, .^e^,^^_,Sif($ji^(^j^^Mi^®jff^Ji''&^^^^J^ brf^4!^eK?^clif?®A?fe}^^^ ^'(^l*"^gi/^•fe)>Jr(£)J^-fei«^^ ^^ '^'''^^ LEEUWENHOEK (A. van). The select Works of microscopical Discoveries in many of the Works of Latin Editions, by S. Hoole. 3 parts in 2 vols, 4to., jvilli portrait and 22 folcliii 1798-1807 (^ First Edition. J^ S? i. ,-wi •^ ^'^ .4 S»T-' %^ ^^ u m m !&. THE SELECT WORKS OF ANTONY VAN LEEUWENHOEK, CONTAINING HIS MICROSCOPICAL DISCOVERIES IN MANY OF THE VVORKS OF NATURE. TRANtLAT£D FROM THE DUTCH AND LATIK EDITIONS PUBLISHED BY THB AUTHOR, By SAMUEL HOOLE. VOLUME THE SECOND. PART THE THIRD. ^p Iprath aocft ban He baomen, ban Den CeUer=bcom aen Die op Den ILibanan is, tot op Den gtop Die aen Den toanDt iipt toast : i)p Qjracft oocft ban I)et Oee, enDe ban i)et (Sebogelte, enDe ban De fttuppenDe Dieitn, enDe ban De aifedjen. 3, liujninsen, ib. 33. And he fpake of trees, from the cedar-tree that is in Lebanon, even unto the hyffop that fpringeth out of the wall ; he fpake alfo of beafts and of fowl, and of creeping things, and of filhes. I. Kings, iv. 33. LONDON: PRINTED BY THE PHILANTHROPIC SOCIETY, And Sold by G. and W. Nicol, Bookfellers to His Majefty, Pall- Mall j J. White, Fleet-Street ; and J. & A. Arch, Cornhill. M,DCCC,Vn. Oil the format'ton of the Elm, Beech, JVilloir, Alder, Ehony, Box, and Lime-tree, tcith an explanation of the manner in ivhich Pipe- staves for making Cafks are prepared from Oali-timber. J. HE formation of the Elm is reprefented in Plate "Kl. fig. 1. AB C D, and the fize of the piece of wood here magnified, when viewed by the naked eye, is fliewn at letter E ; this figure alfo contains as much as the tree encreafed in fize in the fpace of one year; AB and C D, denote the places where, in autumn, the growth ceafed. The fmall perpendicular or afcending vefl'els which lie in great numbers intermixed among the large ones, are lets in this wood than in the Oak, and moreover, each of thefe fmall tubes or veflels is compofed of tougher and thicker membranes than thofe in the Oak. At A B and C D are fliewn the horizontal vellels lying length- wife. Fig. 2, FFFF, exhibits the horizontal velTels cut tranfverfely ; fuch of them as appear collecled in fmall parcels, I take to be thofe which are beginning to be formed from the perpendicular veflels ; and, that thofe which are collected together in great numbers, are the produce of feveral years growth, and contain as great a number as ever would be formed in the future growth of the tree. G G G G, fliew the very fmall perpendicular veflels lengthwife. H H reprefents one of the larger perpendicular veflels cut lengthwife down the middle. Upon a moi'e accurate examination of thefe, we fliall perceive them to be compofed of exceedingly thin membranes, covered with filaments twifled in a ferpentine form, and having the appearance of dark fpots and tubercles or rifings, as at^^. 3, B. Among this fpecies of tree, we often fee fome, from which, at the A ( 2 ) thick part of the ftem the rifing fap leaks or oozes out, and in this liquor I have often, in the fummer time, obfcrved various animal- cules, but which animalcules I could by no means conceive to have illued from the wood; but rather, that the firft rudiments of them had been depolited either by the rain or dew. At fig. 4, ABCD, is pi(5lured a fmall particle of Beech, to the naked eye appearing of the fize reprefented at F ; the length of this figure alfo fliews the thicknefs acquired by the tree in one year's growth, the beginning and ceallng of which growth plainly appear at the letters A D or B C. In this wood are two forts of perpendicular veflels, large and fmall ones ; and, I am inclined to think, that there are alfo two forts of horizontal ones, very minute, one fort of which appears at E E E, lying in fmall numbers together, and when cut tranfverfely they are fhewn in ^jg-. 5, at the letters H H H. The other fort lie in detached parcels, and are fhewn lengthwife at D C; thefe veflels are alfo very fmall in comparifon with the perpen- dicular ones, and are compofed of large clufters colle6led together, a reprefentation of them when cut tranfverfely may be feen irijig. 5, at I I. K K K K, are the large perpendicular vefl"els cut longitudinally; and thele I have almoft always obfei-ved to be covered with par- ticles which, viewed by a common magnifier, exhibited the appear- ance of globules. Fig. 0, ABC D, is a fmall piece of Willow, to the naked eye ap- pearing of the fize fhewn at F ; this wood confifls of two forts of perpendicular veflels, fmall and large ; the large ones are covered with particles bearing the appearance of globules, and in thefe I obferved Certain oblique flreaks, which I long ago concluded to be valves*: * The author's opinion rcfpefting art of its body, which are pictured at C. After this drawing was made, the worm ftruggled fo violently, that it got loofe from the glue, and in fixing it again on the pin, I happened to touch its head with fome of the glue, whereby it was much hurt, and after remaining fixed for fix hours, it died, foon after which I perceived the moiflure of its body lb much evapo- rated, that it was contracted into many wrinkles, and at the end of twenty-four hours it was fo dried as to loofe all likenefs of a maggot, whereas the other which was hatched two hours later, and had remained fixed before the microfcope only two hours lefs, was not only alive, but its body as fully dillended as if it had been newly hatched. After this M'^orm had been thirty hours before the microfcope and was ftill very lively, I thought I faw its body not fo com- pletely filled out, and confequently that fome of its moifliure was evaporated. I frequently afterwards infpe6led it, and at the end of fixty-four hours, I faw it fiill in motion, but its body diminifhed in fize : this day the fun llione very hot. At the expiration of four days and nights this worm was Hill in motion. I did not examine it again till fixteen hours afterwards, and its body was then much contradled : the following morning the moifture of it was fo evaporated, that it could not be known to be a worm. This circumstance, namely, that in Jiving creatures there is fo ( 37 ) little wafte of moiftvire, I have obferved, not only in this maggoty but in many minute animals, and even in the eggs of fmall infers, (among which I reckon thofe of the flea) ; for if the fruitful and barren eggs are placed befide each other, we thall fee the barren ones dry away, whereas the fruitful ones will retain their moisture, at leaft, fo far as to afford the maggot in the egg sufficient for its nourifhment. But what fliall we fay, when we obferve that the evaporation of the moifture in fmall living creatures, or their eggs, is fo little, info- much, that a Flea fhall remain wrapt up in the web or cafe it fpins for fovTr entire months, and yet its moiflure not evaporate fo far as to caufe its death ; whereas the moifture exhales from the body of a dead flea in fo fliort a fpace of time. In a word, we cannot but wonder at thefe appearances, and here our reflexions muft tei'minate. Before this worm, I have laft mentioned, came out of its egg, I placed the egg before the raicrofcope, and caufed a drawing to be made of it, becaufe I could not only fee the worm alive in the egg, and how its body was placed, but I could alfo difcern through the ftiell, many of the joints in its body. Fig. 11. D E represents the egg of the Flea with the worm or maggot in it, and which egg had been laid but three days. Fig. 12, F G, is the egg from which the maggot had crept out, and in which may be feen the manner how it had broke open the fhell. These eggs of the Flea are no larger when viewed by the naked eye, than fmall grains of fand : and as objects do not appear of the fame llze to the eyes of every one, fo it was with the limner who made this drawing ; for the breadth of this egg appeared to me twice the fize here reprefented, and the worm alfo in the same proportion. I could, however, if neceilary, have made drawings of thefe objeds from microfcopes of greater magnifying powers. After the preceding remarks, I fo far fucceeded in the treatment ( 38 ) of feveral worms or maggots, that I had two which acquired their compleat portions of nouriihment, and began to fpin their webs; but, becaufe the bottom of the glafs wherein they lay was flopped with a fmooth piece of cork, and that prefTcd in fo tight that they could not penetrate it, they could not completely cover themfelves with the web. For in like manner as filk worms are placed in a paper of a round tapering form, called a cup, in order that it may fix its web on every fide, and be completely covered by it ; fo the worm produced from the Flea's egg, when come to its full fizc, endea- vours to creep into cracks, holes, or corners, in order to inclofe it- felf on every fide with its web. At feveral times I contrived to prevent the maggots enclofing themfelves completely in their webs, in order that I might the more eafily difcern their alteration into a chryfalis or aurelia. But how often foever I viewed them after they had ceafed eating, and their change approached, I could only perceive that they placed them- felves in the fame pofition as they had lain in the egg. But exa- mining them in the afternoon in this porture, I found upon look- ing at them three hours afterwards, that one of them was changed into a chryfalis. Upon viewing another of them through the mi- crolcope, I perceived a mite upon its body, where it remained fome time, and another larger mite running about the glafs, whereupon I concluded, that at the time thofe worms are in their rtate of change and unable to defend themfelves, the mites will feize and feed upon them. After this worm had thus laid for fome hours, I faw that its body was somewhat contracted, whereupon placing it before the microfcope, I perceived three holes pierced in its body, part of its Ikin llripped otf, and the body of it beginning to dry away. Hereupon I began to confider, that this web or covering fpun by the Flea's worm or maggot is necessary to it, and that without it, thofe creatures could not eafily be propagated ; for there are fel- dom any fragments of food, or the bodies of fmall animals lyinf ( 39 ) about our houfes, but they are immediately found out by mites who come to feed upon them ; and, in the prefent cafe, though I thought I had perfe6lly fecured thefe maggots from the mites, becaufe the glafs tube wherein I had put them, which was ahnoll an inch in dia- meter, and five inches long, was fo clofely Hopped at each end with cork, that I fliould have thought it impoffible for any mite to get in ; yet now I found the contrary to be the cafe : and indeed, I have often found mites feeding on things in places where I won- dered they could fo foon discover their food. And now, upon feeing thefe mites about the maggots, it occurred to my thoughts, whether or no thofe fmall and very flender prominent parts in the maggot, which m Jig. 10, are Ihewn at A, might not be weapons designed for its defence againft the mite. But the web fpun by the maggot, and wherein it inclofes itfelf, before its transformation, proted:s it in that Hate from all attacks of the mite ; and the like we may conclude, to be the cafe with the filk worm, which while in its Hate of tranfmutation into a butter- fly, is protected by its cone or cafe, not from mites, but from birds ; and this I am well allured is the cafe with all caterpillars, which when of full growth, and the time of their tranfmutation approaches, do inclofe themfelves in fome kind of web, or co- vering. The maggot which I have faid I faw changed into a chryfalis, I the next morning placed before a microfcope, and delivered it to the limner, to make a drawing of it. Fig. 13, A B C D E F, is this chryfalis ; A K, are the horns of the yet unformed Flea ; L G B, is one of its fore legs, which rife out of the head at L ; and herein, at B, may be feen all the Imall joints which will be found in the legs and feet when perfectly formed : the like joints may alfo be feen in C and D. H C is one of the middle feet, and at G may be ieen that the fore feet partly cover the middle feet, and thefe in part cover the hind feet ; I D and C H are the two hind feet, which are in part covered by the middle ones. ( 40 ) Fig. 14, MNO PQ, reprefent the pellicle put off by the mag- got, when it changed into a chr^'falis, leaving the wrinkles in it as they here appear ; and at M are the places where the maggot's horns flood. Three days after this drawing had been made, I faw that the •chryfalis was very much altered, and many parts appeared in it which till then could not at all be diftinguilhed ; therefore I caufed a draw- ing to be made of this alfo, to Ihew fuch alteration. Fig. 15, A S T V, is this drawing, taken as exactly as the limner was able to reprefent this fecond appearance of the chryfalis. Fig. 16, ABCDEFGHIKLMN, reprefents an entire Flea, glued by tlie back to the point of a needle, and fo placed before the microfcope, but being tirll killed, becaufe it would be impoffible to make a drawing of a Flea while alive. Nor, indeed, did I intend to have given a drawing of the whole Flea, but a certain learned gentleman ftrongly urged me to it, faying, that the world would thereby be more convinced, that Fleas arc not produced from cor- ruption, but in the ordinary way of generation, and I therefore complied with his request. In this animal a great number of blood vessels were to he seen, particularly in the belly, but the limner only drew a few of them, faying, that it was not in his power to imitate the remainder in his drawing. This Flea appeared to me, through the fame microfcope, eight times larger than here lliewn, though the limner declared that it did not feem any larger to him. Nor could I ever have believed that there was fuch a diverfity in the fight of different people as I now find to be the cafe. But this limner was very fliort fighted. At D E F are fhewn the hind feet ; F G H the middle feet ; and 1 KL the fore feet ; placed on the head : and between thefe lie the organs or weapons witli which the Flea pierces or bites, and feeks its food. L M N are two horns on the Flea's head. I had formerly figured to myfelf the manner in which Fleas must .get their food out of the bodies of men and animals ; but becaufe ( 41 ) thofe parts in a Flea which I heretofore took to be the piercers or weapons by which it draws the blood, appeared now to be the flieath or cafe of the real piercers, which divide into two parts when the Flea thrurts out its piercers from between tliem. I will now defcribe how thefe parts appeared to me upon the examination of three feveral Fleas. Fig. 17, ABC are the two horns on the head, which have been fliewn in the laft figure, each of them has three joints, befides the joint fixed to the head ; D E is the fheath or cafe, with the llings or piercers, which in a manner fit or lock into each other, as I ob- fei-ved while I was endeavouring to feparate them. FAD is part of the head. Fig. 18, G H I K, reprefents alfo the piercers, and their cafe or flieath, placed in the head, between the two fore feet ; which piercers and their llieath are very difiicultly difcovered, unlefs the fore feet be firft cut off clofe to the head, and even thus they will feldom be fecn ; becaufe the Flea, when not viling its piercers, draws them within the flieath, and places them clofe to its body. But as a Flea, though its fore feet are cut off, will yet live a long time, my way always was, when I endeavoured to get a view of the piercers, to cut off its head, lefl:, when I had removed the piercers from their pofition clofe to the body, and feparated them from each other, the Flea fhould draw them again out of fight. G I, and G K, are two parts, which, having cavities in them, oppofite to each other, conftitute the fheath of the piercers ; which piercers are placed in the cavity marked at G H. Thefe two flings or piercers might indeed be taken for a tingle one ; but if we view tlie figure narrowly, it will appear that the Jimner has pictured the fecond fl:ing as it were within the fijlt, and not reaching quite to, the end at H. Fig. ig, LMNOP, exhibits the fheath of the flings or piercers as I found them in a third Flea. Here I had better fuccefs than in the diflection of the two former Fleas. For at L N and L O are YoL. II. F ( 42 ) reprefented thofe two parts which, when joined together as I have before laid, conftitute the fheath, and are covered with many hairs. At L M and L P are the llings or piercers ; and in one of them, L M, may be feen the cavity in which the other of them, L P, is placed, when both are at reft : and when thefe two piercers are inclofed in the Iheath, thefe four organs may be taken for one lingle iiing. While I was employed about thefe obfervations, my fervants brought me a Flea, fixed to a fmall needle. Upon placing this before the microfcopc, I faw not much motion in its feet, and the ftings or piercei*s were put forth from their cafe; and the fting, L P, which was inclofed in the cavity of the fting, L M, was moved up and down in a very pretty manner, with great fwiftnefs, and as it were in play. Moreover, farther to gratify the curious, I pulled off one of the Flea's hind legs ; in doing which, part of the mufcle belonging to it was fcparatcd from the body, this I fixed to the point of a brals pin, in order the better to place the whole leg before a microfcope of greater magnifying power, and to caufe a drawing to be made of its true fliape. F/g. 20, B C D E F G H I K L M N, reprefents this hind leg; A B is the mufcle, feparated from the animal's body at A. The firft joint is flicwn at C D M N, and B C N is the part by which it had been united to the body: in this firft joint might very plainly be fecn four diftinA parts, lying longitudinally, and probably were tendons and blood veftels ; which vellcls, and their more minute ramifica- tions, I could plainly fee. This joint, and all the others feen. through the microfcope, exhibited a tranfparent yellow colour, like that of amber. Between the letters D E L M maybe feen the perfect articulation, whereby this firft was united to the fecond joint. E F R L, reprefents the fecond joint, in the middle of which not only the nervous or mufcular parts lying lengthways, were plainly ( -^3 ) to be feen, but alfo a blood veflel, diftinctly appenring to be coni- pofed of annular parts, in which manner the blood veflels of Fleas and other infects are formed, fimilar to the afpera arteria, or the wind, pipe in the lungs of animals. And at one time, hav- ing a Flea fixed by its hind part to the point of a needle, licfore the microfcope, I faw throughout the whole length, on each fide of this joint, as between E F and L K, and alfo, in the middle of it, a wonderfully fwift motion or current of the juices, which ap- peared to me the plainer as there were globules mixed with thofe juices : but I did not notice this motion, except at the time the Flea was moving its leg or foot, and then this motion continued for fome time after the leg and foot were at reft. Many perfons viewing this would fay, that they had feen the circulation of tlic blood in the Flea's foot. Moreover, upon the motion of the leg, as well in this joint as in the others, there was fo great an agitation of the component parts as is inconceivable. This agitation, I concluded, was only caufed in the fleshy mufcles of the leg, becaufe it partly continued after the death of the Flea ; but it was impoflible for the limner to imitate, in his drawing, all the parts he faw: and he often, while making the drawing of this leg and the other parts of the animal's body, broke out into an exclamation, " Heavens! what wonders here are in fo fmall a creature!" F G I K is the third joint of the leg, in which may be feen many fharp-pointcd particles, kicking out like thorns. At G H I are Ihevvn the five laft or fmallert joints of the Flea's leg, all formed in the fame manner ; and here plainly appears how all thefe joints mutually depend upon, and are fubordinate to, each other. At II arc two perfectly formed claws : w ith thefe every one of the feet is fumifiicd, and the Flea ufi^s them M'ith fuch wonderful fwiftnefs and dexterity, that though when fiiut up in the glafs he leaps about, and touches only a fmall particle of dirt or impurity, F 2 ( 44 ) though it were only a particle of his own excrement adhering to the glals, he can, by a touch only of one claw, cling to it. Now if we reflect on this wonderful and complicated formation of joints in a Flea's leg, we Ihall ceafe \vondering that it can leap to fo great a height as we fee ; nor alk the quellion (which I have often had put to me) whether Fleas had wings to carry them fo far and high? Farther, I cut a maggot, produced from the Flea's egg, and was almoll full grown, into two pieces, and placed each part before a microfcope of the fame magnifying power as that by which the maggot newly hatched was drawn : but if I had placed the maggot entire before the microfcope it would have been impoffible, by reafon of its continual motion, for the limner to have given a true figure of it. Fig. 21. A B C D, reprefents the head and three firft joints of this maggot's body : I had placed it upright before the microfcope, but before the limner had got it, the head was inclined downwards, as fhewn at ABC; nevertheless this piece of a. maggot, for the fpace of an hour, moved itfelf, and often lifted up the head. Fig. 22. E F G reprefents the four latl joints of the maggot, con- ftituting its hind part, in which not only may plainly be fcen, at F, the organs or limbs with which the tail of this maggot is pro- vided, but the place may alfo be dillinguifhcd where the excre- ments are voided. Now this maggot not being provided wnfh any limbs or organs for moving from place to place, except what are feen in ^g. 21, at D, in its head ; and in Jig. 22, as F. in its tail : the many hairs it has on its body are a great help to its motion ; but, at the fame time, are a very great hindrance to it, if it meets with any liquid, mattei". So that even the hundredth part of the liquid excrement voided by the Flea at one time, is fufficient not only to adhere to thofe hairs on the maggot, fo as to Hop its progrefs, but ahb to kill the maggot itfelf, by reafon that it is not able to extricate itfelf; from the moillure : therefore, as we see how little able thefe mag- { <5 ) gots are to endure moiHure, we may conclude that, if in places where Fleas abound, the floors or pavements be well wetted with water, the maggots may be deflroyed, and confequently the places cleared of Fleas. I have caufed a drawing to be made of the glafs wherein I in- clofed the Fleas I had under my obfervation, for the information of any who may chufe to profecute my experiments. Fig. 23, N O P Q, is this glafs, the cavity or orifice of which, N O Q, is about the fourth part of an inch in diameter : the fphere or globular part, O P Q, is fomething larger, according as may happen in the blowing it. I did not put more than two or three Fleas at a time into one of thefe glaffes, and as foon as they had Laid any eggs, I took them out of the glafs, that it might not be foiled by their excre- ments or the vapour of their bodies, otherwife the hairs on the bodies of the maggots Vv^ould Hick to thofe foulnefles, fo that they could not be taken out of the glafs, but would there expire. I have now for feveral years obferved Fleas to lay eggs, and from fuch of the eggs as were fruitful, maggots produced, which maggots were afterwards changed into Fleas as before defcribed Since we then fee fo plainly, that the Flea is endowed with as great perfection in its kind, as any large animal; all v^^hofe limbs may be feen with the naked eye, can any one give credit to the idle tales of old ? one aflerting that Fleas are produced from fand ; another, from dull ; and another from the dung of pigeons ; and laflly, from urine : for that Fleas can be produced from dull and filth, I utterly deny, as appearing to me impoffible : neverthelels, that out of the dust of a floor or pavement. Fleas will fometimes come forth, I readily grant ; but this is brought about in quite a dif- ferent manner. If many children be kept in a room, in which the Fleas are not every day extirpated, and the floor or pavement is fometimes fwept ; or if a floor or pavement be fwept near to a place where a dog is accullomed to lye, there may very eafily be taken up among ( ^& ) the fweepings, not only young maggots from the eggs of Fleas, hut full grown ones, and out of the chinks or cracks maggots may he fwcpt, fome of which are fpinning their wehs, and others, which have completed them, and are changed into cryfales ; fo that out of fuch fvseepings Fleas may come forth day after day : and it may liappen, that maggots newly hatched, may among fuch dult and rubbilh find fomething to afford them nouriihment, fo as to grow up to be complete Fleas. And I am the more inclined to believe that this may be the cafe, becaufe I could never get out of any dog, how much foever he was infefted with Fleas, any of their eggs, nor fee any about his body. But if we take a cufhion covered with a green or any other dark colour, and let a dog lie on it who is in- fested with Fleas (which I have often done), we ftiall find that the Fleas do not lay their eggs upon or near the dog, but the eggs will be found in the corners and fewings of the cufhion, where, by their whitenefs, they will eafily be difcerncd. AN'e have, indeed, moderns vho favour those old opinions, of whom I will only fay, that if they were prqvided with a good mi- crofcope, and would attentively beftow a few days, as I have done many, in the inveftigation of the fubjeft, they would not broach fuch fables and childilh tales, as they now write and publifh to the world. 4V l^i^ -«^ vvg i^(LIBRARY)- On the feeds of Trees, tvith the author s reafoning and obfervafions on the poffibility of intermixi?ig two different fpecies of tree, fo as to produce a third, partaking of the nature of both. A fin' gular peculiarity in the feed of Cotton. VJ PON an accurate examination of every kind of feed, we fhall difcover in it the origin or firll formation of the leaves and root of the future tree or plant, according to the refpedive fpecies of fuch feed. This is particularly obfervable in the feed of the Afh, which is reprefented of its natural fize in plate XIII. fg. 1. In this feed, though no bigger than here pictured, I difcovered not only two leaves, but also that part froni which the root would grow, being all very large in proportion to the lize of the feed. Again, all feeds in their formation, on the parent plant, receive their nourifhment from a fmall ilalk, ftring, or ligament, conlifting of many veilels through which the nutritive fubllancc is conveyed, analogous to that which in animals is called the navel firing. In fome feeds this flalk or ligament is very fliort, in others as long, or longer than the feed itfelf. I will give fome inllances of this, be- ginning with the feed of the Afli.. Fig. 2. A B is the half of the fhellj cafe, or covering, inclofing a feed of the Alh.. A D fliews where the fmall feed E F was placed, and from wlience being taken out, as reprefented in the figure, there appears the firing or ligament A F, through which the whole feed E F received its nourifliment, being derived from die part A, which was joined to the tree, and through which alone the fame can be conveyed. It is also to be obferved, that the part in the feed whence the future root will proceed, is at the point F, where the ligament is joined to it ; fo that the leaves of the future tree when in the feed, while it is united to the parent tree, are placed,. ( 48 ) as I may fay, with their points downwards, and their roots and ilalks Ujnvards. But we mull confidcr that the feeds of the AHi, which grow in * chillers on the tree, do at length, by their weight, hang downwards, and that the fame is the cafe witli apples and pears, which while they are very fmall. Hand erecl on their ftalks, UTid confequently the origin of the future plants formed in them, is placed with its root upwards ; but when the fruit grows to fuch a lize, as by its gravity to hang downwards, then the young plant in the feed or kernel, has its root and leaves in the fame pofition as it will have when growing. Upon opening the feed of the Alh, I found in the middle of it two large leaves, and a) lb the firft rudiment, or beginning of that part which woidd become a root, and thefe leaves were larger than I have obferved in the feed of any plant whatever. Thefe leaves when examined by the microfcope, appeared as \n fig. 3. C D E F, and I found them to conlitl of an immenfe number of thin roinid promi- nent globules, which I endeavoured to imitate in the drawing, though they are not there reprefented nearly fo fmall as they appeared to me. I alfo faw in thofe leaves a great number of fibres, or more properly veflels covered with wonderfully minute globules ; which veflels, but without the globules, are reprefented in the figure : thefe velTels arife from the infide of that part whence the future Item or trunk of the tree, and alfo the root are produced ; which is pointed out in the figure at A B C F G H. This lall mentioned part which would produce the Hem and root, befides thofe veflels from which the fibres of the leaves ilTue, and which may properly be confidered as the marrow or fap of the wood, is moreover provided with many veflels ; and in order to reprefent thofe veflels in a clearer light, I cut a piece tranfverfely, at the place marked with the letters B G, and having placed the piece or flice before the microfcope, I made as exact a drawing as I was able of it, with all the veflels in it, as * In England, thefe cluftors of feeds on the Afli, from the rcfemblance (hey bear to a Auuch of keys, arc called Afli-kcys. (-19) they appeared to me, a rcprelentation of which is given at fig. 4. I K L M. In this fmall particle, I not only judged that there Nvere about a thouland vcllels taking their courfe upwards, but. it alio gave me a rcprelentation of a complete branch of tiie tree cut tranf- verfely ; for the external furface reprefented the bark; the part next it, in which are very fmall dark fpots, denoted the wood; which dark colour was only caufed by this, that in cutting the flice, the knife had Iqueezed together, or Itopped, the fmall tubes or veflels of which it was compofed ; the middle part, the fap, or thofe veflels which would produce the Item or branch, and being cut tranfverfely, ap- peared round bodies. But this figure was drawn from a microfcope of greater magnifying power than that ufed in the former, in order to fhew the nature of this flem and root more ditlinftly, fb that the diameter of this figure at I L, is about twice the diameter of the part marked in the lall figure by B G. ]Sroreover, in this fmall trunk or flem, I perceived in fo me places, fome round particles, as if they were fmall round corpufcles in the tubes or velfels, which are reprefented between the letters A and B. I have thought it right here to exhibit the fize of the young leaves in the feeds of fome