig. 65. Fig. 66. clasively masticatory functions. Even in the microscopic Rotifers, we find very complicated jaws, as seen in a Brachi- onus, (Fig. 65,) and still more magnified in Fig. 66. But 104 NUTRITION. amidst this diversity of apparatus, there is one thing which characterizes all the Articulata, namely, the jaws always move sideways ; while those of the Vertebrates and Mollusks move up and down, and those- of the Radiata concentrically. 215. In the Vertebrates, the jaws form a part of the bony skeleton. In most of them the lower jaw only is movable, and is brought up against the upper jaw by means of very strong mus- cles, the temporal and masseter Fig. 67. muscles, (Fig. 67, t, m,) which perform the principal motions requisite for seizing and mas- ticating food. 216. The jaws are usually armed with solid cutting instruments, the Teeth, or else are enveloped in a horny covering, the beak, as in the birds and tortoises, (Fig. 68.) In some of the whales, the true teeth remain concealed' in the Fig. 68. jaw-bone, and we have instead a range of long, flexible, horny plates or fans, fringed at the margin, which serve as strainers to separate the minute marine ani- mals on which they feed from the water drawn in with them, (Fig. 69.) A few are entirely des- titute of teeth, as the ant-eater, (Fig. 70.) 217. Though all the vertebrates possess jaws, Fig. 69. it must not be inferred nat they all chew their food. Many swallow their prey whole ; as most birds, tortoises, and whales. Even many of those which are furnished with teeth do not masticate their OF DIGESTION. 105 food ; some using them merely for seizing and securing their prey, as the lizards, frogs, crocodiles, and the great majority of fishes. In such animals, the teeth are nearly all alike in form and structure, as for instance, in the alligator, (Fig. 71,) the porpoises, and many fishes. A few of the latter, some of . Fig. 71. Fig. 72. the Rays, for example, have a sort of bony pavement, (Fig. 72,) composed of a peculiar kind of teeth, with which they crush the shells of the mollusks and crabs on which they feed. 218. The Mammals, however, are almost the only verte- brates which can properly be said to masticate their food. Their teeth are well developed, and pre- sent great diversity in form, arrangement and mode of inser- tion. Three kinds of teeth are usually distinguished in most of these animals, whatever may be Fig. ?3. their mode of life ; nanely, the cutting teeth, incisors , the 106 NUTRITION. tusks or carnivorous teeth, canines ; and the grinders, molars, (Fig. 73.) The incisors (a) occupy the front of the mouth, the upper ones being set in the intermaxillary bones ; they are the most simple and the least varied, have generally a thin cutting summit, and are employed almost exclusively for seizing food, except in the elephant, in which they assume the form of large tusks. The canines (b) are conical, more elongated than the others, more or less curved, and only two in each jaw. They have but a single root, like the incisors, and in the carnivora become very formidable weapons. In the herbivora; they are wanting, or when existing they are usually so enlarged and modified as also to become powerful organs of offence and defence, although useless for mastica- tion ; as in the babyroussa, &c. The molars (c) are the most important for indicating the habits and internal structure of the animal ; they are, at the same time, most varied in shape. Among them we find every transition, from those of a sharp and pointed form, as in the cat tribe, to those with broad and level summits, as in the ruminants and rodents. Still, when most diversified in the same animal, they have one character in common, their roots being never simple, but double or triple, a peculiarity which not only fixes them more firmly, but prevents them from being driven into the jaw in the efforts of mastication. 219. The harmony of organs already spoken of (22-24) is illustrated, in a most striking manner, by the study of the teeth of the mammals, and especially of their molar teeth. So constantly do they correspond with the structure of the other parts of the body, that a single molar is sufficient not only to indicate the mode of life of the animal to which it belongs and show whether it feeds on flesh or vegetables, or both, but also to determine the particular group to which it is related. Thus, those beasts of prey which feed on insects, and which on that account have been called Insectivora, such OF DIGESTION. 107 as the moles and bats, have the molars terminated by several Fig. 74 Fig. 76. Fig. 75. sharp, conical points, (Fig. 74,) so arranged that the eleva- tions of one tooth fit exactly into the depressions of the tooth opposite to it. In the true Carnivora, (Fig. 75,) on the con- trary, the molars are compressed laterally, so as to have- sharp, cutting edges, as in the bats ; and they shut by the ,side of each other, like the blades of scissors, thereby di- viding the food with great facility. 220. The same adaptation is observed in the teeth of her- bivorous animals. Those which chew the cud, (ruminants,) many of the thick-skinned animals, (pachydermata,) like the elephant, and some of the gnawers, (rodentia,) like the hare, (Fig. 76,) have the summits of the molars flat, like mill-stones, with more or less prominent ridges, for grinding the grass and leaves on which they subsist. Finally, the omnivora, those which feed on both flesh and fruit, like man and the monkeys, have the molars terminating in several rounded tubercles, being thus adapted to the mixed nature of their food. 221. Again, the mode in which the molars are combined with the canines and incisors furnishes excellent means of characterizing families and genera. Even the internal struc- ture of the teeth is so peculiar in each group of animals, and yet subject to such invariable rules, that it is possible to determine with precision the general structure of an animal, 108. NUTRITION. merely by investigating the fragment of a tooth under a mi croscope. 222. Another process, subsidiary to digestion, is called insalivation. Animals which masticate their food have glands, in the neighborhood of the mouth, which secrete a fluid called saliva. This fluid mingles with the food as it is chewed, and prepares it also to be more readily swallowed. The salivary glands are generally wanting, or rudimentary, or otherwise modified, in animals which swallow their food without mastication. After it has been masticated and min- gled with saliva, it is moved backwards by the tongue, and passes down through the oesophagus, into the stomach. This act is called deglutition or swallowing. 223. The wisdom and skill of the Creator is strikingly illustrated in the means he has afforded to every creature for securing the means for subsistence. Some animals have no ability to move from place to place, but are fixed to the soil ; as the oyster, the polyp, &c. These are dependent for subsistence upon such food as may stray or float near, and they have the means of securing it when it comes within their reach. The oyster closes its shell, and thus entraps its prey ; the polyp has flexible arms, (Fig. 77,) capable of great extension, which it throws instantly around any minute animal that comes in con- tact with it. The cuttle-fish, also, has elongated arms about the mouth, furnished with ranges of suckers, by which it secures its prey, (Fig. 47.) 224. Some are provided with instruments Fig. 77. for extracting food from places which would be otherwise inaccessible. Some of the mollusks, with their rasp-like tongue, (Fig. 58,) perforate the shells of other ani- mals, and thus reach and extract the inhabitant. Insects have various piercers, suckers, or a protractile tongue for the OF DIGESTION. 109 same purpose, (Figs. 61-64.) Marry Annelides, the leeches for example, have a sucker, which enables them to produce a vacuum, and thereby draw out blood from the perforations they make in other animals. Many microscopic animals are provided with hairs or cilia around the mouth, (Fig. 65,) which by their incessant motion produce currents that bring within reach the still more minute creatures or particles on which they feed. 225. Among the Vertebrata, the herbivora generally em- ploy their lips or their tongue, or both together, for seizing the grass or leaves they feed upon. The carnivora use their jaws, teeth, and especially their claws, which are long, sharp even movable, and admirably adapted for the purpose. The woodpeckers have long, bony tongues, barbed at the tip, with which they draw out insects from deep holes and crevi- ces in the bark of trees. Some reptiles also use their tongue to take their prey. Thus, the chameleon obtains flies at a distance of three or four inches, by darting out his tongue, the enlarged end of which is covered with a glutinous sub- stance to which they adhere. The elephant, whose tusks and short neck prevent him from bringing his mouth to the ground, has the nose prolonged into a trunk, which he uses with great dexterity for bringing food and drink to his mouth, Doubtless the mastodon, once so abundant in this country, was furnished with a similar organ. Man and the monkeys employ the hand exclusively, for prehension. 226. Some animals drink by suction, like the ox, others by lapping, like the dog. Birds simply fil. the beak with water, then, raising the head, allow it to run down into the crop. It is difficult to say how far aquatic animals re- quire water with their food ; it seems, however, impossible tha*" they should swallow their prey without introducing at the same time some water into their stomach. Of many among the lowest animals, such as the Polyps it is well 10 110 OF DIGESTION. known that they frequently fill the whole cavity of their body with water, through the mouth, the tentacles, and pores upon the sides, and empty it at intervals through the same openings. And thus the aquatic mollusks introduce water into special cavities of the body, or between their tissues, through various openings, while others pump it into their blood vessels, through pores at the surface of their body. This is the case with most fishes. 226 a. Besides the more conspicuous organs above de- scribed, there are among the lower animals various micro- scopic apparatus for securing their prey. The lassos of polypi have been already mentioned incidentally, (223.) They are minute cells, each containing a thin thread coiled up in its cavity, which may be thrown out by inversion, and extend to a considerable length beyond the sac to which it is at- tached. Such lassos are grouped in clusters upon the ten- tacles, or scattered upon the sides of the Actinia and of most polypi. They occur also in similar clusters upon the tentacles and the disk of jelly-fishes. The nettling sensa- tion produced by the contact of many of these animals is undoubtedly owing to the lasso cells. Upon most of the smaller animals, they act as a sudden, deadly poison. In Echinoderms, such as star-fishes, and sea-urchins, we find other microscopic organs in the form of clasps, placed upon a movable stalk. The clasps, wThich may open and shut al- ternately, are composed of serrated or hooked branches, generally three in number, closing concentrically upon each other. With these weapons, star-fishes not more than two inches in diameter may seize and retain shr:mps of half that length, notwithstanding their efforts to disentangle them- selves. CHAPTER SEVENTH OF THE BLOOD AND CIRCULATION. 227. The nutritive portions of the food are poured into the general mass of fluid which pervades every part of the body, out of which every tissue is originally constructed, and from time to time renewed. This fluid, in the general acceptation of the term, is called blood ; but it differs greatly in its essential constitution in the different groups of the Animal Kingdom. In polypi and medusae, it is merely chyme, (208 ;) in most mollusks and articulates it is chyle, (209 ;) but in vertebrates it is more highly organized, and constitutes what is properly called Blood. 228. The Blood, when examined by the microscope, is found to consist of a transparent fluid, the serum, consisting chiefly of albumen, fibrin, and water, in which float many rounded, somewhat compressed bodies, called blood disks. Fig. 78. Fig. 79. Fig. 80. Fig. 81. These vary in number with the natural heat of the animal from which the blood is taken. Thus, they are more nu- 112 OF THE BLOOD merous in birds than in mammals, and more abundant in the latter than in fishes. In man and other mammals they are very small and nearly circular, (Fig. 78 ;) they are some- what larger, and of an oval form, in birds and fishes, (Figs. 79, 81 ;) and still larger in reptiles, (Fig. 80.) 229. The color of the blood in the vertebrates is bright red ; but in some invertebrates, as the crabs and mollusks, the nutritive fluid is nearly or quite colorless ; while in the worms and some echinoderms, it is variously colored yellow, orange, red, violet, lilac, and even green. 230. The presence of this fluid in every part of the body is one of the essential conditions of animal life. A per- petual current flows from the digestive organs towards the remotest parts of the surface ; and such portions as are not required for nutriment and secretions return to the centre of circulation, mingled with fluids which need to be assimilated to the blood, and with particles of the body which are to be expelled, or, before returning to the heart, are distributed in the liv3i\ The blood is kept in an incessant circulation for this purpose. 231. In the lowest animals, such as the polypi, the nutri- tive fluid is simply the product of digestion (chyme) mingled with water in the common cavity of the viscera, with which it comes in immediate contact, as well as with the whole interior of the body. In the jelly-fishes, which occupy a somewhat higher rank, a similar liquid is distributed by pro- longations of the principal cavity to different parts of the body, (Fig. 31.) Currents are produced in these, partly by the general movements of the animal, and partly by means of the incessant vibrations of microscopic fringes, called vibratile cilia, which overspread the interior. In most of the mollusks and articulates, the blood (chyle) is also in immediate contact with the viscera, water being mixed with it in mollusks ; the vessels, if there are any, not forming a AND CIRCULATION. 113 complete circuit, but emptying into various cavities which interrupt their course. 232. In animals of still higher organization, as the verte- brates, we find the vital fluid enclosed in an appropriate set of vessels, by which it is successively conveyed throughout the system to supply nutriment and secretions, and to the respiratory organs, where it absorbs oxygen, or, in other words, becomes oxygenated. 233. The vessels in which the blood circulates are of two kinds : 1. The arteries, of a firm, elastic structure, which may be distended or contracted, according to the volume of their contents, and which convey the blood from the centre towards the surface, distributing it to every point of the body. 2. The veins, of a thin, membranous structure, furnished within with valves, (Fig. 82, v,) which aid in sustaining the column of blood, only allowing it to flow from the peri- phery towards the centre. The arteries con- stantly subdivide into smaller and smaller branches ; while the veins commence in minute twigs, and are gathered into branches and larger trunks, to unite finally into a few stems, near the centre of circulation. 234. The extremities of the arteries and veins are con- nected by a net-work of extremely delicate vessels, called capillary ves- sels, (Fig. 83.) They pervade every portion of the body, so that almost no point can be pricked without drawing blood. Their office is to distribute the nutritive fluid to the organic cells, where all the important processes of nutrition are performed, such as the alimentation and growth of all organs and tissues, the elaboration of bile, milk, saliva, and 10* Fig. 83. 114 OF THE BLOOD other important products derived from blood, the removal of effete particles and the substitution of new ones, and all those changes by which the bright blood of the arteries be- comes the dark blood of the veins ; and again, in the cells of the respiratory organs which the capillaries supply, the dark venous blood is oxygenated and restored to the bright scarlet hue of the arterial blood. 235. Where there are blood-vessels in the lowest animals, the blood is kept in motion by the occasional contraction of some of the principal vessels, as in the worms. Insects have a large vessel running along the back, furnished with valves, so arranged that, when the ves- Fig. 84. ° ' sel contracts, the blood can flow only towards the head, and, being thence distributed to the body, is returned again into the dorsal vessel, (Fig. 84,) by fissures at its sides. 236. In all the higher animals there is a central organ, the heart, which forces the blood through the arteries to- wards the periphery, and receives it again on its return. The heart is a hollow, muscular organ, of a conical form, which dilates and contracts at regular intervals, independ- ently of the will. It is either a single cavity, or is divided by walls into two, three, or four compartments, as seen in the following diagrams. These modifications are important in their connection with the respiratory organs, and indicate the higher or lower rank of an animal, as determined by the quality of the blood distributed in those organs. 237. In the mammals and birds the heart is divided by a vertical partition into two cavities, each of which is again divided into two compartments, one above the other, as seen in the diagram, (Fig. 85.) The two upper cavities are called AND CIRCULATION. 115 auricles, and the two lower ventricles. Reptiles have two Fig. 85. Fig. 87. auricles and one ventricle, (Fig. 86.) Fishes have one auri- cle and one ventricle only, (Fig. 87.) 238. The auricles do not communicate with each other, in adult animals, nor do the ventricles. The former receive the blood from the body and the respiratory organs, through veins,- and each auricle sends it into the ventricle beneath, through an opening guarded by a valve, to prevent its reflux ; while the ventricles, by their contractions, force the blood through arteries into the lungs, and through the body gen- erally. 239. The two auricles dilate at the same instant, and also contract simultaneously ; so also do the ventricles. These successive contractions and dilatations constitute the pulsa- tions of the heart. The contraction is called systole, and the dilatation is called diastole. Each pulsation consists of two movements, the diastole or dilatation of the ventricles, during which the auricles contract, and the systole or con- traction of the ventricles, while the auricles dilate. The frequency of the pulse varies in different animals, and even in the same animal, according to its age, sex, and the degree of health. In adult man, they are commonly about seventy beats per minute. 240. The course of the blood in those animals which have four cavities to the heart is as follows, beginning with the left ventricle, (Fig. 85, I. v.) By the contraction of this 116 OF THE BLOOD ventricle, the blood is driven through the main arterial trunk, called the aorta, (Fig. 90, a,) and is distributed by its branches thi jughout the body ; it is then collected by the veins, carried back to the heart, and poured into the right auricle, (Fig. 85, r «,) which sends it into the right ventricle rv.) The right ventricle propels it through another set of arteries, the pulmonary arteries, (Fig. 90,^?,) to the lungs, (I ; ) it is there collected by the pulmonary veins, and con- veyed to the left auricle, (Fig. 85, I a,) by which it is returned to the left ventricle, thus completing the circuit. 241. Hence the blood in performing its whole circuit passes twice through the heart. The first part of this cir- cuit, the passage of the blood through the body, is called the great circulation ; and the second part, the passage of the blood through the lungs, is the lesser or pulmonary cir- culation : this double circuit is said to be a complete circu- lation. In this case the heart may be justly regarded as two hearts conjoined, and in fact the whole of the lesser cir- culation intervenes in the passage of the blood from one side of the heart to the other ; except that during the embryonic period there is an opening between the two auricles, which closes as soon as respiration commences. 242. In reptiles, (Fig. 86,) the venous blood from the body is received into one auricle, and the oxygenated blood from the lungs into the other. These throw their contents into the single ventricle below, which propels the mixture in part to the body, and in part to the lungs ; but as only the smaller portion of the whole quantity is sent to the lungs in a single circuit, the circulation is said to be incomplete. In the Crocodiles, the ventricle has a partition which keeps sep- arate the two kinds of blood received from the auricles ; but the mixture soon takes place by means of a special artery, which passes from the pulmonary artery to the aorta. 243. In fishes, (Fig. 87,) the blood is carried directly AND CIRCULATION. 117 from the "v 3ntricle to the gills, which are their chief respir- atory organs ; thence it passes into arteries for distribution to the system in general, and returns by the veins to the auricle. Here' the blood, in its circuit, passes but once through the heart ; but the heart of a fish corresponds nev- ertheless to the heart of a mammal, and not to one half of it, as has often been maintained, for the gills are not lungs. 244. Crabs and other Crustacea have but a single ventri- cle, without an auricle. In the rnollusks, there is likewise but a single ven- tricle, as in Natica, (Fig. 88, ?i.) Some have in addition one or two auri- cles. These auricles are sometimes so disjoined lg' ' as to form so many isolated hearts, as in the cuttle-fish. Among Eadiata, the sea-urchins are provided with a tubular heart. CHAPTER EIGHTH OF RESPIRATION. 245. For the maintenance of its vital properties, the blood must be submitted to the influence of the air. This is true of all animals, whether they live in the atmosphere or in the water. No animal can survive for any considerable period of time without air ; and the higher animals almost instantly die when deprived of it. It is the office of respiration to bring the blood into communication with the air. 216. Among animals which breathe in the open air, some have a series of tubes branching through the interior of the body, -called trachece, (Fig. 89, £,) opening externally upon the sides of the body, by small aper- tures, called stigmata, (s ; ) as in insects and in some spiders. But the most com- mon mode of respiration is by means of Lungs, a pair of peculiar spongy or cel- lular organs, in the form of large pouches, which are the more complicated in pro- portion to the quantity of air to be con- sumed. 247. In the lower vertebrata, provided with lungs, they form a single organ ; but in the higher classes they are in pairs, placed in the cavity formed by the ribs, one on each side of OF RESPIRATION. 119 the vertebral column, and enclosing the heart (h) between them, (Fig. 90, Z Z.) The lungs communicate with the atmos- phere by means of a tube composed of cartilaginous rings which arises from the back part of the mouth, and divides below, first into a branch for each organ, and then into in- numerable branches penetrating their whole mass, and finally terminating in minute sacs. This tube is the trachea or windpipe, (w,) and its branches are the bronchi. In the higher air-breath- mg animals the lungs and heart occupy an apartment by themselves, the chest, which is separated from the other con- tents of the lower arch of the vertebral column, (161,) by a fleshy partition, called the diaphragm, passing across -^S- 90* the cavity of the body, and arching up into the chest. The only access to this apartment from without is by the glottis, (Fig. 22, o,) through the trachea. 248. The mechanism of respiration by lungs may be com- pared to the action of a bellows. The cavity of the chest is enlarged by raising the ribs, the arches of whjch naturally slope somewhat downward, but more especially by the con- traction of the diaphragm, whereby its intrusion into the chest is diminished. This enlargment causes the air to rush in through the trachea, distending the lung so as to fill the additional space. When the diaphragm is again relaxed, and the ribs are allowed to subside, the cavity is again dimin- ished, and the air expelled. These movements are termed inspiration or inhalation, and expiration. . The spongy pul- monary substance being thus distended by air, the blood sen. from the heart is brought into such contact with it as to allow the requisite interchange to take place, (235.) 249. The respiration of animals breathing in water is ac- 120 OF RESPIRATION. Fig. 92. free access to them. complished by a different apparatus. The air is to be derived from the water, in which more or less is always diffused. The organs for this purpose are Fig. 9i. called branchice, or gills, and are either delicate tufts or plumes floating outside of the body, as in some of the marine worms, (Fig. 33,) and many mollusks, (Fig. 91, g ;) or they consist of deli- cate combs and brushes, as in fishes, (Fig. 92,) crabs, and most mollusks, (Fig. 88, g.) These gills are al- ways so situated that the water has In the lower aquatic animals, such as the polypi, and some jelly-fishes and mollusks, respiration takes place by the incessant motions of vibratory cilia, which fringe both the outside and the cavities of the body ; the cur- rents they produce bringing constantly fresh supplies of water, containing air, into contact with the respiratory surface. 250. Many animals living in water, however, rise to the surface and breathe the atmosphere there, or are furnished with the means of carrying away a temporary supply of air, whilst others are furnished with reservoirs in which the blood requiring oxygenation may be accumulated, and their stay under water prolonged. This is the case with the seals, whales, tortoises, frogs, many insects and mollusks, &c. 251. The vivifying power of the air upon the blood is due to its oxygen. If an animal be confined for a time in a closed vessel, and the contained air be afterwards examined, a considerable portion of its oxygen will have disappeared, and another gas of a very different character, namely, car- bonic acid gas, will have taken its place. The essential office of respiration is to supply oxygen to the blood, at the same time that carbon is removed from it. OF RESPIRATION. 121 252. An immediately obvious effect of respiration in the red-blooded animals is a change of color ; the blood, in passing through the respiratory organs, being changed from a very dark purple to a bright scarlet. In the great circula- tion (241) the scarlet blood occupies the arteries, and is usu- ally called red blood, in contradistinction from the venous blood, which is called Mack Hood. In the lesser circulation, on the contrary, the arteries carry the dark, and the veins the red blood. 253. The quantity of oxygen consumed by various ani- mals in a given time has been accurately ascertained by ex- periment. It has been found, for instance, that a common- sized man consumes, on an average, about 150 cubic feet in twenty-four hours ; and as the oxygen constitutes but 21 per cent, of the atmosphere, it follows that he inhales, during a day, about 700 cubic feet of atmospheric air. In birds, the respiration is still more active, while in reptiles and fishes it is much more sluggish. 254. The energy and activity of an animal is, therefore somewhat dependent on the activity of its respiration. Thus the toad, whose movements are very sluggish, respires much more slowly than the mammals, birds, and even insects ; and it has been ascertained that a butterfly, notwithstanding its comparatively diminutive size, consumes more oxygen than a toad. 255. The circulation and respiration have a reciprocal in- fluence upon each other. If the heart be powerful, or if on violent exercise a more rapid supply of blood to repair the consequent waste is demanded, (201,) respiration must be proportionally accelerated to supply air to the greater amount of blood sent to the lungs. Hence the panting occasioned by running or other unusual efforts of the muscles. On the other hand, if respiration be hurried, the blood is rendered more stimulating by greater oxygenation, and causes an ac- 11 122 OF RESPIRATION. celeration of the circulation. The quantity of air consumed varies, therefore, with the proportion of the blood which is sent to the lungs. 256. The proper temperature of an animal, or what is termed animal heat, depends on the combined activity of the respiratory and circulating systems, and is in direct pro- portion to it. In many animals the heat is maintained at a uniform temperature, whatever may be the variations of the surrounding medium. Thus, birds maintain a temperature of about 108° Fahrenheit ; and in a large proportion of mam- mals it is generally from 95° to 105°. These bear the general designation of warm-blooded animals. 257. Reptiles, fishes, and most of the still lower animals, have not this power of maintaining a uniform temperature. The heat of their body is always as low as from 35° to 50°, but varies perceptibly with the surrounding medium, being often, however, a little above it when the external tempera- ture is very low, though some may be frozen without the loss of life. For this reason, they are denominated cold-blooded animals ; and all animals which have such a structure of the heart that only a -part of the blood which enters it is sent to the respiratory organs, are among them, (243.) 258. The production of animal heat is obviously connected with the respiratory process. The oxygen of the respired air is diminished, and carbonic acid takes its place. The carbonic acid is formed in the body by the combination of the oxygen of the air with the carbon of the blood. The chemical combination attending this function is, therefore, essentially the same as that of combustion. It is thus easy to understand how the natural heat of an animal is greater, in proportion as respiration is more active. How far nutri- tion in general, and more particularly assimilation, by which the liquid parts are fixed and solidified, is connected with the maintenance of the proper temperature of animals, and the OF RESPIRATION. 123 uniform distribution of heat through the body, has not yet been satisfactorily ascertained. 259. Some of the higher warm-blooded animals do not maintain their elevated temperature during the whole year ; but pass the winter in a sort of lethargy called hibernation, or the hibernating sleep. The marmot, the bear, the bat, the crocodile, and most reptiles, furnish examples. During this state the animal takes no food ; and as it respires only after very prolonged intervals, its heat is diminished, and its vital functions generally are much reduced. The structural cause of hibernation is not ascertained ; but the phenomena attending it fully illustrate the laws already stated, (254-8.) 260. There is another point of view in which respiration should be considered, namely, with reference to the buoy- ancy of animals, or their power of rising in the atmosphere, and their ability to live at different depths in the water, under a diminished or increased pressure. The organs of res- piration of birds and insects are remarkably adapted for the purpose of admitting at will a greater quantity of .air into their body, the birds being provided with large pouches ex- tending from the lungs into the abdominal cavity and into the bones of the wing. In insects the whole bcdy is pene- trated by air tubes, the ramifications of their trachea?, which are enlarged at intervals into wider cells ; whilst most of the aquatic animals are provided with minute, almost micro- scopic tubes, penetrating from the surface into the substance, or the cavities of the body, admitting water into the interior, by which they thus adapt their whole system to pressures which would otherwise crush them. These tubes may with propriety be called water-tubes. In fishes, they penetrate through the bones of the head and shoulder, through skin and scales, and communicate with the blood vessels and heart, into which they pour water ; in mollusks they are more numerous in the fleshy parts, as, for example, in the 124 OF RESPIRATION. foot, which they help to distend, and communicate with the main cavity of the body, supplying it also with liquid ; in echinoderms they pass through the skin, and even through 260 a. In order fully to appreciate the homologies between the various respiratory apparatus observed in different animals, it is ne- cessary to resort to a strict comparison of the fundamental connec- tions of these organs with the whole system of organization, rather than to the consideration of their special adaptation to the elements in which they live. In Vertebrates, for instance, there are two sets of distinct respiratory organs, more or less developed at different pe- riods of life, or in different groups. All Vertebrates, at first, have gills arising from the sides of the head, and directly supplied with blood from the heart ; but these gills are the essential organs of res- piration only in fishes and some reptiles, and gradually disappear in the higher reptiles, as well as in birds and Mammalia, towards the close of their embryonic growth. Again, all Vertebrates have lungs, opening in or near the head ; but the lungs are fully devel- oped only in Mammalia, birds, and the higher reptiles, in propor- tion as the branchial respiration is reduced ; whilst in fishes the air- bladder constitutes a rudimentary lung. 260 b. In Articulates, there are also two sorts of respiratory or- gans ; aerial, called tracheae in insects, and lungs in spiders ; and aquatic, in Crustacea arid worms, called gills. But these tracheae and lungs open separately upon the two sides of the body, (air never being admitted through the mouth or nostrils in Articulates ;) the gills are placed in pairs ; those which are like the tracheae occupying a similar position, so that there are nearly as many pairs of tracheae and gills as there are segments in these animals, (Figs. 89 and 33.) The different respiratory organs in Articulates are in reality mere modifications of the same apparatus, as their mode of formation and successive metamorphoses distinctly show, and cannot be compared with either the lungs or gills of Vertebrates ; they are special organs not found in other classes, though they perform the same functions. The same may be said of the gills and lungs of mollusks, which are essentially alike in structure, the lungs of snails and slugs being only a modification of the gills of aquatic mollusks ; but these two kinds of organs differ again in their structure and relations from the tracheae and gills of Articulates, as much as from the lungs and gills OF RESPIRATION. 125 the hard shell, whilst in polyps they perforate the walls of the general cavity of the body, which they constantly fill with water. of Vertebrates. In those Radiates which, are provided with distinct respiratory organs, such as the Echinoderms, we find still another typical structure, their gills forming bunches of fringes around the mouth, or rows of minute vesicles along the radiating segments of the body. 11* CHAPTER NINTH. OF THE SECRETIONS. 261. While, by the process of digestion, a homogeneous fluid is prepared from the food, and supplies new material to the blood, another process is also going on, by which the blood is analyzed, as it were ; some of its constituents being selected and so combined as to form products for useful purposes, while other portions of it which have become useless or injurious to the system are taken up by different organs, and expelled in different forms. This process is termed Secretion. 262. The organs by which these operations are per- formed are much varied, consisting either of flat surfaces or membranes, of minute simple sacs, or of delicate elongated tubes, all lined with minute cells, called epithelium cells, which latter are the real agents in the process. Every sur- face of the body is covered by them, and they either dis- charge their products directly upon the surface, as on the mucous membrane, or they unite in clusters and empty into a common duct, and discharge by a single orifice, as is the case with some of the intestinal glands, and of those from which the perspiration issues upon the skin, (Fig. 94.) OF THE SECRETIONS. 127 263. In the higher animals, where separate organs for special purposes are multiplied, numerous sacs and tubes are assembled into compact masses, called glands. Some of these are of large size, such as the salivary glands, the kidneys, and t"ie liver. In these, clusters of sacs "^Fi^&T open into a common canal, and this canal unites with similar ones forming larger trunks, such as we find in the salivary glands, (Fig. 93,) and finally they all discharge by a single duct. 264. By the organs of secretion, two somewhat different purposes are effected, namely, fluids of a peculiar character are selected from the blood, for important uses, such as the saliva, tears, milk, &c, some of which differ but little in their composition from that of the blood itself, and might be retained in the blood with impunity ; or, the fluids selected are such as are positively injurious, and cannot remain in the blood without soon destroying life. These latter are usually termed Excretions. 265. As the weight of the body, except during its period of active growth, remains nearly uniform, it follows that it must daily lose as much as it receives ; in other words, the excretions must equal in amount the food and drink taken, with the exception of the small proportion discharged by the alimentary canal. Some of the most important of these outlets will be now indicated. 266. We have already seen (37) that all animal tissues admit of being traversed by liquids and gases. This mutual transmission of fluids from one side of a membrane to the other is termed endosmosis and exosmosis, or imbibition and transudation, and is a mechanical, rather than a vital, phe- nomenon, inasmuch as it takes place in dead as well as in 128 OF THE SECRETIONS. living tissues. The bloodvessels, especially the capillaries, share this property. Hence portions of the circulating fluids escape through the walls of the vessels and pass off at the surface. This superficial loss is termed exhalation. It is most active where the bloodvessels most abound, and accord- ingly is very copious from the air-tubes of the lungs and from the skin. The loss in this way is very considerable ; and it has been estimated that, under certain circumstances, the body loses, by exhalation, five eighths of the whole weight of the substances received into it. 267. The skin, or outer envelop of the body, is otherwise largely concerned in the losses of the body. Its layers are constantly renewed by the tissues beneath, and the outer dead layers are thrown off. This removal is some- times gradual and continual, as in man. In fishes and many mollusks, it comes off in the form of slime, which is, in fact, composed of cells detached from the surface of the skin. Sometimes the loss is periodical, when it is termed moulting. Thus, the mammals cast their hair, and the deer their horns, the birds their feathers, the serpents their skins, the crabs their test, the caterpillars their outer envelop, with all the hairs growing from it. 268. The skin presents such a variety of structure in the different groups of animals as to furnish excellent distinctive characters of species, genera, and even families, as will hereafter be shown. In the vertebrates we may recognize several distinct layers, of unequal thickness, as may be seen in figure 94, which represents a magnified section of the human skin, traversed by the sudoriferous canals. The lower and thickest layer, (a,) is the cutis, or true skin, and is the part which is tanned into leather. Its surface presents numerous papillae, in which the nerves of general sensation terminate ; they also contain a fine network of bloodvessels, OF THE SECRETIONS. 129 usually termed the vascular layer. The superficial layer (c) is the epidermis, or cuticle. The cells of which it is com- posed are distinct at its inner portion, but become dried and flattened as they are pushed outwards. It is supplied with neither vessels nor nerves, and, conse- quently, is insensible. Between these two layers, and more especially con- nected with the cuticle, is the rete muco- sum, (£,) a very thin layer of cells, some of which contain the pigment which gives the complexion to the different races of men and animals. The scales of reptiles, the nails and claws of mammals, and the solid coverings of the Crustacea, are merely modifications of the epidermis. On the other hand, the feathers of birds and the scales of fishes arise from the vascular layer. 269. Of all the Excretions, if we except that from the Lungs, the bile seems to be the most extensive and im- portant ; and hence a liver, or some analogous organ, by which bile is secreted, is found in animals of every depart- ment ; while some, or all, of the other glands are want- ing in the lower classes of animals. In Vertebrates, the liver is the largest of all the organs of the body. In mol- lusks, it is no less preponderant. In the gasteropods, like the snail, it envelopes the intestine in its convolutions, (Fig. 52 ;) and in the acephala, like the clam and oyster, it generally surrounds the stomach. In insects it is found in the shape of long tubes, variously contorted and interlaced, (Fig. 51.) In the Radiata, this organ is largely developed, especially among the echinoderms. In the star-fishes ;t extends into 130 OF THE SECRETIONS. all the recesses cf the rays ; and, in color and structure, re- sembles the liver of mollusks. Even in polyps, we find pe- culiar brown cells lining the digestive cavity, which, proba- bly, perform functions similar to those of the liver in the higher animals. 270. The great importance of the respiratory organs in discharging carbon from the blood has already been spoken of, (245, 251.) The substances removed by the liver and the lungs are of the same class, being those which are desti- tute of nitrogen. These organs seem, in some sense, sub' sidiary to each other ; and hence, in those animals where the respiratory organs are largely developed, the biliary organs are comparatively small, and vice versa. Another and opposite class of impurities, and no less pernicious if retained in the blood, is removed by the kidneys ; and, consequently, organs answering to the kidneys are found very far down in the series of animals. Most of the peculiar ingredients of the urine are capable of assuming solid, crys- talline forms ; and, in some animals, as in reptiles and birds, the whole secretion of the kidneys is solid. In most cases, however, the urinary salts are largely diluted with water ; and, as the lungs and liver are supplementary to each other in the removal of carbon, so the lungs, the kid- neys, and the skin mutually relieve each other in the removal of the waf 3ry portions of the blood. CHAPTER TENTH. EMBRYOLOGY. SECTION I OF THE EGG. 271. The functions of vegetative life, of which we nave treated in the preceding chapters, namely, digestion, circu- lation, respiration, and secretion, have for their end the pres- ervation of the individual. We have now to treat of the functions that serve for the perpetuation of the species, namely, those of reproduction, (200.) 272. It has been generally admitted that animals as well as plants are the offspring of individuals of the same kind ; and vice versa, that none of them can give birth to individ- uals differing from themselves ; but recent investigations have modified to a considerable extent this view, as we shall see hereafter. 273. Reproduction in animals is almost universally accom- plished by the association of individuals of two kinds, males and females , living commonly in pairs or in flocks, each of them characterized by peculiarities of structure and external appearance. As this distinction prevails throughout the ani- mal kingdom, it is always necessary, if we would obtain a correct and complete idea of a species, to take into account the peculiarities of both sexes. Every one is familiar with the differences between the cock and the hen, the lion and the lioness, &c. Less prominent peculiarities are observed in 132 EB1BRY0L0GY. most Vertebrates. Among Articulata, the differences are no less striking, the males being often of a different shape and color, as in crabs, or having even more complete organs, as in many tribes of insects, where the males have wings, while the females are destitute of them, (Fig. 147.) Among mol- lusks, the females have often a wider shell. 274. Even higher distinctions than specific ones are based upon peculiarities of the sexes ; for example, the whole class of Mammalia is characterized by the fact that the female is furnished with organs for nourishing her young with a peculiar liquid, the milk, secreted by herself. Again, the Marsupial, such as the opossum and kangaroo, are dis- tinguished by the circumstance that the female has a pouch into which the young are received in their immature con- dition at birth. 275. That all animals are produced from eggs, (Omne vivum ex ovo,) is an old adage in Zoology, which modern researches have fully confirmed. In tracing back the phases of animal life, we invariably arrive at an epoch when the incipient animal is enclosed within an egg. It is then called an embryo, and the period passed in this condition is called the embryonic period. 276. Before the various classes of the animal kingdom had been attentively studied during the embryonic period, all animals were divided into two great divisions : the ovip- arous, comprising those which lay eggs, such as birds, reptiles, fishes, insects, mollusks, &c, and the viviparous, which bring forth their young alive, like the mammalia, and a few from other orders, as the sharks, vipers, &c. This distinction lost much of its importance when it was shown that viviparous animals are produced from eggs, as well as the oviparous ; only that their eggs, instead of being laid before the development of the embryo begins, undergo their early changes in the body of the mother. Production from OF THE EGG. 133 Fig. 95. eggs should, therefore, be considered as a universal charac- teristic of the Animal Kingdom. 277. Form of the Egg. — The general form of the egg is more or less spherical. The eggs of birds have the form of an elongated spheroid, narrow at one end ; and this form is so constant, that the term oval has been universally adopted to designate it. But this is by no means the usual form cf the eggs of other animals. In most instances, on the contra- ry, they are spherical, especially among the lower animals. Some have singular appendages, as those of the skates and sharks, (Fig. 95,) which are shaped like a hand-barrow, with four hooked horns at the corners. The eggs of the hydra, or fresh water polyp, are thickly covered with prickles, (Fig. 96.) Those of certain insects, the Podurella, for example, are furnished with fila- ments which give them a hairy aspect, (Fig. 97 ;) others are cylindrical or prismatic ; and frequently the surface is sculptured. 278. Formation of the Egg. — The egg originates within peculiar organs, called ovaries, which are glandular bodies, usually situated in the abdominal cavity. So long as the eggs remain in the ovary, they are very minute in size. In this condition they are called ovarian, or primitive eggs. They are identical in all animals, being, in fact, merely little cells (y) containing yolk, (y,) and including other smaller cells, the germinative vesicle, (g,) and the germinative dot, (d.) The yolk itself, with its membrane, (v,) is formed while the egg remains in the ovary. It is afterwards enclosed in another envelope, the shell membrane, which may remain soft, (s,) 12 Fig. 96. Fig. 97. Fig. 98. 134 EH BRYOLOGY. or be further surrounded by calcareous deposits, the shell proper, (Fig. 101, s.) The number of these eggs is large, in proportion as the animal stands lower in the class to which it belongs. The ovary of a herring contains more than 25,000 eggs ; while that of birds contains a much smaller number, perhaps one or two hundred only. 279. Ovulation. — Having attained a certain degree of maturity, which varies in different classes, the eggs leave the ovary. This is called ovulation, and must not be con- founded with the laying of the eggs, which is the subsequent expulsion of them from the abdominal cavity, either imme- diately, or through a special canal, the oviduct. Ovulation takes place at certain seasons of the year, and never be- fore the animal has reached a particular age, which is commonly that of its full growth. In a majority of species, ovulation is repeated for a number of years consecutively, generally in the spring in terrestrial animals, and frequently several times a year ; most of the lower aquatic animals, how- ever, lay their eggs in the fall, or during winter. In others, on the contrary, it occurs but once during life, at the period of maturity, and the animal soon afterwards dies. Thus the but- terfly and most insects die, shortly after having laid their eggs. 280. The period of ovulation is one of no less interest to the zoologist than to the physiologist, since the peculiar characteristics of each species are then most clearly marked. Ovulation is to animals what flowering is to plants ; and, indeed, few phenomena are more interesting to the student of nature than those exhibited by animals at the pairing season. Then their physiognomy is the most animated, their song the most melodious, and their attire the most brilliant. Some birds appear so different at this time, that zoologists are always careful to indicate whether or not a bird is represented at the breeding season. Fishes, and many other animals, are ornamented with much brighter colors at this period. OF THE EGG. 135 281. Laying. — After leaving the ovary, the eggs are either discharged from the animal, that is, laid ; or they continue their development within the parent animal, as is the case in some fishes and reptiles, as sharks and vipers, which, for that reason, have been named ovo-viviparous animals. The eggs of the mammalia are not only developed within the mother, but become intimately united to her ; this peculiar mode of development has received the name of gestation. 282. Eggs are sometimes laid one by one, as in birds ; sometimes collectively and in great numbers, as in the frogs, the fishes, and most of the invertebrates. The queen ant of the African termites lays 80,000 eggs in twenty-four. hours ; and the common hair- worm, (Gordius,) as many as 8,000,000 in less than one day. In some instances they are united in clusters by a gelatinous envelop ; in others they are Fi 99 enclosed in cases or between membranous disks, forming long strings, as in the eggs of the Pyrula shell, (Fig, 99.) The conditions under which the eggs of different animals are placed, on being laid, are very different. The eggs of birds, and of some insects, are deposited in nests constructed for that purpose by the parent. Other animals carry their eggs attached to their bodies • sometimes under the tail, as in the lobsters and crabs, sometimes hanging in large bun- dles on both sides of the tail, as in the Mo- noculus, (Fig. 100, a.) FiS' 10°- 2S3. Some toads carry them on the back, and, what is most extraordinary, it is the male which undertakes this office. Many mollusks, the Unio for example, have them enclosed between the folds of the gills during incubation. lr the jelly fishes and polyps, they hang in clusters, either 136 EMBRYOLOGY. outside, (Fig. 77, o,) or inside, at the bottom of the cavity of the body. Some insects, such as the gad-flies, deposit their eggs on other animals. Finally, many abandon their eggs to the elements, taking no further care of them after they have been laid ; such is the case with most fishes, some insects, and many mollusks. As a general rule, it may be said that animals take the more care of their eggs and brood as they occupy a higher rank in their respective classes. 