other trees, to fhew that it by no means follows of confequence, that the largell feeds contain the largeft rudiments, or originals, of their future plants, for the young plants in the fmall feeds of the Afli are vatlly luperior in fize to the very fmall leaves which the large feed of the Walnut contains, and which, as feen by the microfcope, are fhewn at jig. 5 and 0, the origmals of which I took from two feeds of that fpecies, in order to note if there might be any material difference between any two of them. In thefe figures I have only reprefented the leaves, be- caufe in the rudiments or originals of the future flems and roots, (which in this feed are fomevvhat longer than the leaves), I per- ceived little or no difi'erence in the form from thole in other feeds. In drawing thefe two figures, I found it quite impofTible to repre- VoL. II. G ( 50 ) fent the very minute globules of which thefe young and unformed leaves were compofed. I have in another place faid, that there are no blood veflels intermixed among the fmall fibres or flelhy ligaments of which a flelhy fibre conlills ; but that the blood veirds which furround the flelhy fibres, are placed in or between membranes ; and 1 have alio laid down my idea^ how tar the flelhy fibres are nouriflied from the blood veflels ; lb in this cafe, I fay, that all the leaves of trees and plants are formed of globules (befidcs the veflels or fibres of the leaves), all inclofed in a membrane conllituting the furface of the leaf, and the manner in which, I imagine, that thefe globules, al- though they touch no vcfTels, are yet nouriflied by the veflels, I take to be this : we mull first underlland, that almoll all the leaves of trees and plants, \\ hile united to the plant, confifl of two third parts water or a watery fubftance, and that the globule?, of which for the greatell part, the leaves confifl, do not lie fingly or feparate, but many of them heaped together. Thus let us fuppofe jig. 7, A B C D E, to be the veflels in a fmall piece of a leaf, and that thefe veflels have a great quantity of globules, which in the nourifliment of the leaf are fupplied and fupported by the veflels : then upon the globule F receiving a fupply of nourifhment, particularly water, from the veflels to which it is clofely conjoined, it mufl neceflarily impart this nourifhment to G, and that the fame nutritive fubflance will be conveyed from G to H, not only becaufe thefe globules are clofely conjoined together, but alfb becaufe as before mentioned, the greatefl part of the fubflance of the leaf, and confequently of each globule, confifls of a watery matter or fubftance ; and thus, thofe globules which are next the veflels, cannot receive any nou- rifhment from them, but they muft impart of it to thofe globules next to them, and thofe again to others. I have formerly com- pared this communication of nourifhment to dry globules or balls of clay, which we will fuppofe lying in a glafs, and only one of tliofe balls to be made wet, and the moiftening being continued, ( 51 ) the other balls of clay contiguous to this moill one, receive the moiflure from it and become wet, and thefe again lying in contact n\dth others, at length all the globules or balls of clay will, by means of the firft globule, become wet; and this is the cafe in the nourifliment of leaves and alfo of fruits. Fig. 8, ABC reprefents the outfide of the young leaves in an Almond, and upon removing them, I perceive feveral leaves in- clofed in them. Fig Q, AB C, is the outllde of the leaves in the kernel of a Cherry, an I ^o-. iq, ABC, the leaves, as they appeared to me, in the kernel of an Apple. Now, if in fuch fmall feeds as thofe which produce the Afli (one of the largeft trees growing in this country), and which feed is fo light, that fix of them fcarcely weigh four grains, if in thefe feeds, I fay, we difcover, not only the perfeA leaves with their vellels, but alfo the ilem and root of the future tree, and thefe much plainer and larger than in the Walnut or Hazle, we fhall alfo eafily per- ceive that wife and provident Nature in all her operations, and efpecially in the propagation of plants and animals, perfects her \vork, by ways and means limilar or analogous. * For the feeds of trees and plants not only contain in them the origin of the future plant, but alfo a white fubftance which we denominate meal, in order to nourifli and fupport the young plant, until it has ftruck its roots into the earth and can draw nourifliment from thence. Be- lldes which, many feeds are provided with an oily fubflance, whereby the young leaves and plants are kept from drying up, and ■\- many feeds which have not this oil will not remain long good out of the ground. * In the original it is " all feeds mufl neccflarily be provided with a mealy fubftance," ice. but this is a miilake which the author corrects prefcntly afterwards in his account of the feed of Cotton. + This is particiilaily (he cafe with the Acorn, which by nature is defigned to Tegetate immediately after it quits the tree. G 2 ( 52 ) Fig. 11. G H I is the half of the hard fliell of the Filbert. K L M is the nut or kernel taken out of the fliell. G is that part of the fliell which was united to the tree, in which part there is a very looie or fpongy pallage through which the ligament of the nut or kernel palfes, as G L, to convey the nutriment for the formation of the young plant, and alfo a futlicicnt quantity of aliment to fupport it, when the nut is fown or planted, until the root of that young plarrt in the nut, has extended itfelf fo far out of the hard fhell as to reach the earth. This figure alfo fliew^s that the fubftance, which through the ligameht is conveyed for the fupport of the nut, does not at aU. arife from the hard fhell, but that the ligament having a paflage through the Ihell, conveys the nourifhmcnt from the tree itfelf. Thefc firings or ligaments, w^iereby the young plant and the rest of the fubftance of feeds is nouriflied, have alfo coats or barks of their own, and within this coat or bark in the ligament of a Filbert, I think there are abo\^ an hundred fmall veflels, all which, as far as I could fee, are formed of fibres in a twifled fhape, in like man- ner as if one were to wind a piece of fmall copper wire round a pii:^ and then draw out the pin from the wire, leaving it in the, form de- lineated at^^. 1 2, A and B. It is worthy of confideration refpe(3:ing thefe ligaments, that in almoll: all feeds the ligament is joined to that part of the nut or kernel', from which the young plant will fhoot, as may be feen at fig. 1 3, letter A, (which is a Filbert drawn fomewhat larger than the na- tural fize, in order to fhew more eafily the courfe of the velfels pro- ceeding from the ligament), in which figure the ligament takes its courfe from A to B, and in its paflage fpreads itfelf into divers branches, and thefe again into fmaller ones ; and thus fpread through the whole nut, which hgament, or the veflels arifing from it tend to the fame point, and finilh where they begim, that is, where the young plant will be produced. I made a tranfverfe fedion of the ligament by which the Almond is nouriftied, becaufe it is fomewhat thicker than that in the Filbert^ I 53 ) and made a drawing of it as feen through the microfcope, which is to be seen at Jig. 14, CDEFG. This ligament is divided into feven compartments, whidi compartments are of a reddifh colour ; the velfels they contain, I have reprefented in the figure as they are placed in one of the compartments at F G H ; and from a view of the veflels in this tingle compartment, any one may eafily figure to himfelf the great number of veflels in the ligament, by which the Almond, the Filbert, and moft feeds are nourifhed ; for upon exa- mining the ligament of the Filbert, I found no difference in it, ex- cej^it that the ligament of the Almond was larger in every part. In my remarks and contemplations refpe(3;ing the propagation of trees and the nature of feeds, I turned my attention to the Willow, which is no otherwife propagated among us, than by cutting off a branch and planting it in the ground, where it grows to a tree. But becaufe I had obferved feveral Willows growing in fields and on the banks of flreams, in places where I judged they were not planted by hand in the way I have defcribed, but to have been produced fi'om feeds ; I turned my mind to difcover what was the fruit or pro- duce of the Willow, in order to difcover the nature of its feed. The only fruit of the Willow is a kind of wool or cotton produced on it, about the beginning of the month of June, and at that feafon, tipon examining this cotton, I faw lyi"g i^ ^' many dark coloured parti- cles, a little larger than grains of fand. Upon viewing thefe parti- cles by the microfcope, I found them to be the feed of tlie tree, and that the cotton and thefe feeds were formed in a kind of cells of a violet colour, and of thefe cells I counted feventy-five, placed near each other on a fmall branch, which feemed deflined for no other purpofe but to produce the feed> and in each of thefe cells, three, four, or five fmall feeds lying among the cotton ; and I could per- ceive that the cotton was formed out of the feeds in the time of their growth. Thefe feeds were of the fize reprefented at fg. 1 5 : the cotton of the feed was in two, three, four, five, and fometimes of fix filaments, joined together by a kind of knot and united to the ( 51 ) feed : and when the feed and cotton were fully ripe, the cells in which they were contained, burll open, and the cotton loofed itfelf from the feed, and then each particle of cotton which before had laid in regular order belide each other, as at Jig. lO, ftarted afunder, as rcprefented at j^^. 17; by which means a fmall quantity of the filaments of the cotton being fo widely difperfed, ■was, with the leaft wind carried away, bearing with it many of thofe minute feeds, and flying over walls and buildings, could de- pofit tlie feeds of the Willow in very diftant grounds. Upon nar- jowly infpecling this feed, I faw that the part from whence the fu- ture root would arife, and which was about one third of the feed, was provided with many veflels which feemed to conlill, for the jnoll part, of oblong and round particles. The reft of the feed confifted of two parts joined clofe together like leaves, very folid in proportion to their lize, of a dark green colour, and feeming to be formed of globules. Having fcparated thefe afunder, I faw two very minute protuberances, which I imagined were the beginnings of two leaves, and the origin of the future tree ; hence I concluded, that the firft two parts \^ hich 1 have compared to leaves, were only defigned to afford nourilhment to the young plant, until it fhould be provided with roots, by which it could extrad: its nourifliment from the earth. In order further to fatisfy my curiofity refpccting this very mi- nute feed, from which fo large a tree as the Willow is produced, I took fome of the feeds, and, in the month of June, placed them in moill fand in my clofet, in order to fee how the beginning of vegetation would be performed in this very fmall feed. But before I put the feed into the fand, and while it was yet very dry, I viewed it with the fame microfcope from which the drawings of the pre- ceding young formed plants are taken, and it appeared as rcpre- fented 'dt Jig. 18, ABCDEF: but thefe feeds were of very dif- ferent fhapes, for in drying they became crooked, fbme more than others. ABE F, is that part of the feed from \\ hence the root would arife. ( 55 ) When this feed had lain in the wet land thirty-fix hours, it ap- peared as at jig. 19, G H I K L. And here it appears how much of the feed was to form the root, which is marked by the letters GH K L ; and it was not only grown longer, but in the very fliort fpace I have mentioned, fix diltindl; roots had grown out, as repre- lented at G L ; and thofe parts, H I K, which I have defcribed to be like leaves, and which, while the feed was dry, could not be feparated without the greateft difficulty, now opened as it were of themfelves, to make room for the plant contained between them. And when this feed had remained in the moill; fand feventy-two hours, I found that the roots had fpread themfelves into divers branches, which were fo fi:rongly twifiied among the particles of fand, that it was impoflible to feparate them without breaking the roots. It is well worthy of remark, refpecting the Willow, that the feeds are ripe befare the leaves on the tree are grown to their proper fize, whereas the fruits of moft trees, and confequently the feeds contained in them, do not arrive at maturity till much later in the fummer, or elfe in autumn ; fo that in the Willow, the feed being- ripe in the fpring, a new tree may be produced from it the fame year. This I have alfo obferved in the Elm : for, about the end of May, I took fome feeds, which are of a very fmall fize, from an Elm, when the leaves on the tree were about half grown : thefe feeds, which were dry, I put into wet fand, and after three days they began to grow. 1 have alfo found that the Poplar tree, which produces a cotton formed with two flat fides, like the Willow cot- ton and the Indian cotton, produces its feed about the end of May, or the beginning of June. Here we fee, that in fuch a fmall feed as that of the WilloWj not only the young plant and the root of it, which is provided with veflels as if it was a complete tree, can be feen, but alfo that within fix-and-thirty hours tlie feed will begin to grow, even in a clofe room, fo that the young roots may be dillinctly feen, ( 50 ) I have fometimes thought, that if it was poffible to take out the young plant from any feed, and unite it to another feed, in that place where the young plant was formed in that feed, a tree or fruit would from thence be produced of a fpecies unknown before : as, for example, if we could take out the young plant from the Walnut, and unite it to the fubllance of a Chefnut, a tree would be pro- dirced not like either of the trees from whence thofe fruits were refpeetively produced, and confequently a tree of a new fpecies. And a certain eminent gentleman hearing me mention this, urged me rtrongly to make the experiment, faying, that though of thofe two feeds only one could vegetate, yet we might expedl that fome tliird plant of a new fpecies would be the refult. For my part, I confidered the thing as impoflible to be performed, and fo I found it upon further invelligation of the fubjeifl ; but as there are not many men well informed in the iirft formation or growth of trees and plants, I will here defcribe the nature of the firll formation of the young plant, both in a Chefnut and a Walnut. Fig. 20 is a Chefnut, broken in half; A is the rudiment or firfl "beginning of the plant, and though the Chefnut is a verv large feed, yet the original or lirll formed leaves can very rarely be dif- covered in it ; and indeed I mull confefs, that among many Chef- nuts I found but one in which I could difcover the two leaves of the young plant ; the upper part of the young plant was fomewhat of a round form, and furnished with a fort of cavity. This beginning of the plant, marked at A, is not only firmly imited to the fub- fiance of the nut, but there is one remarkable particular in it, different from other plants, that it has not only two ftrings or ligaments to convey nouriihment from the Chefnut to the young plant, until it is of fize and ftrength to draw nourifhment from the earth, but thefe ligaments are provided with a great number of veflels, having their rife in the Chefnut, to convey the nutritious jaices ; and thefe veflels produce others in the root and Hem. Thefe ( 57 ) veflcls are of the fame formation as I liave already defcribed tbe ligaments of the Ahnond and Filbert. Fig. 21, A B C is a Chefnut, which I put into an eailhen veffel filled with moift fand, and placed in the chimney, it being in the winter feafon, and watered it every fecond, third, or fourth day, ac- cording as the difference of heat feemed to require : C D and A E* are the two ligaments to which the young plant is united ; F G, is that part which will fpring up to a ftem ; G, indicates the leaves be- ginning to flioot ; and E HD, the root. And here we fee to what ufe the Chefnut is delHned, namely, to fupport and nourifli that fmall part contained in it, which is to conltitute the future plant ; and this is performed througli the two ligaments, until the young plant and its root are grown to a fufficient fize to draw their nou- rilhment from the earth. Fig. 22, is a Walnut, fo divided or cut as to fhew, at I K, the origin or firft beginning of the young plant. And whereas I have faid, that in a Chefnut the young leaves are not to be diftinguhhed; on the contrary, they may eafiiy be feen in a Walnut : for in every one of them that I examined, I could, with the microfcope, as plainly fee the leaves, as with the naked eye we can fee young Jeaves in the fpring. 1, denotes that part whicli will grow into branches and a tree ; K, the fliarp-pointed part fi'om which the root will ilTue, I alio treated feveral Walnuts in the fame manner as I have men- tioned refpeding Chefnuts, in order to obferve their vegetation. Fig. 23, LMNOP, is the Walnut ; Land P, are the ligaments, to convey nourifhmcnt from the root to the young plant. Thefe are provided with a great number of veflcls, which, from the oh- fervations I made on two feveral feeds, I was well allured were fpread through the whole fub (lance of the nut, or feed, in ord(;r to convey its moft nutritious juices to the young plant, until it Ihould be fiifficiently grown to draw its nourifliment from the earth ; R P, is the root. Vol. II. H ( 53 ) From thefe obfervations, lliewing the dole connedlion of the young plant by the ligaments with their multitude of veflels, with that mealy fubllance which we call the feed, it plainly appears, that we cannot take out the young plant from fuch feeds, without ])reaking thofe ligaments and their veflels ; and when they arc broken the young plant is dead, and cannot be removed into any oilier feed ; fo that it feems to me impoffible to remove the young plant from a Chcfnut to a Walnut, and fo to place it that the Chef- nut ihall grow in the Walnut. And tliough wc may be able to take out the young plant from the feeds of Afh, J.ime-tree, Goofeberries, Currants, or the like, without breaking the ligaments, or rather without obferving them, vet we mud conlidcr that were there are no lijraments with veflels in them, yet, in fl:ead of them, the globules compofing the mealy fubflancc of the feed are placed in fuch order, and fo clofely united to the beginning young plant, that they either fupply the place of A'eflels, or in reality are veflels, the true fl^rudlure of which is to us infcrutable. Moreover, there will be always a confldcrable dif- ference between the fize of the young plants in dilferent feeds, and confequently the place whence the plant is taken in one feed, will be too fmail or too large to receive the young plant from another. Add to which, that we cannot take out the plant without break- ing the feed, which, by fuch breaking, will become ufelefs. So that it is plain there is no pofllbility of taking the young plant out of one feed, and uniting it with the farina or mealy fubflancc in another. I have faid, that feeds contain in them not only the firft rudi- ments or origin of the future plant, but alfo a mealy tubflance, and fome of them an oil ; which mealy fubftance is defigned by Nature to noiirifli and fupport the young plant, until its roots are fo far grown out of the fliell that they can draw nourifliment from the earth. But, upon examining the feeds of the Cotton tree which ( 5Q ) grows in Perfia and Bengal,* and which feeds are found among the cotton brought to us from thence ; I was aftonillied to fee the variety of Nature's operation in the formation of this feed. For, upon opening thele feeds, of v/hich ftven, eight, or nine are con- tained in one fhcU or hufk with the cotton, I did not fmd any thing; of a mealy nature or fubllancc, but the oblong round figure of the feed is only caufed by four diilinA leaves, with wonderful ex- a6lnefs doubly folded together, and as it were embracing and de- fending that part from which the Hem or root will proceed. I caufed a drawing of this to be made, fomewhat magnified, in order to Ihew the leaves, with their fibres or vefiels, and alfo cer- tain dark round globules which are to be {gcti on the leaves : thefe are (hewn Sit_fig. 24, DEFG. When I cut thcfe globules open as exactly as I was able, the pieces cut off exhibited the brightell grals-green colour that can be imagined ; a particle cut thicker was of a darker green ; and the globule viewed entire was of a deep green, verging to a black colour, a b c. Are three pins, with which the leaves are fpread open. The fubftance of thefe leaves was compofed of exceeding fmall globules, of a kind of grafs-green colour. I enquired of feveral perfons who had been in India, what was the form and nature of the leaves of the Cotton tree, but among all to whom I addrelfed myfelf, I only found one gen- tleman and lady, who told me that the leaves of thofe trees were marked with fpots. Here we fee the wonderful regularity of Na- ture's works, namely, that in the feed of this tree there is not only formed a perfect }oung plant, but the leaves in that young plant are dotted with points or fpots, in the fame manner as the leaves growing on the tree. In the figure, D E is that part from which the Hem and root will be produced, and, upon cutting it open, I found in it a very few grafs-green globules. • The Cotton tree is now caltiyated in the Weft Indies, where it forms a confidcralle branch of trade. » H 2 ( 60 ) Thcll* obfervatioiis recalled to my mind (for I compare thofe feeds with thofe eggs which I have heretofore taken out of the bo- dies of fomc infects) that in fome of the eggs fo extracted, I did not find any fnbftance dellined to the nourilhment of an animal, but, iullead of it, perfcd and hving animals. For in like manner as in thofe eggs, while yet in the parent's body, a perfedl young one is formed, lo the Cotton tree produces in its feeds not only the leaves of the young ])lant, even while the feeds are yet on the tree, but that part in (he feed irom whence the root and Hem are to be produced, is in this leed uncommonly large. And in like manner as with regard to the eggs of the infedls, I have mentioned, that as foon as the young one has broken the egg, it immediately comes forth and runs, creeps, or fwims about ; fo the leaves in this feed having received the moifture requifite for their growth, do fwell and enlarge themfelves until the thin fkin wherein they are inclofed burfts or cracks, and the leaves then expanding, that part whence the root and llcm will proceed grow to a futficient length to draw its nourifliment from the earth. In a word, fome infe6ls are perfetl in their eggs before they are voided by the parent, and the plant in the fe^d of the Cotton tree is per- fect, and requires no nourifliment to be provided for it when it is of fuflicient maturity to quit the tree. I cut a flice tranfvcrfely from that part whence the root and ftem derive their origin, and caufed a drawing of it to be made from the microfcope, for no other reafon than bccaulc the internal part containing the veflels, which iji others is of a round or oval figure, is in this a figure of eight fides, four of which are fome- what curved, as at fig. 25, A BCD, which was full of pores: the part furrounding it, which appears at E F G H, was very white, and in it I could not difcern any pores. The outward part or compartment, I KLM, both in pores and in its white colour was fimilar to the internal one, with this difference only, that the pores in the inner one were fomewhat larger. And though the greateft (61) - part of the feeds which I examined were very old, yet I found that this young plant contained in it a confiderable quantity of oil. Some other feeds I opened, in which the young plant was fo frcfti that I thought I could make it vegetate, but I have yet met with no Cotton feeds which I could by any means caufe to grow. I afterwards faw, in a curious gentleman's cabinet in this town, fpecimens of two other Indian feeds, in which the leaves and root of the future young plant were extraordinary large, but no oil or mealy fubftance, fo that we find there are fome feeds which contain only the young future plant or tree. If any one is defirous of feeing the young plant in great per- fedion, as it hes in the mealy fubftance of the feed, let him ex- amine the feed of the Lime tree * when ripe ; for in this feed are to be feen two leaves not flattened nor folded up, but of a perfe6l handfome fliape, the fame as a young leaf on the tree ; and through the microfcope the veiTels or fibres in the leaves are as plainly to be feen, as with the naked eye we can fee them in a full grown leaf: the origin or firfh rudiment of the young plant, which in this feed is extraordinary large, is placed in the contrary direction from the parent tree, whereas in other feeds it points towards the tree : this young plant, before it comes to its full growth in the feed, is not of a green colour, but when full grown it becomes of a bright yellowifh green. * A figure of this is given in Baker's Employment for the Microfcope. ■i- On the generation of EELS. It is the common opinion in this country, that Eels are produced Avithout the ordinary procefs of generation ; a notion which I could never conceive, as 1 have often dechired ; and 1 will lay, that it this were true, there is no reafon why Eels fhould not be produced in fuch quantities, as in a manner to fill all our canals. Nevertheless, this opinion is not only entertained among the vulgar, but I have found fome rcfpe a 7 10000 7 1 00 the great circle 100 22) 70000 (3181 10000 Quadrature. •40 180 •40 18 the refult is, that if each eye in a Beetle's head is taken as an hemi- fphere, the two Mill make up a fphere containing, on its furface, 3181 optical organs or eyes. I have caufed a drawing to be made of the eye, or rather of the * It has been mentioned in another place, but is here repeated to favc the trouble of turning back, that by the great circle is meant, the largcft which can be drawn upon a globe, or fphere, or, in other words, a circle, M-hofc diameter is a line paffing through the centre of fuch fphere to the furface. ( 67 ) multitude of optical organs compofing the eye of the Beetle, as far as the limner was able to difcover their ftrufture by the help of the niicrofcope, with intent, partly to exhibit the great number of thofe optical organs, and partly to lliew that each of thefe organs is of a convex Ihape ; not that I would be underllood to mean, that every one of thefe optical organs is a portion of a fphere;* for, if lb, the Beetle would not be able to difcern obje6ls at any dillance, but that each of them is more flattened than fpherical. Upon exhibiting this objedl; to the limner, he compared thefe convexities, or protuberances, to thofe round buttons which are at prefent ufed in men's clothes, and made of that metal commonly called Prince's metal. Plate XIV. fg. 1 , A B C D E F, reprefents a part of the tunica cornea, or horny part of the Beetle's eye. ABC denote that part which was contiguous to the head. D E F A reprefent the greateft part of the longell row of eyes on the fuperficies of the tunica cornea ; in which, from D E F to A, I counted more than lixty optical organs ; and, between the fame letters, may be feen how each of thefe optical organs rifes with a kind of protuberance. It is well known, that when any object is placed before the microfcope, it mull: be fo adjulled that it may neither be too far re- moved from, nor brought too near to the focus of the glafs, for, in either of thofe cafes, the obje6l cannot be feen diftindly. For the fame reafon, if any perfon is defirous to contemplate objedls through thofe optical organs which are in the tunica cornea of the Beetle, he will find it necellary to alIo\^' a fomewhat greater diftance between the tunica cornea and the focus of the magnifier, fo that the focus of each may (if I am allowed the exprelTion), become united in one poijit, as we do when two convex lenfes are placed one before the other in a frame : and, by this means, he will fee the obje^l multiplied feveral hundred times, by reafon of the great * I addrcfs mjfflf here to thofe who have feme knowledge in optics. ( fis ) number of optical organs in the tunica cornea, but all wonderfully minute ; for the fteeple of the new church in our town, the fize of which, and its diftance from my houfe, I have mentioned elfewhere,* when viewed through thefc optical organs, appeared no larger than the point of a very fmall needle. Hence, it appears, how greatly thofe perfons are miftaken who fay, that a Beetle is blind ; and how much perfection is to be found in the organs of fight of fo fmall and fo defpifed an animal, to fay nothing of the other parts of its body; but which creature, whoever fees, immediately crufhes with his foot, as loathing the fight of that black creeping thing. In the month of Auguft I faw, fitting on a glafs, at the backfide of my houfe, a Fly almoft as large as a bee, which fpecies of Fly, though not very numerous, I obferve every year in the fame place. I diflefted the tunica cornea of both eyes of this Fly, and, on ex- amination, I found them to be covered with a great number of wonderfully minute hairs, which did not cover the organs of fight, but were placed in the intermediate fpaces between them. Moreover, I took out of the infide of the tunica cornea, that matter or fubftance with which it was filled, in order to examine it by the microfcope, becaufe, till that time, I never could clearly fatisfy myfelf to what end this fubftance was created, and the rather fo, as, upon viewing it, I judged that it confifted of a collec- tion of threads or fibres. Upon fpreading this a little afunder, to ex- amine it more accurately than I had before done, I faw that all thofe particles which I had before confidered as a coUedlion of threads or fibres, were nearly of the fame length, but one of the ends of each fomewhat thicker than the other, and the thicker end rounding at the extremity. Upon repeatedly, and more carefully, examining this fpecr of eggs which they contain. The fume is the cafe with refpecl to the minute animalcules of which I am now fpeaking : for the eggs of the fmaller animalcules were of the fame fize with thofe of th.e larger ones, thougli the eggs of one were foiu' times more in nmnber than thofe of the other. Thcfe lafl; animalcules 1 placed in a glafs filled wdth water, in which Mere fvvimming fome other animalcules of the fame kind, which were about {even or eiglit davs old ; at which time I judged thefe animalcules to be four times the fize they were w hen tirll excluded from the efrcr. On the 13th of July I had fomc few animalcules in a beer glafs full of water, none of which had any eggs adhering to them ; but the next morning I faw a nimiber of eggs, of a greenifli colour, on the body of one of them ; w hereupon I took this animalcule from the others, and put it into a glals tube, about the thicknefs of a common goofe quill, with intent to difcovcr in what fpace of time young animalcules would be produced from thcie eggs. In the morning of the lOth of July, I perceived fome animal- cules which had ilfued from the eggs, and others Hill lying within the eggs : but whereas thefe eggs had before been joined together in very regular order, now, on the contrary, the entire eggs and the fliells of thofe from which young ones had ilfued, lay difperfed in a very irregular maimer. In the mean time I had, on the 15t]i of July, obferved another animalcule, having the lo^er part of its body tilled with eggs, though the day before I had not {een a tingle egg on it : this, therefore^ I placed by itfelf in a glal's, and, on the 1 8th of July I faw all the young animalcules come forth from the eggs, and fwim- ming about in the water. From thefe obfen'ations I was certain, that all thefe animalcules brought forth their eggs in the fpace of a day or a night, and placed them on the hind parts of their bodies, in the exact and re- ( 8; ) gular order I have mentioned, and that, after three days more, tlie young within the eggs were perfectly formed. Thefe laft-named animalcules did not live above three or four days, whence I conjectured that they died for want of food." I determined to give a drawing of one of thefe animalcules, with the eggs adhering to its body, as nearly as the limner was able to reprelent it ; for when I took one of thern out of the water, none or a very few parts of it could be plainly diltinguiflicd, fo that it was neceflaiy to make the drawing while it lay in the water. Plate XIV. /^. 16, ABCDEFG, exhibits this animalcule, as it lay Avith its back next the limner. The letters CHI and E K L reprefent four horns with which the head was furniflied. At the letters B M and F N are to be i^een the eggs which the animalcule, having brought forth, had placed on the outfide of its body about this part. AO and GP, are the forked parts of the tail, which round about their extremities, Ihewn at the letters O P, were each again fubdi- vided into four parts, which might have been taken merely for hairs ; but when accurately examined, and with a good magnifier, then each of thefe parts (marked in the figure O Q and PR) ap- peared to be covered with a great number of wonderfully minute particles. When the animalcule lay in this pofition, or even with its belly tov^^ards the limner, thofe limbs or organs Avith which it moves it- felf in the water, could not be diftinguiflied. I, therefore, placed it fo that its fide might come into view, and that thus the limner might copy them to his beft in the drawing. Fig. 1 7, exhibits, at the letters abed, thofe organs or limbs, each of which confifis of eight parts, though they could not all be, here fliewn ; and each of thefe is compofed of various organs, part of which may be feen at fg. IS, at the letters e and f. Tins animalcule did not ufe thefe limbs in the fame manner as ( 88 ) terreftrial animals ^^-]^cll have many leet, nor as tliofe in the water do tor the moll part, that is, by moving the feet fucceflivcly one after another ; but this creature, with great fwiftnefs, moved all its limbs at the fame inllant, io that \\ itii a fingle llroke it moved very quickly and made much way in the water. Here we find another convincing proof, with how many per- fections fo minute an animalcule is endowed, as well in regard to the llructure of its body, as to its innate diJpofition, or the in- flinct whereby it is pompted, when the eggs arc fully gro\S'n within its body, to place them on the outlide of it, and to the intent (as feems to me) to protect the eggs from being injured or devoured by other, animalcules ; and that the young ones, when in a perfedl Hate, are able to diicngage themfelves from the eggs. And who can difcover all the farther perfcdiions with which fo minute and (to us) inligniligant a creature n)ay be endowed ? ^^^hen, therefore, we lee thefe wonderful properties in fo fmall and, to us, contemj)tib]e a creature ; and, moreover, figure to our- felvee in imagination what farther we can fuppofe concealed in it, can any one with reafon fuppofe that fo many perfeclions are pro- duced fpontaneoufly, or by chance ? But we lliall be a thoufand times nearer the truth, if we lay it down as an axiom or indifput- able fact, that all the living creatures we behold at this day, how- -ever minute, derive their origin from thole which were formed at the Creation. I have frequently declared this to be ray opinion, and fliould not now have touched upon the fubjecl", were it not that I find, by experience, moll men Hill adhering to the old opinion, and the follies of antiquity, that many minute animalcules are produced fpontaneously. But if we fee fo much pcrfeAion, as well in the make of the body ^s in the aptitude to propagate its kind, in the animalcule of which I have been treating, \se may, by parity of reafonlng, conclude, that the fame perfection muft necelfarily exill in the miiiutcft filhea ( 89 ) or animalcules, even in thofe whole whole bodies are llendcrer than thofe very {lender particles with which each of the four parts (marked in the figure bj the letters O Q and P R) are covered. For, in a word, the animalcule 1 Imve jull been defcribing may be confidered as an elcpliant, if compared with the moll minute of thofe filhes or animalcules which may be difcovered in all waters. If it be then alked, to what end fuch exceedingly minute animal- cules were created, no anfwer can readily be given which feems more agreeable to the truth, than that, in like manner as we fee conftantly, that the larger kinds of filli feed on the fmaller ; as, for example, that the cod filli preys on the haddock and other fmaller kinds of fifli ; the haddock again on the whiting ; thefe on ilill fmaller fifties, and among the reft: on flirimps ; and ftirimps on fl:ill more minute fifties ; and that this gradually prevails among all the kinds of fifli : fo that, in a word, the fmaller are created to be food for the larger. Again, if we confider the nature of our fea, abounding with fifti, yet having nothing at the bottom of it fave barren land : ftored %\'ith various fliell-filh, yet dellitute of €very green herb ; and if we, moreover, lay it down for a truth, that no filh can be fupported on water alone, there wiU not remain a doubt, that the fmaller filhes are dellined, by Nature, to be the fubfiftence of the larger. You will excufe, illuftrious Signer, my boldnefs, in taking up your time with my remarks, of little value, fince you can employ yourfelf in much more ufeful fiudies than to read the trifles J commit to paper. Delft, in Holland, the lOih Odober, 1099. I remainj Sec. A. van Lecuwenhoek. Vol. IL M On the ^IAGNET or LOADSTONE. JtIaVING at feveral times examined the Loadflone, ^^■ithollt committing my obfervations thereon to writing, I at length deter- mined to make and note down a feries of regular obfervations on the fubjed:. I took two Loadrtones, each of them weighing fome pounds, and fufpended them to a balance, in order to fee what tendency they might have to iron : I then brought a piece of iron very near to the Loadftone, but I did not perceive that the balance to which it was fufpended, did at all move from its pofition. After this I took one of the before-mentioned Loadftoncs, in or- der to fee how much weight of iron it was capable of lifting. The firll trial I made, \\'as with the key of my houfe door ; this the Magnet would not lift, but after I had filed off a little of the key from that part where the Magnet was to be applied, that by this means the fatty fubftance, left by repeated handling on the key, might be cleaned away, then the key adhered to the magnet. Upon obferving this, I no longer wondered that the Loadllone, when it was before applied to the iron, had not fhewn any attractive power, as if it had not much virtue, becaufe I confidcred that this balance had been put to all forts of \ifes in weighing.' I put a piece of this Loadftone, about the fize of a filbert, into a glafs tube, and clofed the orifice of the glafs by the help of fire. 1 then brought the Loadllone near to a fea-compafs, and I found that the needle of the compafs was as much attracted by the Load- ilone, as if it had been on the outfide of the glafs. I then broke the glafs, and taking that part in which the Mag- net was placed, I clofed both ends with a blow-pipe, leaving fo much cavity or portion of air within, as, in my Judgment, woidd be fufficient to keep the glafs and the INIagnet in it from finking m ( 01 ) water ; and by this proceeding I hoped to difcover, whether the Northern part or pole (as it is called) of the Magnet would point towards the North. Plate XIV. fg. 19, AB C D, reprefents this glafs ; at E F is the piece of Loadllone which I placed in the middle of the glafs, that neither of the extremities might be deprelled in the water more than the other. I then put the glafs into an earthen veflel filled with rain water, and I prefently law the North pole of the Magnet move towai-ds the Northern lide of the veflel ; yet fometimes the glafs and the Magnet in it took a contrary diredion, but which, I think, proceeded from hence, that as I often took the glafs out of the water, I might, in replacing it, put the North Pole of the Magnet higher or lower than it lliould be, and there- fore that it might not imiformly move the glafs in the fame dire(ilion. I alfo befpoke fome fmall Heel needles, fuch as are ufed for fea- compalles, and both extremities of thefe, namely, the North and South, were rubbed with a Loadflone by a man who made it his bullnefs to prepare fea-compafles. Thefe needles, I put into glafs tubes, clofed at the ends, and of a fize jvift to float, and putting them into the water, I prefently faw the extremities of the needles tend towards the North and South ; but the leafl; particle of dufl, or breath of air meeting the tubes did, I thought, impede their motion. But finding, that by reafon of the length of thefe tubes, the Magnet very diflicultly and llowly exerted its influence on the tubes to move them in the water, I broke the glafs again, and prepared another of fuch a ftiape, that the Magnet might put it in motion more fpeedily : the ends of this glafs I also clofed with a blow-pipe. Fig. 20, G H I K L M N O, reprefents this glafs ; the letter P indicates the place where the Loadllone was put , and by heating- one end of this glafs, I bent it in the direction L Af, that its dif- M 2 ( 02 ) ferent motions in the water might be more eafily dilVrngiiiflicd. This glais 1 put into a very large and broad beer-cup, in w hich it funk in the water as deep as the place marked K: the point M immediately veering about to the North-eaft part of the heavens, and as often as 1 altered its pofition, it returned to it again. I had alfo feveral fragments of the before-mentioned Magnet, one of which weighed no more than five grains; others of them, fomewhat larger. I took three of thefe fmall pieces or particles, and prepared for them three fmall glalles of the fliape reprefented ^tjjg. -1, Q R ST, in which, at V, the particle of Loadllone is to be feen. The part Q R was added for no other purpofe than to keep the glafs upright in the water. Two of thcfe fmall glafles were fo made, that no more than the part S T appeared above the furface of the water; the third was fomewhat more ele- vated. Upon putting thefe glaffes into the water, the extremity or part, T, of one of them turned itfelf towards the Weft ; and as often as I changed its pofition either way, it refted not till it had re- turned to its firft pofition ; and even when, with a quicker mo- tion, I turned the cup round from the South towards the Weft, fo that the part, T, almoft pointed towards the North, that part im- mediately turned back to the Weft, and there refted. The fecond glafs pointed its part, T, towards the Eaft ; and in whatever di- reftion I moved it, it would not remain at reft, except in its firft pofition. I was greatly furprifed to find, in thefe experiments, that fuch minute particles of Loadftone, clofely ftiut up in glafles, and more- over immerfed under water, would yet point to that p;u:t of the Heavens whereto they were inclined.* * The nniformity of Nature's operations, in cafes analogous, will be fecn cxemplifift], on comparing thefe appearances in the Loadftone with what has been obferved by naturalifls in ( 03 ) The third glafs being put into the fame cup with the two former, I turned it in' various diredlions, but it did not uniformly fettle in the fame polition; for its part, T, fometimes pointed towards the South, fometimes towards the Well, and then would incline a little from the Well towards the South. AVhen I firll law this, I began to con- clude that the fragment, though broken otFfrom a Magnet, might yet be deftitute of North and South poles, and, therefore, had no power to put the glafs wherein it was placed in motion. Bvit foon after- wards rejecting that idea, I thought that perhaps the North and South poles in this fragment might lie fo as to point one of them directly upwards and the other downwards ; and that if fo, they could not by any means put the glafs in motion. I, therefore, feveral times took this fmall glafs out of the water, and lliook it up and down, that by fuch lliaking the poles or corners, if they lay up and down, might afl'ume on horizontal polition. And, after frequent trials, I found that at length this glafs took a certain di- redlion, and kept that polition, in like manner as I have related of the others. Moreover, I took an iron key, and brought it near to the glafs, while fwimming in the water (but fo as not to let the key touch the water) in order to fee whether this fmall piece of Loadllone, thus inclofed and under the furface of the water, would be put in motion by the approach of iron : but I could not obferve the leall motion. Neverthelefs, upon bringing a thick and long piece of iron very clofe to the water and alfo to the glafs, the glafs in- clined a little to one fide : the fame I alfo obferved in the larger glafs tube, which is pictured ^t jig. IQ.- that minute aquatic animal or infe6l, the Polype ; which, if it be divided into many pieces, each piece will become a perfeft animal, pofleiring all the properties of the original Polype, before divided. Mr. Baker, in his attempt towards a Natural lliiloiy of the Polype, has a curious cffiiy refperting the divifil)ili(y of the confcious principle in that living creature, which feems applicable to the inanimate propcvtics multiplied in this fubdivillon of the JvOad- fione. — TuANSLAioK. ( 9* ) But the motion produced in the glafles by thefe pieces of Load- ilone was fo feeble, that I judged if a power not equal to the thoufandth part of a grain, had been oppofed to the fmall glalles, it ^^'ould have given them a different direAion ; for thefe particles of Loadftone had vciy little virtue in them, if compared with what I have heard boalled refpecting other Loadltones. ~ INloreover, I made another glai's veffel, to contain a piece of Loadllone ; the fhape of which vell'el is fliewn at Jig. 22, A B C D E F G H I K, and in the cavity of tliis, at A B C 1 K, a fragment of Loadftone was placed, as marked at L. The lengtli of this glafs, from C to D, was almoft nine inches ; the cavity in which part was about the thickneis of an hortc hair. I purpolcd to make the part, D E M, with a cavity of jull fuch a tize, that by means thereof a fmall part only of the glafs might rife above the furface of the water : and, after three feveral trials, I made the glafs fo to my with, that the upper part of the cavity, D E F, barely ap- peared above the furface. The reafon why I made this glafs of fuch a length was, partly that I might fee whether the particle of Magnet, when fo deep under the water, would yet have power to turn its North pole towards the North, and lb to caule the glafs vellel to change its polition ; and partly to obfei-ve w hether, when funk fo deep, it would be at all affected by iron brought clofe to the furface of the water. This being done, I turned round the part, F G, feveral times ; fometimes with a quicker and fometimes with a flower motion ; and I always found that it would not remain at reft until its extremity, G, pointed towards the Eaft. I could not make this experiment in a beer-cup, by reafon of the length of the glafs ; therefore I took a wooden veffel of that fort which are ufed in this country to meafure charges of powder for guns, and called by us, cardocs-dooj'en, which may be rendered in Englifli, cartridge-boxes. After this I made another glafs, the thinneft part of which, fimi- Jar to what is pidured in fig. 22, at C D, was thirteen inches long: ( 05 ) into this I put a piece of Loadllone, which was half as long again as thick, but before inclofing it I carefully examined, by the help of a fea-compafs, in what part its North pole was fituated ; and finding it to be, not at the extremity but rather towards the middle, I placed the Loadllone upright on its end in the glafs. The top of this glafs, when it was put into the water with the Loadllone in it, fcarcely appeared above the furface, and, after moying it in feveral directions, I found that it would not remain at reft until the North pole of the Loadftone in it pointed to the North. When this glafs with the Magnet in it floated in a ftate of reft on the water, I took a piece of iron, almoft eighteen inches long, one extremity of which I approached firft to the furface of the water, and then to the outfide of the wooden vellel near theljottom, about the part where the Magnet lay, in order to fee whether by this the glafs containing the Magnet woidd be put into any new motion, but I did not at that time perceive any. After this I applied the fame iron, not by its end but the vi^iole length of it, as clofcly as poffible to the wooden veftel, and immedi- ately I perceived that the glafs inclined feme what towards it, where- vipon I llowly moved the iron roimd the box, and faw that the Load- ftone in the glafs, and which was fourteen inches imder water, fol- lowed the motion of the iron, fo that in nearly a minute's time it performed a complete revolution. By this experiment the tendency of the Magnet was proved to be greater towards the iron than to- wards the North part of the heavens, as appeared by its following the motion of the iron. Tlien, after fome interval, I placed the iron length wife, clofe to the wooden box or veflel, in order to fee whether the Loadftone would be attracted by the iron, towards the fide next to it, which however did not happen, for it kept its pofition unmoved, excepting only that its North pole altered its pofition a little from the North. Afterwards I made another glafs, wherein I put a fragment of Loadllone, which glafs was of the fame ftiape as that reprefented at u ( 96 ) Jig. 21, Q R S, this I put into a common beer-cup filled with water, and when the Magnet had turned to the North, and was at reft, I took a round piece of iron, about an inch in diameter, and placed it lengthwife clofe to the beer-cup, m hen 1 immediately perceived that the glafs, with the Loadllone in it, inclined fomcwhat to the iron ; whereupon I moved the iron, as gently as 1 could, round about the cup, and the glafs, with the Loadftone in it, immediately followed the motion, but without approaching nearer to the fide^of the cup, and in about a minute's Ipace performed a complete revo- jution. After this I placed the iron as clofe as poflible to the cup, in order to difcover whether the attraction between it and the Magnet would be fufficient to move the latter from the middle to the tide of the cup next the iron, but this did not take place though they were left a 'whole night. From thefe things I conclude, that the attrac- tion between the JSIagnet and the iron will fliew itfelf upon the leaft application, fo far as to caufe the circular rotation I have mentioned, but no farther, for very little force is required to efieel this, in com- parifon of that which would be necellary to draw the glals, contain- ing the Loadllone, through the water to the fide of the cup. Ne- verthelefs, I do believe that there might be fome tendency in the Loadtlone towards the iron, and I have no doubt that if this Load- lione had been larger, or of Itronger power, it would have moved to the fide of the cup next tlie iron. Once more, I made a much fmaller glafs, of the fame fliape as lafl mentioned, in which I put a fmall piece of Loadltone, not much more than the weight of a grain, and I found that fmall particle of Loadllone to produce the fame efFeel as I had before obferved in the other pieces, and the only ditference in my obferv^ations was, that l\\c larger the Loadlione the quicker were its motions. On the Suhjiance of the Brain in a Turkey, a Sheep, and a Sparrow. IN my examination of a Turkey's Brain, I began with that part which is called the corticle ;* this part, belides the small blood- vef- fels and globules found in it, is compofed of a very pellucid cryf- taJline, and (as it appears to the eye) oily fubftance, which, from its clearnefs and tranfparency, fliould rather be called the vitreous or glafly part, than the corticle or fhell, of the Brain. When I fpread this into fmall particles, I perceived to ilTue from it a fmall quanti- ty of a thin fluid, compofed of very minute globules, thirty-fix of which would not be equal in lize to a globule of the human blood ; this liquor, though it did not extend farther from the brain than about the tenth part of the diameter of an hair, was yet mixed with thofe globules. I obferved this fluid matter principally in the Brains of thofe Turkeys which had been killed fome time, whence I concluded that it had partly iffued from the fmall velfels of the Brain, and perhaps that fome of thofe veflels themfelves might have been diflblved into a fluid matter. Belides thofe fmall globules, there were fome larger ones, of which I judged lix would be equal in (ize to one globule of human blood; thefe two forts of globules I judged might iflue from the minute veflels which I might have • That is, tlie fliell or cafe, from the Latin word cortex. livLich figniCea the bark of a tree. Vol. II. , N ( 98 ) broken, and, that, what in the animal, when ahve, was a thin fluid, might become folid in the veflels when cold, and exhibit the appear- iUice of thofe globules. I alfo faw, dilperled among them, fome other bright irregular globules of different lizes, and fome as large as a globule of human blood, and others larger. Among, or in the midft of this watery matter and globules, there were difperfeda great number ot wonderfully minute blood-veffels, and these in no greater a portion of Brain than the fize of a large grain of fand. Many of thefe blood- veflels were fo minute that (to judge by the eye) if one of the red globules in the blood of a Turkey > or other bird, were to be divided into five hundred parts, not one of thele parts could be contained in the cavity of thofe veflels. For I judged, that if the fize of the cavity of thofe veflels fliould be confldered as 1, the axis of one of thofe globules mull be as 8, and confe- 8 quently, if the axis of any fphere is 1, and the axis of ano- ^ ther is 8, then the proportion will be as 1 to 512; and though C4 thefe blood-velFels were fo minute, yet their colour plainly ^ fliewed that the fubflance they contained was what gives the ii2 blojKl its red colour. And, if I had not taken notice of the — ' faint colour w hicl) a globule of blood, tingly taken, exhibits, it would have been impoflible for me to know thefe to be bloods veflels, and thus it appears that the reddifli liquid imparts to them fome kind of colour ; this I was the more certain of, by obferving fome of thofe vefl^els Ibmevvhat larger which aflluned a redder call. Thefe very minute blood-veflels appeared of a deeper colour \^ here three or four of them lay one on another, without any interjacent fublhince. From thefe appearances, I was more firmly of opinion than before, that the globules of blood, whence its rednefs proceeds, are divided into fmaller parts, when they come to fuch minute vel- fels as they cannot enter without being divided ; and I was now of opinion, that the dark colour of that part of the Brain, called the corticle, in which it differs from the white part, called the nicdul- ( 00 ) lary or marrowy fubftance of the Brain, proceeds from this, tliat the greater part of it confifls of pellucid particles, which are ■fo clofely joined together, that they exhibit a glafly or watery tranf- parency, and that the dark colour is increafed by the multitude of blood-veflels paffing through it. I alfo obferved many very minute particles, which I judged to be globules, about the fixth part of the fize of a globule of human blood : thefe were not tranfparent, and gave the Brain a darkifli colour, and refpecling them I thought that, perhaps, they might have iflued from fome of the blood-vellels which I had cut afunder. We may alfo perceive that this corticle of the Brain is, in many places, deeply mixed among the medullary parts, but w hen we come to feparate them gently, we find, betw een the two, fo great a num- ber of blood-vellels, that they feem to conftitute an entire mem- brane ; and we Ihall find that this internal part has as many blood- velfels as the corticle, or external part, of the Brain. Befides thefe fmall blood-veflels, I obferved in the Brain other veflels fo flender that, in my judgment, none of the before-mentioned globules, though divided into a thoufand parts, could pafs through them. T do not here take any notice of thofe blood-veflels as large or larger than a hair of one's head, which in great numbers run among the medullary parts of the Brain, and are every where again divided into branches, When I came to what is called the medullary fubflance of the Brain, I obferved feveral irregular globules of different fizes, fome of which were equal to the fize of a globule of human blood, and fome larger, and which, as well as I could judge by my eye, for the mofl: part confifted of a thin, tranfparent, and oily fubfliance. Thefe globules are formed in the medullary part of the Brain (and principally in that part where the fpinal man-ow begins), in fuch quantities that they feem to conftitute the greatefl part of the Brain. This great multitude of tranfjparent globules caufes the white colour, N2 ( 100 ) becaiifc all tranfparent particles, which are not fo conneded toge- ther that the light can pafs through them in a ftraight line, and do not conftitute as it were an uniform body, muft exhibit a white ap- pearance to the eye, as I have fliewn in * another place. Thefe ir- regular globules were lb clofely joined, that when I endeavoured to feparate them, fome of them llretched out, and became twice as long as broad, and they appeared to me joined in the manner of net-work : upon obferving which I began to conlider whether the fmallcit blood-veflcls, ifluing out of the corticle, might not be again divided into fmaller branches, and many of them furround thefe globules, or give way to them, as we see the small f horizontal vef- ftls in fome kind af wood give way to the perpendicular veflels, and take a circuit round the half of their circumference. This opinion of mine, that many of thefe irregular globules arc furrounded by fmall veflels, was confirmed, -when I faw many of the laid velTels bright in the middle, and bearing fomething of a dark colour at the fides ; and ftill more, when, upon breaking the globules, I found many fmall fibrous parts which feemed to be veflels lying among them. 1 alfo often faw parts of the medullary fubftance of the Brain of the fame figure, as if we were to behold a fifherman's net, the threads of which can eafily be extended any way, and that between each fpace of the net (which fifhermen call a mefli), 'a very flexible body, in fhape of a ball, was placed, which would aflume either a round or an oblong form, as the net was drawn one way or the other. And to fuch a net I compare the multitude of minute veflels in the medullary fubftance of the Brain, and the balls to the irregular glo- bules I have mentioned. The other parts of the medullary fub- ftance confifted of an almofl; infinite number of excefflvely minute globules, and a clear thin matter, which laft I conje<9:ured had iflued from the wounded veflels, and alfo that fome of the veflels themfelves might have been diflblved into it, * See Vol. I. p. 184, Addition by the Tranflafor. » This may be fcen in Vol. 1. Plate 1. fig. 1, at the Letters E E £. Translator. ( 101 ) Proceeding farther in my inquiries, I took the head of a Sheep, and upon examining its Brain, I alfo found in the corticle, a great number of wonderfully minute blood-veflels, in which I could difcover the fubftance which gives the blood its red colour ; thefe veflels alfo gave the corticle a darkifli complex- ion. I often contemplated this incomprehenfible multitude of exquiiitely minute blood-veflels, merely for the pleafure I took in viewing them. For I fusv almoft all of them again divide into branches ; and I moreover took notice of a great number of globules, each about a fixth part tlie fize of a globule of human blood, and which, I judged, iifued from the vell'cls which were broken ; and 1 coiicluded, that lix of thofe globules would join to make up one globule of blood when they palled into larger veflels, for they were very inferior in tranfparency to the other globules adjoining. I alfo unagined that thele globules, of which fix would m.ake up an ordinary fized globule, when they came to veflt-Is fo fmall as not to admit them, muft be again divided into ftill fmaller pai-ts, and then thofe vellels would become colourlefs. And, in order more clearly to giA-c the reader feme idea of the incomprehenf ble flendernefs of the blood veflels wliich are formed in the brain, I have made a computation of their flze, judging by the eye, and by comparifon wnth a large grain of fand ; I take it then for a certain pofition that thofe globules which tinge our blood with a red colour are, when perfecT:, of fuch a fize, that one hundred of them laid fide by fide, do not more than IQO equal the thicknefs or axis of a grain of fand, and '00 confequently, that a million of globules of blood are 1,000,000 equal to a large grain of fand. I next obfervc the blood- •5* veflels in the Brain, refpeAing which I am certain, that 64,000,000 if one globule of blood was divided into fixty-four parts, """ none of fuch parts could pafs through one of thofe vef- fels ; for I Hate the diameter of one of thofe vell'els to be as i; and- ( 102 ) ^ the axis of a globule of blood to be as -1 ; the rcfult is, that if 4 a grain of fand \i;as divided into fixty-four niiUions of parts, not T- one of thofe parts could enter the orilices of the fmallctl vef- •1- lels in the Erain, and efpocially, if the fmall particles of the ~ blood were not llexible ; but T think that the fniall particles — of the blood arc equally tlexible with thofe globules \Nhich are of full fize. I alfo