284. The development of the embryo does not always take place immediately after the egg is laid. A considera- ble time, even, may elapse before it commences. Thus, the first eggs laid by the hen do not begin to develop until the whole number which is to constitute the brood is deposited. The eggs of most butterflies, and of insects in general, are laid in autumn, in temperate climates, and remain unchanged until the following spring. During this time, the principle of life in the egg is not extinct, but is simply inactive, or in a latent state. This tenacity of life is displayed in a still more striking manner in plants. The seeds, which are equivalent to eggs, preserve for years, and even for ages, their power to germinate. Thus, there are some well- authenticated cases in which wheat taken from the ancient catacombs of Egypt has been made to sprout and grow. 285. A certain degree of warmth is requisite for the hatching of eggs. Those of birds, especially, require to be submitted, for a certain length of time, to a uniform tem- perature, corresponding to the natural heat of the future chicken, which is naturally supplied by the body of the parent. In other words, incubation is necessary for their growth. Incubation, however, is not a purely vital phenom- enon, but may be easily imitated artificially. Some birds of warm climates dispense with this task ; for example, the ostrich often contents herself with depositing her eggs in the sand of the desert, lea -ing them to be hatched by the sun. In OF THE EGG. 137 like manner, the eggs of most birds may be hatched by main- taining them at the proper temperature by artificial means. Some fishes are also known to build nests and to sit upon their eggs, as the sticklebacks, sun-fishes, and cat-fishes ; but whether they impart heat to them or not, is doubtful. Before entering into the details of embryonic transfor- mations, a few words are necessary respecting the composi- tion of the egg. 286. Composition of the Egg. — The egg is composed of several substances, varying in structure, as well as in appearance. Thus, in a hen's egg, (Fig. 101,) we have first a calcareous shell, (s,) lined by a double membrane, the shell membrane, (m ;) then an albuminous substance, the white, (a,) in which several layers may be distinguished ; within this we find the yolk, (y,) enclosed in its membrane ; and before it was laid, there was in the midst of the latter a mi- nute vesicle, the germinative vesicle, (Fig. 98, g,) containing a still smaller one, the germinative dot, (d.) These different parts are not equally important in a physiological point of view. The most conspicuous of them, namely, the shell and the white, are not es- sential parts, and therefore are often wanting ; while the yolk, the ger- minative vesicle, and the germina- Fig. 101. tive dot are found in the eggs of all animals ; and out of these, and of these only, the germ is formed, in the position shown by Fig. 101, e. 287. The vitellus or yolk (Fig. 101, y) is the most essen- tial part of the egg. It is a liquid of variable consistence, sometimes opaque, as in the eggs of birds, sometimes trans- parent and colorless, as in the eggs of some fishes and mollusks. On examination under the microscope, it appears to be composed of an accumulation of granules and oil-drops. 12* 138 EMBRYOLOGY. The yolk is surrounded by a very thin skin, the vitelline membrane, (Fig. 98, v.) In some insects, when the albumen is wanting, this membrane, surrounded by a layer of pecu- liar cells, forms the exterior covering of the egg, which, in such cases, is generally of a firm consistence, and sometimes even horny. 288. The germinative vesicle (Fig. 98, g) is a cell of ex- treme delicacy, situated, in the young egg, near the middle of the yolk, and easily recognized by the greater transpar- ency of its contents when the yolk is in some degree opaque, as in the hen's egg, or by its outline, when the yolk itself is transparent, as in eggs of fishes and mollusks. It contains one or more little spots, somewhat opaque, appearing as small dots, the germinal dots, (d.) On closer examination, these dots are themselves found to contain smaller nucleoli. 289. The albumen, or white of the egg, (Fig. 101, a,) is a viscous substance, generally colorless, but becoming opaque white on coagulation. Voluminous as it is in birds' eggs, it nevertheless plays but a secondary part in the histo- ry of their development. It is not formed in the ovary, like the yolk, but is secreted by the oviduct, and deposited around the yolk, during the passage of the egg through that eanal. On this account, the eggs of those animals in which the ovi- duct is wanting, are generally without the albumen. In birds, the albumen consists of several layers, one of which, the chalaza, (c,) is twisted. Like the yolk, the albumen is surrounded by a membrane, the shell membrane, (m,) which is either single or double, and in birds, as also in some reptiles and mollusks, is again protected by a calcareous covering, forming a true shell, (s.) In most cases, how- ever, this envelop continues membranous, particularly in the eggs of the mollusks, most crustaceans and fishes, salaman- ders, frogs, &c. Sometimes it is horny, as in the sharks and skates. DEVELOPMENT OF THE YOUNG WITHIN THE EGG. 139 SECTION II. DEVELOPMENT OF THE YOUNG WITHIN THE EGG. 290. The formation and development of the young ani- mal within the egg is a most mysterious phenomenon. From a hen's egg, for example, surrounded by a shell, and com- posed, as we have seen, (Fig. 101,) of albumen and yolk, with a minute vesicle in its interior, there is produced, at the end of a certain time, a living animal, composed apparently of elements entirely different from those of the egg, en- dowed with organs perfectly adapted to the exercise of all the functions of animal and vegetative life, having a pul- sating heart, a digestive apparatus, organs of sense for the reception of outward impressions, and having, moreover, the faculty of performing voluntary motions, and of experi- encing pain and pleasure. These phenomena are certainly sufficient to excite the curiosity of every intelligent person. 291. By opening eggs which have been subjected to incu- bation during different periods of time, we may easily satisfy ourselves that these changes are effected gradually. We thus find that those which have undergone but a short incu- bation exhibit only faint indications of the future animal ; while those upon which the hen has been sitting for a longer period include an embryo chicken proportionally more developed. Modern researches have taught us that these gradual changes, although complicated, and at first sight so mysterious, follow a constant law in each great division of the Animal Kingdom. 292. The study of these changes constitutes that peculiar branch of Physiology called Embryology. As there are differences in the fouv great departments of the Animal 140 EMBRYOLOGY. Kingdom perceptible at an early stage of embryonic life, quite as obvious as those found at maturity, and as the phases of embryonic development furnish important indi- cations for the natural classification of animals, we propose to give the outlines of Embryology, so far as it may have reference to Zoology. 293. In order to understand the successive steps of em- bryonic development, we must bear in mind that the whole animal body is formed of tissues, the elements of which are cells, (39.) These cells, however, are more or less diversi- fied and modified, or even completely metamorphosed in the full grown animal ; but, at the commencement of embry- onic life, the whole embryo is composed of minute cells of nearly the same form and consistence, originating within the yolk, and constantly undergoing changes under the influence of life. New cells are successively formed, while others disappear, or are modified and so transformed as to become bones, muscles, nerves, &c. 294. We may form some idea of this singular process, by noticing how, in the healing of a wound, new substance is supplied by the transformation of blood. Similar changes take place in the embryo, during its early life ; only, instead of being limited to some part of the body, they pervade the whole animal. 295. The changes commence, in most animals, soon after the eggs are laid, and are continued without interruption until the development of the young is completed ; in others, birds for example, they proceed only to a certain extent, and are then suspended until incubation takes place. The yolk, which at first consists of a mass of uniform appearance, grad- ually assumes a diversified aspect. Some portions become more opaque, and others more transparent ; the germinal vesicle, which was in the midst of the yolk, rises to its upper part where the germ is to be formed. These early changes DEVELOPMENT OF THE YOUNG WITHIN THE I&G. 14] are accompanied, in some animals, by a rotation of the yolk within the egg, as may be distinctly seen in some of the mollusks, especially in the snails. 296. At the same time, the yolk undergoes a peculiar process of segmentation. It is first divided into halves, forming distinct spheres, which are again regularly sub- divided into two more, and so on, till the whole yolk as- sumes the appearance of a mulberry, each of the spheres of which if is composed having in its interior a transparent vesicle. This is the case in mammalia, most mollusks, worms, &c. In many animals, however, as in the naked reptiles and fishes,* this segmentation is only partial, the divisions of the. yolk not extending across its whole mass. 297. But whether complete or partial, this process leads to the formation of a germ comprising the whole yolk, or rising above it as a disk-shaped protuberance, composed of little cells, which has been variously designated under the names of germinative disk, proligerous disk, blastoderma, germinal membrane. In this case, however, that portion of the yolk which has undergone less obvious changes forms, nevertheless, part of the growing germ. The disk again gradually enlarges, until it embraces the" whole, or nearly the whole, of the yolk. 298. At this early epoch, namely, a few days, and some- times a few hours, after development has begun, the germ proper con- sists of a single layer composed Fig. 102. Fig. 103. * In the Birds and higher reptiles we find, in the mature egg, a peculiar organ, called cicatricula, which may. nevertheless, have been formed by a similar process before it was laid. 142 EMBRYOLOGY. of very minute cells, all of which are alike in appearance and form, (Fig. 102, g.) But soon after, as the germ increases in thicuness, several layers may be discerned, in vertebrated animals, (Fig. 103,) which become more and more distinct. 299. The upper layer, (s,) in which are subsequently formed the organs of animal life, namely, the nervous sys- tem, the muscles, the skeleton, &c, (59,) has received the name of serous or nervous layer. The lower layer, (m,) which gives origin to the organs of vegetative life, and espe- cially to the intestines, is called the mucous or vegetative layer, and is generally composed of larger cells than those of the upper or serous layer. Finally, there is a third layer, (v,) interposed between the two others, giving rise to the formation of blood and the organs of circulation ; whence it has been called blood layer, or vascular layer. 300. From the manner in which the germ is modified, we can generally distinguish, at a very early epoch, to what de- partment of the animal kingdom an individual is to belong. Thus, in the Articulata, the germ is divided into segments, indicating the transverse divisions ^^fc. ^ma of the body, as, for example, in the JBF^H e5 I Hk embryo of the crabs, (Fig. 104.) Ghj j9 Ira I fill The germ of the vertebrated ani- wM xllBF mals, on the other hand, displays ^Hr ^^ a longitudinal furrow, which marks Fig. 104. Fig. 105. the positiori tne future back-bone is to occupy, (Fig. 105.) 301. The development of this furrow is highly important, as indicating the plan of structure of vertebrated animals in general, as will be shown by the following figures, which represent vertical sections of the embryo at different epochs.* * In these figures, the egg is supposed to be cut down through the mid- dle, so that only the cut edge of the embryo is seen ; whereas, if viewed ' DEVELOPMENT OF THE YOUNG WITHIN THE EGG. 143 At first the furrow (Fig. 106, b) is very shallow, and a 1 it- Fig. 106. Fig. 107. Fig. 108. tie transparent, narrow band appears under it, called the primitive stripe, (a.) The walls of the furrow consist of two raised edges formed by a swelling of the germ along both sides of the primitive stripe. Gradually, these walls grow higher, and we perceive that their summits have a tendency to ap- proach each other, as seen in Fig. 107 ; at last they meet and unite completely, so that the furrow is now changed into a closed canal, (Fig. 108, b.) This canal is soon filled with a peculiar liquid, from which the spinal marrow and brain are formed at a later period. 302. The primitive stripe is gradually obliterated by a peculiar organ of a cartilaginous nature, the dorsal cord, formed in the lower wall of the dorsal canal. This is found in the embryos of all vertebrates, and *s the representative of the back-bone. In the mean time, the margin of the germ gradually extends farther and farther over the yolk, so as finally to enclose it entirely, and form another cavity in which the organs of vegetative life are to be developed. Thus the embryo of vertebrates has two cavities, namely, the upper one, which is very small, containing the nervous system, and the lower, which is much larger, for the intes- tines, (161.) 303. In all classes of the Animal Kingdom, the embryo proper rests upon the yolk, and covers it like a cap. But the direction by which its edges approach each other, and from above, it would extend over the yolk in every direction, and the furrow at b, of Fig. 106, would appear as in Fig. 105. 144 EMBRYOLOGY. Fig. 109. unite to form the cavity of the body, is very unlike in dif ferent animals ; and these several modes are of high importance in classification. Among the Vertebrates, the embryo lies with its face or ventral surface towards the yolk, (Fig. 109,) and thus the suture, or line at which the edges of the germ unite to enclose the yolk, and which in the mammals forms the navel, is found in front. Another suture is found along the back, arising from the actual folding upwards of the upper surface of the germ, to form the dorsal cavity. 304. The embryo in the Articulata, on the contrary, lies with its back upon the yolk, as seen in the following figure, which represents an embryo of Podurella ; consequently the yolk enters the body on that side ; and the suture, which in the vertebrates is found on the belly, is here found on the back. In the Cephalopoda the yolk communicates with the lower side of the body, as in Vertebrates, but there is no dorsal cavity formed in them. In the other Mollusks, as also in the Worms, there is this peculiarity, that the whole yolk is changed at the beginning into the substance of the embryo ; whilst in Vertebrates, and the higher Articulates and Mollusks, a part of it is reserved, till a later period, to be used for the nourishment of the em- bryo. Among Radiata, the germ is formed around the yolk, and seems to surround the whole of it, from the first.* 305. The development of the embryo of the vertebrated animals may be best observed in the eggs of fishes. Being Fie. 110. * These facts show plainly that the circumstance of embryos arising from the whole or a part of the yolk is of no systematic importance. DEVELOPMENT OF THE YOUNG- WITHIN THE EGG. 145 transparent, they do not require to be cut open, and, by- sufficient caution, the whole series of embryonic changes may be observed upon the same individual, and thus the suc- cession in which the organs appear be ascertained with pre- cision ; whereas, if we employ the eggs of birds, which are opaque, we are obliged to sacrifice an egg for each obser- vation. 306. To illustrate these general views as to the develop- ment of the embryo, we will briefly describe the principal phases, as they have been observed in the White-fish of Eu- rope, which belongs to the salmon family. The following magnified sections will illustrate this development, and show the period at which the different organs successively appear. Fig. 111. Fig. 112. Fig. US. 307. The egg, when laid, (Fig. 11 1,) is spherical, about the size of a small pea, and nearly transparent. It has no albu- men, and the shell membrane is so closely attached to the membrane of the yolk, that they cannot be distinguished. Oil-like globules are scattered through the mass of the yolk, or grouped into a sort of disk, under which lies the germina- tive vesicle. The first change in such an egg occurs a few hours after it has been laid, when the shell membrane sepa- rates from the yolk membrane, in consequence of the ab- sorption of a quantity of water, (Fig. 112,) by which the egg increases in size. Between the shell membrane (s m) and the yolk, (?/,) there is now a considerable transparent space, which corresponds, in some respects, to the albumen found in the eggs of birds. 308. Soon afterwards we see, in the midst of the oil-like 13 146 EMBRYOLOGY. globules, a swelling in the shape of a transparent vesicle, (Fig. 113, g,) composed of very delicate cells. This is the first indication of the germ. This swelling rapidly enlarges until it envelops a greai part of the yolk, when a depression Fig. 114. Fig. 115. Fig. 116. is formed upon it, (Fig. 114.) This depression becomes by degrees a deep furrow, and soon after a second furrow ap- pears at right angles with the former, so that the germ now presents four elevations, (Fig. 115.) The subdivision goes on in this way, during the second and third days, until the germ is divided into numerous little spheres, giving the sur- face the appearance of a mulberry, (Fig. 116.) This ap- pearance, however, does not long continue ; at the end of the third day, the fissures again disappear, and leave no visible traces. After this, the germ continues to extend as an envelop around the yolk, which it at last entirely encloses. 309. On the tenth day, the first outlines of the embryo begin to appear, and we soon distinguish in it a depression between two little ridges, whose edges constantly approach Fig. 117. Fig. 118. Fig. 119. each other until they unite and form a canal, vFig. 117, Z>,) DEVELOPMENT OF THE YOUNG WITHIN THE EGG. 147 as has been before shown, (Fig. 107.) At the same time, an enlargement at one end of the furrow is observed. This is the rudiment of the head, (Fig. 118,) in which may soon be distinguished traces of the three divisions of the brain, (Fig. 119,) corresponding to the senses of sight, (m,) hear- ing, (e,) and smell, (p.) 310. Towards the thirteenth day, we see a transparent, cartilaginous cord, in the place afterwards occupied by the back-bone, composed of large cells, on which transverse Fig. 120. Fig. 121. Fig. 122. divisions are successively forming, (Figs. 120, 121, c.) This is the dorsal cord, a part of which, as we have before seen, is common to all embryos of vertebrated animals. It always precedes the formation of the back-bone ; and in some fishes, as the sturgeon, this cartilaginous or embryonic state is permanent through life, and no true back-bone is ever formed. Soon after, the first rudiments of the eye appear, in the form of a fold in the external membrane of the germ, in which the crystalline lens (Fig. 121, x) is afterwards formed. At the same time we see, at the posterior part of the head, an elliptical vesicle, which js the rudiment of the ear. At this period, the distinction between the upper and the lower layer of the germ is best traced ; all the changes mentioned above appertaining to the upper layer. 311. After the seventeenth day, the lower layer divides into two sheets, the inferior of which becomes the intestine. 148 EMBRYOLOGY. The heart shows itself about the same time, under the form of a simple cavity, (Fig. 121, /&,) in the midst of a mass of cells belonging to the middle or vascular layer. As soon as the cavity of the heart is closed in, regular motions of contraction and expansion are perceived, and the globules of blood are seen to rise and fall in conformity with these motions. 312. There is as yet, however, no circulation. It is not until the thirtieth day that its first traces are manifest in the existence of two currents, one running towards the head, the other towards the trunk, (Fig. 122,) with similar returning currents. At this time the liver begins to be formed. Mean- while, the embryo gradually disengages itself, at both ends, from its adherence to the yolk ; the tail becomes free, and^ the young animal moves it in violent jerks. 313. The embryo, although still enclosed in the egg, now unites all the essential conditions for the exercise of the functions of animal life. It has a brain, an intestine, a pul- sating heart and circulating blood, and it moves its tail spon- taneously. But the forms of the organs are not yet complete nor have they yet acquired the precise shape that character- izes the class, the family, the genus, and the species. The young White-fish is as yet only a vertebrate animal in gen- eral, and might as well be taken for the embryo of a frog. 314. Towards the close of the embryonic period, after the fortieth day, the embryo acquires a more definite shape. The head is more completely separated from the yolk, the jaws protrude, and the nostrils approach nearer and nearer to the end of the snout; divisions are formed in the fin which surrounds the body ; the anterior limbs, which were indicated only by a small protuberance, assume the shape of fins ; and finally, the openings of the gills appear, one after the other, so that we cannot now fail to recognize the type of fishes. 315. In this state, the young white-fish escapes from the Fie. 123. DEVELOPMENT OF THE YOUNG WITHIN THE EGG. 143 egg, about the sixtieth day after it is laid, (Fig. 123,) but its development is still incomplete. The out- lines are yet too indis- tinct to indicate the genus and the species to which the fish be- longs ; at most we distinguish its order only. The opercula or gill-covers are not formed ; the tee.h are wanting ; the fins have as yet no rays ; the mouth is underneath, and it is some time before it assumes its final position at the most projecting point of the head. The remainder of the yolk is suspended from the belly, in the form of a large bladder, but it daily diminishes in size, until it is at length completely taken into the animal, (304.) The duration of these metamorphoses varies extremely in different fishes ; some accomplish it in the course of a few days, while in others, months are required. 315 a. In frogs and all the naked reptiles, the development is very similar to that of fishes. It is somewhat different in the scaly rep- tiles, (snakes, lizards, and turtles,) which have peculiar membranes surrounding and protecting the embryo during its growth. From one of these envelopes, the allanto'is, (Fig. 125, «,) is derived their common name of Allantoldian Vertebrates, in opposition to the naked reptiles and fishes, which are called Anallanto'idian. 315 b. The Allantoic dian Vertebrates differ from each other in several essential peculiarities. Among Birds, as well as in the scaly Fig. 124. Fig. 125. reptilea; we find at a certain epoch, when the embryo is already dis- 13* 150 EMBRYOLOGY. 316. As a general fact, it should be further stated, that the envelopes which protect the egg, and also the embryo, are the more numerous and complicated as animals belong to a higher class, and produce a smaller number of eggs. This is particularly evident when contrasting the innumer- able eggs of fishes, discharged almost without protection engaging itself from the yolk, a fold rising around the body from the upper layer of the germ, so as to present, in a longitudinal section, two prominent walls, (Fig. 124, xx.) These walls, converging from all sides upwards, rise gradually till they unite above the middle of the back, (Fig. 125.) When the junction is effected, which in the hen's egg takes place in the course of the fourth day, a cavity is formed between the back of the embryo (Fig. 126, e) and the new membrane, whose walls are called the amnios. This cavity becomes filled with a peculiar liquid, the amniotic xoater. 315 c. Soon after the embryo has been enclosed in the amnios, a shallow pouch forms from the mucous layer, below the posterior ex- tremity of the embryo, between the tail and the vitelline mass. This pouch, at first a simple little sinus, (Fig. 125, a,) grows larger and larger, till it forms an extensive sac, the allantois, turning backwards and upwards, so as completely to separate the two plates of the am* nios, (Fig. 126, a,) and finally enclosing the whole embryo, with its Fig. 126. amnios, in another large sac. The tubular part of this sac, which is nearest the embryo, is at last transformed into the urinary bladder. Lhc heart (/i) is already very large, with mniute arterial threads DEVELOPMENT OF THE YOUNG WITHIN THE EGG. 151 uto the water, with the well-protected eggs of birds, and still more with the growth of young mammals within the body of the mother. 317. But neither in fishes, nor in reptiles, nor in birds, does the vitelline membrane, or any other envelope of the egg, take any part in the growth of the embryo ; while on the Fig. 127. Fig. 128. passing off from it. At this period there exist true gills upon the sides of the neck, and a branchial respiration goes on. 315 d. The development of mammals exhibits the following peculiarities. The egg is ex- ceedingly minute, almost micro- scopic, although composed of the same essential elements as those of the lower animals. The vitel- line membrane, called chorion, in this class of animals, is comparatively thicker, (Fig. 127, v,) always soft, surrounded by peculiar cells, being a kind of albumen. The chorion soon grows proportionally larger than the vitelline sphere itself, (Fig. 128, y,) so as no longer to invest it directly, being sepa- rated from it by an empty space, (/v.) The germ is formed in the same position as in the other classes of Vertebrates, namely, at the top of the vitellus, (Fig. 129 ;) and here also two layers may be distinguished, the up- per or serous layer, (s,) and the lower or mu- cous layer, (m.) As it gradually enlarges, the surface of the chorion becomes cov- ered with little fringes, which, at a later epoch, will be attached to the mother by means of similar fringes arising from the walls of the matrix, or organ which contains the embryo. 315 e. The embryo itself undergoes, within the chorior changes Fig. 129. Fig. 130. 152 EMBRYOLOGY. contrary, in the mammals, the chorion, which corresponds to the vitelline membrane, is vivified, and finally becomes attached to the maternal body, thus establishing a direct con- nection between the young and the mother ; a connection which is again renewed in another mode, after birth, by the process of nursing. similar to those described in birds : its body and its organs are formed in the same way ; an amnios encloses it, and an allant-oi's grows out of the lower extremity of the little animal. As soon as the allantoTs has surrounded the embryo, its blood vessels become more and more numerous, so as to extend into the fringes of the chorion, (Fig. 1 3 1, p e ;) while, Vjn on the other hand, similar vessels from the ^Qj"\B^MlJ^Q Pe mother extend into the corresponding fringes of the matrix, (p m,) but without directly communicating with those ^pf the chorion. These two sorts of fringes soon become interwoven, so as to form an intri- cate organ filled with blood, called the pla- Fig. 131. centa, to which the embryo remains sus- pended until birth. 315/. From the fact above stated, it is clear that there are three modifications of embryonic development among vertebrated animals, namely, that of fishes and naked reptiles, that of scaly reptiles and birds, and that of the mammals, which display a gradation of more and more complicated adaptation. In fishes and the naked reptiles, the germ simply encloses the yolk, and the embryo rises and grows from its upper part. In the scaly reptiles and birds there is, besides, an amnios arising from the peripheric part of the embryo and an allantols growing out of the lower cavity, both enclosing and protecting the germ. ITS ZOOLOGICAL IMPORTANCE. 153 SECTION HI. ZOOLOGICAL IMPORTANCE OF EMBRYOLOGY. 318. As a general result of the observations which have been mide, up to this time, on the embryology of the various classes of the Animal Kingdom, especially of the verte- brates, it may be said, that the organs of the body are suc- cessively formed in the order of their organic importance, the most essential being always the earliest to appear. In accordance with this law, the organs of vegetative life, the intestines and their appurtenances, make their appearance subsequently to those of animal life, such as the nervous system, the skeleton, &c. ; and these, in turn, are preceded by the more general phenomena belonging to the animal as such. ' 319. Thus we have seen that, in the fish, the first changes relate to the segmentation of the yolk and the formation of the germ, which is a process common to all classes of ani- mals. It is not until a subsequent period that we trace the dorsal furrow, which indicates that the forming animal will have a double cavity, and consequently belong to the drvlsion of the vertebrates ; an indication afterwards fully confirmed by the successive appearance of the brain and the organs of sense. Later still, the intestine is formed, the limbs be- come evident, and the organs of respiration acquire their definite form, thus enabling us to distinguish with certainty the class to which the animal belongs. Finally, after the egg is hatched, the peculiarities of the teeth, and the shape of the extremit es, mark the genus and species. 320. Hence the embryos of different animals resemble each other more strongly when examined in the earlier stages of their growth. We have already stated that, during 154 EMBRYOLOGY. almost the whole period of embiyonic life, the young fish and the young frog scarcely differ at all, (313 :) so it is also with the young snake compared with the embryo bird. The embryo of the crab, again, is scarcely to be distinguished from that of the insect ; and if we go still further back in the history of development, we come to a period when no appreciable difference whatever is to be discovered between the embryos of the various departments. The embryo of the snail, when the germ begins to show itself, is nearly the same as that of a fish or a crab. All that can be predicted at this period is, that the germ which is unfolding itself will become an animal ; the class and the group are not yet indicated. 321. After this account of the history of the development of the egg, the importance of Embryology to the study of systematic Zoology cannot be questioned. For evidently, if the formation of the organs in the embryo takes place in an order corresponding to their importance, this succession must of itself furnish a criterion of their relative value in classifi- cation. Thus, those peculiarities that first appear should be considered of higher value than those that appear later. In this respect, the division of the Animal Kingdom into four types, the Vertebrates, the Articulates, the Mollusks, and the Radiates, corresponds perfectly with the gradations displayed by Embryology. 322. This classification, as has been already shown, (61,) is founded essentially on the organs of animal life, the ner- vous system and the parts belonging thereto, as found in the perfect animal. Now, it results from the above account, that in most animals the organs of animal life are precisely those that are earliest formed in the embryo ; whereas those of vegetative life, on which is founded the division into classes, orders, and families, such as the heart, the respiratory ap ->aratus, and the jaws, are not distinctly formed until after- ITS ZOOLOGICAL IMPORTANCE. 155 wards. Therefore a classification, to be true and natural, must accord with the succession of organs in the embryonic development. This coincidence, while it corroborates the anatomical principles of Cuvier's classification of the Animal Kingdom, furnishes us with new proof that there is a general plan displayed in every kind of development. 323. Combining these two points of view, that of Embry- ology with that of Anatomy, the four divisions of the Animal Kingdom may be represented by the four figures which are to be found, at the centre of the diagram, at the beginning of the volume. 324. The type of Vertebrates, having two cavities, one above the other, the former destined to receive the nervous system, and the latter, which is of a larger size, for the intes- tines, is represented by a double crescent united at the cen- tre, and closing above, as well as below. 325. The type of Articulata, having but one cavity, grow- ing from below upwards, and the nervous system forming a series of ganglions, placed below the intestine, is repre- sented by a single crescent, with the horns directed up- wards. 326. The type of Mollusks having also but one cavity, the nervous system being a simple ring around the oesophagus, with ganglions above and below, from which threads go off to all parts, is represented by a single crescent with the horns turned downwards. 327. Finally, the type of Radiata, the radiating form of . which is seen even in the youngest individuals, is represented by a star. CHAPTER ELEVENTH. PECULIAR MODES OF REPRODUCTION. SECTION I. GEMMIPAROTJS AND FISSIPAROUS REPRODUCTION. 328. We have shown in the preceding chapter, that ovula- tion, and the development of embryos from eggs, is common to all classes of animals, and must be considered as the great process for the reproduction of species. Two other modes of propagation, applying, however, to only a limited number of animals, remain to be mentioned, namely, gemmiparous reproduction, or multiplication by means of buds, and jissip- arous reproduction, or propagation by division ; and also some still more extraordinary modifications yet involved in much obscurity. 329. Reproduction by buds occurs among the polyps, me- dusae, and some of the infusoria. On the stalk, or even on the body of the Hydra, (Fig. 132,) and of many infusoria, there are formed buds, like those of plants. On close exam- ination they are found to be young animals, at first very imperfectly formed, and commu- nicating at the base with the parent body, from which they derive their nourishment. By degrees, the animal is developed ; in most cases, the tube by which it is connected with the parent Fig. 132. GEMMIPAROUS AND FISSIPAROUS REPRODUCTION. 157 withers away, and the animal is thus detached and becomes independent. Others remain through life united to the parent stalk, and, in this respect, present a more striking analogy to the buds of plants. But in the polyps, as in trees, budding is only an accessory mode of reproduction, which pre- supposes a trunk already existing, originally the product of ovulation. 330. Reproduction by division, or fissiparous reproduction, is still more extraordinary ; it takes place only in polyps and some infusoria. A cleft or fissure at some part of the body takes place, very slight at first, but constantly increasing in depth, so as to become a deep furrow, like that observed in the yolk, at the beginning of embry- onic development ; at the same time the contained organs are di- ^S- 13^. vided and become double, and thus two individuals are formed of one, so similar to each other that it is impossible to say which is the parent and which the offspring. The division takes place sometimes vertically, as, for example, in Vorticella, (Fig. 133,) and in some Polyps, (Fig. 134,) and sometimes trans- Fig. 134. versely. In some Infusoria, the Paramecia, for instance, this division occurs as often as three or four times in a day. 331. In consequence of this same faculty, many animals are able to reproduce various parts of their bodies when accidentally lost. It is well known that crabs and spidersj on losing a limb, acquire a new one. The same happens with the arms of the star-fishes. The tail of a lizard is also 14 158 REPRODUCTION. readily reproduced. Salamanders even possess the faculty of reproducing parts of the head, including the eye with all its complicated structure. Something similar takes place in our own bodies, when a new skin is formed over a wound, or when a broken bone is reunited. 332. In some of the lower animals, this power of repara- tion is carried much farther, and applies to the whole body, so as closely to imitate fissiparous reproduction. If an earth- worm, or a fresh-water polyp, be divided into several pieces, the injury is soon repaired, each fragment speedily becoming a perfect animal. Something like this reparative faculty is seen in the vegetable kingdom, as well as the animal. A willow branch, planted in a moist soil, throws out roots below and branches above ; and thus, after a time, assumes the shape of a perfect tree. 333. These various modes of reproduction do not exclude each other. All animals which propagate by gemmiparous or fissiparous reproduction also lay eggs. Thus the fresh- water polyps (Hydra) propagate both by eggs and by buds. In Vorticella, according to Ehrenberg, all three modes are found ; it is propagated by eggs, by buds, and by division. Ovulation, however, is the most common mode of reproduc- tion ; the other modes, and also alternate reproduction, are only additional means employed by Nature to secure the per- petuation of the species. SECTION II. ALTERNATE AND EQUIVOCAL REPRODUCTION. 334. It is a matter of common observation, that individuals of the same species have the same general appearance, by which their peculiar organization is indicated. The trans- ALTERNATE AND EQUIVOCAL REPRODUCTION. 159 mission of these characteristics, from one generation to the next, is justly considered as one of the great laws of the Animal and Vegetable Kingdoms. It is, indeed, one of the points on which the definition of species is generally founded. We would, however, unhesitatingly adopt the new definition of Dr. S. G. Morton, who defines species to be " primordial organic forms." 335. But it does not follow that animals must resemble their parents in every condition, and at every epoch of their existence. On the contrary, as we have seen, this resem- blance is very faint, in most species, at birth ; and some, such as the caterpillar and the tadpole, undergo com- plete metamorphoses before attaining their final shape as the butterfly and frog. Nevertheless, we do not hesitate to refer the tadpole and the frog to the same species ; and so with the caterpillar and the butterfly ; because we know that there is the same individual observed in different stages of development. ' 336. There is, also, another series of cases, in which the offspring not only do not resemble the parent at birth, but, moreover, remain different during their whole life, so that their relationship is not apparent until a succeeding genera- tion. The son does not resemble the father, but the grand- father ; and in some cases the resemblance reappears only at the fourth or fifth generation, and even later. This sin- gular mode of reproduction has received the name of alter- nate generation. The phenomena attending it have been of late the object of numerous scientific researches, which are the more deserving of our attention, as they furnish a solution to several problems alike interesting in a zoological and in a philosophical point of view. 337. Alternate generation was first observed among the Salpse. These are marine mollusks, without shells, belong- ing to the family Tunicata. They are distinguished by the curious peculiarity of being united together in considerable numbers, so as to form long chains, which float in the sea, 160 REPRODUCTION. the mouth, (to,) however, being free in each, (Fig. 135.) Fig. 135. Fig. 136. The individuals thus joined in floating colonies produce eggs ; but in each animal there is generally but one egg formed, which is developed in the body of the parent, and from which is hatched a little mollusk, (Fig. 136,) which remains solitary, and differs in many respects from the parent. This little animal, on the other hand, does not produce eggs, but propagates by a kind of budding, which gives rise to chains already seen within the body of their parent, (a,) and these again bring forth solitary individuals, &c. 338. In some parasitic worms, alternate generation is accompanied by still more extraordinary phenomena, as is shown by the late discoveries of the Danish naturalist, Steen- strup. Among the numerous animals which inhabit stagnant pools, in which fresh-water shells, particularly Lymnea and Paludina, are found, there is a small worm, know to naturalists under the name of Cer- caria, (Fig. 137.) When examined with a lens, it looks much like a tadpole, with a long tail, a triangular head, and a large sucker (a) in the middle of the body. Va- rious viscera appear within, and, among others, a very distinct forked cord, (c,) which embraces the sucker, and which is thought to be the liver. 339. If we watch these worms, which always abound in company with the shells mentioned, we find them after a while attaching themselves, by means of their sucker, to the bodies of the moll usks. When Fig. 137. ALTERNATE AND EQUIVOCAL REPRODUCTION. 161 Fig. 138. The fol fixed, they soon undergo considerable alteration. The tail, which was previously employed for locomotion, is now use- less, falls off, and the animal surrounds itself with a .dnucous substance, in which it remains nearly motionless, like the caterpillar on its transformation into the Pupa. Sf, however, after some time, we remove the little animal from its retreat, we find it to be no longer a Cercaria, but an intestinal worm, called Distoma, having the shape of Fig. 138, with two suckers. The Distoma, therefore, is only a particular state of the Cercaria, or, rather, . the Cercaria is only the larva of the Distoma. 340. What now is the origin of the Cercaria ? lowing are the results of the latest researches on this point. At certain periods of the year, we find in the viscera of the Limnea (one of the most common fresh-water mollusks) a quantity of little worms of an elongated form, v ith a well marked head, and two posterior projections like limbs, (Fig. 139.) On examin- ing these worms attentively, under the micro- scope, we discover that the cavity of their body is filled by a mass of other little worms, which a practised eye easily recognizes as young CercarisB, the tail and the characteristic furcated organ (a) within it being distinctly visible, (Fig. 140.) These little embryos increase in size, distending the worm which contains them, and which seemingly has no other office than to protect and forward the de- Fig. 140. velopment of the young Cercaria. It is, as it were, their living envelop, account, it has been called the nurse. 14* Fig. 139. On this 162 REPR0DULT10N- 341. When they have reached a certain size, the young Cercarise leave the body of the nurse, and move freely in the abdominal cavity of the mollusks, or escape from it into the water, to fix themselves, in their turn, to the body of another mollusk, and begin their transformations anew. 342. But this is not the end of the series. The nurses of the Cercaria are themselves the offspring of little worms of yet another kind. At certain seasons, we find in the viscera of the Limnea, worms somewhat like the nurses of Cercaria in shape, (Fig. 141,) but rather longer, more slender, and having a much more elongated stomach, (s.) These worms contain, in the hinder part of the body, little embryos, (#,) which are the young nurses, like Figures 139, 140. This generation has received' the name of grand- nurses. 343. Supposing these grand-nurses to be the immediate offspring of the Distoma, (Fig. 138,) as is probable, we have thus a quadruple series of generation. Four generations and one metamorphosis are required to evolve the perfect animal ; in other words, the parent finds no resemblance to himself in any of his progeny, until he comes down to the great-grandson. 344. Among the Aphides, or plant-lice, the number of generations is still greater. The first generation, which is produced from eggs, soon undergoes metamorphoses, and then gives birth to a second generation, which is followed by a third, and so on ; so that it is sometimes the eighth or ninth generation before the perfect animals appear as males and females, the sexes being then for the first time distinct, and the males provided with wings. The females lay eggs, which are hatched the following year, to repeat the same succession. Each generation is an additional step towards the perft^t state ; and, as each member of the succession is ALTERNATE AND EQUIVOCAL REPRODUCTION. 163 ai. incomplete animal, we cannot better explain their office, than by considering them analogous to the larvae of the Cercaria, that is, as nurses.* 345. The development of the Medusss is not less instruc- tive. According to the observations of Sars, a Norwegian naturalist, the Medusa brings forth living young, which, after having burst the covering of the egg, swim about freely for some time in the body of the mother. When born, these animals have no resemblance whatever to the perfect Medusa. They are little cylindrical bodies, (Fig. 142, a,) much. resembling infusoria, and, like them, covered with minute cilia, by means of which they swim with much activity. 346. After swimming about freely in the water for some days, the little animal fixes itself by one extremity, (Fig. 142, e.) At the opposite extremity a depression is gradu- * There is a certain analogy between the larvae of the plant-louse (Aphis) and the neuters or working ants and bees. This analogy has given rise to various speculations, and, among others, to the following theory, which is not without interest. The end and aim of all alternate generation, it is said, is to favor the development of the species in its progress towards the perfect state. Among the plant-lice, as among all the nurses, this end is accomplished by means of the body of the nurse. Now, a similar end is accomplished by the working ants and bees, only, instead of being performed as an organic function, it is turned into an outward activity, which makes them instinctively watch over the new gen- eration, nurse and take care of it. It is no longer the body of the nurse, but its own instincts, which become the instrument of the development. This seems to receive confirmation from the fact that the working bees, like the plant-lice, are barren females. The attributes of their sex, in both, seem to consist only in their solicitude for the welfare of the new generation, of which they are the natural guardians, but not the parents. The task of bringing forth young is confided to other individuals, to the ;rueen among the bees, and to the female of the last generation among the plantrlice. Thus the barrenness of the working bees, which seems an anomaly as long as we consider them complete animals, receives a very natural explanation so soon as we look upon them merely as nurses. 164 REPRODUCTION. ally formed, the four corners (bf) become elongated, and, by degrees, are transformed into tentacles, (c.) These b o 0 9. y e f g Fig. 142. k tentacles rapidly multiply, until the whole of the upper margin is covered with them, (g.) Then transverse wrinkles are seen on the body, at regular distances, ap- pearing first above and extending downwards. These wrinkles, which are at first very slight, grow deeper and deeper, and, at the same time, the edge of each segment begins to be serrated, so that the animal presents the ap- pearance of a pine cone, surmounted by a tuft of tentacles, (h ;) whence the name of Strobila, which was originally given to it, before it was known to be only a transient state of the jelly-fish. The separation constantly goes on, until at last the divisions are united by only a very slender axis, and resemble a pile of cups placed within each other, (i.) The divisions are now ready for separation ; the upper ring first disengages itself, and then the others in succession.* Each segment (d) then continues its development by itself, until it becomes a complete Medusa, (k ;) while, according to recent researches, the basis or stalk remains and pro- duces a new colony. 347. It is thus, by a series of metamorphoses, that the little animal which, on leaving the egg, has the form of the * These free segments have been described as peculiar animals, under the name of Ephyra. ALTERNATE AND EQUIVOCAL REPRODUCTION. 165 Infusoria, passes in succession through all the phases we have described. But the remarkable point in these meta- morphoses is, that what was at first a single individual is thus transformed, by transverse division, into a number of entirely distinct animals, which is not the case in ordinary metamorphoses. Moreover, the upper segment does not follow the others in their development. Its office seems to be accomplished so soon as the other segments begin to be independent, being intended merely to favor their develop- ment, by securing and preparing the substances necessary to their growth. In this respect, it resembles the nurse of the Cercaria. 348. The Hydroid Polyps present phenomena no less numerous and strange. The Campanularia has a branching, planl-like form, with little cup-shaped cells on the ends and in the axils of the branches, each of which contains a little animal. These cups have not all the same organization. Those at the extremity of the branches, (a,) and which appear first, are furnished with long tentacles, where- with they seize their food, (Fig. 143.) Those in the axils of the branches, and which appear late, are females, (&,) and have no such tentacles. Inside of the lat- ter, little spherical bodies are found, each having several spots in the middle ; these are the eggs. Finally, there is a third form, different from the two preceding, produced by budding from the female polyp, to which it in some sort belongs, (c.) It is within this that the eggs ar- rive, after having remained some time within the female. Their office seems to be to complete the incubation, for it is always within them that the eggs are hatched. 349. The little animal, on becoming free, has not the Fig. 143. 166 REPRODUCTION. slightest resemblance to the adult polyp. As in the young Medusa, the body is cylindrical, covered with delicate cilia. After having remained free for some time, the young animal fixes itself and as- sumes a flattened form. By degrees, a little swell- fing rises from the centre, which elongates, and at last forms a stalk. This stalk ramifies, and we Fig. 144. soon recognize in it the animal of figure 143, with the three kinds of buds, which we may consider as three distinct forms of the same animal. 350. The development of Campanularia presents, in some respects, an analogy to what takes place in the re- production of plants, and especially of trees. They should be considered as groups of individuals, and not as single individuals. The seed, which corresponds to the embryo of the Hydroid, puts forth a little stalk. This stalk soon ramifies by gemmiparous reproduction, that is, by throwing out buds which become branches. But ovulation, or repro- duction by means of seeds, does not take place until an ad- vanced period, and requires that the tree should have attained a considerable growth. It then produces flowers with pistils and stamens, that is, males and females, which are com- monly united in one flower, but which in some instances are separated, as in the hickories, the elders, the willows, &c* * Several plants are endowed with organs similar to the third form of buds, as seen in the Campanularia ; for example, the liverwort, (Marchan- tiapolymorpha,') which has at the base of the cup a little receptacle, from the bottom of which little disk-like bodies are constantly forming, which, when detached, send out roots, and gradually become complete individu- als. Besides that, we find in these animals, as in plants, the important peculiarity, that all the individuals are united in a common trunk, which is attached to the soil ; and that all are intimately dependent on each other, as long as they remain united. And if we compare, in this point of view, the various species in which alternate reproduction has been •observed, we find that the progress displayed in each type consists pre- cisely in the increasing freedom of the individual in its various forms. At CONSEQUENCES OF ALTERNATE GENERATION. 