found the corticlc of the Brain in the Sheep to confift of a clear vitreous fubftancc, tlie fame as I have deferibed in the Brain of a Turkey ; with this only difference, that I faw in this fome thin white fireaks, which could not ealily be difcovered by the naked eye, fome thinner than a hair of one's head : thefe ftreaks I judged to be caufed by a greater collciflion than ufual, of thofe large tranfjiarent globules \s hich caufe the medullary parts to appear \Ahite. I abb obferved in the medullary parts fome dark ftreaks of the colour of the corticle, which dark llreaks, I judged proceeded only from this, that there were few or none of thofe pellucid glo- bules in that part. After this, I examined the white or medullary parts of the Brain, and principally thofe which are the beginning of the fpinal marrow ; and here I think I faw, fometimes very clearly, what 1 had not been able to diftinguifli in the Brains of Turkeys, namely, that thofe large and tranflucid (as they appeared to the fight) oily globules, were in a manner furrounded, or lay in the midft of, an inexpreffible nvmiber of wonderfully minute veflels or ftreaks in the form of net- work, mixed with fome larger ones, which were in a ftraight direction and A'cry tranfpai-ent, caufing the Brain where they were collefted in any quantity, to appear uncommonly white to the eye : thefe, by feveral obfervations, appeared to me to be about the twenty-fifth part the thicknefs of an hair, and to be of a dark colour. The remainder of the medullary fubftancc confifted of the fame kind of parts, as I have faid I obferved in the Brains of Turkeys. And yet I fometimes had my doubts, whether all I deemed to be veflels were fo in reality. ( 103 ) After this, I took the Brain of an Ox immediately after the head was cut off, and forthwith proceeded to examine the corticle of the Brain with all the care and attention I was able. In feveral exa- minations of which, I thought I v^as allured that the vitreous and very pellucid fubflance (which conftitutes the greateil; part of the corticle), coniifted of nothing elfe than of exceffively flender ftreaks or veffels clofely joined together; though at another time, I could not fatisfy myfelf fo fully in that refpe(ft as I wiflied to have done. With regard to the component parts of the corticle, I could not dif- cern any difference from what I have before related of the other fubjedls I examined, except that I did not here perceive lb much fluid matter, as where the animals had been killed fome time. The white, or medullary fubftance of the brain, I found to be of the fame nature as I have defcribed in a Sheep. For, when I ob- ferved the very white lines or ffreaks in the medullary part (from whence the fpinal marrow takes its origin), I found the reafon of its great whitenefs, to be a number of very tranfparent veffels ad- joing to each other, which feemed to me,, formed for conveying from the fubftance to noiu'iili and fupport the Ijjinal marrow, and in part the nerves : the largell of thefe veffels dellined for conveying fuch nourilhment, feemed to me, as nearly as I could judge by mv eye, to be about the hundredth part of the thicknefs of a hair of my beard, though at another time, I faw them much larger ; but in this inllance, I think I happened on that part of the Brain where thole tranfparent v-ellels v/ere the fmallell of all. In all thefe my obfervations, it mull be underllood, that I take no notice of the multitudes of blood veffels difperfed throughout the ]>rain, which, upon diffecling it, may be feen with the naked eye. For tilefe are, as it were, entire rivers, when compared with the fmall vellels I difcovered, and have been now defcribiiig, whicii may be deemed as the fmallell brooks, channels, and ditches. I alio examined the corticle of the Brain in Sparrows, immedi- ately after having killed them. In thefe, I not only obferved with. ( 104 ) equal diilindlnefs, the fmall veflels of every dcfcription, as I had feen them in the Brain of a Turkey ; but alfo as clearly and dif- tindly as I had done in the Brain of an Ox and a Sheep, and in all other refpects, there was no difference to be noted than between the magnitude of a Sparrow's Brain and that of an Ox ; fo that as before obferved, there is no difference between them (except in the large blood veflHs), fave that the fizc in the larger animal is owing to its being compofed of a greater number of parts. And when, with my utmoll attention, I examined the vitreous fubllance (othcrwife called the corticle) of the Brain, it feems to me wholly to confill of no other parts, than an incomprehenlible mul- titude of the minuted veffels, which adjoin fo clofely to each other, that by their tranfparency they reprefent a glafly fubftance, when viewed by the microfcope, and which appeared more plainly to me in the fmall Brain of the Sparrow, than in the large one of the Ox. Now, though I am certain of the truth of my opinion, nor have any fcruple or doubt refpecling the exigence of the minute veflels I have been defcribing, I had rather it were doubted of by others, if perhaps my fight has deceived me, but which I fee no reafon to believe. For we fhall ceafe to doubt or wonder at the minutenefe of thefe vcllels, if we recoiled; and duly confider the minutenefs of thofe which the fmalleft animalcules we view mull be furnifhed with ; or what will feem lefs wonderful, if we confider what I am going to relate, refpeding the fmallelt veflels in our own bodies. For being lately bufied in diflcding a human eye; in the black mem- brane which covers the cavity of the eye, and by which the rays of light are reflected, I faw ftreaks or veflels the fmallell that I had ever difcovered ; and being defirous to judge of their flender- nefs, I took a large grain of fand, the axis of which was almoft the thirtieth part of an inch : viewing this grain of fand by the microfcope, I judged that its axis might be divided at leaft into 330 equal parts ; and finding that eight of thofe fmall vcfleU', placed r C 105 ) fide by fide, would not equal -1-th part of the axis ^2^640 °^ ^^^ S'^^^'^ °^ ^^"*^' ^^ follows that the axis of fuch a grain is 2,040 times larger than the breadth 105,600 of one of thofe fmall veffels. This number 2,04o ,584,0 ' 5,280 ' ' being multiplied into itfelf, to find the folid con- tents of a body whofe axis is 2,640, the refult is ' ' more than eighteen thoufand millions : fo that 2,640 1 • /~ a large gram of fand, as before-mentioned, must 278,784,000 ][jg divided into fo many millions of parts before 4,181,760,0 r ^u /- .. i- ■ . \i 13 939 "00 ^^y °^^ tnele parts can pats into the cavity of thofe minute veflels. And the minute vellels, ' ' ' which in part conftitute the vitreous fubftance of the Brain, I take to be fo fmall, tliat no particle or grain of large fand could pafs through them, unlets it were firft divided into many millions of parts. > "-^l With regard to the Brain of a Sparrow, I found, by many ob- fervations, that thofe parts which are called the medullary fubllance do, for the moft part, confift of wonderfully minute fibres or vef- fels : and in this part I met with as many fmall blood-velfels as I have before mentioned to have feen in the corticle. The remainder of the white fubllance in the Sparrow's Brain did not differ from that in the Ox, Sheep, and Turkey, as I have before mentioned, except that the tranfparent oily globules, which were enclofed by fome of the veflels, were not fo large in the Ox. But in the Brain of a Sparrow which had been killed twenty-four hours, I found thofe oily globules, as far as my eye" could judge, to be of the fame fize as in the brain of an Ox or other animal. From thefe laft ob- fervations, and from my former ones, I began to confider whether that great number of lucid globules (which may be confidered to be of an oily fubllance) were not a fluid in the veflels, or perhaps the veflTels themfelves, which, while the animal was living, con* tinually conveyed a fubllance for the nutriment of the fpinal mar-i- voi.. n. , o ( 106 ) row and the ncrvt^s ; and tliat, iipon the animal's death, and the motion of the fluids in tlie vcflels ccafing, and the parts growing cold, they collected or coagulated into irregular globules of different fizes, in like manner as we fee that two or three globules of blood, lying fo near as to touch each otlier, do, upon the approach of cold, concrete togetlier and form an irregular figure. And as often as I revolve in my mind the fituation and figure of the medullary fub- ftance of the Brain, it feems to be defigned by Nature to convey the blood, which in thefe innumerable fmallefl vellels, palling through the vitreous part of the Brain (called the corticle), is prepared and elaborated, to the fpinal marrow : fo that moft of the minute arte- ries which are found in the Brain, feem made only to convey the blood to the Brain, without its being returned from thence into the veins ; and for this intent only, namely, that the Brain may be continually fupplicd with a frefli addition of blood, and may provide a conllant frelli fupply of fubflance, for the fupport and iiourifliment of the fpinal marrow and the nerves. And as to the objeclion which fome may make, that if the blood did really pals tlirough the Brain, it would tinge the medullary fubflance of a Ted colour ; fiich objedlion will be found of no force, if we con- fider that a * globule of blood, fingly taken, exhibits very little of a red appearance ; and, therefore, when divided into its moll minute component particles, it may appear wholly colourlefs. Addition, by the Thanslator. The Tranflator begs leave to fubjoin a (ew -words to this Bflay, for the information of fuch of his readers as are not converfant In the doftrine of folids ; and the rather, as what the author dates refpefting the minutenefs of the vefTels in the retina of the human eye may appear, at firft fight, utterly incredible. But it muft be remembered, that it is the folid contents of two fpheres or globes of the fizes mentioned by the author^ and not ^leir refpe£live diameters, that are the u^eafure of his computation. * See this explained in Vol. I. page 94. ( 107 ) Tci illuftrate this, we muft underftand, that if a grain of fand were divided into parts (fuppofing all to be of a fpherical fliape) each of wiiich was 'aT4?sth part of the diameter of that grain, each of fucli parts would be capable of entering the cavities of the fmall veffels he is treating of: though, at the fame time, the rules of arithmetic teach us, that the folid contents of that grain would be to the folid contents of one of thofe component parts, as 18,392,744,000 to 1. Again, he tell us, that a globule of blood (of which a million are no more than equal to a grain of fand) muft be divided into 64 parts before it could be received into fome of the blood-vef- fels of the Brain ; and that a grain of fand would be equal to 64 millions of fuch parts. But by the fame rule we fhall find, that the diameter of each fuch part is no more than ^^o^h part of the diameter of a grain of fand. After all, it muft be confefted, that thefe reduced fubdivifions are not to be comprehended in idea, though not fo inconceivably minute as the other proportions feem to intimate. — See a note on this fubjeft, taken from the Spectator, in the IntroduQion to the Firft Volume. O 2 .7 it) On the Seeds found in the Fig and on Strawhcrries, with the Author s remarks on the great fecundity of Nature in the pro- pagatio7i of plants and animals. J HAVE, at times, beftowed much labour in fearching after the young plant in the feed of the Fig, but always without fuccefs ; the reafon of which I took to be, that when Figs are packed up at the places of their growth, in order to be exported, they are gathered before they are ripe. At Icngtli, however, while I was in fearch after fo- reign mites (that little pernicious infccl which finds its way into all kinds of dried provilions, fuch as clicefe, dried fifti and bacon, and alfo dried fruits, as Figs and Railins) I found a Fig with fcA'eral hun- dreds of thefe animals in it, but otherwife of good tafle and full grown, feeming to me as if it had been ripe when gathered. I was, therefore, induced to difleft fome of the fmall feeds it contained; and, breaking open the hard outfide Ihells of feveral of them, I took out the entire kernels they contained, then ftripping this kernel of the membrane furrounding it, and clearing away fome moillure which covered the plant, I faw a complete young plant, conlifting of two leaves, and of the part from which a young tree would in due time Jiave proceeded. I have cauled a drawing to be made, from the microfcope, of the }oung plant in one of thefe feeds (of which feeds we know that every Fig contains great numbers), becaufe I have often heard it faid, that eating Figs in great quantities, will breed lice in the ftomach; and that fome perfons (and among them a man of fome eminence) have not fcrupled to alfcrt the fame in writing ; which idle taleis certainly do no other than excite derifion, for 1 am well allured that this notion took its rife from no other caufe than the nniltitude of fmall grains or feeds with which all Figs abound, but ,M hicli not one man in a thoufand knows to be feeds, and Itill Jcii-, ( im ) tfeat in every one of thofe feeds there is as much perfedlon as in an entire Fig-tree ; and, therefore, it is very probable, tliat people comparing thefe feeds or grains in Figs, by reafon of their fmall- nefs, with lice, firfl broached the idea that lice can be bred from Figs. • Plate XIV, fig. 23, ABC, reprefents the kernel or internal part, taken out of the hard fliell of one of thofe feeds, which we obferve in great numbers in every Fig. A B is that part of the kernel to which the firing or ligament by which the feed received its nouriih- ment was fixed. That part from which the root and trunk of the tree would proceed, is fituated from A towards C ; but the leaves of the young plant lie from C towards B. Every one of thefe grains or feeds in a Fig is diftincl from the reft, being as it were furrounded with its own proper membrane ; fo that we may be certain that every feed, while in the Fig, is provided with two fti'ings or ligaments, deftined for its nourifliment, namely, one that nou- rilhes the hard fhell, and the other that brings nourilliment to the kernel within the Ihell. At ^^. 24, DEFG, is feen the young plant taken out of the ieed of the Fig; and in this figure, EFG, denote the two leaves ; and G D E, that part which would grow to the root and ftem or trunk. But it muft be obferved, that tliis young plant does not conftitute the whole kernel of this .feed, but that the young plant (befides the membrane which furrounds it) is partly enveloped with a certain kind of fubliancc, from which it receives fupport and growth, until the root is grown long enough to extract nou- rilliment from the earth. All the fpace in the figure, between FDG, was filled with this fubllance. Now, if we attentively confidcr and obferve the membrane which furrounds this kernel, we Ihall not only fee a great number of cx- celiively minute veflels, but an incredible quantity of dots or cavi- ties in it, fo that, in a word, if it were poffible to dive into all the bidden parts of this feed, nothing \\ ould be feen but wonders and ( no ) perfections, for no doubt this minute plant pofleflos as many per- ♦edtions as an entire tree. When I had fteeped fome of thefe feeds in water for a few hours, and then opened them, I could diftinguilh, as well in that part which would produce a root as in the young leaves, a great number of vef- fels with their divifions or cells, but as foon as the liquor evaporated, all thofe vellels difappeared. Fig. 25, HIK exhibits the fame plant as is fliewn in fg. 24,. with this ditference only, that whereas the former was drawn in a pofition to Ihew only the fides of the leaves, in this figure the plant was so placed before the microfcope as to Ihew the breadth of the leaves. I am at times called upon to defend the fyllem I have advanced refper trated by it. ( 101 ) But when, from the preceding obfervations, we refledl on the time that Gunpowder, when fired, requires to drive the ball out of a Gun, and how much of the charge of powder is confumed in that time ; which confumed Gunpowder is injurious to the effetk of the iiriiig, and alfo when we conlider how much of the charge may be driven out of the Gun before it takes fire, the conclufion is, that it is worthy of confideration to devife ways and means whereby the whole charge of Powder in a Gun may, if poffible, be let on fire all at once; and if this be accompliflicd, lb much powder will not be required for a charge as is now in ufe. I will now explain the manner in which I make the foregoing ex- periments on the exploilon of Gunpowder : I take a glafs tube of the fliape and fize reprefented in Plate XV. Jig. 2(5, L M, at one end of which I blow the glafs globe H 1 R M, then, after dropping into it a grain of Gunpowder, I give the glafs the fliape repre- fented at fig. 27, PO N Q, R, whereby the grain of powder fixes itfelf in the tube at the place marked N. I then take a fmall pipe, called by filverfmiths a blow-pipe, which they ufe to folder their work, and, firll putting on my fpedlacles to defend my fight, I bring the tube near my eye to fee the effedl of the firing; then direcling the flame of a candle or lamp, by means of the blowpipe, to the place where the grain of powder is lodged, it immediately takes fire, producing the inconceivable number of particles in violent agitation, refembling fmoke, as I have before defcribed ; befides the multitudes of particles adhering to the glafs, and indeed, the number of particles into which a grain of Gunpow- der is divided, cannot be conceived, but by making the expe- riment. I then blow a glafs of the fliape reprefented at fig. 28, S T V W, taking care that it be fomewhat thicker at the part T, and filling it with water, I hold it in the oblique pofition reprefented in the figure. Vol. II. X ( 162 ) After this, I infcrt the point of the tube reprefented at fg. 27^ wherein the Gunpowder was fired into the aperture of the glafs, fig. 23, at W, fo that the bent part of the t\ibe R, may prefs the bottom of the glafs at T, and continue the preflure until the tube breaks about Q, whereupon the compreffed air in tlie cavity of the glafs, jig. 27, ruflies violently into the glafs, fg. 28 ; but as it can- not efcape through the aperture W, it places itfelf about V, by which means the fame fpace of water is expelled at W, as of air is forced from the glafs, fg. 27, into the glafs, fg. 28, and u]M)n weighing this lail mentioned glafs, when filled with water, and again when part of the water, as before mentioned, has been driven o\it of it, I can make an cxaifl computation of the quantity of com- prefied air driven out of the glafs, fg. 27. Again, I take another glafs of the Ihape reprefented ntfg. 27,. withthis difference only, that the tube at Q. is flraight, and the aperture left unclofed, and then infert this into the glals, fg. '28, fo as not quite to touch the bottom ; then, upon liring tlie grain of Gunpowder, the condenfed air rufhes with great force into the glafs 28 ; after which firing, and the heat of the flame elcaping out of the glafs 27, inflantly, as I may fay, the water makes its -way through the orifice Q, into the glafs 27, in greater quantity than one could imagine. In thefe experiments, by the firing of the Gunpowder and the rufliing in of the water, the glaties are often broken ; therefore, in making thefe obfervations, it will be neceflary to repeat the experi- ments many times. -*- Of the louse. 1 HIS animal, which is fo troublefome to many, efpecially the poor, who have not the means of frequently changing their linen and other apparel, is by fome writers fuppofed to be produced from dirt, fweat, or excrements : but to convince fuch perfons of their miftake herein, I will give the defcription of feveral parts of this creature, as examined by me, the perfeft and wonderful for- mation of which, will clearly prove that thefe animals cannot be produced othervvife than by the ordinary courfe of generation. Plate XVI. fig. 1 , A B C D E F G, is the head of the Loufe, in which may not only be {eei\ two very black eyes, but alfo two pcrfedtly made horns with joints, befprinkled with hairs in many places, as fhewn at C D and G F. The letters HIKE indicate only the outline of a part of the Loufe's bodj-. When I was preparing this object for the limner, I cut off the head and brealt from the lower part of the body, and placed this fmall part only before the microfcope ; for when I placed the ani- mal befoi'e it entire, it was in fuch continual motion, bending its body backwards and forwards, that it was impoflible to obtain a diftinft view of it, fo as to make a drawing ; and this piece of the body remaining fixed before the microfcope, the horns and feet con- tinued in motion for an hour. In the contemplation of feveral lice v/hen placed before the mi- crofcope (and I had plenty of them brought to me for my money), I received great pleafure in contemplating the motion of the inter- nal parts in the head and feet, and even in the oefophagus or gul- let, which in this creature lies partly in the head, and through which the blood it liicks may be ken running very fwiftly : this X2 ( 1<54 ) motion in the gullet was feen in a clear liquor pafling upwards and downwards alternately. J At E is a protuberance fomewhat like a nipple, which, when the Loufe is preparing to take its food, itprojeds further, and from the extremity of it thrufts out its * piercer, in order to fuck the blood. This piercer, or rather the piercer with its flieath (for there are two of them, one inclofed in the other), I have often taken out of the Loufe's head, but it was not till after repeated trials, by reafon of their exceflive flendernefs, that I could place them before the microfcope, lb as to give a drawing of them both. Fig. 2, L O P, is part of the Loufe's head ; at O is fliewn the protuberance, which I have likened to a nipple, as it appears when the piercers are protruded out of it : O jNI is the larger piercer, or, more properly fpeaking, the flieath which contains the piercer MN, both of which are drawn into the head when not in ufe. At N, the extremity of this piercer appears a little fpht or divided. Fig. 3, K L, is this llieath taken out of the head, and L M is the exceflively flender piercer it contains, protruding beyond the extre- mity of the flieath. When the Loufe is about to feek its food from the human body, it extends the nipple or fnout I have defcribed, from its head, and from it protrudes the fheath of the piercer ; and lallly, the piercer itfelf, which being introduced betv%'een thofe fmall fcales with which the furface of the Ikin is covered, it pierces the blood-vel- fels lying underneath and then fucks the blood, which is its nou- rifliment ; and in doing this, it places itfelf upon its head, the more readily to introduce the piercer into the body. The blood which the animal fucks, may be feen pafling with a very fwift motion into its body, and it is a curious fpeelacle to behold the rapid motion with * The Dtifch word is Angela wliich the Latin verfion renders ylculeuf, both words lignif)ing a fting: but the Tranflaior has adopted the word piercer, as more applicable to the <\tc which this part of the animal is defined for : bcfides, we fliall lee prefcnfly, that the ftif!;; •f the Loufe, properly fo calledj is placed iu a difl'trcut p.irt ol its body. ( 165 ) which the human blood, when received into the Loufe, is incef- fantly driven to and fro both in the ftomach and inteftlnes, to pre- vent its coagulating", which would be fatal to the animal. In my experiments and obfervations on this creature, although I had, at feveral times, had a number of them on my hand drawing the blood, yet I very rarely felt any pain from their punctures, which is not to be wondered at when we conlider the exceffive llendernefs of the piercer I have been defcribing ; for, upon comr paring this with a hair taken from the back of my hand, I judged, from the moft accurate computation I could form by the microf- cope, that the hair was feven hundred times the lize of this incre- dibly flender piercer, which, confequently, by its punctures, mull ex- cite little or no pain, unlefs it happens to touch a nerve. Hence I have been induced to think, that the pain or uneafinefs thofe per- fons fuffer who are infelied by thefe creatures, is not fo much pro- duced from the piercer, as from a real fling which the male Loufe cai'ries in the hind part of its body. Fig. 4, BCD, reprefents part of this rting, fo far as it is pro- truded out of the animal's body, and thus far it is of a hard fub' Itance and a yellowifh colour like the claw s : in it may be feen a kind of groove or cavity, which palTes through the whole fting, and feems as if it were defigned to convey fonie liquor to the extremity when the animal makes ufe of it, though I never did adlually ob- ferve any fuch liquor. In this figure the fling is drawn with the cavity fronting the eye, in which pofition it appears quite llraight. Fig. 5, E F G, is the fame part of the lling viewed fideways, in which pofition it appears to be of a curved fhape, and thus far it was bare of any mufcular parts : the lower part G H I E, in its na- tural Hate, is covered with mufcular and flelhy parts, which, being cleared away, there only remains to be leen m the figure, the hard or horny part of the lling, which gives it llrength and firmnefs. This lling is tlie Loufe' s weapon of offence, and which it ufes when preffed by the clothes or otherwife dillurbed ; for I have ob- ( 160 ) len-ed that, when roughly handled, they protrude their lling as prepaiiri^ tO liriKC ; bui as to the reafon why the males alone are provided with it, and not the females, I have formed fome conjec- tures, but not fo as to fatisfy myfelf in that refped. The feet and cla«'S of this animal difplay the pcrfedl contrivance manifell: in the formation of fo fmall a creature. Fig. 6. A B C D E F, is one of the fix feet of the Loufe ; BCD, is the largcfl: claw, one of Mhich the Loufe has on every foot, and, when the animal is on that part of the body where there are no hairs, it lays hold of the ikin with this claw, in order the more forcibly to introduce the piercer which it carries in its head into the body, in order to fuck the blood ; but when moving from place to place, or not employed in fucking the blood, it does not cling to the body, but to the Ihirt or other garment (on which alfo it lays its eggs), becaufe it can eafily fix its claws into the filaments of the linen or woollen. To lay hold of a hair it grafps it with this claw and the prominent part of the foot, which is Ihewn at D, and which is alfo provided with a very fmall nail or claw, and more particularly the part E which I call the Loufe's thumb, and which is alfo furniihed with a fmall nail. For in like manner as we, in holding any thing in our hands, ufe the thumb, fo does the Loufe in grafping a hair make ufe of what I call its thumb. A F G, is that part of the Loufe's leg which joins the body. I could have given a drawing of the Loufe's claw magnified to a greater fize than the whole foot is here reprefcnted, but I do not make ufe of fuch very deep magnifiers, unlefs neceffity requires it ; for I think that an object is fufficiently magnified when we can fee all the parts of it difiindly. Upon exhibiting this creature before the microfcope to a certain great perfonage, he obfervcd to me, that his foldiers, who were in- felled with lice, found them more troublefome in rainy than in dry weather: for which I gave this reafon, that the clothes, when wet- ted, Ihrink and comprefs the body fo clofely, as to impede the ( ^67 ) Lovife in its motions, and caufe it to ufe the lling which it carries in its tail, whereas, in dry weather, the clothes hanging ioofe on the body, tlie Louie has room to infert its piercer and luck its food, which it cannot do without bending its body and railing its hind pai'ts. The Louie is fo prohfic an animal, that it is a common vulgar faying, that it will be a grandfather in the fpace of twenty-four hours. This I could never believe to be the fad;, but rather that it would require nearly a month for the offspring of a Louie to be ca- pable of producing young of its kind ; and, in order to make proof of it by experiment, I at fn-ft propofed to hire fome poor child to wear a clean Hocking for a week, with two or three female lice ia it, and well tied or fecured at the garter, in order to fee how many young ones would be produced in that ipace of time ; but 1 after- wards confidered, that I could make the experiment with much more certainty in my own peribn, at the expence only of enduring, in one leg, w^hat moll poor people are obliged to fufFer in their whole bodies during all their lives. Hereupon I put on one leg, inllead of the white ujidcr ftocking I nl\;ally wear, a fine black ftocking, chufmg that colour, becaufe I confidered that the eggs and the young lice thence proceeding, would be more ealily dirtinguifhed upon it. Into this ftocking I put two large female lice, and cutting another black ftocking into long Hips, I bound it over the firft above the knee, to prevent their efcaping. After wearing this ftocking fix days, I took it off, ar.d found one of the Lice in the fame place w^here I had put it, and that it had laid fifty eggs, and in another part of the ftocking the other had laid about forty eggs, but the parent I could not find. I opened the other which had laid the fifty eggs, and found in its body at leaft fifty more, and who knows how many eggs it had laid before I put it into the ftocking, and how many more eggs it might then have in its body which my fight could not reach ? Having worn the ftocking ten, days longer,' I found in it at leaft ( 1C8 ) twenty-five lice of three different fizes, fome of which I judged were two days old, others a day old, and the rcll newly come out of the egg, belides others- ready to come forth, as I found ujion opening one of the remaining eggs. l]ut I was fo difgulled at the fight of fo many lice, that I threw the liocking containing them into the ftreet ; after which I rubbed my leg and foot very hard, in order to kill any Loufe that might be on it, and repeating the rubbing four hours afterwards, 1 put on a clean white under flocking. I have caufed a drawing to be made of the Loufe's eggs, (com- monly called nits), as viewed by the microfcope, to fliew from what part the young Loufe ilfues forth. Fig. 7, IS () P, is the egg, Q R, is a hair of the wool to which the egg is fixed, by means of fome gummy fubflance, which the Loufe emits from its body together with the egg. At N, is fhewn how part of the egg is shaped, foraewhat like a lid or cover, which in all probability is made very tender or brittle, that the young Loufe, when. grown to its full fizc within the egg, may be able to break it open and ililie forth ; whereas other young animals, who are provided with teeth or pin- cers, can gnaw or bore holes in the fliell. Fig. 8, S T V, is