167 SECTION III. CONSEQUENCES OF ALTERNATE GENERATION. 351. These various examples of alternate generation ren- der it evident, that this phenomenon ought not to be consid- ered as an anomaly in Nature ; but as the special plan of de- velopment, leading those animals in which it occurs to the highest degree of perfection of which they are susceptible. Moreover, it has been noticed among ail types of inverte- brated animals ; while among the Vertebrates it is as yet unknown. It would seem that individual life in the lower animals is not defined within so precise limits as in the higher types ; owing, perhaps, to the greater uniformity and independence of their constituent elements, the cells, and that, instead of passing at one stride as it were, through all the phases of their development, in order to accomplish it, they must either be born in a new form, as in the case of alternate generation, or undergo metamorphoses, which are a sort of second birth. 352. Many analogies may be discovered between alternate reproduction and metamorphosis. They are parallel lines that lead to the same end, namely, the development of the species. Nor is it rare to see them coexisting in the same first, we have all the generations united in a common trunk, as in the lower Polyps and in plants ; then in the Medusa? and in some of the Hydroid Polyps the third generation begins to disengage itself. Among some of the intestinal worms, (the Distoma,) the third generation is enclosed within its nurse, and this, in its turn, is contained in the body of the grand-nurse, while the complete Distoma lives as a parasitic worm in the body of other animals, or even swims freely about in the larva state, as Cercaria. Finally, in the Plant-lice, all the generations, the nuises as well as the perfect animals, are separate individuals. 168 REPRODUCTION. animal. Thus, in the Cercaria, we have seen an animal pro- duced from a nurse afterwards transformed into a Distoma, by undergoing a regular metamorphosis. 353. In each new generation, as in each new metamor- phosis, a real progress is made, and the form which results is more perfect than its predecessor. The nurse that pro- duces the Cercaria is manifestly an inferior state, just as the chrysalis is inferior to the butterfly. 354. But there is this essential difference between the metamorphoses of the caterpillar and alternate reproduction, that, in the former case, the same individual passes through all the phases of development ; whereas, in the latter, the individual disappears, and makes way for another, which carries out what its predecessors had begun. It would give a correct idea of this difference to suppose that the tadpole, instead of being itself transformed into a frog, should die, having first brought forth young frogs ; or that the chrysalis should, in the same way, produce young butterflies. In either case, the young would still belong to the same species, but the cycle of development, instead of being accomplished in a single individual, would involve two or more acts of generation. 355. It follows, therefore, that the general practice of de- riving the character of a species from the sexual forms alone, namely, the male and the female, is not applicable to all classes of animals ; since there are large numbers whose various phases are represented by distinct individuals, en- dowed with peculiarities of their own. Thus, while in the stag the species is represented by two individuals only, stag and hind, the Medusa, on the other hand, is represented under the form of three different types of animals ; the first is free, like the Infusoria, the second is fixed on a stalk, like a polyp, and the third again is free, consisting in its turn of male and female. In the Distoma, also, there are four CONSEQUENCES OF ALTERNATE GENERATION. 169 separate individuals, the grand-nurse, the nurse, the larva or Cercaria, and the Distoma, in which the sexes are not sepa- rate. Among the Aphides, the number is much greater still. 356. The study of alternate generation, besides making us better acquainted with the organization of the lower ani- mals, greatly simplifies our nomenclature. Thus, in future, instead of enumerating the Distoma and the Cercaria, or the Strobila, me Ephyra, and the Medusa, as distinct animals, belonging to different classes and families, only the name first given to one of these forms will be retained, and the rest be struck from the pages of Zoology, as representing only the transitory phases of the same species. 357. Alternate generation always presupposes several modes of reproduction, of which the primary is invariably by ovulation. Thus, we have seen that the Polyps, the Medusa, the Salpa, &c, produce eggs, which are generally hatched within the mother. The subsequent generation, on the contrary, is produced in a different manner, as we have shown in the preceding paragraphs ; as among the Medusae, by transverse division ; among the Polyps and Salpse, by buds, &c. 358. The subsequent generations are, moreover, not to be regarded in the same light as those which first spring directly from eggs. In fact, they are rather phases of development, than generations properly so called ; they are either without sex, or females whose sex is imperfectly developed. The nurses of the Distoma, the Medusa, and the Campanularia, are barren, and have none of the attributes of maternity, except that of watching over the development of the species, being themselves incapable of producing young. 359. Another important result follows from the above ob- servations, namely, that the differences between animals which are produced by alternate generation are less, the 15 170 REPRODUCTION. earlier the epoch at which we examine them. No two ani mals can be more unlike than an adult Medusa (Fig. 31) and an adult Campanularia, (Fig. 143;) they even seem to belong to different classes of the Animal Kingdom, the for- mer being considered as an Acaleph, the latter as a Polyp. On the other hand, if we compare them when first hatched from the egg, they appear so much alike that it is with the greatest difficulty they can be distinguished. They are then little Infusoria, without any very distinct shape, ana moving with the greatest freedom. The larvae of certain intestinal worms, though they belong to a different depart- ment, have nearly the same form, at one period of their life. Farther still, this resemblance extends to plants. The spores of certain sea-weeds have nearly the same appear- ance as the young Polyp, or the young Medusa ; and what is yet more remarkable, they are also furnished with cilia, and move about in a similar manner. But this is only a transient state. Like the young Campanularia and the young Medusa, the spore of the sea-weed is free for only a short time ; soon it becomes fixed, and from that moment the resemblance ceases. 360. Are we to conclude, then, from this resemblance of the different types of animals at the outset of life, that there is no real difference between them ; or that the two King doms, the Animal and the Vegetable, actually blend, be- cause their germs are similar ? On the contrary, we think nothing is better calculated to strengthen the idea of the original separation of the various groups, as distinct and independent types, than the study of their different phases. In fact, a difference so wide as that between the adult Medusa and the adult Campanularia must have existed even in the young; only it does not show itself in a manner appreciable by our senses ; the character by which they subsequently differ so much being not yet developed. To CONSEQUENCES OF ALTERNATE GENERATION. 171 deny the reality of natural groups, because of these early resemblances, would be to take the semblance for the reality. It would be the same as saying that the frog and the fish are one, because at one stage of embryonic life it is1 impossible, with the means at our command, to distinguish them. 361. The account we have above given of the develop- ment, the metamorphoses, and the alternate reproduction of the lower animals, is sufficient to undermine the old theory of Spontaneous Generation, which was proposed to account for the presence of worms in the bodies of animals, for the sudden appearance of myriads of animalcules in stagnant water, and under other circumstances rendering their occur- rence mysterious. We need only to recollect how the Cercaria insinuates itself into the skin and the viscera of mollusks, (339, 342,) to understand how admission may be gained to the most inaccessible parts. Such be- ings occur even in the eye of many Fig. 145. Fig. 146. animals, especially of fishes ; they are numerous in the eye of the common fresh- water perch of Europe. To the naked eye they seem like little white spots, (Fig. 145;) but when magnified, they have the form of Fig. 146. 362. As to the larger intestinal worms found in other animals, the mystery of their origin has been entirely solved by recent researches. A single instance will illustrate their history. At certain periods of the year, the Sculpins of the Baltic are infested by a particular species of Taenia or tape- worm, from which they are free at other seasons. Mr. Esch- richt found that, at certain seasons, the worms lose a gryat portion of the long chain of rings of which they are com- posed. On a careful examination, he found that each ring 172 REPRODUCTION. contained several hundred eggs, which, on heing freed from their envelop, float in the water. As these eggs are innu- merable, it is not astonishing that the Sculpins should occa- sionally swallow some of them with their prey. The eggs, being thus introduced into the stomach of the fish, find con- ditions favorable to their development ; and thus the species is propagated, and at the same time transmitted from one generation of the fish to another. The eggs which are not swallowed are probably lost. 363. All animals swallow, in the same manner, with their food, and in the water they drink, numerous eggs of such parasites, any one of which, finding in the intestine of the animal favorable conditions, may be hatched. It is probable that each animal affords the proper conditions for some par- ticular species of worm ; and thus we may explain how it is that most animals have parasites peculiar to themselves. 364. As respects the Infusoria, we also know that most of them, the E-otifera especially, lay eggs. These eggs, which are extremely minute, (some of them only y^-thnr °f an inch in diameter,) are scattered every where in great profusion, in water, in the air, in mist, and even in snow. Assiduous observers have not only seen the eggs laid, but moreover, have followed their development, and have seen the young animal forming in the egg, then escaping from it, increasing in size, and, in its turn, laying eggs. They have been able, in some instances, to follow them even to the fifth and sixth generation. 365. This being the case, it is much more natural to suppose that the Infusoria * are products of like germs, than * In this connection, it ought to be remembered that a large proportion of the so-called Infusoria are not independent animals, but immature germs, belonging to different classes of the Animal Kingdom, and that many must be referred to the Vegetable Kingdom. SPONTANEOUS GENERATION. 173 to assign to them a spontaneous origin altogether incompati- ble with what we know of organic development. Their rapid appearance is not at all astonishing, when we reflect that some mushrooms attain a considerable size in a few hours, but yet pass through all the phases of regular growth ; and, indeed, since we have ascertained the different modes of generation among the lower animals, no substantial difficul- ties to the axiom, " omne vivum 5x ovo" (275,) any longer exist. 15* CHAPTER TWELFTH. METAMOKPJOSES OF ANIMALS. 366. Under the name of metamorphoses are included those changes which the body of an animal undergoes after its birth, and which are modifications, in various degrees, of its organization, form, and its mode of life. Such changes are not peculiar to certain classes, as has been so long sup- posed, but are common to all animals, without exception. 367. Vegetables also undergo metamorphoses, but with this essential difference, that in vegetables the process con- sists in an addition of new parts to the old ones. A succession of leaves, differing from those which preceded them, comes on each season ; new branches and roots are added to the old stem, and woody layers to the trunk. In animals, the whole body is transformed, in such a manner that all the existing parts contribute to the formation of the modified body. The chrysalis becomes a butterfly ; the frog, after having been herbivorous during its tadpole state, becomes carnivorous, and its stomach is adapted to this new mode of life ; at the same time, instead of breathing by gills, it be- comes an air-breathing animal ; its tail and the gills disap- pear ; lungs and legs are being developed, and, finally, it is to live and move on land. 368. The nature, the duration, and importance of meta- morphoses, as also the epoch at which they take place, are infinitely varied. The most striking changes which naturally present themselves to the mind when we speak of metamor- METAMORPHOSES OF ANIMALS. 175 phoses, are those occurring in insects. Not merely is there a change of physiognomy and form observable, or an organ more or less formed, but their whole organization is modified. The animal enters into new relations with the external world, while, at the same time, new instincts are imparted to it. It has lived in water, and respired by gills ; it is now furnished with air-tubes, and breathes in the atmosphere. It passes by, with indifference, objects which before were attractive, and its new instincts prompt it to seek conditions which would have been most pernicious during its former period of life. All these changes are brought about without destroying the individuality of the animal. The mosquito, which to-day haunts us with its shrill trumpet, and pierces us for our blood, is the same animal that, a few days ago, lived obscure and unregarded in stagnant water, under the guise of a little worm. 369. Every one is familiar with the metamorphoses of the silk-worm. On escaping from the egg, the little worm or caterpillar grows with great rapidity for twenty days, when it ceases to feed, spins its silken cocoon, casts its skin, and remains enclosed in its chrysalis state.* During this period of its existence, most extraordinary changes take place. The jaws with which it masticated mulberry leaves are trans- formed into a coiled tongue ; the spinning organs are reduced ; the gullet is lengthened and more slender; the stomach, which was nearly as long as the body, is now contracted into a short bag ; +he intestine, on the contrary, becomes elon- gated and narrow. The dorsal vessel is shortened. The ganglions of the thoracic region approach each other, and unite into a single mass. Antennas and palpi are developed on the head, and instead of simple eyes appear compound ones. * In the raising of silk-worms this period is not waited for, but ihe ani • mal is killed as soon as it has spun its cocoon. 176 METAMORPHOSES OF ANIMALS. The muscles, which before were uniformly distributed, (159,) are now gathered into masses. The limbs are elongated, and wings spring forth from the thorax. More active motions then reappear in the digestive organs, and the animal, burst- ing the envelop of its chrysalis, issues in the form of a winged moth. 370 The different external forms which an insect may assume is well illustrated by one which is unfortunately too well known in this country, namely, the canker-worm. Its eggs are laid on posts and fences, or upon the branches of our apple-trees, elms, and other trees. They are hatched about the time the tender leaves of these trees begin to unfold. f t Fig. 147. The caterpillar (a) feeds on the leaves, and attains its full growth at the end of about four weeks, being then not quite an inch in length. It then descends to the ground, and en- ters the earth to the depth of four or five inches, and having excavated a sort of cell, is soon changed into a chrysalis or aymph, (Z>.) At the usual time in the spring, it bursts the sidn, and appears in its perfect state, under the form of a moth, (d.) In this species, however, only the male has •vings. The perfect insects soon pair, the female (c) crawls op a tree, and, having deposited her eggs, dies. 371. Transformations no less remarkable are observed among the Crustacea. The metamorphoses in the family of ^irrhipedes are especially striking. It is now known that he barnacles, ^Balanus,) which have been arranged among ihe mollusks, are truly crustaceans ; and this result of modern lesearches has been deduced in the clearest manner from the METAMORPHOSES OF ANIMALS. 377 study of their transformations. The following figures repre- sent the different phases of the duck-barnacle, (Anatifa.) b c f Fig. 148. 372. The Anatifa, like all Crustacea, is reproduced by eggs, specimens of which, magnified ninety diameters, are represented in figure 148, a. From these eggs little ani- mals issue, which have not the slightest resemblance to the parent. They have an elongated form, (&,) a pair of ten- acles, and four legs, with which they swim freely in the ;vater. 373. Their freedom, however, is of but short duration. The little animal soon attaches itself by means of its tenta- cles, having previously become covered with a transparent shell, through which the outlines of the body, and also a very distinct eye, are easily distinguished, (Fig. 148, c.) Figure 148, d, shows the animal taken out of its shell. It is plainly seen that the anterior portion has become considerably en- larged. Subsequently, the shell becomes completed, and the animal casts its skin, losing with it both its eyes and its tentacles. On the other hand, a thick membrane lines the interior of the shell, which pushes out and forms a stem, (e,) by means of which the animal fixes itself to immersed bodies, after the loss of its tentacles. This stem gradually enlarges, and the animal soon acquires a definite shape, such 178 METAMORPHOSES OF ANIMALS. as it is represented in figure 148,/, attached to *. piece of floating wood. 374. There is, consequently, not only a change of organi- zation in the course of the metamorphoses, but also a change of faculties and mode of life. The animal, at first free, becomes fixed ; and its adhesion is effected by totally different organs at different periods of life, first by means of tentacles, which were temporary organs, and afterwards by means of a fleshy stem developed especially for that purpose. 375. The Radiata also furnish us with examples of vari- ous metamorphoses, especially among the star-fishes. A small species living on the coast of New England (Echi- naster sanguinolentus) undergoes the following phases, (Fig. 149.) 376. If the eggs are examined by the microscope, each one is found to contain a small, pear-shaped body, which is the embryo, (e,) surrounded by a transparent envelop. On escaping from the egg, the little animal has an oblong form, with a constriction at the base. This constriction becoming deeper and deeper forms a pedicle, (p,) which soon divides into three lobes. The disk also assumes a pen- tagonal form, with five double series of vesicles. The first rudiments of the rays are seen to form in the interior of the pentagon. At the same time, the peduncle contracts still more, being at last entirely absorbed into the cavity of the body, and the animal soon acquires its final form, (m.) METAMORPHOSES OF ANIMALS. 179 Fig. 151. Fig. 150. 378. The 377. Analogous transformations take place in the Cc:nat- ula. In early life (Fig. 150) it is fixed to the ground by a stern, but be- comes detached at a certain epoch, and then floats freely in the sea, (Fig. 151.) On the other hand, the Polypi seem to follow a reverse course, many of them becoming fixed to the ground after having been previously free, metamorphoses of mollusks, though less striking, are not less worthy of notice. Thus, the oyster, with which we are familiar in its adhering shell, is free when young, like the clam (Mya) and most other shell- fishes. Others, which are at first attached or suspended to the gills of the mother, afterwards become free, as the Unio. Some naked Gasteropods, the Acteon or the Eolis, for ex- ample, are born with a shell, which they part with shortly after leaving the egg. 379. The study of metamorphoses is, therefore, of the utmost importance for understanding the real affinities of animals very different in appearance, as is readily shown by •the following instances. The butterfly and the earth-worm seem, at the first glance, to have no relation whatever. They differ in their organization, no less than in their out- ward appearance. But, on comparing the caterpillar and the worm, these two animals closely resemble each other. The analogy, however, is only, transient ; it lasts only during the larva state of the caterpillar, and is effaced as it 180 METAMORPHOSES OF ANIMALS. passes to the chrysalis and butterfly states. The latter be- comes a more and more perfect animal, whilst the worm remains in its inferior state. 380. Similar instances are furnished by animals belong- ing to all the types of the Animal Kingdom. Who would think, at first glance, that a Barnacle or an Anatifa were more nearly allied to the crab than to the oyster ? And, nevertheless, we have seen, (372,) in tracing back the Anat- ifa to its early stages, that it then bears a near resemblance to a little Crustacean, (Fig. 148, d.) It is only when full grown that it assumes its peculiar mollusk-like covering. 381. Among the Cuttle-fishes there are several, the Loligo, (Fig. 47,) for example, which are characterized by the form of their tentacles, the two interior being much longer than the others, and of a different form ; whilst in others, as the Octopus, they are all equal. But if we com- pare the young, we find that in both animals the tentacles are all equal, though they differ in number. The inequality in the tentacles is the result of a further development. 382. Among the Radiata, the Pentacrinus and the Comat- ula exemplify the same point. The two are very different when full grown, the latter being a free-swimming star-fish, (Fig. 151,) while the former is attached to the soil, like a Polyp. But we have seen (377) that the same is the case with Comatula in its early period ; and that, in consequence of a further metamorphosis, it becomes disengaged from its* stem, and floats freely in the water. 383. In the type of Vertebrates, the considerations drawn from metamorphoses acquire still greater importance in ref- erence to classification. The Sturgeon and the White-fish, before mentioned, (306,) are two very different fishes ; yet, taking into consideration their external form and bearing merely, it might be questioned which of the two should take the highest rank ; whereas the doubt is very easily METAMORPHOSES OF ANIMALS. 181 resolved by an examination of their anatomical structure. The White-fish has a skeleton, and, moreover, a vertebral column, composed of firm bone. The Sturgeon, (Fig. 152,) Fig. 152. on the contrary, has no bone in the vertebral column, except the spines or apophyses of the vertebrae. The middle part, or body of the vertebra, is cartilaginous ; the mouth is trans- verse, and underneath the head ; and the caudal fin is un- equally forked, while in the White-fish it is equally forked. 384. If, however, we observe the young White-fish just after it has issued from the egg, (Fig. 123,) the contrast will be less striking. At this period the vertebrae are cartilagi- nous, like those of the Sturgeon ; its mouth, also, is trans- verse and inferior, and its tail undivided ; at that period the White-fish and the Sturgeon are, therefore, much more alike. But this similarity is only transient ; as the White-fish grows, its vertebrae become ossified, and its resemblance to the Sturgeon is comparatively slight. As the Sturgeon has no such transformation of the vertebrae, and is, in some sense, arrested in its development, while the White-fish undergoes subsequent transformation, we conclude that, compared with the White-fish, it is really inferior in rank. 385. This relative inferiority and superiority strikes us still more when we compare with our most perfect fishes (the Salmon, the Cod) some of those worm-like animals, so different from ordinary fishes that they were formerly placed among the worms. The Am- phioxus, represented of its nat- >*^S /X///2221- ural size, (Fig. 153,) not only Fig. 153. 16 182 METAMORPHOSES OF ANIMALS. has no bony skeleton, but not even a head, properly speak ing.. Yet the fact that it possesses a dorsal ccrd, extending from one extremity of the body to the other, proves that it belongs to the type of Vertebrates. But as this peculiar structure is found only at a very early period of embryonic development, in other fishes, we conclude that the Amphi- oxus holds the very lowest rank in this class. 386. Nevertheless, the metamorphoses of animals after birth, will, in many instances, present but trifling modifica- tions of the relative rank of animals, compared with those which may be derived from the study of changes previous to that period, as there are many animals which undergo no changes of great importance after their escape from the egg, and occupy, nevertheless, a high rank in the Zoological series, as, for example, Birds and Mammals. The question is, whether such animals are developed according to differ- ent plans, or whether their peculiarity in that respect is merely apparent. To answer this question, let us go back to the period anterior to birth, and see if some parallel may not be made out between the embryonic changes of these animals and the metamorphoses which take place subse- quently to birth in others. 