ano- ther egg, A\ herein, at T, may be feen that the flieli of thefe very fmall eggs is provided v/ith a fkin or membrane, the fame as a hen's or other bird's egg ; and under the lid or cover of this egg, which the young Loufe breaks open, there is another thin mem- brane, which is alfb broken by the young Loufe, and is to be feen atT. Now fince we fee, by experiment, that a Loufe in the fpace of fix days can lay fifty eggs, and have as many more remaining in its body, we may eafily conceive, that a poor perfon who has an hun- dred female Lice about his body, and has not any change of clothes or linen, and who, moreover, through floth is carelefs of deflroying thofe he has about him, may in a few months (if I may ufe the expreffion) be devoured by thefe vermin. ( m ) To give a clearer conception of the great increafe of thefe animals, let us fuppofe a perfon to have about his body two male Lice, and as many females, and that the females in twelve days time lay two hundred eggs, and that, fix days afterwards, out of thofe eggs are produced an hundred males and as many females, and that this young brood in eighteen days time are grown to a fize to propa- gate their kind, and that each of thofe young females in the fpace of twelve days more lays an hundred eggs, from which, in fix days time, other young lice are produced; upon this fuppofition, the number of lice fpringing from two females, will amount to ten thoufand. Thus it appears that two females may, in eight weeks time, be grandmothers, and fee ten thoufand lice of their own off- fpring, which, unlefs reduced to actual demonllration, would feem incredible ; and who can tell, whether in the heat of fummer thefe creatures may not breed in half the time I have mentioned ? I will here put an end to this loufy difcourfe, which has gone to * three times the length I intended ; but my defign in it was, to fa- tisfy myfelf, and to convince others, that fome days are required for the egg laid by a Loufe to produce a young one, befides the time required for eggs to be again laid by fuch young one, and alfo to afcertain in what numbers thefe creatures do multiply. ♦ In the original, the author is much more prolix aud circumflantial than here fet down ; but theTraiiQator has thought it fufficicnt, on fuch a fubjed, to give the fubflaacc and gc Reral rcfult of bis obfcrvatioas. Vol. II. Of the mite. 1 HE Mite is the fmalleft animal that I have ever obferved about our houfos, but in every kind of dried provifion, fuch as ham, bacon, and dried fifli, they are almoft always to be found. In reflecting upon this animal, I was defirous to know the na- ture of their propagation, and how long time their eggs would take from their being firll laid to their being hatched, and alfo in what Ipace of time a young Mite will come to its full growth. In catching thefe creatures, I found they were endued with a very quick fight, for after I had once touched them with the inftru- ment with which I caught them, they afterwards avoided it in a manner which furprifed me. I had often feen the eggs of Mites in cheefe and other fubftances, and I now proceeded, by the help of a magnifier, to open fome of the largefl: mites, which I judged to be females, and viewing them by a microfcope of ftill deeper magnifying power, I faw at three feveral times, not only the eggs, but alfo through the fhells of them I perceived their infide to be compofed of greater and fmaller globules, exadly fimilar to thofe in the yolks of hen's and other birds' eggs, only with this diiFerence, that the globules in the yolk of a hen's egg are each of them larger than the entire egg of a Mite. I took a glafs tube, into which I put a piece of bifcuit and five or fix Mites, and then, by the help of fire, I clofed the orifice of the tube, fo that no egg laid by the Mites could drop out ; the firfl day of their confinement I found one egg, the next four, and the third fix eggs, and one of the Mites dead : the fourth day I counted as many as twenty eggs, and afterwards fiill more, but ( 171 ) the number I did not particularly reckon ; and as it was in the middle of 0 he declared he could not reprefent them in the drawing. Now if we confider, what I have always experienced, that a glafs, though wafhed ever fo clean, will have many particles ad- hering to it, tliough thele are fo fmall, that the claws on the feet of fmall tlying infects cannot take hold of them, we may eafily con- ceive that thefe minute hooks, may take hold of the fmall particles of water or motes from the air adhering to the glafs. And here we may difcover the error of thofe who formerly fuppofed there were cavities in glafs, wherein Flies could fix their claws and climb up. In the fpring feafon I obferved, on feveral parts of my apple trees, many caterpillars gathered together, which, in moving from place to place, fattened themfelves by a kind of thread, and I began to confider, whether thefe were produced by the black Flies, and it feems they are called by gardeners de IFolf. To fatisfy myfelf in this refpeel:, I cut off from the apple tree, two branches, on which were thefe caterpillars, placing the ends cut off in a veflel of ^^•a- ter in my hall, in order that the leaves might remain freih, and xafibrd nouriftiment to the caterpillars : w*hen the leaves began to Aa 2 ( 188 ) wither, I placed frefh branches near the others, to which the ca-^ terpillars remoA^ed themfelves. When thefe caterpillars came to their full growth, they prepared to enclofe themfelves in a web fimilar to the filk worm, with this difference, that at one extremity of their web or cafe, there was a fmall aperture. A rcprefentation of this web is given at fn;. 20. Thefe animals, thus inclofed in their web, I put into a glafs tube, together with feveral others of the fame kind which I had found on the apple trees, placing the whole in a large glafs. After fome time, I faw come out of the greatell part of thefe webs certain white flying infeds, having their wings diverfified with black fpots ; they were fome\vhat fmiilar to thofc flying animals found in granaries, and proceeding from the Maggot, which mealmen, and bakers likewife, call dc If^olf, and of which 1 have treated fully in another place. I was deflrous of keeping thefe creatures alive till 1 fliould fee whether they would lay eggs, but they all died. I have eaufed a drawing to be made of this flying animal, as it appeared to the naked eye, when come out of its web, and this is to be feen at Jig. 2 1 . To have made a drawing of it from the mi- crofcope, would have been too troublefome, by reafon of the mul- titude of feathers with which, not only the wings, but the feet, the horns, and the whole body were covered, and alfo by reafon of a crooked organ on the fore part of its head ; the true form and make of which I was not able to obferve with fufficient accuracy. Among thefe flying animals, I faw in the glafs two blackifl^ Flies, which I conceived muft have been produced in this manner, namely, that fome black Fly of the fame fpecies having laid its egg upon oneof thofe caterpillars, the Maggot thence produced had fed upon the caterpillar till it had acquired its full growth, and there- upon was changed into a black Fly, inftead of the web producing a white flying animal with black fpots. In one of the glafles, wherein I had inclofed the webs I have raentionedj there iflucd from thofe webs not only the flying animtvlsr ( 18Q ) • ♦ ■ . . . I have jnft defcrlbed, but alfo a great number of Flies, fo very mi-" nute, that I fhould not have imagined they could exift in the open air, for that the heat mufl caufe all the moill:ure in their bodies to evaporate. The fight of thefc Flies caufed me to open all the webs which had been left in the glafs, and in one of them I found a great number of minute Ikins or cafes, from which thofe Flies had pro- ceded by tranfmutation from aurelias. From whence I concluded, that a minute Fly of this fpecies, muft have laid many eggs in the aperture of one of thefe v/cbs, and the Maggots hatched from thence, muft have fed upon the caterpillars in the web, until they came to their full growth, and then within the web be changed into thofe mmute Flies ; otherwife, in my opinion, that fpecies of Fly would become extinct. For we mull lay it down as a truth, that many flying animals live on nothing but other living creatures, and for want of which food many of them die, efpecially the fmall ones, among which may properly be reckoned Flies : for if many Flies could not find particles of fleili whereon to lay their eggs, the mag- gots bred from thofe eggs mull perifii. This innate difpofition and forefight in fmall animals leading then? to lay their eggs in thofe places where the young maggots may find food and nourifhment, will appear ftrange to many. But if we confider the nature of larger fiying animals which are familiar to us, and that we never fee geefe, ducks^ or fwans, make their nefis in trees, or in fields far difi:ant from the water, but always on the banks of ditches or rivers, becaufe they do not bring food to their young, who are by nature defi:ined to feek it for themfelves ; and therefore the parents, when the young are hatched, do no more than tend on them and proteft them from enemies ; whereas, on the contrary, we fee that birds who arc able to bring food to their young, build their ncfis on the tops of trees and other high places, and that the young remain in the nefis, and do not endeavour to follow their parents, however lumgry they may be, we ll;all ceafe ( 190 ) to wonder, that an infect lays its eggs near the body of anotner, while in an aureUa ftate, where the young maggots may find nou« riftiment. And lallly, if we fee in quadrupeds, that many wild beafts have no other food than the bodies of thofe hearts which they devour, that there are many birds who feed only upon birdsj and that the fame almort univerfally obtains in fifties, it will not appear ftrange to us, that among minute flying animals, fome feed on others. I caufcd a drawing to be made of this very minute Ipecies of Fly, the fize it appears to the naked eye, w hich is fliewn ^tjig. 22, with a circle round it to make it more apparent ; for I murt confefs, that when viewing it through the common fpedlacles with which I write, I could not difcover it to be a Fly. At fig. 23, A B C D, 1 have given a reprefentation of one of the wings of this Fly, as feen through the microfcope, in order to fbew the wonderful forma- tion of fo minute an animal. Thefe wings, which are four in number, are covered both on the edges and on their furface, with a great number of hairs, terminating in points, Uke thofe on our hands. One of thefe minute Flies I placed before a microfcope of much lefs magnifying power than that from which the wing was drawn ; by this we fee it to have two pretty horns on its head, each com- pofed of many joints, and every joint covered with hairs. And in contemplating the horns, I took notice of the eyes, wherein I plainly perceived many optical organs of which each eye con- filled, as we obferve in larger Flies. All thefe objed:5 are rcpre- fentedat/^. 24, EFGHI. In contemplating fuch minute animals as this, and confidering that no part of them is made in vain, but that every one has its ufe, we fee rtiU further reafon to admire the perfedion of fo minute a creature. And when we fee the ftupcndous wifdoni of Nature't* operations in the greatell, and in the lead of her productions, we may well crj^ out again arid again, *' Away with the blind croakings ( igi ) '' of thofe followers of Ariftotle, who by their writings endeavour ■' to darken the truth, and to perfuade us that flying infects or any " other aniiTjalcuIes can be produced from corruption !" There is another fpccies of minute t'ly, which I believe lays its eggs in ditches, from which maggots are hatched, and thpfe niagr gets again become flies of the fame kind. I have not thought it worth while to purfue a minute inveftigation, as to its being fo pro- pagated, becaufe the fadl is, I think, already fufficiently efta- blifhed ; but the feathers on its head, its eyes, horns, and wings, when vievyed by the micro fcope, are fo wonderful to behold, that I have caufed drawings to be made of fomc parts of it. Fig. 25, is the Fly of the fize it appears to the naked eye. Fig. 2(5, is one of the wings viewed by the micro fcope. Now, if we confider, not only the multitudes of hairs, as well round the edges of the wing, as in the other honey parts, xvhich give it ftrength ; and alfo the incredible number of very mi-r nute hairs with which the membrane of the wing is covered, and which the limner, as near as he could, imitated in the drawing ; and that all thefe cannot be compjired with the great number of hairs with which the Fly's body and its feet are covered ; and if we naoreqver confider, that each hair is not formed of a lingle velfel, jaut of many, we muft needs fay, that there is a greater caufe for admiration and refledlion, in the contemplation of fo fmall infig- nificant an animal, than in that of a horfe or an ox. And the deeper we endeavour to fearch iqto the fecrets of Nature, the lefs we are able to conceive the piinuteriefs of the particles of which bodies are compofed. And to give {o.n\e idea of which minutenefs, I have made thefe remarks on the wings of fmall flying animals. Fig. 27, reprefents one of the two horns on the head of this fmall Fly. And here we muft fee, that there is more wifdom, perfedlion, and curious workmanfliip, in the formation of this fmall Fly I have ( 102 ) teen dercribing, than of the large body of a horfe ; and we alfb' mnft conclude, which I lay down for certain, that not only this fpecies of Fly, but every living creature upon the earth, are by no means produced from any kind of corruption or putrefaction, but derive their origin from thofe creatures which were made at the Beginning, or a very fhort time after the parts, whereof our world confilts, were brought into exiftence. Finally, the more we re- fled on the confummate wifdom and Ikill of the Creator of the Univerfe, the lefs are we able to form adequate ideas of his Per- 4- K)f a vci-ij noxious Animalcule, ivliicJi in tliefpiing infejls tlit -young Jlioots of fruit trees* Xi. AVING frequently obferved the leaves at the ends of the young flioots of goofeberry trees, and alfo on cherry and peach trees, to be very much contrad:ed, and, as it were, rolled up, by which means the growth of thole trees was impeded ; and perceiving at the fame time, many ants on the leaves fo contra6ted, I at firll adopted the vul- gar opinion, that the ants alone were the caufe of that contradion in the leaves, and confequently, of the impediment to the growth of the brartcheSi In one year my cherry trees were fo much infel1:ed with this contradlion of the leaves, or rather by the Animalcules concealed in them, that, out of about thirty of thole trees, only two or three fmall ones were unhurt. I therefore determined to examine for what purpofe the ants teforted to thofe young leaves, and what was the caufe of the leaves being contracted ; in doing which, I faw that the contracted leaves, and efpecially thofe on the goofeberry trees, were covered with a great number of dark-coloured Animalcules, and that thofe which were mod full grown, and were about the fize of a half grown loufe, were of a darker or blacker colour than the fmaller ones. Thefe Animalcules were fome of them fo minute, as not to exceed the flze of a common grain of fand. Upon fight of thefe creatui'es, I concluded that the ants reforted to the contradled leaves for no other purpofe, than to devour thefe Animalcules on them ; and I was confirmed in my opinion, by feeing feveral, both of the fmaller and larger fort, to be almofl: wholly confumed ; fo that nothing except their ikins and feet remained. Vol. II. B b ( 104 ) I cut off a (hoot from a cherry tree, which I brought into my houfe, in order to examine thele Animalcules more narrowly, and the rather, becaufe moft of the verniin which infell ouf fruit trees are, in their refpedtive fpecies, nearly of the fame fize, and are generated from caterpillars, which become creeping or flying ani- mals ; and, in like manner all forts of flies, knowm to me, are generated. 1 again looked over many of the leaves, in order, if pofTible, tq difcover the eggs from which thcfe Animalcules wci-e produced, and the rather, becaufe I was certain, that their bodies were not compofed of annular parts or rings, as is the ca(e with flies, butter- flies, and the like, which are produced from caterpillars, or mag-, gots ; and from thofe rings or divilions in their bodies, they have the name of infecls, among which the flea is alio to be reckoned. But all my fearch was to no purpofe, at which I was much fur-, prifed, that among fo many minute animals, not an egg was to be found. This feemed to favour the opinion of thofe who will have it, that fmall living creatures are produced fpontancouflv, but fuch a notion appeared to me altogether impolfible, though, at the fame time, I was at a lofs how to inveftigate the generation of thcfe creatures. At length, I determined to open fome of the largefl of them, in hopes of finding eggs in their bodies ; but, inllcad of eggs, I 'bund, not without great admiration, young Animalcules in the bodies of the larger ones, and in Ihape fo like the parent, that one drop of \vater cannot be more like another, and I extracted not a fmgle young one, but four, completely formed, from the fame pa-, rent. Hereupon I judged, that it would be mofl: expedient to cut off all the twigs and leaves of the peaches, cherries, and goofe- berry trees which were infefled wdtli thcfe creatures, and thro\v them into the water to drown them, and try whether I fliould not aftervNards be lefs infclted with thcfe vermin. Thefe difcoveries led me to confider, whether thefe Animalcules towards the end of fummer, or when the leaves fall ofl^, might uot ( 1D5 ) ioflgc tliemfelves in the trunk or branches, of the trees, to flielteJr themlelves there during the winter ; and, in order to inveftigat^ that mattei*, having a goofeberry tree, which had been fo infefted with thele animals, that it had grown very little during the fum~ mer, and I had therefore determined to root it up, I fuffercd it to ftand till the 15th of the following January, when, after a long froll and rain following, I cut a branch from the tree about a fpan long> in a place whei-e it was the thicknefs of my finger, and, examining it by the microfcope, I faw among the cracks in the bark, and among the fmall dry leaves where the new bud was about to fpring> and which fall off when the bud grows larger, and alfo among fome fragments of mols adhering to the branch, feveral of thefe Animalcules, which all feemed full grown. They were not only dead, but the hind parts of their bodies were perforated with a round hole, and their entrails gone, whence I gathei-ed, that provi=- dent Nature had affigned thefe creatures their enemies, to prevent their fpecies increaflng too fail, and alfo for the fullenance of other animals. In this fearch, I happened upon an Animalcule eight times fmaller than the' former ones, which moved its liead, horns, and feet ; and it alfo appeared to me, that it had been produced by tranfmutation from a maggot or caterpillar, becaufe I could plainly difcover in it, thofe rings or annular parts we obferve in tnaggots. i alfo fliw adhering to this branch afubllance, which, upon more accurate infpe6lion, I took to be the web of fome fmall maggot, and on tliis were four eggs, the Ihape of birds' eggs, but no larger than fmall grains of fand, and which I thought might, perhaps, be the eggs of the before mentioned living Animalcule. But what to me appeared moll wonderful was, that I difco- vered two Animalcules, in fliape like thofe called by children lady-birds, but fo minute, that a hair taken from my hand, was more than four times their thicknefs, and, upon comparing them with a grain of fcowering fand, it was, in my judgment, three Bb3 ( IQQ ) hundred and fifty times as large as cither of them : one of thefe Animalcules was alive and moved its feet, and I was certain it vvus of full fixe, bccaufe it appeared to have been produced from a maggot : and 1 the more wondered at the figiit of fo minute an animal, becaufe I could not have imagined fo fmall a creature could live in tlie open air ; for, if v»e fuppofe the one hah ot this animal's body to confiil of a thin or watery fublhmce, one would conclude, fo fmall a quantity would be foon evaporated ; but yet, when we find that fo Imall an Animalcule remains a long time alive, we mull conclude, that Nature, our kind and provident mo- ther, has formed the Ikin of this animal lb hard and fuhd, that litrs tie or no moiliure can be evaporated from it, Thefe were my obfervations during one fummer and the winter which I'ollowed. On the 17 th of May in the following year, I did not find, among all my goofeberry trees, above three or four branches the leaves of which were contradled. Upon opening thofe leaves, 1 found eight or ten of the before mentioned Animalcules,, and among them one of a dark colour, inclining to black, and larger than the relL This, on account of its fize, I judged to be a fe-. male ; and upon opening it. 1 took out of the body twenty-one young ones, of which one feemed to be completely formed, and of a lighter green colour than the parent; the others were of fuch diflcrcnt fizes and colours, that in the fmallefl, I could neither dif- tinguifh the eyes, nor the green colour. I opened feveral other of thele Animalcules, which I deemed to be females, and took out of their bodies many young ones ; in fome more than thirty, and in none lefs than twenty, of different fizes, and fome fo fmall that I could neither difi;inguith their limbs nor eyes. On the 20th of INIay I cut off three branches of this year's growth from a goofeberry tree, on which branches I was certain there was no animalcule of this fpecies ; thele I put into a vellel of water, and on the tops of two of them I put t^^'o and on the third branch tlu'ec ( 197 ) of thofe Animalcules, which I deemed by their fize to be females, ia order to lee how loon, and to w^hat degree, they would bring forth joung : and, in twenty-four hours, two of thefe produced nine young ones and a third lix ; they continued to increafe, but there being a vefl'el, with flowers in it, brought out of the garden, which liood near that M'here the branches were, fome ants, which were among the flowers, crept into the branches and killed fome of the Animalcules, for I could plainly fee that their bodies had been, in great part, devoured by the ants. Hereupon I killed all thofe ants, and placed the veflel containing the branches in a dilh full of water, to defend the accefs to it from ants. In thefe and others of my obfervations it appeared to me that our common ants, which I had always deemed Aery pernicious infects, on account of the damage they do in our gardens, by devouring the fruit when ripe, do. on the contrary, in the fpring, when there is no fruit, live upon other fmall creatures ; lb that I am doubtful whe^ ther the damage they do is greater than the utihty they are of in the fpring. Hereto I mull add, tliat I have been at fome times very much in* felled with ants, fo that I caufed them and their eggs to be dug up and thrown into the water : but afterwards my method was, where an ants' nell was found, to ciuse its opening to be llrongly preifed cjovvn with the foot, to deftroy the ants in their nell ; and, if ants were found among the trees, to llamp the earth dole round the trees, in order to keep the ants within the ground, and prevent their bring- ing food to their young, whei-eby both would be dellroyed, and by this means I almoll wholly freed myfelf from them, On the 30th of IVIay I again examined the branches I had placed in my lludy, and found many young Animalcules on them, fome of "which were confiderably grown ; and I alio perceived that it was in the nature of thefe creatures to change their ikins, for I found fe- veral call Ikins, in which I could plainly fee the feet, horns, hairs, and claws on the feet j and in thefe Ikins, which were very tvanf" ( m ) parent, I not only favv many veflels, but I could difcover many cf the eyes, or optical organs, w ith which this creature is provided, all which were a plcafant IpecHiacle to behold. Hitherto 1 had been of opinion that thele Animalcides fed only on the veins or veflels of the leaves, and that their breaking or biting them caufed the leaves to Contract, and under which contra('l;ed leaves the animals llieltered themfclves from the heat of the fun ; but now I faw that they, for the moll part^ fed on the very fmall buds and alio on the Ihdks of the leaves, the velTels of which being wounded caufed the leaVes to contrail in their growth, and the nou- rilhment from the young flioots being, in a great meaftire, taken away, the flioots grow knobbed and crooked. Upon recoUeding that, in the former fummer, I had feeri on my plums and apple trees a great number of flics which, as I thought, had fo imJDeded their growth that not only the apples wefe very fmall, but alfo the young flioots were very defective, I now determined to examine into the true caufe of that appearance. I could not, in my fearch, difcover any eggs of thofe flies in my apples, peaches, and plum trees, but I now faw all the young flioots bf one of my goofeberry trees to be uncommonly contracted, and oft it I not only faw a great number of thofe Animalcules I have de- fcribcd, which breed their young within them, but alio many black flies, whole bodies were not larger than the bodies of those Animal- cules. I therefore pulled up the tree and threw it into the water, concluding it impoflible to extirpate all the Animalcules and lave the tree's growth, having firll cut ofi' two branches of it for further ex- amination. Thefe flies have four wings, the two largefl: of which are twice the fize of their bodies ; I could not, at firll, think they were pro- duced from the other Animalcules, but, upon examining them by the microfcope, I found the bodies of both of them to be veiy flnii- lar, and, after feveral repeated obfervations, I law that the firfl: men- tioued Animalcules had, on each lide of their bodies, a long >n bite ( 100 ) protuberant part, ■\^'hich, upon examination by the microfcope, 1 found to be wings. I alfo opened the bodies of feveral of the flies, and in them I found young ones of the fame form, and in like nxnn- bers, as the other Animalcules, all which plainly proved to me that thefe Animalcules, commonly called goofeberry lice, are changed into flies. As I was aflured that the Animalcules which had been bred in my houfe, and were now fourteen days old, had grown to their full fize, I opened three of them, and from the body of one of them I took about thirty young ones, of different lizes, from another forty-nine, and from the third fixty. At this very great increafe I was afloniflaed, and was deflrous to examine all the goofeberry and other trees in my garden, in order to extirpate thefe noxious animals as much as pof- fible; and the rather, becaule when changed into flies, they can fly into other trees, and fo infe<5t the whole. But though we may clear our gardens ever fo much, they will be ftill liable to be ipfefted fron^ neighbouring ones. ' Some of thefe Animalcules, whofe change I judged was near, I put into a glafs, in order, if pofllble, to obfcrve the nature of fuch change ; and, after a day or two, I faw one of them put otF its flcin and aflume a new form : its wings, which before had been folded up very clofe, it expanded by degrees, fliaking them flightly, and then they appeared as fl:raight and regularly placed as if they had never been folded up, and the fame I obferved in others. This kind of propagation appeared to me more wonderful than any I had before oblerved ; if we confider that fuch minute Animal- cules, as thofe we are now confidering, fliall, within thirteen days after they are produced from the parent, breed within them fixty young ones, many of which can be feen to be completely formed ; and moreover that thefe Animalcules, after iflliing from their parent, fliall, in their growth, many times change their Ikins, produce a number of young, and lallly be changed into flying animals which pontiaue to bring forth young; this niull appear wpnderful, and be ( '206 ) a Confirmation of the principle, that all living creatures deduce their origin from thole which were formed at the Beginning. And if we compute how many Animalcules one female may pro- duce in the courfe of a liimmer, reckoning from thofe ws find in their hodies, w ithout conlidering thole that efcape our notice, we muft be filled with afi^onifhment. Although thefe Animalcules were propagated fo rapidly in my houle, as I have before fet down^ I have found that in the open air they increafe flill fatier. I have alio obferved another fort of thefe Animalcules^ a littld different from the former, for the bodies of the former \\ ere not only fomewhat broadci% but, when 1 examined their heads and the hind part of their bodies by the microfcope, I found that thofe parts were alio different: for the former, when full grown, had a dark colour, appearing blackifli ; the latter were green, and fo were the flies pro- duced from them. I alio fiiw thefe two fpecies of Animalcules mix one among another, whence I concluded that they were the two iexes. As foon as the young of thefe Animalcules come from the pa- rent, they can creep about, and appear as vigorous, as if they had been long in the open air. I havecaufed drawings to be made of thefe Animalcules, in ordei* to ihew the exadt regularity and perfedion which are fhewn in the formation of fo contemptible a creature. Plate XVI. fg 28, reprefents one of thefe Animalcules of a light green colour, the fame fize it appeared to the naked eye. Fig. 2g A B C D E F G II, is the fame fecn through the microfcope, being of its full growth and approaching to its change ; the wings, folded together, begin to appear, and may be fcen in the figure at W X. At KLMN, are the fix legs with their joints, covered with many very thin and fliort hairs, and each of the feet furnilhed with two claws. At F, is one of its two beautiful eyes, the wonderful for- mation of which, as it appeared through the microfcope, tlie limner ( 201 ) could not copy in the draAving, 1 1, fhews the trunk, or piercer, which the animal ftrikes into the bud, or ftalk, on which it feeds : F Z Z, are the two horns. In the hind part of its body this Animalcule has two parts, or or- ga'ns, thicker in the middle than at the ends, which are curioufly covered with round fcales, placed in exaft order befide each othef thereon, as fhewn at C and B, and from thefe organs I often faw a fmall drop of very tranfparent liquor ilTue, as lliewn at B. This fmall drop exhibited a very pleafant fpedacle to me, for, when removed a little further from the microfcope, it had the effe6l of another mi- ox-ofcope, fliewing the objects, as houfes, fteeples, and the like, in- verted, and fo minute and delicate in their appearance, that could fcarcely be believed. When this drop of liquor was emitted from one of the organs, B or C, I faw that the organ from which it if- fued was immediately drawn in towards the animal's body. D T U E, is the point of a needle, to which this animal was faftened when the drawing was made. Fig. 30, is the fame Animalcule, of the lize it was when changed into a fly. While the limner was employed in making the above drawing, I dilTedled fome more of thefe Animalcules, and having taken out fome of the unborn young ones, I placed the moft perfedl one of them before a microfcope, and caufed a drawing to be made of it, which is fhewn at Jig, 31, OP: this animal's body appeared to be covered with a membrane, but the limner could not copy in his drawing all the parts which were to be feen, becaufe the moifture of it in a very fliort time evaporated, and thereby the fhape was altered. I alfo gave the limner another microfcope, before which I had placed eight unborn Animalcules, in all which the eyes could plainly be feen, and of thefe he made as corred a drawing as he was able, which is Ihewn at fg. 32, Q R S. In fg. 28, at F, I have fliewn one of the curious eyes of this Animalcule, but meeting with one of the put-ofF Ikins, in which Vol. IL C c ( 202 ) the formation of it could be feen more accurately, I placed it, by itfelf, before a microfcope of greater magnifying power, and caufed a drawing of it to be made, in order to Ihew the perfection exhi- bited in fo minute, and to us fo defpicable, a creature. Fig. 33, A B, reprefents this eye as {een in the put-ofF fkin, and it appears to be compofed of a great number of diftindl eyes or optical organs. After this I opened the bodies of others of thefe Animalcules, in order to fee whether the young ones within them lliewed any ligns of life, and I found one of the young Animalcules, in whofe body I could not only fee the motions of the inteftines, but alfo its feet to move, though they lay regularly placed on the fides of its body. On the 6th or 7th of June, I faw that many of the Animalcules, which had been brought forth on the 2lft of May, were changed into flies, and feme of the leaves on the goofeberry branches where- on I kept them began to wither. Until the 5 th of June, I had often fought for thefe Animalcules on my cherry, peach, and plum trees, but found none : on the 7 th of June, upon making a farther fearch, I found fome of them on fourteen different branches of the cherry trees; they were not green but blackifh, the young ones round about them were of a dark co- lour, and in one leaf I faw five Animalcules, full grown, which had one hundred young ones round about them. I opened many of thefe Animalcules, and took many young ones out of them of the fame kind as before mentioned, but thefe laft young ones were of a dark colour. I alfo opened fome Animalcules ly^hich feemed to be half grown, and found in them many imperfedly formed young ones, and, to the befi: of my judgment, 1 counted lixty in the body of one of them, befides which there were doubtlefs many which I could not difcern ; the largefl: of thefe were of a green colour. I did intend here to have finiflied my obfervations, but feeing that thefe laft mentioned Animalcules were only on the cherry trees, and perceiving fome little differences in their formation from thofe I have befoje mentioned, I determined to try whether thefe lafl ( 203 ) would feed on the goofeberry tree ; I therefore took three branches of this year's growth from a goofeberry tree, which I put into a veflel full of water, and put on each of them a cherry tree leaf, whereon were many of thofe Animalcules, judging, that as the cherry leaves began to wither, they would leave them and remove to the goofeberry leaves, which they accordingly did. But they did not remain clofe to each other, as they had done on the cherry leaves, where they had food clofe to them, but difperfed themfelves among the goofeberry leaves, creeping up and down among the branches, I then put two twigs of the cherry tree in the veflel clofe to the goofeberry branches, and faw many of the Animalcules quit the goofeberry and remove to the cherry branches ; thofe which did not remove to the cherry branches, I found afterwards dead ; others got down to the water and there perilhed. On the 23d of June, I was much furprifed to fee a great nuni- ber of the Animalcules Hill remaining on the cherry branches, and on the 20th, I faw fome of them changed into flies ; but what I mofl; wondered at was, that fome of the Animalcules, which I judged had lived through the whole winter, were not yet changed into flies. I obferved, among other things, that as foon as one of thefe Animalcules had put off its Ikin, and w^as changed into a fly, it immediately began to move its wings, whereby they opened a little from the fides of their bodies, to which they before were clofely attached, and in the fpace of two minutes acquired their full fize ; and, at this time, I thought I faw the parts of the wings not only unfold, but alfo encreafe in fize. Moreover, I opened fome of the Animalcules which were changed into flies, and took feveral young ones out of their bodies ; thefe animals had alfo a piercer, which they thrufl; out of the or- gan, fig. 28, 1 1, and which is there fliewn at I A: this is put off with the ikin when they undergo their change. Cc 2 ( 204 ) Another circumftance appeared to me particularly worthy of note, that I law about fifteen of thefe Animalcules, whofe bodies were fo fwelled, that they feemed almoil globular : fome of them were dead, others moved but little, and upon opening them, I found their Ikins very tough, compared with others of the fpecies, and on the inhdes I found no appearance of any young nor any bowels, but only a white thick maggot, which took up almoil all the fub- ftance of their bodies. 1 put twelve of thefe, fome of them living, others dead, into a glafs, and in a little time they were all dead. But after eight days, namely tlie 24th of June, I opened one of them, and took out of it a hving maggot, which lived for the fpace of thi'ee days in the glafs wherein I put it : this maggot ap- peared to me, like thofe produced from the eggs of ants ; for like thofe maggots, it feemed incapable of moving from place to place, as it had no other motion than what confilled in extending and con- tracing its body in a fmall degree. I was atlonifhed at this fpectacle, refpe^ling which I could form no other conjedlure, than that thefe Animalcules had been impreg-^ nated by a female ant laying its egg in the hind part of the animal's body, which is the only way I could conceive that the maggot from an ant's egg could be found in that place. I opened feveral others of thefe Animalcules, at different timeSj and found maggots in all of them ; but I could not, in any inftance, extract the maggot without injuring it. I left fome of thefe Ani- malcules which were dead in the glafs, and after a few days, I found that the maggots within them were dried up. On the 20th of June, I found on a plum tree, on which I could not for three days before difcover any, a great number of green Animalcules, the largeft of them about the lize of a common loufe, and with which fome of the leaves were fo covered, that their lur- face could not be feen, and this for the molt part by Animalcules but lately brought forth. ( 205 ) I took a leaf on which were only two large ones, and two or three young ones, fuppollng that the full grown ones had not yet brought forth many young ; one of thefe I opened, in order, if poffible, to compute the number of young I might take out of it, and I thought that the young which I could dillinguilh, and thofe particles which I confidered to be young ones yet unformed, ex- ceeded the number of feventy. At the fame time, I law, among many others, fix Animalcules changed into flies, in all which I found, upon opening them, a great number of Animalcviles, and, among the reft, one that was upon the point of being voided by the parent; and 1 not only faw it move, but I could fee the inteftines within it move about as vehemently as if it had been a parcel of living creatures. But what feemed to me the moll extraordinary of all my obferva- tions was this : that in every one of the Animalcules which I opened,, thc-ugh but of a middling fize, I found young ones, and alfo upon opening fome whofc bodies were very flender, and which, for that reafon, I thought might be males, yet among thefe and all others of the Animalcules, I have been defcribing under this head, I could not find any that could be deemed males. Farther, I opened fome Animalcules, which were about an eighth part the fize of the parent ones, and I took out of them a great number of round and pellucid particles, which, I doubted not, would in time have become perfedl young ones ; fome of the largeft of thefe contained fome green particles, and moreover, they were of different fizes, the fmalleft of them appearing no larger through the microfcope than a grain of fand viewed by the naked eye. I afterwards opened fome Animalcules twenty-four times fmaller than the full grown ones, and in them I alfo faw fome of thofe round particles, which I concluded would in time become young ones ; and fi.nally, I opened one, which was not much larger than ( 20fi ) thol^e newly voided by the parent, and, in my opinion, was only one day old ; but I was not able to Judge with certainty, relpefting the particles which I took, out of its body, (by reafon of their ex- ceflive minutenefs), whether they were fuch as would in time be- come young animals. Addition, by the Translator. THE Tranflator hopes to be indulged in bearing his teftimony to the accuracy of Mr. Leeuwenhoek's inveftigation of the preceding fubjeft, and alfo as to the utility of his difcoveries. This part of the tranflation having been made at thehoufeofa friend in the country, and in the month of June, the Tranflator was led to examine the fruit trees in the garden, cxpefting to find fomeof the Animalcules men- tioned in this Effay : he faw many of them exa£lly agreeing with tlie de- fcription here given; on the goofeberry and currant trees (particularly the latter) they faftened themfelves at the extremities of the young flioots, and the farther extenfion of the flioot feemed to be entirely prevented, for the bud in the centre was deftroyed and the ftalk of the fhoot grown into an ir- regular knobbed form, and fwelled to two or three times its natural fize, having the fame appearance as a gouty limb. Some perfons may perhaps be difpofed to ridicule the great pains taken by Mr. Leeuwenhoek to inveftigate the nature of fo minute, and, as they may think, fo contemptible a creature, as that under confideration. But the ftate of the fruit trees juft mentioned will at once demonftrate that thefe minute animals are of a formidable nature, and capable of deftroying all the next year's produce- For if they attack the young fhoots in the early part of their growth, and thereby put a flop to their further vegetation, the confequence muft be that from thofe trees, whofe fruit is produced upon the lafl year's wood, little or no fruit can be expefted in the fucceeding year. On certain Animalcules found in the fediment in gutters on the roofs of houfes. * 1 HAVE been induced to publifh my difcoveries refpeding thefe creatures, in order to fliew how wonderfully Nature has provided for the prefervation of their fpecies. On the 25 th of Auguft, I faw in a leaden gutter at the fore part of my houfe, for the length of about five feet, and the breadth of leven inches, a fettlement of rain water, which appeared of a red co- lour ; and, upon confidering that perhaps this colour might proceed from fome red Animalcules, fimilar to thofe which I had feen in muddy ditches, I took a drop of this water, which I placed before the microfcope, and in it I difcovered a great number of Animal- cules, fome of them red, and others of them green. The largeft of thefe, viewed through the microfcope, did not appear bigger than a large grain of fand to the naked eye ; the fize of the others was gradually lefs and lefs : they were, for the moft part, of a round fhape ; and in the green ones, the middle part of their bodies was of a yellowifll colour. Their bodies feemed compofed of particles of an oval fhape ; they were alfo provided with certain fhort and llender organs or limbs, which were protruded a little way out of their bodies, by means of which they caufed a kind of circular mo- tion and current in the water : when they were at reft and fixed themfelves to the glafs, they had the Ihape of a pear with a ihort ftalk. Upon more carefully examining this ftalk, or rather this tail, I found that the extremity of it was divided into two parts, • This fpecies of Animalcule is very minutely defcribed by Mr. Baker, in his Treatifes on the Microfcope, and he has gtren to it the name of the wheel aoiaal : alfo ia Adams on the Microfcope, ( 208 ) and by the help of thefe tails the Animalcules fixed theinfclves to the giafs ; the lefler of thefe appeared to me to be the offspring of the larger ones. Moreover, I faw another kind of Animalcules much fmaller, the bodies of them were very tranfparent ; but there feemed to be an hundred of the former fpecies to one of them. On the 3 111 of Augull, the M'ater which I had before obferved, was, by three fucceffive days of hot weather, fo dried away, that when I prefled my finger on the muddy fcdiment in the gut- ter, no more water than about the fize of a grain of fand adhered to my finger, in which water I difcovered a fmall number of tranf- parent living Animalcules, but all the green and red ones were dead. The fir/l of September the fcdiment in this leaden gutter was fo thickened, that it appeared like Giff moill clay ; but, vath all my endeavours, I could not difcover any Animalcules in it of the fpe- cies I had before feen. At length 1 difcovered two living Animalcules with oblong bodies, like the largell of thofe which I had formerly feen in rain wvttev, wherein pepper or gingei" had been infufed. Thefe Animalcules were almoll: the thicknefs of a hair of one's head.; but fuch of them whofe bodies were full of young, were twice that fize, the ends of their bodies terminating in a point ; their tails were pro- vided with fix or eight minute organs, by the help of which they could fallen themfelves to the glafs, and the fore part of their bo- dies being alio provided with certain organs, when they would move from place to place, they brought their hind parts nearer to th« fore part, and then, loofing the fore part, they extended it in like manner as we fee caterpillars do ; and, in fwimmiug, they made ufe of other organs defiiined for that purpofe. Soon afterwards I ob- fcrvcd many of the fame fpecies of Animalcules. The matter in the bowels of thefe creatures was for the raoft part red, proceeding (as I imagine) from their feeding on fmaller Ani- ( 209 ) flialcules of that colour, but fome few of them had no red colour in them, efpecially the fmaller ones, which probably had not been long brought forth from the parent. On the fame day the weather was very hot, and, in the afternoon, I took a fmall part of the fediment from the gutter which was now quite dry, and I faw the furface of it completely red, by reafon of the great number of red Animalcules in it, being many more than the green ones ; but I could not diliinguifla them until 1 had moifl- ened the fubftance with fome rain water. The following day the Iky was again very hot and dry, and, about nine in the morning, I took fome of the fediment which had been in the leaden gutter, which was then quite dried, and no thicker than half the back of a knife ; it had alfo lain from the preceding evening in my lludy ; this I put into a glafs tube, about the thicknefs of a fwan's quill, and poured on it a fmall quantity of rain water taken out of my ftone cittern, in which water were fwimming fome of the before mentioned Animalcules of the fmaller fort ; having poured in this water, I mixed it up with the dry fediment or matter put into the tube, and which feemed very hard and compadl, in or- der to dtirolve the fame ; that thus, if there were Itill any living Animalcules in it, they might illue forth ; though I confefs I never thought that there could be any living creature in a fubftance fo dried as this was. I was, however, miftaken ; for fcarce an hour had elapfed, when I faw, at leart, an hundred of the Animalcules before dcfcribcd; fome of them adhering to the glafs, fome creeping along upon it, and fome fwimming about. In the evening I computed there were more than three hundred of the fame kind of Animalcules, but the moft of them were not of full fize, as I judged by their bodies be- ing fo minute, and fo empty of food, as if they were newly born ; and in the bodies of fome of the larger ones, I could fee two, in others three, young ones, folded double : thefe young ones, when Vol. II. D d ( 210 ) newly born, were as quick in their motions as the full grown ones. In that part of thefe Animalcules which may be called the breaft, • 1 faw a round particle moving with a reciprocal contrad;ion and di- latation, in the time one might count one : this I did not doubt was the heart. Moreover, the fore part of the bodies of thefe Animalcules, which may be called the head, was divided into two parts, each of the two divifions being of a round Ihape, fet round with certain long and very llender organs, which, in their motion, exhibited a moll: pleating and delightful fpedlacle ; to form an idea of which, we mull; fuppofe we fee two Imall wheels fet round the edges with fliarp points or pins, and thefe wheels in fwift motion, as it were, from the Weft towards the South and Eaft, but never to move in a contrary dirediion from the Weft towards the North and Eaft. This fpe6lacle appeared to me the more wonderfiil and incom- prehenfible, becaufe it is not to be conceived how fuch a motion can be produced or performed in an animal body. In order to give a clearer conception of this, I took a glafs tube with fome of thefe Animalcules in rain water, which I placed before the microfcope, and delivered the fame to the limner, that he might make as exadl a drawing of it as he was able. Plate XVI. Jig. 33,ABCDEFG reprefents one of thefe Animal- cules, which had fixed itlelf to the glafs by the help of the limbs or organs at A. The round oblong particle, appearing between B and G, I take to be a portion of its food nearly digefted ; that which is fituated in the middle, I think is the food in theftomach and intef- tines ; and the four oblong particles which feem, as it were, to fur- round the inteftines, exhibit the young Animalcules in the body of the parent. Between the letters D and E, appear the two round parts, fliaped like wheels, with fliarp points placed upright on them. Thefe ( 211 ) wheels moving from the point D, which we will call the Weft, and carried round, with a very fwift motion, by the South towards the point E, which we will call the Eaft. When one of thefe Animalcules is creeping along the glafs, it affumes the figure H I K L M N O, fg. 34 : the parts, H and M, being alternately fixed to the glafs, and in this lltuation the organs, like wheels, which in the former figure are ftiewn between D and E, are drawn within the body, and a part like an horn, marked L, appears in fight. Befides thefe pofitions, the animal twifts and turns its body into fuch wonderful Ihapes, that I have often been afl:oniftied to behold it. The limner alfo faw feveral Animalcules of a fliape fimilar to what is reprefented at fig. 35, P Q ; thefe had the lower parts of their bodies of a flat fliape, from which iflued various minute or- gans, which they ufed in moving themfelves from place to place. Now in the body of this Animalcule, were many globular particles, and in the fame water were many ftill fmaller Animalcules, whofe whole bodies appeared no larger through the microfcope than one of thofe globules in the former Animalcule. I have often placed the Animalcules I have before defcribed out of the water, not leaving the quantity of a grain of fand adjoining to them, in order to fee whether, when all the water about them was evaporated and they were expofed to the air, their bodies would burft, as I had often feen in other Animalcules. But now I found that when almoll all the water was evaporated, fo that the creature could no longer be covered with water, nor move itfelf as ufual, it then contracted itfelf into an oval figure, and in that fiiate it re- mained, nor could I perceive that the moifl:ure evaporated from its body, for it preferved its oval and round fhape unhurt. In order more fully to fatisfy myfelf in this refpeCi, on the third of September, about ieven in the morning, I took fome of tiiis dry fediment, which 1 had taken out of the leaden gutter and had llood almoft two days in my lludy, and put a little of it into two feparate Dd2 ( 212 ) glafs tubes, wherein T poured foine rain water which had been boiled and afterwards cooled. This fediment confifted of a fmall portion of earth, fome fand, pieces of mortar ; and among it were mixed fome pieces of hair, threads of wool of different colours, and bits of ftraw, which things we may fuppofe to have been brought thither by the winds ; and the furface of it conlifted of thofe red and green Animalcules, ap- parently dead. As foon as I had poured on the water, I ftirred the whole about, that the fediment which, by means of the hairs in it, feemed to ad- here like a folid body, might be the fooner mixed with the water : and when it had fettled to the bottom of the glafs, I examined it, and perceived fome of the Animalcules lying clofely heaped together. In a Ihort time afterwards they began to extend their bodies, and in half an hour at leaft an hundred of them were fv^imming about the glafs, though the whole of the fediment which I had put into it did not, in my judgment, exceed the weight of two grains. After five or fix hours had elapfed I faw two feveral forts of Animalcules f\\ im- ming in the water, the leaft of which were fo minute, that many thoufands of them would fcarcely equal the fize of a grain of fand. The preceding experiment I afterwards repeated, and met with the fame event. Thus we fee that thefe Animalcules, when the water dries away, contrail their bodies into an oval Ihape, and, even in the heat of fummer, preferve their oval lliape for a long time : and, that when they are again fupplied with water, they, in a very little time, unfold and extend their different limbs or organs, ufing them in the fame manner, and with the like motions as they did before the want of water caufed them to contraft themfelves. And this I obferved, not only in the full grown ones, but in the moft minute of thofe Ani- malcules. Hence we may conclude, that in like manner as the fhells of the eggs of moths or butterflies, whence caterpillars are hatched. ( 213 ) and alfo the membranes of grubs or cryfales produced from cater- pillars, are of fuch folidity and firmnefs that the moifture in them will not evaporate, fo the Ikins of the Animalcules I am now treating of are formed of fuch a folid texture, that they do not permit the leaft evaporation : and, were it not fo, I will venture to affirm that thefe creatures in very dry weather, being deprived of water, mull all perifh : and this, M^hich we find to be the cafe with thefe, we may fairly conclude takes place with Animalcules a thoufand times lefs. We can now ealily conceive, that in all rain water which is col- lected from gutters in cifterns, and in all waters expofed to the air. Animalcules may be found, for they may be carried thither with the particles of dull blown about by the winds. And not only fo, but Animalcules, millions of times fmaller than a grain of fand, may be carried up in particles of water, if not to the clouds, yet to fuch a height as to defcend with the evening dew : or by the winds they may be raifed from the earth, and fpread on all fides. Nor will this appear incredible, if we confider that, in great llorms, the fea water is dafhed with fuch force againll the Ihore, that the particles of it are carried many miles, fo as by fettling on the leaves of trees and herbs to give them a fait talle. The preceding kinds of experiments I have many times repeated with the fame fuccefs, and in particular with fome of this fediment, which had been kept in my lludy for above five months, and upon pouring on it rain water, which had been boiled and afterwards cooled, I faw in a few hours time many of the Animalcules before defcribed. And if, after being fo long in a dry llate, thefe Animal- cules, upon water being given to them, can unfold their bodies and move about in their ufual manner, we may conclude, that in many places, where in fummer time the waters llagnate, and at length dry up, there may be many kinds of Animalcules, which, though not originally in thofe waters, may be carried thither by water fowl, in the water or mud adhering to their feet or feathers. ( 214 ) From all thefe oblervations, moft plainly we difcern the incom- prehenfible perfeftion, the exadl order, and the infcrutable provi- dential care with which the moll wile Creator and Lord of the Uni- verle, has formed the bodies of thefe Animalcules, which are fo mi- nute as to efcape our fight, to the end, that the different fpecies of them may be preferved in exillence. And this moll wonderful dif- polition of Nature with regard to thefe Animalcules, for the prefer- vation of their fpecies ; at the fame time that it ftrikes us with allo- nifliment, mull furely convince all of the abfurdity of thofe old opi- nions, that living creatures can be produced from corruption or putrefadlion. On the circulation of the blood in the tail of an Eel, and in the tails and fins of other fflies : ivith a particular defcription of the Au- thor s apparatus for viewing it, x\MONG * other objeds, wherein I have viewed the circulation of the blood, was an Eel, and in the fin of its tail, I faw the blood cir- culating through an incredible number of arteries and veins of vari- ous fizes; and although thofe blood-veflels were difperfed promif- cuoully one among another, yet I could very plainly diftinguilli the arteries and veins. Upon fixing my eye almoft at the extremity of the tail fin, I there faw fuch a number of minute blood-veflels, that it was impofli- ble forme to difcern the circulation in the minuteft of thofe veflels. This fjn being a little dirty, I took a piece of linen cloth, and gently wiped it twice, to get a better view ; but I found that in that flight touch, many of the external blood vellels were fo injured, that many particles of blood iflued forth, caufing the extreme parts of the fin to appear red, and they were alfo a little diftorted : I alfo plainly faw in all the arteries, however minute, a fi:rong and quick fuccel- five elevation, with a protrufion of the blood ; and, upon attending to a large artery in the tail, I there faw the protrufion of blood, de- rived from the heart, to be much more vehement. I alfo placed before my fight one of the two fins which the Eel has next its head, and there I faw the blood circulating in as many diftindl places as I have jufl; mentioned refpefting the tail fin. And when I endeavoured to purfue the circulation to the extremity of this • See more on this fubjeft, in Vol. I. p. 89. et m*?. ( 21C ) fin, I there faw its motion, both in arteries and veins, in fuch an inconceivable number of cxcelTively minute veflels, that it looked as if the fin in that part of it was compofed of nothing but blood velfels. In this and many other Eels, I faw that the blood veflels, where the circulation comes to its full extent at the extremity of the tail fin, turned back with a fmall bending, many of them taking their courfe tranfverfely, or eroding one another, in their return back towards the heart. For inllance, the circulation appeared to me as in Plate XVII. Jig. 1, A B C D E, which reprefents a blood-velTel fituated between two of tl\ofe fmall bones which give ftrength to the extremity of the tail fin. In this figure, ABC is to be called an artery, becaufe in it the blood moves forward from A by B to- wards C, and from C by D, it returns to E ; therefore C D E mull be called a vein, though each of thefe veflels, fo called, is but one and the fame blood-vefl'cl prolonged ; and in its return it twice crofles itfelf. Near to this was one of the linall bones of the fin, and clofe to it a lecond blood-veflel, in which alfo the circulation forward and backwards was performed ; and this veliel in its return alfo twice croll'ed itfelf, but with fomewhat fmaller bendings than in the other vefTel. Here, F G H, is an artery, wherein the blood was carried forward as far as H, and, bringing back the blood to- wards the heart, in the direction H I K, it is then to be called a vein. On this occafion I faw, (and which I had obferved in feveral other infiances) that in the firll mentioned artery ABC, there arofe, at C, a fmall veli'el which conveyed the blood from ABC, into the other veliel at I. To give an idea of the relative fize of thefe vefTels, and of their ■dillance from each other, the reader will underliand, that the dif- tance from E to K was almoll equal to the breadth of four hairs of one's head. To make thefe obfervations, my method at firfl: was, to wrap the Eel in a piece of paper, or a cloth, leaving out only that part of ( 217 ) the fin which was to be examined ; but, with all my care, I found that, in doing this, I either impeded the circulation or injured the iin ; I therefore adopted this method : to take Eels about the Hze of one's finger, and let them fwim about in the water for a time, till they were at reft, and then examine their tail fins while in the water, for in that fituation they fpread out their tails, but when taken out of the water, the veiy extremity of the fin gathers up in wrinkles. ' In order to impart this pleafing fight to others, I invented and compleated fome inftruments, whereby I exhibited the fame to fe- veral gentlemen of eminence in this country, who all declared, that they did not think any more delightful fpeclacle, nor more worthy of obfervation could be lliewn. I have determined to give drawings of the inftruments by which I exhibited this circulation of the blood, and by which thofe who defire to view the fame may be eafily gratified. I firft prepare a piece of brafs about half the thicknefs of the back of a common knife, and of the fhape reprefented at fig. 2, A B C D E F ; this I hammer upon an anvil fome time, to make it the tougher, and make two large holes in it, as fliewn at G H I and K L M. I alfo drill fix fmaller holes at P Q R S and NO. I then bend this piece of brafs at the end A B F, and at the dotted line B F, fo that it may form a right angle with the other part, and alfo bend the other end C D E, in like manner. I then take another flat piece of brafs of the fame thicknefs, which, being well hammered, will anfwer the purpofc of a fpring ; this is reprefented ^tjlg. 3, A B C D, and I haminer it into feme- thing of a hollow fliape, and file in the lower end of it a cavity, in order that it may in part furround the glafs tube I flaall hereafter defcribe ; this round cavity is fliewn at AD. I then drill four holes in it at E F G H, to correfpond with thofe marked P Q R S in fg. 2 ; and with brafs rivets I join the two pieces together. I then prepare another brafs fpring, as at Jig. 4, I K L M, in which Vol. II, E c ( 218 ) I alfo make a hollow, as at K L, to embrace the glafs tube, and hav- ing drilled two holes in it at A B, to correfpond with the two holes Q R, in fg. 2, I place it on the contrary fide of the plate, fg 2, and rivet it with two brafs rivets through the holes Q R. I then prepare another piece of brafs more than twice the thick- nefs of the former, to be fcrewed clofe to the plate, fg. 2, and to which the microfcope is to be fixed ; this piece of brafs is repre- fented at fg. 5, NOPQRST, and in this I drill two holes to correfpond with thofe at O and N in fg 2 ; thefe holes, V and W, are made to receive fci-ews in them, in order to fix by them the plate, ^g'. 