387. We have already shown that embryonic develop- ment consists in a series of transformations ; the young ani- mal enclosed in the egg differing at each period of its de- velopment, from what it was before. But because these transformations precede birth, and are, therefore, not generally observed, they are not less important. To be satisfied that these transformations are in every respect similar to those which follow birth, we have only to compare the changes, which immediately precede birth with those which immediate- ly follow it, and we shall readily perceive that the latter are simply a continuation of the former, till all are completed. 388. Let us recur to the development of fishes for II us- METAMORPHOSES OF ANIMALS. 183 tration. The young White-fish, as we have seen, (315,) is far from having acquired its complete development when born. The vertical fins are not yet separate ; the mouth has not yet its proper position ; the yolk has not yet retreated within the cavity of the body, but hangs below the chest in the form of a large bag. Much, therefore, remains to be changed before its development is complete. But the fact that it has been born does not prevent its future evolution, which goes on without interruption. 389. Similar inferences may be drawn from the develop- ment of the chicken. The only difference is, that the young chicken is born in a more mature state, the most important transformations having taken place during the embryonic period, while those to be undergone after birth are less con- siderable, though they complete the process begun in the embryo. Thus we see it, shortly after birth, completely changing its covering, and clothed with feathers instead of down ; still later its crest appears, and its spurs begin to be developed. 390. In certain Mammals, known under the name of Marsupials, (the Opossum and Kangaroo,) the link between the transformations which take place before birth, and those that occur at a later period, is especially remarkable, These animals are brought into the world so weak and undeveloped that they have to undergo a second gestation, in a pouch with which the mother is furnished, and in which the young remain, each one fixed to a teat, until they are entirely developed. Even those animals which are born nearest to the complete state, undergo, nevertheless, embryonic transformations. Ruminants acquire their horns ; and the lion his mane. Most mammals, at birth, are destitute of teeth, and incapable of using their limbs ; and all are dependent on the mother and the milk secreted by her, until the stomach is capable of digesting other aliments. 184 METAMORPHOSES OF ANIMALS. 391. If it be thus shown that the transformations which take place in the embryo are of the same nature, and of the same importance, as those which occur afterwards, the cir- cumstance that some precede and others succeed birth can- not mark any radical distinction between them. Both are processes of the life of the individual. Now, as life does not commence at birth, but goes still farther back, it is quite clear that the modifications which supervene during the former period are essentially the same as, and continuous with, the later ones ; and hence, that metamorphoses, far from being exceptional in the case of Insects, are one of the general, features of the Animal Kingdom. 392. We are, therefore, perfectly entitled to say that all animals, without exception, undergo metamorphoses. Were it not so, we should be at a loss to conceive why animals of the same division present such wide differences; and that there should be, as in the class of Reptiles, some families that undergo important metamorphoses, (the frogs, for ex- ample,) and others in which nothing of the kind is observed after birth, (the Lizards and Tortoises.) 393. It is only by connecting the two kinds of transforma- tions, namely, those which take place before, and those after birth, that we are furnished with the means of ascertaining the relative perfection of an animal ; in other words, these transformations become, under such circumstances, a natureu key to the gradation of types. At the same time, they will force upon us the conviction that there is an immutable prin- ciple presiding over all these changes, and regulating them in a peculiar manner in each animal. 394. These considerations are exceedingly important, not only from their bearing upon classification, but not less so from the application which may be made of them to the study of fossils. If we examine attentively the fishes that have been found in the different strata of the earth, we remark that B1ETAM0RPH0SES OF ANIMALS. * 185 those of the most ancient deposits have, in general, preserved only the apophyses of their vertebras, whilst the vertebras then.selves are wanting. Were the Sturgeons of the Amer- ican rivers to become petrified, they would be found in a similar state of preservation. As the apophyses are the only bony portions of the vertebral column, they alone would be preserved. Indeed, fossil Sturgeons are known, which are in precisely this condition. 395. From the fact above stated, we may conclude that the oldest fossil fishes did not pass through all the metamor- phoses which our osseous fishes undergo ; and, consequently, that they were inferior to analogous species of the present epoch which have bony vertebras. Similar considerations apply to the fossil Crustacea and to the fossil Echinoderms, when compared with living ones, and will, probably, be true of all classes of the Animal Kingdom, when fully studied as to their geological succession. 16* CHAPTER THIRTEENTH. GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION OF ANIMALS. SECTION I. GENERAL LAWS OF DISTRIBUTION. 396. No animal, excepting man, inhabits every part of the surface of the earth. Each great geographical or climatal region is occupied by some species not found elsewhere ; and each animal dwells within certain limits, beyond which it does not range while left to its natural freedom, and within which it always inclines to return, when removed by acci- dent or design. Man alone is a cosmopolite. His domain is the whole earth. For him, and with a view to him, it was created. His right to it is based upon his organization and his relation to Nature, and is maintained by his intelligence and the perfectibility of his social condition. 397. A group of animals which inhabits any particular region, embracing all the species, both aquatic and terrestrial, is called its Fauna ; in the same manner as the plants of a country are called its Flora. To be entitled to this name, it is not necessary that none of the animals composing the group should be found in any other region ; it is sufficient that there should be peculiarities in the distribution of the families, genera, and species, and in the preponderance of certain types over others, sufficiently prominent to impress upon a region well-marked features. Thus, for example, in the islands of the Pacific are found terrestrial animals, alto- GENERAL LAWS OF DISTRIBUTION. 187 gether peculiar, and not found on the nearest continents. There are numerous animals ,n New Holland differing from any found on the continent of Asia, or, indeed, on any other part of the earth. If, however, some species inhabiting both shores of a sea which separates two terrestrial regions are found to be alike, we are not to conclude that those regions have the same Fauna, any more than that the Flora of Lap- land and England are alike, because some of the sea-weeds found on both their shores are the same. 398. There is an evident relation between the fauna of any locality and its temperature, although, as we shall here- after see, similar climates are not always inhabited by similar animals, (401, 402.) Hence the faunas of the two hemis- pheres have been distributed into three principal divisions, namely, the arctic, the temperate, and the tropical faunas : in the same manner as we have arctic, temperate, and tropi- cal floras. Hence, also, animals dwelling at high elevations upon mountains, where the temperature is much reduced, resemble the animals of colder latitudes, rather than those of the surrounding plains. 399. In some respects, the peculiarities of the fauna of a region depend upon its flora, at least so far as land animals are concerned ; for herbivorous animals will exist only where there is an adequate supply of vegetable food. But taking the terrestrial and aquatic animals together, the limi- tation of a fauna is less intimately dependent on climate than that of a flora. Plants, in truth, are for the most part terrestrial, (marine plants being relatively very few,) wtvle animals are chiefly aquatic. The ocean is the true home of the Animal Kingdom ; and while plants, with the excep- tion of the lichens and mosses, become dwarfed, or perish under the influence of severe cold, the sea teems with animals of all classes, far beyond the extreme limit of flower- ing plants. 188 GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION OF ANIMALS. 400. The influence of climate, in the colder regions, acts merely to induce a greater uniformity in the species of animals. Thus the same animals inhabit the northern polar regions of the three continents. The polar bear is the same in Europe, Asia, and America, and so are also a great many birds. In the temperate regions, on the contrary, the species differ on each of the continents, but they still pre- serve the same general features. The types are the same, but they are represented by quite different species. In consequence of these general resemblances, the first colo- nists of New England erroneously applied the names of European species to American animals. Similar differences are observed in distant regions of the same continent, within the same parallels of latitude. The animals of Oregon and of California are not the same as those of New England. The difference, in certain respects, is even greater than between the animals of New England and Europe. In like manner, the animals of temperate Asia differ more from those of Europe than they do from those of America. 401. Under the torrid zone, the Animal Kingdom, as well as the Vegetable, attains its highest development. The ani- mals of the tropics are not only different from those of the temperate zone, but, moreover, they present the greatest variety among themselves. The most gracefully propor- tioned forms are found by the side of the most grotesque, decked with every combination of brilliant coloring. At the same time, the contrast between the animals of different con- tinents is more marked ; and, in many respects, the animals of the different tropical faunas differ not less from each other than from those of the temperate or frozen zones. Thus, the fauna of Brazil varies as much from that of Central Africa as from that Of the United States. 402. This diversity upon different continents cannot de- pend simply on any influence of the climate of the tropics GENERAL LAWS OF DISTRIBUTION. 189 if it were so, uniformity ought to be restored in proportion as we rececb from the tropics towards the antarctic tem- perate regions. But, instead of this, the differences con- tinue to increase ; — so much so, that no faunas are more in contrast than those of Cape Horn, the Cape of Good Hope, and New Holland. Hence, other influences must be in oper- ation besides those of climate; — influences of a higher order, which are involved in a general plan, and intimately- associated with the development of life on the surface of the earth. 403. Faunas are more or less distinctly limited, according to the natural features of the earth's surface. Sometimes two faunas are separated by an extensive chain of moun- tains, like the Rocky Mountains. Again, a desert may in- tervene, like the desert of Sahara, which separates the fauna of Central Africa from that of the Atlas and the Moorish coast, the latter being merely an appendage to the fauna of Europe. But the sea effects the most complete limita- tion. The depths of the ocean are quite as impassable for marine species as high mountains are for terrestrial animals. It would be quite as difficult for a fish or a mollusk to cross from the coast of Europe to the coast of America, as it would be for a reindeer to pass from the arctic to the antarctic regions, across the torrid zone. Experiments of dredging in very deep water have also, taught us that the abyss of the ocean is nearly a desert. Not only are no materials found there for sustenance, but it is doubtful if ani- mals could sustain the pressure of so great a column of water, although many of them are provided with a system of pores, (260,) which enables them to sustain a much greater pressure than terrestrial animals. 404. When there is no great natural limit, the transition from one fauna to another is made insensibly. Thus, in passing from the arctic to the temperate regions of North 190 GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION OF ANIMALS. America, one species takes tb.3 place of another, a third suc- ceeds the second, and so on, until finally the fauna is found to be completely changed, though it is not always possible to mark the precise line which divides the one from the other. 405. The range of species does not at all depend upon their powers of locomotion ; if it were so, animals which move slowly and with difficulty would have a narrow range, whilst those which are very active would be widely diffused. Precisely the reverse of this is actually the case. The com- mon oyster extends at least from the St. Lawrence to the Carolinas ; its range is consequently very great ; much more so than that of some of the fleet animals, as, for instance, the Moose. It is even probable that the very inability of the oyster to travel really contributes to its diffusion, inasmuch as, having once spread over extensive grounds, there is no chance of its return to a former limitation, inasmuch as, being fixed, and consequently unable to choose positions for its eggs, they must be left to the mercy of currents ; while Fishes, by depositing their eggs in the bays and inlets of the shore, undisturbed by currents and winds, secure them from too wide a dispersion. 406. The nature of their food has an important bearing upon the grouping of animals, and upon the extent of their distribution. Carnivorous animals are generally less con- fined in their range than herbivorous ones ; because their food is almost every where to be found. The herbivora, on the contrary, are restricted to the more limited regions corresponding to the different zones of vegetation. The same remark may be made with respect to Birds. Birds of prey, such as the eagle and vulture, have a much wider range than the granivorous and gallinaceous birds. Still, notwith- standing the facilities they have for change of place, even the birds that wander widest recognize limits which they do GENERAL LAWS OF DISTRIBUTION. 191 not overstep. The Condor of the Cordilleras does not de- scend into the temperate regions of the United States ; and yet it is not that he fears the cold, since he is frequently known to ascend even above the highest summits of the Andes, and disappears from view where the cold is most intense. Nor can it be from lack of prey. 407. Again, the peculiar configuration of a country some- times determines a peculiar grouping of animals, into what may be called local faunas. Such, for example, are the prairies of the West, the Pampas of South America, the Steppes of Asia, the Deserts of Africa ; — and, for marine animals, the basin of the Caspian. In all these localities, animals are met with which exist only there, and are not found except under those particular conditions. 408. Finally, to obtain a true picture of the zoological distribution of animals, not the terrestrial types alone, but the marine species, must also be included. Notwithstanding the uniform nature of the watery element, the animals which dwell in it are not dispersed at random ; and though the limits of the marine may be less easily defined than those of the terrestrial faunas, still, marked differences between the animals of great basins are not less observable. Properly to apprehend how marine animals may be distributed into local faunas, it must be remembered that their residence is not in the high sea, but along the coasts of continents and on soundings. It is on the Banks of Newfoundland, and not in the deep sea, that the great cod-fishery is carried on ; and it is well known that when fishes migrate, they run along the shores. The range of marine species being, therefore, con- fined to the vicinity of the shores, their distribution must be subjected to laws similar to those which- regulate the terres- trial faunas. As to the fresh-water fishes, not only do the species vary in the different zones, but even the different rivers of the same region have species peculiar to them, and 192 GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION OF ANIMALS. not found in neighboring streams. The garpikes (Lepi* dosteus) of the American rivers afford a striking example of this kind. 409. A very influential cause in the distribution of aquatic animals is the depth of the water ; so that several zoological zones, receding from the shore, may be defined, according to the depth of water ; much in the same manner as we mark different zones at different elevations in ascending moun- tains, (398.) The Mollusks, and even the Fishes found near the shore in shallow water, differ, in general, from those living at the depth of twenty or thirty feet, and these again are found to be different from those which are met with at a greater depth. Their coloring, in particular, var.es, ac- cording to the quantity of light they receive, as has also been shown to be the case with the marine plants. 410. It is sometimes the case that one or more animals are found upon a certain chain of mountains, and not else- where ; as, for instance, the Mountain Sheep ( Ovis montana) upon the Rocky Mountains, or the Chamois and the Ibex upon the Alps. The same is also the case on some of the wide plains or prairies. This, however, does not entitle such regions to be considered as having an independent fauna, any more than a lake is to be regarded as having a peculiar fauna, exclusive of the animals of the surrounding country, merely because some of the species found in the lake may not ascend the rivers emptying into it. It is only when the whole group of animals inhabiting such a region has such peculiarities as to give it a distinct character, when contrasted with animals found in surrounding regions, that it is to be regarded as a separate fauna. Such, for exam- ple, is the fauna of the great steppe, or plain of Gobi, in Asia ; and such indeed that of the chain of the Rocky Moun- tains may prove to be, when the animals inhabiting them shall be better known. GENERAL LAWS OF DISTRIBUTION. 193 411. The migration of animals might at first seem to pre- sent a serious difficulty in determining the character or the limits of a fauna ; but this difficulty ceases, if we regard the country of an animal to be the place where it makes its habitual abode. As to Birds, which of all animals wander farthest, it may be laid down as a rule, that they belong to the zone in which they breed. TPhus, the gulls, many of the ducks, mergansers, and divers, belong to the boreal regions, though they pass a portion of the year with us. On the other hand, the swallows and martins, and many of the gallinaceous birds belong to the temperate faunas, notwith- standing their migration during winter to the confines of the torrid zone. This rule does not apply to the fishes who an- nually leave their proper home, and migrate to a distant region merely for the purpose of spawning. The Salmon, for example, comes down from the North, to spawn on the coast of Maine and Nova Scotia. 412. Few of the Mammals, and these mostly of the tribe of Rodents, make extensive migrations. Among the most remarkable of these are the Kamtschatka rats. In Spring they direct their course westward, in immense troops ; and, after a very long journey, return again in Autumn to their quarters, where their approach is anxiously awaited by the hunters, on account of the fine furs to be obtained from the numerous carnivora which always follow in their train. The migrations of the Lemmings are marked by the devas- tations they commit along their course, as they come down from the borders of the Frozen Ocean to the valleys of Lapland and Norway ; but their migrations are not period- ical. 17 194 GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION OF ANIMALS. SECTION II. DISTRIBUTION OF THE FAUNAS. 413. We have stated that all the faunas of the globe may be divided into three gneups, corresponding to as many great climatal divisions, namely, the glacial or arctic, the temperate and the tropical faunas. These three divisions appertain to both hemispheres, as we recede from the equator towards the north or south poles. It will hereafter be shown that the vropical and temperate faunas may be again divided into several zoological provinces, depending on longitude or on me peculiar configuration of the continents. 414. No continent is better calculated to give a correct idea of distribution into faunas, as determined by climate, than the continent of America ; extending as it does across both hemispheres, and embracing all latitudes, so that all climates are represented upon it, as shown by the chart on the following page. 415. Let a traveller embark at Iceland, which is situated on the borders of the polar circle, with a view to observe, in a zoological aspect, the principal points along the eastern shore of America. The result of his observation will be very much as follows. Along the coast of Greenland and Iceland, and also along Baffin's Bay, he will meet with an unvaried fauna, composed throughout of the same animals, which are also for the most part identical with those of the arctic shores of Europe. It will be nearly the same along the coast of Labrador. 416. As he approaches Newfoundland, he will see the landscape, and with it the fauna, assuming a somewhat more varied aspect. To the wide and naked or turfy plains of the boreal regions succeed forests, in which he will find FAUNAS. I. North Glacial or Arctic II. Northern Temperate. III. Northern Warm. IV. Tropical. V. Southern Warm. VI. Southern Temperate. ©MART ®W EQ>Q>LQ>G>l®hL RE©»©MS 196 GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION OF ANIMALS. various animals which dwell only in forests. Here the tem- perate fauna commences. Still the number of species is not yet very considerable ; but as he advances southward, along the coasts of Nova Scotia and New England, he finds new species gradually introduced, while those of the colder regions diminish, and at length entirely disappear, some few acci- dental or periodical visiters excepted, who wander, during winter, as far south as the Carolinas. 417. But it is after having passed the boundaries of the United States, among the Antilles, and more especially on the southern continent, along the shores of the Orinoco and the Amazon, that our traveller will be forcibly struck with the astonishing variety of the animals which people the for- ests, the prairies, the rivers, and the sea-shores, most of which he will also find to be different from those of the northern continent. By this extraordinary richness of new forms, he will become sensible that he is now in the domain of the tropical fauna. 418. Let him still travel on beyond the equator towards the tropic of Capricorn, and he will again find the scene change as he enters the regions where the sun casts his rays more obliquely, and where the contrast of the seasons is more marked. The vegetation will be less luxuriant; the palms will have disappeared to make place for other trees; the animals will be less varied, and the whole picture will recall to him, in some measure, what he witnessed in the United States. He will again find himself in the temperate region, and this he will trace on, till he arrives at the ex- tremity of the continent, the fauna and the flora becoming more and more impoverished as he approaches Cape Horn. 419. Finally, we know that there is a continent around the South Pole. Although we have as yet but very imper- fect notions respecting the animals of this inhospitable clime, still, the few which have already been observed there present DISTRIBUTION OF THE FAUNAS. 197 a close analogy to those of the arctic region. It is another glacial fauna, namely, the antarctic. Having thus sketched the general divisions of the faunas, it remains to point out the principal features of each of them. 420. I. Arctic Fauna. — The predominant feature of the Arctic Fauna is its uniformity. The species are few in num- ber ; but, on the other hand, the number of individuals is immense. We need only refer to the clouds of birds which hover upon the islands and shores of the North ; the shoals of fishes, the salmon among others, which throng the coasts of Greenland, Iceland, and Hudson's Bay. There is great uniformity, also, in the form and color of these animals, Not a single bird of brilliant plumage is found, and few fishes with varied hues. Their forms are regular, and their tints as dusky as the northern heavens. The most conspicuous animals are the white-bear, the moose, the reindeer, the musk-ox, the white-fox, the polar-hare, the lemming, and various Seals ; but the most important are the Whales, which, it is to be remarked, rank lowest of all the Mammals. Among the Birds may be enumerated some sea-eagles and a few Waders, while the great majority are aquatic species, such as gulls, cormorants, divers, petrels, ducks, geese, gan- nets, &c, all belonging to the lowest orders of Birds. Rep- tiles are altogether wanting. The Articulata are represented by numerous marine worms, and by minute crustaceans of the orders Isopoda and Amphipoda. Insects are rare, and of inferior types. Of the type of Mollusks, there are Acephala, particularly Tunicata, fewer Gasteropods, and very few Cephalopods. Among the Radiata are a great number of jelly-fishes, particularly the Beroe ; and to con- clude with the Echinoderms, there are several star-fishes and Echini, but few Holothurise. The class of Polypi is very scantily represented, and those producing stony corals are entirely wan mg. 17* 198 GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION is country, but in England. The London Literary Gazette, for April, contains an able review, occupying over nine columns, from which we make the following extract : " We venture \o say that no scien- tific man of any reputation will maintain the theory, without mixing up theological with phys- ical arguments. And it is in regard to the theological and moral aspect of the question, that we think the author urges considerations which most believers in the truths of Christianity will deem unanswerable." — Evening Transcript. The " Plurality of Worlds " has created as great a sensation in the reading world, as did the Vestiges of Creation. But this time the religious world is not uc in arms with anathemas on its lips. ' This is a book for it to " lick its ear " over. It is aimeu at the speculations of Fonte- nelle, or Dr. Chalmers, respecting the existence of life and spirit in the worlds that roll around us, and demonstrating the impossibility of such a thing. — London Cor. of N. T. Tribune. To the theologian, philosopher, and man of science, this is a most intensely interesting work, while to the ordinary thinker it will be found possessed of much valuable information. The work is evidently the production of a scholar, and of one earnest for the dissemination of truth in regard to what he considers, for theologians and scientific men, the greatest question of the age. — Albany Transcript. The work is learned, eloquent, suggestive of profound reflection, solacing to human pride, and even to Christian humility ; and points out the great lesson it illustrates, upon the diagram of the heavens, in language and tone elevated to the standard of the great theme. — Boston Atlas. One of the most extraordinary books of the age. It is an attempt to show that the facts of science do not warrant the conclusion to which most scientific minds so readily assent, that the planets are inhabited. The anonymous author is a genius, and will set hundreds of critics on the hunt to ferret him out ! — Star of the West. GEOLOGICAL MAP OF THE UNITED STATES AND BRITISH PROV- INCES OF NORTH AMERICA. With an Explanatory Text, Geological Sections, and Plates of the Fossils which characterize the Formations. By Jules Marcotj. Two volumes. Octavo, cloth. $3.00. 