5, to the plate, fg. 2. In this piece of brafs, I alfo drill a third hole with a fcrew fitted to it, by which the magnifier may be adjufted at a proper diftance, which hole is fliewn at X. I make likewife in this piece of brafs a fourth hole, rather larger than the former, in order that the magnifier, when adjulled by the fcrew, may be moved to the one fide or the other : lallly, I bend this piece of brafs, at the place marked with the dotted line PR, to a right angle. I then make three fcrews, one of which is fhewn at A B, fg. 6, and with two of them I fcrew the brafs, fg. 5, to the plate, fg. 2, paffing one fcrew through the hole O, ^^g- 2, and V, fg. 5, and the other through the holes N, fg. 2, and W, fg. 5 : the third fcrew is to fix the magnifier by the hole Q, to the piece of brafs, fg. 5 . I alfo make a fourth fcrew, as at fg. 7, CD ; the only ufe of which is, that, being pafled through the hole X, in Jig. 5, it may ferve to fix the magnifier at a proper difiance from the objed to be viewed. Fig. 8, E FGH T, are two thin plates of brafs or filver joined with five rivets, between which the magnifying glafs is placed at Iv ; and at K is fliewn a hole made to receive a fcrew, by which the magnifier is fixed to the brafs inftrument before defcribed. 1 have alfo caufed a drawing to be made of the whole inftrument, as viewed on one fide, (before the magnifying glafs is joined to it). ( 210 ) which is fhewn at Jig. 9, and in this figure L M N T, Ihcws that part which, in fig. 2, is reprefented at AB F : and the round hole in that figure is in this fhewn at a b c. In this figure alio O P Q R is the part reprefented in fig. 2, at C D E, and the round hole, d e f , in this figure, is the hole K L M, \nfig. 2. The brals fpring V W X is tliat which, \nfig. 3, is fhewn at A B C D, and the fpring AB C D, in this figure, the fame which is fliewn, in^^. 4, at I K LM. The piece of brafs fliewn in fig. 5, N O P Q R S T, is reprefented in this figure at E F G, and the two fcrews, by which it is made faft, are fliewn at Y and Z ; the brafs fcrew, in fg. 7, marked C D, is in this figure fliewn at H, where it is feen fcrewed in its place. I then directed the limner to make a drawing of the entire in- flrument, with the micro fcope joined to it, and the glafs tube in- clofed in it, the fame being adjulled ready for ufe, and fo placed before the view ; this is fliewn at /^ 10, A B C D E F G H ; the filver or brafs plates, inclofing the magnifying glafs, are fliewn at I K LM ; the brafs I'crew, by which the magnifier is fixed, is fliCMai at 2 ; the fcrew, by which the obje6l is placed at a proper diftance, is marked at 3, and the glafs tube, containing the Eel, and fixed iu the inllrument, is reprefented by Q R S T V W X Y. It is my practice to ufe glafs tubes of a fize fuitable to the Eels which are to be viewed ; and though but a fmall Eel be placed within the tube with its head towards the bottom, yet the glafs tube will project fo far below the inftrument, that it may be held in the hand by that part, fo that it will not be neceflaiy to touch the inflrument with the hand, and with the other hand the magni- fier, which will be held next the eye, may, by means of the fcrew at 3, be drawn out, or comprefled inwards, until the part of the objeft to be viewed is brought to a proper difl:ance. When I wifli to take out or put in the glafs tube, which 1 gene- rally do at the upper end, I remove the magnifier a little on one fide, that it may not be fcratched by the glafs tube ; this pofition or removal is marked in the figure by the dotted line N 0 P F. E e 2 ( 220 ) I alfo made another inftrument of like Hiape with the former, in wliich the fpring reprefented in^^. 9, at ABCD, is a little fliortcr ; and to this I fcrewed the brafs containing the magnifying glafs, as reprefented in fig. 11, H I K L, on which magnitier or microfcope, I fixed a little dith or concave reflc6lor, to throw more light on the ohje6l ; to which intent I filed away as much as I could of the brafs about the microfcope, as may be feen at Jig 12, MN O P, where this is lliewn on the oppofite fide. I have alfo given a drawing of the glafs tube containing the Eel, which is fhewn ^tfig. 13, Q R S T V. The Eel placed in this tube, I at firfi; ufcd to cover entirely with water, but I found that when the tail was left out of the water it would, being wet, fprcad itfelf on the glafs, and be more eafily viewed (this fin of the tail is Ihewn at W) ; and I always, before putting in the Eel, wetted the infide of the glafs, for otherwife the glutinous matter from its body would ad- here to the dry glafs and impede the view. I alfo recommend to thofe who make thefe experiments, as foon as ever the Eel is taken out of the tube, to let the glafs be well cleaned, for otherwife the glutinous matter from the fith will dry on the glafs. I have caufed many glafs tubes to be blown for thefe experi- ments, but the rounder they are, and the thinner the glafs, the bet- ter : fome of them I caufed to be made clofed at one end, as here fhewn at Q, others I clofed with a cork. I have alfo viewed the circulation of the blood in the tail fin of a Perch, and that in fuch minute veflels as would only admit one glo- bule or particle of blood to pafs through at a time. I once faw in a large artery in a Perch, (I call it large in refped; of the mofi; minute ones, though this was not thicker than an hair of one's head), and which is reprefented at ^g-. 14, the blood pro- truded from A to B, though but faintly ; from B to C, I could only perceive a fmall agitation of the blood, and beyond C it was coagu- lated : from this artery there arofe a branch as reprefented in the ( 221 ) figure at B E, which carried almoft all the blood from A B, through B E, into the vein D E F, in which vein the blood was conveyed from E to D, and all the blood which lay between E F was coa- gulated. When thofe Perch which I examined were very lively, and their tails unhurt, I could not difcern the large veflels in their tail fins, but when the blood began to coagulate, fome of the veflels, in a fliort time, appeared fifty times larger than their natural fize. There were other vellels in which the blood had circulated, and were not fwelled, but here the blood was at a fland, and the veflels them- felves, by reafon of their minvitenefs and there being no circulation, in them, were not eafily difcerned. Moreover, it was my opinion that many of the large circulations of the blood, which I faw, when it began to flagnate, were not performed within the coats of the blood- vellels, but that, when the blood in the arteries was impeded in its courfe, the continued and ftrong propulfion from the heart caufed it to form new canals, where the fifli's fkin made the leafl refiftance, and that it was by this means the oblique current of blood, fliewn in Jig. 14, at EB, was formed. And, indeed, I am of opinion that all thofe very minute currents, whether we call them arteries or veins, are not performed within the coats of veflels, but that they are formed where the blood, in its protrufion from the heart, meets the leafl refinance. But if we fuppofe one of the very fmallefl blood-veffels to be provided with a coat, and fuch coat to confift of three ditlinft membranes, as it is faid the coats of the veins and arteries are formed, it neceffarily fol- lows that the coats of thofe minuteft vefTels muft be of a thinnefs which is inconceivable. For, let us fuppofe, as I have often faid, that the axis of an hundred globules of the blood, from whence its rednefs proceeds, are no more than equal to the axis or diameter of a large grain of fand; it follows, that ten thoufand globules of blood may pafs together through a veflel, no larger than to admit a large grain of fand to pafs through it. Now, fuppofing the coat of fuch ( 222 ) a vefTel, as will admit a grain of fand to pafs through it, is twenty- live times thinner than fine poll paper, how much thinner mull be the coat of a vein which will only admit the ten thoufandth part of a grain of fand to pafs through it ? Therefore, if thefe very fmallert blood-vclfels are provided with coats, fuch coats mull be fo thin, open, or fpongy, that the very thinnell watery parts of the blood can as eafily pafs through them as water through a fine fieve. After this, I took one of thofe fifli called a Jack, which I placed fo that about the breadth of a finger of its tail was above the water, and, upon examining the extremities of this tail fin b}' the micro- fco])e, I could not perceive the leall motion in the blood in that part ; \\ hence I judged that thofe parts of the tail were mortified, for the filh, from its appearance, feemed to me to have been caught fome da}'s. But when I examined the tail fin, nearer to the body, I fiiw the blood llowly moving in an artery, and, a little nearer to the body, there ilfued from this artery a fmall branch, through vvhich the blood was carried with a very fwift current, and this branch, taking a fmall bending, carried the blood into a vein which brought it back towards the heart. Let G H I, in Jig. 15, rep relent this artery, in vA'hich the blood from G to H was driven forward with its ufual fwiftnefs, and from H to I its motion was very flow ; H K M, is a fmaller vellel, through which the blood was carried from this artery into the vein L M N, at the point N, and in that vein conveyed back to the heart. After this, 1 bought a parcel of Trout, which had been caught in the river Maes two or three days before, and among the reft was one, not quite ieyen inches long, which, upon view of its fcales, I judged to be be about five years old. This Trout, whofe tail fin was a little injured at the extremity, I placed with its tail about a finger's breadth: above llie water; and, when it was become quiet, I viewed the tail by the microfcope, and I could not difcover any circulation at the extremity, but, examining it a little nearer to the body, I faw the blood in the arteries and veins ftagnating and coagulated ; and I ( 223 ) alio perceived the arteries to be uncommonly large, which I con- ceived to proceed only from this, that the circulation being impeded, they vs^ere by the impulfe of the blood diftended to that lize. Upon viewing the fin ftill nearer to the tail I fav^^ the blood run- ning both in the arteries and veins, and what teemed to me very worthy of note was this : I favv the blood llagnating in an artery, fliewn in p'g. 1 0, at O F Q, from P to Q, and fo on towards the extremity of the tail, and in the fame artery from P to O, and alfo towards the fifli's body, the blood was carried in its ufual motion, namely, from O towards P. From this artery there arole a branch, reprefented at P, in which the arterial blood, after it had been driven thus far, was carried back towards the heart, fo that this branch, PV, arifmg out of the artery, OPQ, muft be called a vein. At about three hairs breadth from the before mentioned artery, there was another artery, nearl}^ of the fame fize, which is Ihewn in the figure, at R S T. In this the blood between S and T, and alfo beyond it, was coagulated, and the blood which, from R to S, was driven forward, iflued into a branch arifing out of that artery, at S, which alfo led back towards the heart, as is lliewn in S V ; \\ here, at V, both the veins, P V and S V, are joined, and conllitute a larger vein, VW. Moreover, I took a Carp, in order to view the circulation, but it was fo reftlefs that, after many trials, I determined to wrap it in a cloth, in order to view the fin on its back, which, being nearer to the heart, I judged the circulation might be llronger : and here 1 faw the blood moving in an artery, which divided itfelf into two other arteries, fo fmall as orily to admit a fingle globule or particle of blood at a time ; one of thefe minute arteries was joined to a Acin, fo large that the blood in it began to aflume a red colour, the other I could not follow with my eye, becaufe its courfe was hid behind a fmall bone in the fin. Fig. 17, AB, is this fmall artery, which, at B, was divided into two branches, one of which, B C, was joined to the vein D C E, at C ; fo that the blood whichj in the artery, was ( 224 ) driven from A to B, from the heart, and took its courfe from B to C, in C, being emptied into a vein, it returned back, from C to D, tovi^ards the heart: the other fmall artery, B F, took a courfe out of my fight at F. This circulation gradually decreafed till, at length, I could not perceive any motion in the veflds ABC and B F. Thefe obfervations I alfo purfued in feveral other forts of fifh, and in all of them the circulation was very apparent, particularly the Flounder, in the tail fin of which I faw fuch multitudes of minute blood-veflels, that I may fay there is not a fpace in that fin, fo fmall as a grain of fand, which does not contain a veflel, either conveying the blood from the heart, or bringing it back towards the heart. This fifli, called the Flounder, is one of the beft adapted to view the circulation of the blood, becaufe it lies quiet a long time, and alfo \\ ill live a long time out of the water. With regard to the infiruments I have defcribed, they might, I doubt not, be made more perfect and convenient ; for I myfelf was never infi:ru6led in the working in brafs and iron, otherwife than by obfervation of workmen in the making and ufing their tools ; by which means, however, I have been enabled (rather in a rude way) to make thefe infiruments fufiicient to anfwer all my purpofes. Addition, by the Translator. AS the reader may have a defire to know of what nature were the Mi- •crofcopes by which Mr. Leeuwenhoek made the wonderfal difcoveries, wliicli are the fubjeft of his works, the Trandator has thought proper to introduce, in this place, the bed account of them he has been able to colIeO. Mr. Henry Baker, in his IntroduQion to the ufeof the Microfcope, has thefe words : * " The famous Microfcopes of Mr. Leeuwenhoek are the mofl fimple pof- " fible, being only a fmgle lens fct between two plates of filver, perforated *' with a fmall hole, with a moveable pin before it to place the objed on, and • Wicrofcopc made Eafy, p. 7. aud 8. Ed. 1711. ( 225 ) *' adjuft it to the eye of the beholder. Several writers reprefent the glafles " Mr. Leeuwenhoek made ufe' of in his Microfcopes to be Tittle globules, " or fpheres of glafs ; which miftake moll probably arifes from their under- " taking to defcribe what they had never feen ; for, at the time I am writing " this, the cabinet of Microfcopes left by that famous man, at his death, to " the Royal Society as a Legacy is (landing upon my table; and I can alTure " the world that every one of the twenty-fix Microfcopes, contained thereiuj " is a double convex lens, and not a fphere or globule." And in another treatife, publifhed by Mr. Baker fome years afterwards, he writes as follows : * " An accurate defcription of the twenty-fix Microfcopes, and objects be- " longing to them, contained in a fmall cabinet, which Mr. Leeuwenhoek* " at his deeeafe, bequeathed to the Royal Society, was prefented many years " ago to that Society by Martin Folkes, Efq. and may be feen No. 380 of " the Philofophical Tranfaflions. And a farther account, fetting forth the " magnifying powers and other particulars concernmg the faid Microfcopes " (which were three months under my examination for that purpofe), was " prefented by me to the Royal Society in the year 1740, and publifhed in •' Phil, Tranf. No. 458. But neither of thefe accounts has any drawing of the " Microfcopes : it is therefore hoped the curious will be pleafed to fee a draw- " ing of them, taken, with great exaftnefs, from thofe in the Repofitory of *' the Royal Society, which are all alike in form, and differ very little in fize " from this drawing, or from one another. " The two fides of one of thefe Microfcopes are fhewn at^^. 18 and IQ: " the eye mud he applied to the fide Jig. 18. The liat part. A, is compofed " of two thin filver plates, faftened together by little rivets b, b, b, b, b, b. " Between thefe plates a very fmall double convex glafs (called by mathema • *' ticians a lens) is let into a focket, and a hole drilled in each plate, for the " eye to look through, at c. A limb of filver, d, is faflened to the plates " on this fide by a fcrew, e, which goes through them both. Another " part of this limb, joined to it at right angles, paiTes under the plates, and " comes out on the other fide (fee^°-. ig) at f ; through this runs, dircQly " upwards, a long fine-threaded fcrew, g, v.hich turns in, and raises or lowers " the flage, h, whereon a coarfe rugged pin, i, for the objeft to be fallened to, ♦' is turned about by a little handle, k, and this ilagc, with the pin upon it, • Employment for the Microfcopc, p. 13J. £d. 17G4. Vol. II. F t^ ( 22(5 ) " is removed farther from the magnifying lens, or admitted nearer to it, by " a little fcrew, I, that, paflTmg through the flage horizontally, and bearing " againft the back of the inftrument, thrufts it farther off when there is oc- " cafion. The end of the long fcrew, g, comes out through the ftage, at m, " where it turns round, but afts not there as a fcrew, having no threads that " reach fo high. Thefe Microfcopes are plain and fimple in their contrivance : , " all the parts are filver, fafhioned by M. Leeuwenhoek's own hand, and the " glafTes, which are excellent, were all ground and fet by himfelf. " The magnifying powers of thefe glafles come fhort of fome now made, " but are fully fufficient for mod purpofes. Of the twenty-fix Microfcopes " I examined, one magnifies the diameter of an objeQ; l6o, one 133, one " 114, three 100, three 89, eight 60, two 72, three 66, two 57, one 53> " and one 40 times," ♦ On Frogs, and the manner in which their young are produced from Tadpoles, tvith the circulation of the blood Jeen in them : alfo on thefliape of the component particles of the blood. W E have two forts of Frogs in this country, one which ufed to be found in great numbers about the town of Delft, but of late years only few of them have been feen, by reafon, as I believe, that their fpawn has been devoured by a fmall kind of filh ; and I have fometimes feen this (pawn in the fmall ditches which divide our fields, lying in fuch quantities, that the furface of the water feemed almoft covered with it. The other fpecies of Frogs is much fewer in number, but of a larger fize, and they leap farther than the others, and the hind parts of their bodies, or rather the thickefl parts of their legs, are ufed by the French, as good food. Refpe6l- ing the propagation of thefe laft, as a particular fpecies, I was for fome time in doubt, not having obferved them couple together, nor feen any of their eggs or fpawn. But one day, at the end of the month of May, walking in a mea- dow for my recreation, and not thinking of this fubjedl, becaufe the time of the other fort of Frogs laying their eggs was long pall, my attention was excited by the noife or croaking, which thefe iall mentioned Frogs make both by day and night, in hot weather, whereupon I went to the fide of the water, and I thought that I faw fome of their eggs adhering to a green leaf in the water, and i'o in fa6l it proved. Thefe eggs are not fo ealily to be difcerned, as thofe of the common Frogs, becaufe the glutinous matter or jelly which contains them, fwims deeper in the water, and is alfo lefs in quantity, Ff 2 ( 228 ) I caufed fome of the leaves, to which thefe eggs or fpawn adhered, to be brought to my houfe, and put them into two earthen veffels filled with the water that runs through our canals ; and then I ex- amined thofe eggs by the microfcope, and found that, for the moft part, they were dark coloured on one fide, and yellow on the other : but looking at them again the next morning, I found that the yel- low colour was almofl vanifhed, only a fmall part of each egg re- maining of that tinge, whence I concluded that the eggs had been but lately laid by the Frog when I took them up. Moreover, I took feveral eggs out of the tranfparent glutinous matter or jelly, which contained them, and I found this glutinous fubflance, by which the eggs feemed to be preferred difiin(5t in their round fliape, to be very flrong and tough, fo that it could not be feparated from the egg itfelf, without being torn ; and when I handled it ever fo gently, the egg did not retain its round figure, but broke to pieces. I examined many of the eggs after I had taken them out of the jelly which inclofed them, and found them to be contained in a very thin membrane, formed with black parts or fpots, in fliape agreeing with the knobs or protuberances in that leather which is called fhagreen. The egg itfelf, as far as I could difcern, confifted of a watery matter, (as it appeared to the fight) and an incredible number of globules, each of which again confifled of a great number of lefTer globules, all having a larger globule in the middle ; fo that every one of them had the appearance of an egg with a very fmall yolk. The figure of many of thefe eggs altered every day; for, from being round, they aflumed an oblong fhape ; afterwards minute tails were formed ; and I alfo thought that I faw the appearance of heads. Every day I opened feveral of thefe eggs, and until the feventh day after they had been brought to my houfe, when I faw the young Frogs (which are called Tadpoles) to be fo far formed, that they began to move. But, with all my attention, I could perceive ( 229 ) nothing in them except globules ; and upon opening a Tadpole, which of itfelf crept out of the jelly which had contained it, and was fwiniming in the M^ater, and in which, when it was entire, I could diftinguifli the back bone, I could not, when diflected, dif- eover any bowels, much lefs arteries or mufcles. Hereupon it feemed to me, that the whole body of this animal, called a Tadpole, conlifted of no other particles than globules, and efpecially the belly of it, which was of a yellowilh colour, and feemed to be made of that part of the egg which had continued yellow. This feemed ftrange to me, that in fo large an animal which I had killed and dilfedled, I could not difcover any veflels or fibres. After all my obfei-vations refpecfting thefe eggs, I could draw no other conclufion, than that the glutinous matter or jelly, encom- paiTmg the eggs, was only formed by nature for the prefervation of the egg when depotited in it, as the Ihells of birds' eggs cover and protect the whites and yolks. And as we fee, that the whole fubftance of a hen's egg paHes into and becomes part of the chick, (except the fliell and the mem- brane within it, which are deligned for the prefei-vation of that fub- llance), fo in the prefent cafe, the whole of the egg pafles into the body of the Frog or Tadpole, and the vifcous and gluey matter, which furrounded the egg, remains after the young has left it. So that we may fay of the eggs of Frogs, what I have faid of the eggs of birds, namely, that they are deligned to fupport and nourifh the young creature until it is able to provide for itfelf When I obferved that the vifcous matter or jelly I have men- tioned, contained in it multitudes of air bubbles, I concluded the ufe of them was, that where there were no leaves floating on the furface of the water to which the eggs could adhere, thefe air bub- bles might make the jelly float on the water, whereby the eggs might receive the warmth of the fun, and thereby, as I may fay, be hatched. - ( 230 ) Plate XVII. fg. 20, rep relents the egg of the Frog I am now defcribing, incloled in the tenacious or vifcid fubftance I have mentioned ; and when it is lb far grown, that the animal begins to move, the tail appears fome\\hat bent. Fig. 21, reprefents the animal, when fo fully formed in the egg, as to be able to fwim in the water ; this was taken by me out of the egg, and laid on a glafs, where it died, and the body of it dried up. Fig. 22, A B C D E F, reprefents the fame animal as it appeared to the limner through the microfcope, in which the head can ealily be diftinguilhed from the fore part of the body, as is repre- fented at A B F. FE is the belly of the animal, which was of a yellowilh colour, being formed, as I have laid, out of that part of the egg, where there remained a yellow fpot ; but this drawing is not exacftly like the animal, becaufe it was fo broken and torn, that it only exhibited the appearance of globules. C 1) E reprefents the tail of the animal, in which a fpine or back bone could very plainly be diliinguifhed, and is here rcprefented in the figure in the beft manner the limner was able; and though I opened many of the tails of thofe animals, which had this appear- ance of a fpine, I could not difcover in them any other parts than globules. Thele little animals, or Tadpoles, in fwimming, move their tails with great force, and as foon as they ceafe the motion, they link to the bottom of the water, whence it appears that their bodies are fpecifically heavier than water. But thefe animals have a property (while in their Tadpole Hate) to fix their heads to the glafs, fo that they are able to faftcn themfelves to any thing they find in the wa- ters, and there to remain without finking to the bottom. Moreover, I placed a Tadpole, which was alive in the water and liad fixed itfelf to the glafs, before a microfcope, direding the limner to make a drawing of it as it appeared to him. F/^. 23, G H I K L M N O P Q R S, reprefents this Tadpole alive, ( ^31 ^ as it had fixed itfelf to the glafs, with its belly next the eye of the fpeAator ; this Tadpole had but a few hours before quitted the egg and jelly in which it had been inclofed. L M NOP, reprefents the head ; H IRS, the belly ; and G H S, the tail. In the upper part of the head of this animal, its Ikin ap- peared fomewhat thicker than the reft ; fo that I concluded, this was a part of the Ikin which in time would cover the whole body of the animal : this is reprefented at M NO. The mouth is ihewn atT, which I did not perceive this newly hatched animal to move. At V V are two dark fpots in the animal's head, of a veiy round Ihape, and being much more protuberant than I have feen in any other ani- mal, and which many would conclude to be the eyes. But if eyes,, they would not be feen by us in this pofition of the animal ; but ra- ther be placed on the otlier fide out of fight. I K L, and P Q R, are fix tranfparent parts hanging down from the head, three on each fide, and thefe parts were the only reafon of my giving a drawing of this Tadpole ; for in each of them I, with great delight, faw moflidifiindly the circulation of the blood, which was driven from the parts next the body to the extremities, and there, with great fvviftnefs, performed an incefiant circuit back to the body. This circulation had not an equable or even motion, but was performed at intervals by quick repeated protrufions ; and in the intervals, any one for the moment, would have thought the circu- lation cealed ; but fcarcely had the current of the blood begun to make a fl;op, when a new protrufion immediately followed, caufing a continual courfe of the blood in this creature; and, upon accurately computing the time in which their pulfations or protrufions were per- formed, I may fay, that an hundred of them \^ ere performed in lefs time than one could count an hundred. From thefe appearances, I concluded that at every one of thofe protrufions, the blood was driven out of the heart, and I could perceive this motion (namely, the protrufion of the blood from the heart, and its paflage from the ( 232 ) arteries into the veins, where they are united), as diflin^lly as any perfoii can polTibly imagine. "When thefe Tadpoles were fomedays old, thofe dependent parts, wherein the circulation of blood I have defcribed was performed, were no longer to be ieen, being, as it fcemed to me, grown over by the animal's Ikin. Isut I even then faw fomething of a rapid mo- tion, as before defcribed, performed on each fide the head, though I could not diftinguilh it to be the circulation of the blood ; at the fame time, the head became fo conjoined to the body, that it could not be dillinguiflied from it. The circulation of the blood, as seen in the tail of the Tadpole, has been noticed in another place,* therefore no more need be added here, than that my obfervations on this creature were not made upon a fnigle infpection of the fubject ; but I often repeated the fame, on account of the pleafure I took in the fight, and in different Tadpoles, but I always found the appearance to be the fame. And one thing is here worthy of not^, that in the very fmall veflels at the greateft dhhmce from the heart, as in the extremity of the tail, there did not appear fuch a foi'cible and vehement protrufion as in the veflels near the heart ; but though the blood in thofe fmall veflels appeared to move in an uninterrupted courfe, yet it could plainly be feon, that at every pulfation of the heart the courfe was a little accelerated. I have in another place faid, that the particles or globules of blood, from whence its rednefs proceeds, are fo minute that a million of them taken together would not equal the fize of a large grain of land, and from hence we may eafily conclude how exceffively fmall mult be the vellels in which this circulation is performed. As many perfons have never feen a Tadpole, I have caufed a draw- ing to be made of this creature, which, defpifed as it is, has afforded me the greateft pleafure ; for the circulation of the blood, in this animal, is more admirable to behold than in any other creature or filh I ever faw : and luch has been my delight in viewing it, that * Vol. I. p. 92. ( 233 ) I thinlc no fountain whatfoever, either natural or artificial, or indeed any other fpedlacle, could have afforded me fuch plealure as thele fniall animals. Fig. 24, repreferrts a Tadpole, when grown to fuch a fize that both its hind feet were formed, and it could ufe them; the two fore feet were alfo vifible, but as yet lay hid under the Ikin. jSIoreover, I examined the Tadpoles when they were fo far per- fected as to become Frogs and leap about the fields, and in thefe I alfo difcovered a great number of wonderfully minute blood- vellels, which with their bendings