4Sg=* The Map is elegantly colored, and done up with linen cloth back, and folded in octavo form, with thick cloth covers. The most complete Geological Map of the United States which has yet appeared. The exe- cution of this Map is very neat and tasteful, and it is issued in the best style. It is a work which allwho take an interest in the geology of the United States would wish to possess, and we recommend it as extremely valuable, not only in a geological point of view, but as repre- senting very fully the coal and copper regions of the country. The explanatory text presents a rapid sketch of the geological constilations of North America, and is rich in facts on the sub- jects. It is embellished with a number of beautiful plates of the fossils which characterize the formations, thus making, with the Map, a very complete, clear, and distinct outline of the geology of our country •■ — Mining Magazine, N. Y. » '-*s GUYOT'S WORKS THE EARTH AND MAN; Lectures on Comparative Physical Geography, in its relation to the History of Mankind. By Prof. Arnold Guyot. Translated from the French, by Prof. C. C. Felton, with numerous Illustrations. Eighth thousand. 12mo, cloth, 1,25. From Prof- Louis Agassiz, of Harvard University. It will not only render the study of Geography more attractive, ]jut actually show it in its true light, namely, as the science of the relations which exist between nature and man throughout history ; of the contrasts observed between the different parts of the globe ; of the laws of horizontal and vertical forms of the dry land, in its contact with the sea; of climate, &c. It would be highly serviceable, it seems to me. for the benefit of schools and teachers, that you should induce Mr. Guyot to write a se- ries of graduated text books of geography, from the first elements up to a scientific treatise. It would give new life to these studies in this country, and be the best preparation for sound statistical investi- gations. From George S. Ilttlard. Esq., of Boston. Professor Goyot's Lectures are marked by learning, ability, and taste. His bold and comprehen- sive generalizations rest upon a careful foundation of facts. The essential value of his statements is enhanced by his luminous arrangement, and by a vein of philosophical reflection which gives life and dignity to dry details. To teachers of youth it will be especially important. They may learn from it how to make Geography, which I recall as the least interesting of studies, one of the most attractive -, and I earnestly commend it to their careful consideration. Those who have been accustomed to regard Geography as a merely descriptive branch of learn- ing, drier than the remainder biscuit after a voyage, will be delighted to find this hitherto unattractive pursuit converted into a science, the principles of which are definite and the results conclusive.— A'orth American Review. The grand idea of the work is happily expressed by the aut /or, where he calls it the geographical march of history. Faith, science, learning, poetry, taste, in a word, genius, have liberally contributed to the production of the work under review. Sometimes we feel as if we were studying a treatise on the exact sciences ; at others, it strikes the car like an epic poem. Now it reads like history, and now it sounds like prophecy. It will find readers in whatever language it may be published. — Christian Examiner. The work is one of high merit, exhibiting a wide range of knowledge, great research, and a philo- sophical spirit of investigation. Its perusal will well repay the most learned in such subjects, and give new views to all of man's relation to the globe he inhabits. — Siihman's Journal. COMPARATIVE PHYSICAL AND HISTORICAL GEOGRAPHY; or, the Study of the Earth and its Inhabitants. A series of graduated courses for the use of Schools. By ARNOLD Guyot, author of " Earth and Man," etc. The series hereby announced will consist of three courses, adapted to the capacity of three different ages and periods of study. The first is intended for primary schools and for children of from seven to ten years. The second is adapted for higher schools, and for young persons of from ten to fifteen years. The third is to be used as a scientific manual in Academies and Colleges. Each course will be divided into two parts, one on purely Physical Geography, the other for Eth- nography, Statistics, Political and Historical Geography. Each part will be illustrated by a colored Physical and Political Atlas, prepared expressly for this purpose, delineating, with the greatest care, the configuration of the surface, and the other physical phenomena alluded to in the corresponding work, the distribution of the races of men, and the political divisions into states, &c, &c. The two parts of the first or preparatory course are now in a forward state of preparation, and will be issued at an early day. GUYOT'S MURAL MAPS ; a Series of elegant Colored Maps, projected on a large scale, for the Recitation Room, consisting of a Map of the World, North and South America, Europe, Asia, Africa, &c, exhibiting the Physical Phenomena of the Globe, etc. By Prof. Arnold Guyot. Price, mounted, 10,00 each. MAP OF THE WORLD,- Now ready. MAP OF NORTH AM ERICA, -Now ready. MAP OF SOUTH AMERICA, -Nearly ready. MAP OF GEOGRAPHICAL ELEMENTS, — Now ready. ftjT Other Maps of the Series are in preparation. C VALUABLE SCIENTIFIC WORKS. PRINCIPLES OF ZOOLOGY: touching the Structure, Development, Distribution, and Natural Arrangement of the Races of Animals, living and extinct. With numerous Illustrations. For the Use of Schools and Colleges. Part I., Compara- tive Physiology- By Louis Agassiz and Augustus A. Gould. Revised Edition. 12mo, cloth, 1,00. This work places us in possession of information half a century in advance of all our elementary works on this subject. . . No work of the same dimensions has ever appeared in the English lan- guage containing so much new and valuable information on the subject of which it treats. — Pkof. James Hall. A work emanating from so high a source hardly requires commendation to give it currency. The volume is prepared for the student in zoological science ; it is simple and elementary in its style, full in its illustrations, comprehensive in its range, yet well condensed, and brought into the narrow com- pass requisite for the purpose intended. — Sillimari's Journal. The work may safely be recommended as the best book of the kind in our language. — Christian Examiner. It is not a mere book, but a work - a real work, in the form of a book. Zoology is an interesting science, and is here treated with a masterly hand. The history, anatomical structure, the nature and habits of numberless animals, are described in clear and plain language, and illustrated with innumer- able engravings. It is a work adapted to colleges and schools, and no young man should be without it. — Scientific American. PPJNCIPLES OF ZOOLOGY, PAET II. Systematic Zoology, in which the Principles of Classification are applied, and the principal Groups of Animals are briefly characterized. With numerous Illustrations. 12mo, in preparation, THE ELEMENTS OF GEOLOGY; adapted to Schools and Colleges, with numerous Illustrations. By J. R. Looiviis, late Professor of Chemistry and Geology in VVaterville College. 12mo, cloth, 1,00. After a thorough examination of the work, we feel convinced that in all the requirements of a text book of natural science, it is surpassed by no work before the American public. In this opinion we believe the great body of experienced teachers will concur. The work will be found equally well adapted to the wants of those who have given little or no attention to the science in early life, and are desirous to become acquainted with its terms and principles, with the least consumption of time and labor. We hope that every teacher among our readers will examine the work and put the justness of our remarks to the test of his judgment and experience. — M. B. Akdekson, iVes. of Rochester University. This is just such a work as is needed for our schools. It contains a systematic statement of the principles of Geology, without entering into the minuteness of detail, which, though interesting to the mature student, confuses the learner. It very wisely, also, avoids those controverted points which mingle geology with questions of biblical criticism. We see no reason why it should not take its place as a text book in all the schools in the land. — N. Y. Observer. This volume merits the attention of teachers, who, if we mistake not, will find it better adapted to their purpose than any other similar work of which we have knowledge. It embodies a statement of the principles of Geology sufficiently full for the ordinary purposes of instruction, with the leading facts from which they are deduced. It embraces the latest results of the science, and indicates the debatable points of theoretical geology. The plan of the work is simple and clear, and the style in which it is written is both compact and lucid. We have special pleasure in welcoming its appearance. — Watchman and Reflector. This volume seems to be just the book now required on geology. It will acquire rapidly a circula- tion, and will do much to popularize and universally diffuse a knowledge of geological truths. — Al- bany Journal. It gives a clear and scientific, yet simple, analysis of the main features of the science. It seems, in language and illustration, admirably adapted for usaas a text book in common schools and academies; while it is vastly better than any thing which was used in college in our time. In all these capacities We particularly and cordially recommend it. — Congregationalist, Boston. jD THESAURUS OP ENGLISH WORDS AND PHRASES. So Classified and Arranged as to Facilitate the Expression of Ideas, and Assist in Literary Composition. By Peter Mark Roget, late Secretary of the Royal Society, and author of the " Bridgewater Treatise," etc. Revised and En- larged ; with a List of Foreign H'ords and Expressions most frequently occurring in works of general Literature, Defined in English, by Barnas Sears, D.D., Secretary of the Massachusetts Board of Education, assisted by several Literary Gentlemen. 12mo, cloth. $1.50. J6Sr- A work of great merit, admirably adapted as a text-book for schools and colleges, and of high importance to every American scholar. Among the numerous commendations received from the press, in all directions, the publishers would call attention to the following : "We are glad to see the Thesaurus of English "Words republished in this country. It is a most valuable work, giving the results of many years' labor, in an attempt to classify and arrange the words of the English tongue, so as to facilitate the practice of composition. The purpose of an ordinary dictionary is to explain the meaning of words, while the object of this Thesaurus is to collate all the words by which any given idea may be expressed. — Putnam's Monthly. This volume offers the student of English composition the results of great labor in the form of a rich and copious vocabulary. We would commend the work to those who have charge of academies and high schools, and to all students. — CJtristian Observer. This is a novel publication, and is the first and only one of the kind ever issued in which words and phrases of our language are classified, not according to the sound of their orthog- raphy, but strictly according to their signification. It will become an invaluable aid in the communication of our thoughts, whether spoken or written, and hence, as a means of improve- ment, we can recommend it as a work of rare and excellent qualities. — Scientific American. A work of great utility. It will give a writer the word he wants, when that word is on the tip of his tongue, but altogether beyond his reach. — N. Y. Times. It is more complete than the English work, which has attained a just celebrity. It is intended to supply, with respect to the English language, a desideratum hitherto unsupplied in any language, namely, a collection of the words it contains, and of the idiomatic combinations peculiar to it, arranged, not in alphabetical order, as they are in a dictionary, but according to the ideas which they express. The purpose of a dictionary is simply to explain the meaning of words — the word being given, to find its signification, or the idea it is intended to convey. The object aimed at here is exactly the converse of tins : the idea being given, to find the word or words by which that idea may be most fitly and aptly expressed. For this purp ie, the words and phrases of the language are here classed, not according to their sound or their orthography, but strictly according to their signification. — New York Evening Mirror. An invaluable companion to persons engaged in literary labors. To persons who are not familiar with foreign tongues, the catalogue of foreign words and phrases most current in mod- ern literature, which the American editor has appended, will be very useful. — Presbyterian. It casts the whole English language into groups of words and terms, arranged in such a man- ner that the student of English composition, when embarrassed by the poverty of his vocabu- lary, may supply himself immediately, on consulting it, with the precise term for which he has occasion. — New York Evening Post. This is a work not merely of extraordinary, but of peculiar value. We would gladly praise it, if anything could add to the consideration held out by the title-page. No one who speaks or writes for the public need be urged to study Roget's Thesaurus. — Star of the West. Every writer and speaker ought to possess himself at once of this manual. It is far from being a mere dull, dead string of synonymes, but it is enlivened and vivified by the classifying and crystallizing power of genuine philosophy. We have put it on our table as a permanent fixture, as near our left hand as the Bible is to our right. — Congregationalist. This book is one of the most valuable we ever examined. It supplies a want long acknowl- edged by the best writers, and supplies it completely. — Portland Advertiser. One of the most efficient aids to composition that research, industry and scholarship, have ever produced. Its object is to supply the writer or speaker with the most felicitous terms for expressing an idea that may be vaguely floating on his mind ; and, indeed, through the peculiar manner of arrangement, ideas themselves may be expanded or modified by reference to Mr. Roget' s elucidations. — Albion, N. Y. (e) CPIAMBERS'S WORKS. CHAMBERS'S CYCLOPEDIA OF ENGLISH LITERATURE. A Selection of tiie choicest productions of English Authors, from the earliest to the present time. Connected by a Critical and Biographical History. Forming two large imperial octavo volumes of 1400 pages, double column letter-press ; with upwards of 300 elegant Illustrations. This work embraces about one thousand authors, chronologically arranged and classed as Poets, Historians, Dramatists, Philosophers, Metaphysicians, Divines, etc., with choice selections from their writings, connected by a Biographical, Historical, and Critical Narrative ; thus presenting a complete view of English literature from the earliest to the present time. Let the reader open where he will, he cannot fail to find matter for profit and delight. The selections are gems — infinite riches in a little room; in the language of another, "A whole English Library fused down into one cheap book- " From W. H. Prescott. Author of "Ferdinand and Isabella." The plan of the work is very judicious. , It will put the reader in a proper point of view for surveying the whole ground over which he is travelling. . . . Such readers cannot fail to profit largely by the labors of the critic who has the talent and taste to separate what is really beautiful and worthy of their study from what is superfluous. I concur in the foregoing opinion of Mr. Prescott. — Edward Everett. A popular work, indispensable to the library of a student of English literature. — Dr. Watlakd. We hail with peculiar pleasure the appearance of this work. — North American Review. It has been fitly described as '• a ivhole English library fused down into one cheap book." The Bos- ton edition combines neatness with cheapness, engraved portraits being given, over and above the il- lustrations of the English copy. — N. Y. Commercial Advertiser. Welcome more than welcome It was our good fortune some months ago to obtain a glance at this work, and we have ever since looked with earnestness for its appearance in an American edition. — A. Y. Recorder. 6S- The American edition of this valuable work is enriched by the addition of fine steel and mezzo- tint engravings of the heads of Siiakspeare, Addison, Byron ; a full length portrait of Dr. John- sqx, and a beautiful scenic representation of Oliver Goldsmith and Dr. Johnson. These im- portant and elegant additions, together witli superior paper and binding, render the American far su- perior to the English edition. The circulation of this most valuable and popular work has been truly enormous, and its sale in this country still continues unabated. CHAMBERS'S MISCELLANY OF USEFUL AND ENTERTAIN- ING KNOWLEDGE. Edited by William Chambers. With Elegant Illustrative Engravings. Ten volumes, 16mo, cloth, 7,00. This work has been highly recommended by distinguished individuals, as admirably adapted to Family, Sabbath, and District School Libraries. It would be difficult to find any miscellany superior or even equal to it : it richly deserves the epi- thets " useful and entertaining," and I would recommend it very strongly as extremely well adapted to form parts of a library for the young, or of a social or circulating library in town or country.— George B. Emerson, Esq., Chairman Boston School Book Committee. I am gratified to have an opportunity to be instrumental in circulating " Chambers's Miscellany " among the schools for which I am superintendent. — J. J. Ci.ute, Town. Sup. of Castleton, A". Y. I am fully satisfied that it is one of the best series in our common school libraries now in circula- tion. - S. T. Hance, Town Sup. of Macedon, Wayne Co., A". Y. The trustees have examined the " Miscellany," and are well pleased with it. I have engaged the books to every district that has library money. — Miles Chaffee, Town Sup. of Concord. N. Y. I am not acquainted with any similar collection in the English language that can compare with it for purposes of instruction or amusement. I should rejoice to see that set of books in every house in our country. — Rev. John O. Choules D. D. The information contained in this work is surprisingly great ; -and for the fireside, and the young, particularly, it cannot fail to prove a most valuable and entertaining companion. — A". Y. Evangelist. It is an admirable compilation, distinguished by the good taste which has been shown in all the pub- lications of the Messrs. Chambers. It unites the useful and entertaining. — A'". Y. Com. Adv. E CHAMBERS'S WORKS. CHAMBERS'S HOME BOOK AND POCKET MISCELLANY Con- taining a Choice Selection of Interesting and Instructive Reading for the Old and tne Young. Six vols. 16mo, cloth, 3,00. This work is considered fully equal, if not superior, to either of the Chambers's other works in in- terest, and. like them, contains a vast fund of valuable information. Following somewhat the plan of the " Miscellany, ' it is admirably adapted to the school or the family library, furnishing ample va- riety for every class of readers, both old and young. We do not know how it is possible to publish so much good reading matter at such a low price. We speak a good word for the literary excellence of the stories in this work ; we hope our people will introduce it into all their families in order to drive away the miserable flashy-trashy stuff so often found in flie hands of our young people of both sexes. — Scientific American. Both an entertaining and instructive work, as it is certainly a very cheap one. — Puritan Recorder. It cannot but have an extensive circulation. — Albany Express. Excellent stories from one of the best sources in the world. Of all the series of cheap books, this promises to be the best — Bangor Mercury. If any person wishes to read for amusement or profit, to kill time or improve it, get " Chambers's Home Book."— Chicago Times. The Chambers are confessedly the best caterers for popular and useful reading in the world. — Willis's Home Journal. A very entertaining, instructive, and popular work. — X. T. Commercial. The articles are of that attractive sort which suits us in moods of indolence, when we would linger half way between wakefulness and sleep. They require just thought and activity enough to keep our feet from the land of Nod, without forcing us to run, walk, or even stand. — Eclectic, Portland. The reading contained in these books is of a miscellaneous character, calculated to have the very best effect upon the minds of young readers. While the contents are very far from being puerile, they are not too heavy, but most admirably calculated for the object intended. — Evening Gazette. Coming from the source they do, we need not say that the articles are of the highest literary excel-, lence. We predict for the work a large sale and a host of admirers. — East Boston Ledger. It is just the thing to amuse a leisure hour, and at the same time combines instruction with amuse- ment. — Dover Inquirer. Messrs. Chambers, of Edinburgh, have become famous wherever the English language is spoken and read, for their interesting and instructive publications. We have never yet met with any thing which bore the sanction of their names, whose moral tendency was in the least degree questionable. They combine instruction with amusement, and throughout they breathe a spirit of the purest moral- ity.— Chicago Tribune. CHAMBERS'S REPOSITORY OE INSTRUCTIVE AND AMUSING PAPERS. With Illustrations. An entirely New Series, and containing Original Arti- cles. 16mo, cloth, per vol. 50 cents. The Messrs. Chambers have recently commenced the publication of this work, under the title of "Chambers's Repository of Instructive axd Amusing Tracts," in the form of penny weekly sheets, similar in style, literary character, &c, to the " Miscellany," which has maintained an enormous circulation of more than eighty thousand copies in England, and has already reached nearly the same sale in this country. Arrangements have been made by the American publishers, by which they will issue the work simultaneously with the English edition, in two monthly, handsomely bound, 16mo. volumes, of 2G0 pages each, to continue until the whole series is completed. Each volume complete in itself, and will be sold in sets or single volumes. CS~ Commendatory Letters, Reviews, Notices, &c, of each of Chambers's works, sufficient to make a good sized duodecimo volume, have been received by the publishers, but room here will only allow giving a specimen of the vast multitude at hand. They are all popular, and contain valuable instruc- tive and entertaining reading — such as should be found in every family, school, and college library. F VALUABLE WOBK. CYCLOPAEDIA OF ANECDOTES OF LITERATURE AND THE FINE ARTS. Containing a copious and choice selection of Anecdotes of the various forms of Literature, of the Arts, of Architecture, Engravings, Music, Poetry, Painting, and Sculpture, and of the most celebrated Literary Characters and Artists of different Countries and Ages, &c. By Kazlitt Arvine, A. M., Author of " Cyclopaedia of Moral and Religious Anecdotes." With numerous illustrations. 725 pages octavo, cloth, 3,00. This is unquestionably the choicest collection of anecdotes ever published. It contains three thou- sand and forO/ Anecdotes, many of them articles of interest, containing reading matter equal to half a dozen pages of a common 12mo. volume ; and such is the wonderful variety, that it will be found an almost inexhaustible fund of interest for every class of readers. The elaborate classification and in- dexes must commend it, especially to public speakers, to the various classes of literary and scientific men, to artists, mechanics, and others, as a Dictionary, for reference, in relation to facts on the num- berless subjects and characters introduced. There are also more than one hundred and fifty fine Illustrations. YV'e know- of no work which in the same space comprises so much valuable information in a form so entertaining, and so well adapted to make an indelible impression upon the mind. It must become a standard work, and be ranked among the few books which are indispensable to every complete library. — N. Y. Chronicle. Here is a perfect repository of the most choice and approved specimens of this species of informa- tion, selected with the greatest care from all sources, ancient and modern. The work is replete with such entertainment as is adapted to all grades of readers, the most or least intellectual. — Methodist Quarterly Magazine. One of the most complete things of the kind ever given to the public. There is scarcely a paragraph in the whole book which will not interest some one deeply ; for, while men of letters, argument, and art cannot afford to do without its immense fund of sound maxims, pungent wit, apt illustrations, and brilliant examples, the merchant, mechanic and laborer will find it one of the choicest companions of the hours of relaxation. " Whatever be the mood of one's mind, and however limited the time for reading, in the almost endless variety and great brevity of the articles he can find something to suit his feelings, which he can begin and end at once. It may also be made the very life of the social circle, containing pleasant reading for all ages, at all times and seasons. — Buffalo Commercial Advertiser. A well spring of entertainment, to be drawn from at any moment, comprising the choicest anecdotes of distinguished men, from the remotest period to the present time. — Bangor Whig. A magnific3nt collection of anecdotes touching literature and the fine arts. — Albany Spectator. This work, which is the most extensive and comprehensive collection of anecdotes ever published, cannot fail to become highly popular. — Salem Gazette. A publication of which there is little danger of speaking in too nattering terms ; a perfect Thesaurus of rare and curious information, carefully selected and methodically arranged. A jewel of a book to lie on one's table, to snatch up in those brief moments of leisure that could not be very profitably turned to account by recourse to any connected work in any department of literature. — Troy Budget. No family ought to be without it, for it is at once cheap, valuable, and very interesting ; containing matter compiled from all kinds of books, from all quarters of the globe, from all ages of the world, and in relation to every corporeal matter at all worthy of being remarked or remembered. No work has been issued from the i ress for a number of years for which there was such a manifest want, and we are certain it only needs to be known to meet with an immense sale. — New Jersey Union. A well-pointed anecdote is often useful to illustrate an argument, and a memory well stored with per- sonal incidents enables the possessor to entertain lively and agreeable conversation. — A. T. Com. A rich treasury of thought, and wit, and learning, illustrating the characteristics and peculiarities of many of the most distinguished names in the history of literature and the arts. — Phil. Chris. Obs. The range of topics is very wide, relating to nature, religion, science, and art ; furnishing apposite illustrations for the preacher, the orator, the Sabbath school teacher, and the instructors of our com- mon schools, academies, and colleges. It must prove a valuable work for the fireside, as well as for the library, as it is calculated to please and edify all classes. — Zanesville Ch. Register. This is one of the most entertaining works for desultory reading we have seen, and will no doubt have a very extensive circulation. As a most entertaining table book, we hardly know of any tiring at once so instructive and amusing. — A". Y. Ch. Intelligencer. & HUGH MILLER'S WORKS, MY FIRST IMPRESSIONS OF ENGLAND AND ITS PEOPLE. By Hugh Miller, author of " Old lied Sandstone," " Footprints of the Creator," etc., with a fine likeness of the author. 12mo, cloth, 1,00. Let not the careless reader imagine, from the title of this book, that it is a common book of travels, on the contrary, it is a very remarkable one, both in design, spirit, and execution. The facts recorded, and the views advanced in tins book, arc so fresh, vivid, and natural, that we cannot but commend it as a treasure, both of information and entertainment It will greatly enhance the author's reputation in this country as it already has in England. — Willis's Home Journal. This is a noble book, worthy of the author of the Footprints of the Creator and the Old Red Sand- stone, because it is seasoned with the same power of vivid description, the same minuteness of obser- vation, and soundness of criticism, and the same genial piety. We have read it with deep interest, and with ardent admiration of the author's temper and genius. It isahnost impossible to lay the book down, even to attend to more pressing matters. It is, without compliment or hyperbole, a most de- lightful volume. — N. Y. Commercial. It abounds with graphic sketches of scenery and character is full of genius, eloquence, and observa- tion, and is well calculated to arrest the attention of the thoughtful and inquiring. — Phil. Inquirer. This is a mr^st amusing and instructive book, by a master hand. — Democratic Review. The author of this work proved himself, in the Footprints of the Creator, one of the most original thinkers and powerful writers of the age. In the volume before us he adds new laurels to his reputa- tion Whoever wishes to understand the character of the present race of Englishmen, as contradistin- guished from past generations ; to comprehend the workings of political, social, and religious agitation in the minds, not of the nobility or gentry, but of the iieople, will discover that, in this volume, he has found a treasure. — Peterson's Magazine. His eyes were open to see, and his ears to hear, every thing ; and, as the result of what he saw and heard in " merrie " England, he has made one of the most spirited and attractive volumes of travels and observations that we have met with these man}' days. — Traveller. It is with the feeling with which one grasps the hand of an old friend that we greet to our home and heart the author of the Old Red Sandstone and Footprints of the Creator. Hugh Miller is one of the most agreeable, entertaining, and instructive writers of the age ; and, having been so delighted with him before, we open the First Impre sions, and enter upon its perusal with x keen intellectual appe- tite. "We know of no work in England so lull of adaptedness to the age as this. It opens up clearly to view the condition of its various classes, sheds new light into its social, moral, and religious history, not forgetting its geological peculiarities, and draws conclusions of great value. — Albany Spectator. "We commend the volume to our readers as one of more than ordinary value and interest, from the pen of a writer who thinks for himself, and looks at mankind and at nature through his own spec- tacles.— Tramcrijjt. The author, one of the most remarkable men of the age, arranged for this journey into England, expecting to " lodge in humble cottages, and wear a humble dress, and see what was to be seen by humble men only,— society without its mask." Such an observer might be expected to bring to view a thousand things unknown, or partially known before ; and abundantly does he fulfil this expecta- tion. It is one of the most absorbing books of the time.— Portland Ch. Mirror. HTEW ¥0EK. MY SCHOOLS AND SCHOOLMASTERS; OR THE STORY OF MY EDUCATION. By Hugh Miller author of "Footprints of the Creator," "Old Ked Sandstone," " First Impressions of England." etc. 12mo, cloth This is a personal narrative of a deeply interesting and instructive character, concerning one of the most remarkable men of the age. No one who purchases this book will have occasion to regret it, our Word for it t . U VALUABLE SCHOOL BOOKS. THE ELEMENTS OF MORAL SCIENCE. By Francis Waylato, D. D., President of Crown University, and Professor of Moral Philosophy. Fiftieth Thousand. 12mo, cloth. Price 1,25. *** This work has been highly commended by Reviewers, Teachers, and others, and lias been adopted as a Class Book in most of the collegiate, theological, and academical institu- tions of the country. I have examined it with great satisfaction and interest. The work was greatly needed, and is well executed. Dr. Wayland deserves the grateful acknowledgments and liberal patronage of the public. I need say nothing further to express my high estimate of the work, than that we shall immediately adopt it for a text book in our university. — Rev. "Wilbur Fisk, late Pres. of Wesleyan University. The work has been read by me attentively and thoroughly, and I think very highly of it. The au- thor himself is one of the most estimable of men, and I do not know of any ethical treatise in which our duties to God and to our fellow-men are laid down with more precision, simplicity, clearness, en- ergy, and truth. — Hox. James Kent, late Chancellor of Sew York. It is a radical mistake, in the education of youth, to permit any book to be used by students as a text book, which contains erroneous doctrines, especially when -these are fundamental, and tend to vitiate the whole system of morals. "We have been greatly pleased with the method which President "Wayland has adopted; he goes back to the simplest and most fundamental principles; and, in the statement of his views, he unites perspicuity with conciseness and precision. In all the author's lead- ing fundamental principles we entirely concur. — Biblical Repository. This is a new work on morals, for academic use, and we welcome it with much satisfaction. It is the result of several years' reflection and experience in teaching, on the part of its justly distinguished author; and if it is not perfectly what we could wish, yet, in the most important respects, it supplies a want which has been extensively felt. It is, we think, substantially sound in its fundamental prin- ciples; "and, being comprehensive and elementary in its plan, and adapted to the purposes of instruc- tion, it will be gladly adopted by those who have for a long time been dissatisfied with the existing works of Paley. — Literary and Theological Review. MORAL SCIENCE, ABRIDGED, by the Author, and adapted to the Use of Schools and Academies. Thirty-fifth Thousand. 18mo, half cloth. Price 53 cts. g^r* The more effectually to meet the desire expressed for a cheap edition for schools, one is now issued at the reduced -price o/25 cents per copy ! and it is hoped thereby to extend the benefit ol moral instruction to all the youth of our land. Teachers, and all others engaged in the training of youth, are invited to examine this work. Dr. Wayland has published an abridgment of his work, for the use of schools. Of this step we can hardly speak too highly. It is more than time that the study of mora! philosophy should be intro- duced into all our institutions of education. "We are happy to see the way so auspiciously opened for such an introduction. It has been not merely abridged, but also rewritten. "We cannot but regard the labor as well bestowed. — North American Review. We speak that we do know when we express our high estimate of Dr. Wayland's ability in teach- ing moral philosophy, whether orally or by the book. Having listened to his instructions in this de- partment, we can attest how lofty are the principles, how exact and severe the argumentation, how appropriate and strong the illustrations, which characterize his system. — Watchman and Reflector. The work of which this volume is an abridgment, is well known as one of the best and most com- plete works on moral philosophy extant. The author is well known as one of the most profound scholars of the age. That the study of moral science, a science which teaches goodness, should be a branch of education, not only in our colleges, but in our schools and academies, we believe will not be denied. The abridgment of this work seems to us admirably calculated for the purpose, and we hope it will be extensively applied to the purposes for which it is intended. — Mercantile Journal. We hail the abridgment as admirably adapted to supply the deficiency which has long been felt in common school education — the study of moral obligation. Let the child early be taught the rela- tions it sustains to man and to its Maker, and who can foretell how many a sad and disastrous over- throw of character will be prevented, and how elevated and pure will be the sense of integrity and Virtue ? — Evening Gazette. L VALUABLE SCHOOL BOOKS. ELEMENTS OF POLITICAL ECONOMY. By Francis Wayland. D. D., President of Brown University. Twenty-sixth thousand. 12mo, cloth, 1,25. C3T This important work of Dr. Wayland s is fast taking the place of every other text book on the subject of Political Economy in our colleges and higher schools in all parts of the country. The author says, ".his object has been to write a book which every one who chooses majr under- stand, lie has, therefore, labored to express the general principles in the plainest manner possible, and to illustrate them by cases with which every person is familiar. It has been to the author a source of regret, that the course of discussion in the following pages has, una\oidably, led him over ground which has frequently been the arena of political controversy. In all such cases, he has endeav- ored to state what seemed to him to be truth, without fear, favor or affection. He is conscious to him- self of no bias towards any party whatever, and he thinks that he who will read the whole work will be convinced that he has been influenced by none." •- Extract from the Preface. It embraces the soundest system of republican political economy of any treatise extant. — Advocate. We can say, with safety, that the topics are well selected and arranged ; that the author's name is a guarantee for more than usual excellence. We wish it an extensive circulation. — Ar. T. Observer. POLITICAL ECONOMY, ABRIDGED, by the Author, and adapted to the use of Schools and Academies. Thirteenth thousand. ISnio, half morocco. Price 50 cents. *** The success which has attended the abridgment of " The Elements of Moral Sci- ence " has induced the anther to prepare an abridgment of this work. In this case, as in the other, the work has been entirely rewritten, and an attempt has been made to adapt it to the attainments of youth. The original work of the author, on Political Economy, has already been noticed on our pages; and the present abridgment stands in no need of a recommendation from us. We may be permitted how- ever, to say, that both the rising and the risen generations are deeply indebted to Dr. Wayland for the skill and [lower he has put forth to bring a highly important subject distinctly before them, within sucli narrow limits. Though " abridged for the use of academies," it deserves to be introduced into every private family, and to be studied by every man who has an interest in the wealth and prosper- ity of his country. It is a subject little understood, even practically, by thousands, and still less un- derstood theoretically. It is to be hoped this will form a class book, and be faithfully studied in our academies, and that it will find its way into every family library ; not there to be shut up unread, but to afford rich material for thought and discussion in the family circle. It is fitted to enlarge the mind, to purify the judgment, to correct erroneous popular impressions, and assist every man informing opinions of public measures, which will abide the test of time and experience. — Puri tan Recorder. An abridgment of this clear, common-sense work, designed for the use of academies, is just pub- lished. We rejoice to sec such treatises spreading among the people ; and we urge all, who would be intelligent freemen, to read them. — X. Y. Transcript. P ALLY'S NATUPvAL THEOLOGY. Illustrated by forty Plates, and Selections from the notes of Dr. Paston, with additional Notes, original and selected, for this edition; with a vocabulary of Scientific Terms. Edited by John Ware, M. D. , New edition, with nezo and elegant Illustrations. 12mo, sheep, 1,25. C3~ This deservedly popular work has become almost universally introduced into all schools, acad- emies, and colleges, where the subject is studied, throughout the country. The work before us is one which deserves rather to be studied than merely read. Indeed, without diligent attention and study, neither the excellences of it can be fully discovered, nor its advantages realised. It is', therefore gratifying to find it introduced, as a text book, into the colleges and literary institutions of our country. The edition before us is superior to any we have seen, and, we believe, superior to any that has yet been published. — Spirit of the Pilgrims. Perhaps no one of our author's works gives greater satisfaction to all classes of readers, the young and the old, the ignorant and the enlightened. Indeed, we recollect no book in which the arguments for the existence and attributes of the Supreme Being, to be drawn from his works, are exhibited in a manner more attractive and more convincing. — Qliristian Examiner. J>J VALUABLE SCHOOL BOOKS THE YOUNG LADIES' CLASS BOOK. A Selection of Lessons for Reading, in Prose and Verse. By £. Bailey, A. M., late Principal of the Young Ladies' High School, Boston. 12mo, sheep, 83| cts. The united testimony of the Principals of all the Boston Public Schools for Females. " "We have examined the Young Ladies' Class Book with interest and pleasure : with interest, because ■we have felt the want of a reading book expressly designed for the use of females ; and with pleasure, because we have found it well adapted to supply the deficiency. In the selections for a Reader de- signed for boys, the eloquence of the bar, the pulpit, and the forum may be laid under heavy contri- bution ; but such selections, we conceive, arc out of place in a book designed for females. We have been pleased, therefore, to observe that in the Young Ladies' Class Book such pieces are rare. The high-toned morality, the freedom from sectarianism, the taste, richness, and adaptation of the selec- tions, added to the neatness of its external appearance, must commend it to all ; while the practical teacher will not fail to observe that diversity of style, together with those peculiar points, the want of which few, who have not felt, know how to supply." I have examined with much interest the Young Ladies' Class Book, by Mr. Bailey, and have been very highly pleased with its contents. It is my intention to introduce it into my own school ; as I re- gard it as not only remarkably well fitted to answer its particular object as a book of exercises in the art of elocution, but as calculated to have an influence upon the character and conduct, which will in every respect favorable. — Jacob Abbott, late Prin. of Jlount Vernon School, Boston. We were never so struck with the importance of having reading books for female schools, adapted particularly to that express purpose, as while looking over the pages of this selection. The eminent success of the compiler in teaching this branch, to which we can personally bear testimony, is suffi- cient evidence of the character of the work, considered as a selection of lessons in elocution; they are, in general, admirably adapted to cultivate the amiable and gentle traits of the female character, as well as to elevate and improve the mind. — Annals of Education. The reading books prepared for academic use are often unsuitable for females. We are glad, there- fore, to perceive that an attempt has been made to supply the deficiency ; and we believe that the task has been faithfully and successfully accomplished. The selections are judicious and chaste, and, so far as they have any moral bearing, appear to be unexceptionable. — Education Itegiste ROMAN ANTIQUITIES AND ANCIENT MYTHOLOGY. By Charles K. Dillaway, A. M., late principal in the Boston Latin School Twelfth .edition, improved. 12mo, half mor., G7 cts. Having used Dillaway's Roman Antiquities and Ancient Mythology in my school for several years, I commend it to teachers with great confidence, as a valuable text book on those interesting branches of education. — E. Bailey, late Prin. of Young Badies" High School, Boston. The want of a cheap volume, embracing a succinct account of ancient customs, together with a view of classical mythology, has long been felt. To the student of a language, some knowledge of the man- ners, habits, and religious feelings of the people whose language is studied, is indispensably requisite. This knowledge is seldom to be obtained without tedious research and laborious investigation. Mr. Dillaway's book seems to have been prepared with special reference to the waEts of those who are just entering upon a classical career ; and we deem it but a simple act of justice to say that it supplies the want which, as we have before said, has long been felt. In a small duodecimo, of about one hundred and fifty pages, he concentrates the most valuable and interesting particulars relating to Roman an- tiquity ; together with as full an account of heathen mythology as is generally needed in our highest seminaries. A peculiar merit of this compilation, and one which will gain it admission into our highly respectable female seminaries, is the total absence of all allusion, even the most remote, to the disgust- ing obscenities of ancient mythology ; while, at the same time, nothing is omitted which a pure mind would feel interested to know. "We recommend the book as avaluable addition to the treatises in our Bchools and academies. — Education Reporter, Boston. We well remember, in the days of our pupilage, how unpopular as a study was the volume of Ro- man Antiquities introduced in the academic course. It wearied on account of its prolixity, filling a thick octavo, and was the prescribed task each afternoon for a long three months. It was reserved for one of our Boston instructors to apply the condensing apparatus to this mass of crudities, and so to modernize the antiquities of the old Romans, as to make a befitting abridgment for schools of the first order. Mr. Dillaway has presented such a compilation as must be interesting to lads, and become popular as a text book. Historical facts are stated with great simplicity and clearness ; the most im- portant points ore seized upon, while trifling peculiarities are passed unnoticed. — Am. Traveller. O WORKS JUST PUBLISHED. THE BETTER LAND ; or, The Believer's Journey and Future Home. Bj Rev. A. C. Thompson. 12rno, cloth. 85 cents. Contents. — The Pilgrimage — Clusters of Eschol — Waymarks — Glimpses of the Land — The Passage — The Recognition of Friends — The Heavenly Banquet — Children in Heaven- Society of Angels — Society of the Saviour — Heavenly Honor and Riches— No Tears in Heaven —Holiness of Heaven— Activity in Heaven — Resurrection Body — Perpetuity of Bliss in Heaven. A most charming and instructive book for all now Journeying to the " Better Land," and es- pecially to those who have friends already entered upon its eternal joys. CHRISTIANITY VIEWED IN ITS LEADING ASPECTS. By the Rev. A. L. R. Foote, author of " Incidents in the Life of our Saviour," etc. 16mo, el. MEMOIRS OF A GRANDMOTHER. By a Lady of Massachusetts. 16mo, cloth. 50 cents. " My path lies in a valley which T have sought to adorn with flowers. Shadows from the hills cover it, but I make my own sunshine." The little volume is gracefully and beautifully written.— Journal. Not unworthy the genius of a Dickens. — Transcript. HOURS WITH EUROPEAN CELEBRITIES. By the Rev. William B. Sprague, D. D. l'inio, cloth. The author of this work visited Europe in 1828 and in 1836, under circumstances which afforded him an opportunity of making the acquaintance, by personal interviews, of a large number of the most distinguished men and women of that continent ; and in his preface he says, "It was my uniform custom, after every such interview, to take copious memoranda of the conversation, including an account of the individual's appearance and manners ; in short, denning, as well as I could, the whole impression which his physical, intellectual and moral man had made upon me." From the memoranda thus made, the material for the present instructive and exceedingly interesting volume is derived. Besides these "pen and ink" sketches, the work contains the novel attraction of a fac-simile of the signature of each of the persons introduced. THE AIMWELL STORIES. A series of volumes illustrative of youthful character, and combining instruction with amuse- ment. By Walter Aimwell, author of " The Boy's Own Guide," " The Boy's Book of Morals and Manners," &c. With numerous Illustrations. The first two volumes of the series, now ready, are — OSCAR ; or, The Boy who had his own Way. 16mo, cloth, gilt. 63 cents. CLINTON ; or, Boy-life in the Country. lCmo, cloth, gilt. 63 cents. j6®=- Each volume will be complete and independent of itself, but the series will be con- nected by a partial identity of character, localities, &c. THE PLURALITY OF WORLDS. A New Edition. With a Supplementary Dialogue, in which the author's reviewers are reviewed. 12luo, cloth. $1 This masterly production, which has excited so much interest in this country and in Europe, will now have an increased attraction in the addition of the Supplement, in which the author's reviewers are triumphantly reviewed. /i®=* The Supplement will be furnished separate to those who have the original work. INFLUENCE OF THE HISTORY OF SCIENCE UPON INTELLECTUAL EDUCATION. By William Whewell, D. D., of Trinity College, Cambridge, Eng., and the alleged author of " Plurality of Worlds." 16mo, cloth. 25 cts THE LANDING AT CAPE ANNE; or, The Charter of the First Perma- nent Colony on the Territory of the Massachusetts Company. Now discovered and first published from the original manuscript, with an in quiry into its authority, and a History of the Colony, 1624-1628. Rogei Conant Governor. By John Wingate Thornton. 8vo, cloth. $1.50. This Js a curious and exceedingly valuable historical document. A volume of great interest and importance. — Evening Traveller. A rare contribution to the early history of New England. — Mercantile Journal.