conllituted thofe vellels we call arteries and veins; fo that it moft manifeilly appeared to me that the arteries and veins are only a prolongation of one and the fiime veliel. And this was moll; particularly manifelt in the extremity of thofe parts in the foot, which may be called the fingers, and of which the Frog has four in each of the fore feet and five in the hind feet. Thefe blood veflels, which we call veins and arteries (though in fact they are one and the fame), were to be feen in great numbers at the extremities of thofe fingers, and each of them had a round bending, fo that the dillincl courfe of each of them could not indi- vidually be difcovered. All thefe veflels were fo fmall and thin that they only admitted the paflage of the blood in fingle globules. But when I examined them at the firll or fecond joint of the fingers, then I faw the arteries and veins were larger, fo that the blood in them was of a red colour. I did not only examine thefe young Frogs in parts of their bodies only, but placed their whole bodies before the microfcope, and the before mentioned blood-velfels appeared to me as I have already de- fcribcd them. This circulation I fhewed to two refpedable gen- tlemen, who could not behold the fight without great admiration, efpecially in thofe places where they faw the blood running in fuch fmall vellels as to be only pervious to one of thofe particles, \^•hence its rednefs proceeds. Vol. II. G g ( 234 ) I alfb examined larger Frogs, and in their feet I law the circula- tion of the blood, but with much difficulty, and, unlefs I had be- fore difcovered it in the fmall ones, it would have been impoffible for me to difcover the complete circulation in the fmallest vellels. But when I examined other parts of the bodies of thefe larger Frogs, I there completely dilcovered the circulation. Among other things, I at one time faw the blood in an artery (large enough to admit three globules of blood at a time) driven in a contrary direction to the ordinary one; but this retrograde motion lafted no longer than while one could tell four, after which it re- fumcd its ufual courfe. To illullrate this : I faw the blood running as defcribed in fig. 25, N R O P, palling from N to O ; out of which artery arofe a branch or fmall artery ; but here the light which at- tracted my notice was, that the blood in the artery, P Q, not only fuddenly flopped in its motion, but was driven back from Q to P, and emptied into the artery N R O P. The caufe of this, I think, might be, that the blood in the fmall artery, P Q, or in the fmaller branches into which the artery, P Q, was divided, had met with fome fmall obftruftion, or that fome mufcle, adjoining to thefe fmall vellels, fo prelled upon them, that the courfe of the blood was thereby im- peded, whence the blood was not only llopped in its progress, but driven by a backward motion into the artery adjoining ; for, after the lliort time I have mentioned, the blood relumed its motion in the fame courfe and with the fame fwiftnefs as before. In another place I faw the courfe of the blood, in the fame kind of artery, very much retarded for a fliort fpace, and immediately afterwards in the fame artery a fudden protrulion, and diredlly after- wards another Hop or lliort interruption in the circulation. This pro- trufion and interruption took place live or fix times fuccelTively, af- ter which followed a fwift and regular motion, and all this was per- formed in fo lliort a fpace of time, that I could fcarcely have fpoken ten words in the interval. ( 235 ) In my feveral obfen/ations on the circulation of the blood in tiflies I have not been able clearly to latisfy myfelf with regard to the fliape of the globules or component particles of the blood, for they fomctimes appeared of a fpherical, and fometimes of an oval and even a flat lliape, and fometimes an irregular figure ; this I fome- times attributed to my glafles not being of fufficient magnifying power to dilHnguifh them, and fometimes- to the pofltion in which they appeared to the eye, for, while in circulation, they tumbled one over another, fometimes prefenting one part and fometimes another to the view; and I alfo thought that it might be owing to the llrait- nefs of the vefl^els, in which the particles of blood, being of a yield- ing nature, might, by the comprelFion, lofe their fpherical figure. In order to fatisfy myfelf in fome degree on this head, I cut olT pieces from the tails of feveral fmall flat fifli, fuch as Plaice and Flounders, in order to view the blood when drawn out of the vefl^els, and the rather, becaufe I could not perfuade myfelf, that the na- tural fliape of the particles of blood in fifties was an oval ; foraf- much, as a fpherical feemed to me to be the more perfe6l form. For I was of opinion, that the particles of blood in fifties were coni- pofed of fix globules, in like manner with the blood in man, and in terreftrial animals : and I feveral times faw the particles of fifties blood, the original texture of which was broken, and in which I could difl:in6lly fee four or five, and in fome few of them fix com- ponent particles. I, however, thought it worthy of note, that many of thefe particles of blood appeared to me of an oval fliape, fome few others roundilh, and others of a perfe6l fpherical figure. In order farther to profecute my inquiries on this fubjeft, I took the blood of a Salmon not quite dead, which was received into a glafs tube, about the fize of a fmall writing pen : this blood, after a fliort time, became coagulated ; but having reftored it in part to its fluidity, I put it into a fmaller glafs tube, in which I viewed it, hold- ing it fo, that the particles of blood might be kept in motion con- tinually, by which means many of the particles appeared before my Gg2 ( 236 ) fight with a flat and oval fliape ; in others, the fides of which were turned towards me, I could fcarcely perceive any fenfiblc thick- nefs ; and in lliort, others, where their fides were not exadly turned tov\ ards me, appeared Ibmewhat broader in proportion to their fize ; but I could not dilcover one particle of blood of a perfe6l Ijpherical Ihape. The blood of a Salmon appears, to the eye, of a blackifli colour, by reafon of the very great number of thofe particles which give the blood its red colour, and which are more in number in this filh's blood than in others. Moreover, I fpread a fmall portion of tliis blood upon a clean thin glafs, and 1 obferved where the particles of the blood lay thin- ncli, that they were of oval fliapes, and in many of thofe oval par- ticles, it could be feen that they were compofed of globules ; and I law a few of them, wherein I could dillinguilh fix globules lying in two rows, three and three. But where the particles of blood lay in numbers clofe together, they were fo coagulated, that no oval figures could be feen in them, and all I could obferve was fome confufed particles, fix of which made up one entire particle of blood. Thefe renewed inquiries of mine were, with intent to difcover whether I had before been in an error, by faying, that the parti- cles of blood in fiihes, were not oval, but fpherical ; becaufe all thofe perfons who had feen the circulation of the blood at my houfe, were of opinion, that the particles were not oval, but fpherical. I have heretofore faid, and do fi:ill believe, that the blood-veflcls in many parts where I have viewed the circulation, are fo extremely flender, that if a large grain of fand was divided into a million of parts, not one of thofe parts could pafs through thofe fmall blood- veflels, \mlefs they were as foft and flexible as the particles of blood. I have iifed all the diligence in my power, in order, if poflible, ( 237 ) to difcover thefe oval particles at the time the blood was in its na- tural courfe in the veins ; for which purpofe, I feledled for exami- nation, the very fmalleft blood-veffels ; but though I was very atten- tive, I could not fatisty myfelf, for fometimes I faw a darkifh parti- cle, then one much more tranfparent ; and when I viewed the very fmallell veflels, in which the blood had little or no motion, as divers veflels at the extremity of the fins, the particles of the blood lay fo very thin and fcattered, that I could not fee any thing ex- cept a liquid without a motion, which was fomewhat of a yellow colour. I have heretofore caufed drawings to be made of the particles of blood, reprefenting them of an * oval fliape, though the limner had not the originals before him. I have alfo dikited blood with water, becaufe the multitude of its particles impeded a just view of them ; but now, for the greater fatisfadlion of myfelf and others, I gave into the hands of the limner a microfcope, before which was placed a portion of the blood of a Salmon, in order that he might make a drawing of the particles as they appeared to him. Fig. 20, AE CD, fliews the oval particles of the blood of a Sal- mon, which weighed about thirty pounds. At A B are reprefented thofe particles which did not come in a ftraight line before my eye ; the others, fliewn at C, floated llraight before the fight : in mofl: of them was a luminous fpot, though in fome larger than in others ; thefe the limner alfo obferved, and reprefented them as nearly as he could in the middle of the parti- cles in the drawing. Thefe particles appeared black, and I dilpofed the ferum in which they floated, in fuch a manner as to make them fink to the bottom, though with fome difficulty ; and in this pofition the limner had an opportunity of feeing fome thoufands of thofe particles. * See Vol I. p. 9-1. ( 238 ) H I had made a drawing of thefe particles, as they appeared to me, I lliould have reprelented them twice the lize here Ihewn, fo that here is an inllance of the diverdty of fight in different people. Moreover, I placed before a microfcope the blood of a fniall Flounder, Jiot diluted with any other liquor, but tlic particles were floating in their own proper ferum ; thel'e particles are fliewn at Jig. 27, between E and F. Although thefe particles are reprefented fomewhat fmaller than the former ones, I could not perceive any difference in their lize, and I am certain, that there is not fuch difference, but that the par- ticles of blood, whence its rednefs proceeds, are no larger in a whale than in the fmallell fi(h. I alfo put fome particles of the blood of a fmall Flounder in a clear and very" clean glafs, and placed them before a microfcope of lefs magnifying powers than the former, in order that I might Ihew them, even in the dark days of winter, by day-light alone. Thefe particles of blood, in the middle of which the light could be feen, and which was obfei'vcd by the limner, are llicw-n at fig. 23, be- tween G and H. I had alfo fome blood lying in a glafs before deeper magnifiers : from thefe the thin ferous liquor was evaporated, and in fome few of thefe oval parts (which were fo feparated, that they did not touch one another), it could be feen that each of them, as far as the eye could ditlinguifli, confilled of fix globules : thefe fix glo- bules the limner imitated as near as he could, as appears at^o-. 2y, between I and K. After thefe obfervations, I devifed means to view the circulation of the blood through deeper magnifiers than what I had ufed be- fore, in which attempt I fucceeded fo as to fee the rapid courfe of thefe oval particles in the blood- veffels, by feveral different microf- copes, and the greater the magnifier, the plainer was the courfe of ( 239 ) blood to be feen : in order to abate this rapid motion, 1 Ibmetiraes preiTed the fmall arteries for the fpace of two minutes, when I faw in divers fmall blood-veflels, fome oval fliaped particles were fo fe- parated from each other, that in fuch veflels no particles of blood could be diftinguiflied, not even thofe of which fix go to make up one entire particle of blood, but only a fluid fubftance palfing through the veflels, which was almoft colourlefs, and in one of the large blood-veflels in the tail, which was an artery, the blood ran very flowly : in this laft veflel I plainly faw that the particles of blood in it were oval, and I not only faw them plainly, but I could, more dillin6lly than before, obferve the component glo- bules, of which all, or the greater part, of thefe oval particles were compofed. It is eafy to conceive how fix globules of a yielding or flexible na*- ture, in continual motion and flriking againlt each other, may form a perfedl fpherical figure, as I have elfewhere obferved : for exam- ple, let Jis^. 30, reprefent the original compofition of a particle of blood, confifting of fix globules, five of which appear to the eye, and the fixth is out of fight. I have myfelf with wax made up fuch a globule, confifling of fix fmaller ones, as is piftured ^tfig. 3o and 31, and each of thofe fix, of fix others in order to expofe to the view of the curious, the make of thefe globules of blood ; for I may lay it down as a fad, that each globule of our blood confifts at leaft of thirty-fix globules ; thefe before mentioned globules, prefled to- gether, in conftant motion, and flexible in their nature, are, as it were, mutually compaded together, and aflume a perfed fpherical fliape, as fliewn at fig. 3 1 . From this difpofition of the parts, we may conceive how the globules of blood, in men and animals, have a round figure, but how thofe oval particles of blood I have been treating of are compounded, and made up of fix globules, is not eafy to com- prehend. ( 210 ) I hare before faid, that I believed every globule in our blood, I mean thofe, fix of which go to make up a perfect globule, as is iliewn in Jig. 30, is itlelf eompofed of fix globules, and who knows how this is performed ? For in how fmall parts foever we, in imagination, divide a globule of blood, there may, neverthclefs, be particles of which fuch a globule confills, infinitely fmaller, and I w^onder that any will be fo bold as to publilh what they do, rc- fped:ing the original particles of matter ; for my part, I think, that could I divide, even in imagination, a globule of blood into a thou- fand million of fmaller particles,* 1 fliould not go the extent of its component parts. Since we now fee, as before is obferved, that the particles of blood can, by preflure, be divided, and fo united with the thin li- quor in which they float, that we take it for a fimple or uncom- pounded liquid, we may imagine, than when a horl'e prell'es his breall with a heavy load, the globules of blood in the veU'els, where the prelTure is greatell, may be dillblved or divided in the velTels, and united with the fluid, which phyficians call the ferum. I have alfo thought, whether or no the particles of blood, fo di- vided or diflblved, may not, when removed from the incumbent preflure, afliime their prilHne figure, in like manner with the parti- cles of fat or tallow ; for, if a portion of ox's or fheep's tallow is expofed to the fire, the particles of fat, which we call globules, as having the neareft refemblance to that fliape, are diflblved and ex- hibit only a clear tranfjjarent liquid, even to the microfcope, but "when the heat ceafes it again appears in the fliape of globules, and if melted ten times over it ftill, when cold, aflumes the fliape of fpherical particles. I have likewife laid it down, as my opinion, that no blood, Mdiich is carried in a vein to the heart, can become arterial blood, unlefs * The Latin tranflation has i( decern millics^ tea thoufand : but the author's own words are, dinifent millioenen^ a thoufand millions. ( 211 ) it has firft pafled into the heart ; but fince, in one of the obferva- tions I was making only for my amufement I faw the contrary, I have caufed a drawing to be made of that appearance, in which drawing I direAed the blood-veflels to be reprelentcd rather larger than they appeared to me, and in the middle of the fmall veirds there are no dots : thofe dots, in other parts of the figure, denote the globules of blood, in order more plainly to defcribe the circulation. Let us fuppofe A B, in.,fig- 32, to be a vein in which, by the mi- crofcope, the blood may be feen di-iven with great fwiftnefs from B to A. From this blood-veiiel iflued two fmall branches, repre- fented at the letters C and D, which were united between the let- ters E and F. On the other hand, the letters II I exhibit an artery through which the blood was, with like fwiftnefs, driven from H to I, and from this artery, H I, proceeded a branch, fliewn at the letters K F L. Now the blood running from K towards F is united to the velTel F at that letter, and by this means the blood illuing out of the artery is in part infufed into a vein and carried from F to G ; and the fame quantity of blood (as according to my moll accurate obfervations appeared) as was carried from K F to G downwards, fo much blood of that, which was carried from C E to F, was carried upwards from F to L ; fo that as much of the arterial blood as the velfcl, KF, conveyed into the veflel, FG, fo much of the venal blood did the velfel, C E, convey into the veflel, F L. And, though I have often enjoyed great pleafure in viewing the circulation of the blood, this fpeclacle, which I have been juft defcribing, was more delightful than any other, becaufe I could moft clearly and ditlindly fee the objeds I have defcribed, and alfo, becaufe I never before faw fuch a conjundion or communication between the blood- veflels. ^Vi^ ^^^^^ - .fr^ Vol. XL H h Oxv PHOSPHORUS.* A. CERTAIN German gentleman, who faid he was a Dodor of Phyfic, and newly come from England, paying me a vifit, with the compliments of feveral of my friends in London, after fitting with me sometime, produced a fmall veflel filled with water, at the bottom of which lay fomc fmall pieces of a whitifli fubftance, in- clining to a tinge of yellow ; thefe he took out of the water, and with one of them he traced upon paper fome letters about the fize of a joint of one's finger ; and though at firtl, nothing of thefe let- ters was to be feen on the paper, yet upon removing it into a dark place, the paper feemed to be on fire in every place where the let- ters had been traced : but this fire was very pale or faint, and fe- veral hours afterwards viewing the paper in the dark, the letters -had Hill a lucid appearance. He alfo took a fmall piece of this fubllance and put it between two pieces of whited brown paper^ and rubbing them brilkly fix or eight times with his cane, in the place where the before mentioned fubfi:ance lay, to my great fur- prize, I faw the paper, by means of the fri6lion, burfi: into a flame. This medical gentleman told me, that this fubftance was pre- pared by difiillation from urine which had been long kept, and that it could not be preferved, unlefs kept under water : he gave me a piece of it, and with a particle thereof, about the fize of a pin's head, I repeated the before-mentioned experiments three feveral' * Mr. Lceuwenhoek calls this fubftanre ligt der nature, which the Latin Trandalor Tenders licmen naturale, in Englifli, natural light : from the dcfcription here g'lTCn, it can. be no other than the Thofphorus of the fliops. ( 243 ) times, not only with the fame event, but I alfo found, that when the letters had been fo traced, and tiie paper was brought fo near the fire as to warm it, the places where the letters had been traced, were immediately inflamed, and the flame fpread farther over the paper. Soon after this, a friend of mine, who was on his travels, fent me, by a meflenger, a fmall veflel full of water, in which was a fubllance about half as big as a pea, and informed me that it was a mineral, and called natural light ; being a part of what had been given to a chymifl in the town where he then was, by a perfon who had received it as a prefent from fome other, and the half of it was now fent to me. My friend alfo informed me, that he had himfelt feen, that when taken out of the water and laid in a perlbn's hand, a vapour and fmoke ilfued from it, and, upon being carried in the hand into a dark place, it emitted a light fimilar to that produced from rotten wood. Upon viewing this, I immediately judged it to be the fame kind of fubflance as that which I had received from the German gentleman ; for, upon viewing it with the naked eye, and trying the fame experiment of its efFe6l, the whole were as exadlly alike, as if it had been broken off from the fame piece ; I there- upon fet about a diligent examination of this fubllance, and noted the following particulars in it. I poured the water and this fubflance in it out of the veflel, and cut off, while it was under the water, a piece or particle, about the fize of a pin's head, having firfl prepared a glafs to receive it and make my obfervations. Having put this particle on the glafs, I immediately placed it before the microfcope, and law lying about it a fmall portion of fome kind of moiflure, and the particle itfelf appeared like a dark body, excepting only, that in two places, there was a fmall luminous appearance : I alfo faw a great number of particles, which I deemed to be globules, in violent agitation one among another ; thefe globules were collected in two places on the Hh2 ( 244 ) particle, and tlien were, as it were, driven off from it, and when they had got to about five or fix hairs' breadths from the fubllance of the particle, they difappeared. All thefc globules, viewed by the naked eye, exhibited the appearance of fmoke : foon afterwards, feveral fmall luminous parts appeared on the particle, which by de- grees increafed fo far, that through the microfcope, they gave me the reprefentation of a piece of burning turf, with fome afliy parts here and there covering its furfacc. But what I moll wondered at was, that what I have fiiid gave the appearance of fmoke, did not difperfe itfelf in the air, nor mount upwards, as we obferve common fmoke to do, but fell back on the glafs. lb that round about this particle of fubftance, cidled natural light, there was not only more moifture tlian before, but at the diltance of half an inch from it, there lay a very tranfparent moifture or liquor, confiding of minute round jiarticles of different fizes, and thefe in fuch numbers, that it was wonderful to behold : many of thefe feemed to be watery, others oily particles. After this particle had laid a whole night, I examined it again in the morning, and then I law that the fubllance which feemed wa- tery, was increafed, and that the minute globules, exhibiting the appearance of fmoke, ftill iffued from the particle. I then carried it into a dark place, to fee whether the fame kind of light was emitted from it as 1 had feen the evening before, but I could not diltinguiili any. After it had remained twenty-four hours in my clofet, expofed to the air, I again examined it, but I could not perceive any thing expelled fr®m it. I then lighted a candle, excluding the day-light, that I might fee more acutely, and then I faw fome globules ex- pelled, which I think was principally caufed by the heat of the candle ; for I obferved, that all the moill part of the fubflance which had been expelled, was evaporated, and fome faline particles of irregular figures were coagidated. ( 245 ) Moreover, I prepared a glafs tube, in which no liquor had ever been, and taking one half of this fubltance, called natural light, out of the water, I wrapped it in blotting paper to dry up any part of the water which might adhere to it. Being thus dried, I put. it into the glafs tube, with intent to clofe the orifice by heat, fird uling the necellary precaution that the glafs might remain cold, ex- cepting the bare end, which I clofed by applying it to the flame of a candle. Having thus clofed the glafs, I examined the fubftance I had put into it, and faw an incredible number of globules ifluing from it, producing round about it an appearance of vapour or fmoke, and at length forming a collection of watery and oily matter, which gathered about the particle in fuch quantity, that, after an hour's time, they impeded my view of the globules which were expelled : whereupon by llrongly Ihaking the glafs, I removed the particle into a freflr place, and then, again examining it, I faw the globules expelled from it in as great numbers as before, and after three hours, they formed fuch a colledion of moillure, as again to inter- cept my view of the globules as they were expelled. I brought the glafs, containing this fubliance, near to the heat of the candle, and immediately placed it before the microfcope ; and then I faw, not only a great number of globules expelled from it, but alfo many globules expelled from that part which had been converted into a liquid ; and in fome places I faw that the heat had changed the liquid into hard or folid corpufcles, to \vhich, by reafon of their minutenefs, I could not alhgn any determinate fliape, and which, to the naked eye, reprefented a white appearance. I again brought the glafs to the candle, and expofed it to a greater degree of heat, imagining that when, in this clofed glafs, I had driven the liquid from one place, I fhould find it colledcd in another, but in this I was mifiaken, for all the moifiure was changed into rigid corpufcles, and though, on the next and following days, 1 ( 210 ) examined the lubftancc in the glafs, I could not perceive any nioillure. The piece of this fubftance which I had left remaining I put into a glafs tube, the cavity of which was not larger than the tip of a child's little finger, whereas the former tube was more than three times that lize. This I examined by the microfcopc, placing the particle in a fomewhat oblique point of view, and then, not with- out wonder, I perceived the globules expelled from it ; which, to the naked eye, appeared as fmoke, not rifmg up on all fides, as is iiniverfally obferved in common fmoke, but, on the contrary, that they tended downwards. To illurtrate this, let A B C D, Plate XVIII. fg, \, reprefent tliis piece or particle of fubllance, which is called natural light, and let A be fuppofed the lower and C the upper fide of it, and in this po- fition the globules, expelled between £ D and G, were driven down- wards, that is, towards H, and, in like manner, the globules be- tween E B and F were driven towards 11 ; and \\'hen I made B the lower part, all the expelled matter took its courfe towards K, and if D was made the lower part, then it all tended towards I, This expulfion of globules lalled only two or three days, and, as I faw no farther alteration for the fpace of two or three weeks, I laid the glafles afide. This fubllance was fent to me on the fifteenth of April, lOgs, and in the middle of Auguft, in the fame year, I looked at the firrt mentioned glals, when I was greatly furprifed to find that it feemed to be all vaniftied out of the glafs, whence, at firft, I doubted whe- ther this was the real glafs which I had ufed : but, feeing a great quantity of tranfparent moifture in it, I became more fatisfied that it was the same, and the more fo when, upon warming the glafs and the moifture which adhered to it, towards the warmth I faw the moifture immediately change into a white fubllance. I then exa- mined the other, and the fmaller glafs tube, which was still clofed up, and I could not difcern any alteration in the contents. ( 247 ) in order to give a better idea of the manner of making my ob- fcrvations on this fubjedl, I will explain how I prepared the fecond and Imallell glafs tube which I ufed. I took a glafs tube, of the length and fize reprefented at ^^g". 2, A B, and by the help of a brafs pipe, which goldfmiths and other artificers ufe to folder fmall pieces of work, which they call a blow- pipe, and by applying with it the flame of a candle I blew at the end of it the fphere or glafs globule, fig. 3, FDE. When this fphere and the whole glafs was cooled, I dropped in- to the opening, C, the particle of the before mentioned fubftance, called natural light, which relied at the place E : I then took the fphere between my fingers, that when I fhould again approach the tube to the fire, there might the lefs heat reach to the fphere, then, directing a llream of fire to the tube, at G, until the glafs was hot enough to be extended, I gave it the figure fhewn at fig. 4, H I K L. I then broke the glafs at the llender part, H, and the tube then was of the Ihape fhewn at fig. 5, M N O P, and when the glafs was again cool, I brought the orifice, M, to the flame of the blow-pipe, whereby the glafs immediately melted, and the orifice was doled. This glafs having remained clofed up for lb long a time as I have men- tioned, I broke off a fmall piece at M, caufing an aperture about the fize of a pin, and from which the air rulhed out with lb much force as to produce fomething of a noife. I then immediately ob- ferved the fubfiance in the glafs, and faw the globules driven from it in as great numbers as if it had been but newly put into the glafs. I examined it feveral times the fame day, and conllantiy faw the expelled matter tending downwards, as I have before dcfcribed. The following day the matter was fo diminifiied that two fmall cavities were formed in the middle of it, and the moifture was fo much increafed that the matter fwam in it. In the evening of that day two third parts of the folid fubilance were wafted : I then took the piece out of the water, and faw the globules expelled from it as large as ever. ( 2^8 ) On the morning of the third day after the glafs had been opened, I examined it, and faw that b\it a linall part was remaining, yet the globules were expelled with the' fame force ; in the evening, about nine o'clock, it was diminiflicd to lefs than the fize of a large grain of fand, and yet globules were expelled from it, though in no great number, by reafon of its minutenefs. On the fourth day there remained no more than the fize of a fmall grain of fand, yet the expulfion of globules ftill continued: in the evening there was nothing remaining of it defcrving to be men- tioned, nor did I fee any more globules illuc from it. During the courfe of thefe my obfervations I have often conli- dered what might be the caufe why flame is fo eafdy produced from this fubftance, but have not been able to fatisfy mjiclf on that head. This, however, feems certain to me, that this fubrtance may, in great part, be kejjt out of water undiminiflied, provided it be pre- ferved from communication with the air, and clofed up in fome vef- fel, as I have mentioned. If any pcrfon lliould imagine, on reading my defcription of the glafles fabricated by me for thefe and my other obferv^ations, that I am verfed in the art of glafs-blowing ; I mull inform him, that the only knowledge 1 have therein was acquired from thole artills who, at our fair-times, came to exhibit the manner of blowing in glafs by the candle or lamp ; and, by obferving their manner of working, I have learned fulBcient to qualify myfelf for preparing glalles to anfwer my feveral purpofes. The Sting of a Gnat, as defcribed hy Stvammerdam, JJieivn to have been erroneonjly pidured hy him. The Author s de/cription of the Gnat's Sting, and alfo of that of the Horfe-jly, and the Feathers on the ivings of Gnats. JJOCTOR John Swammerdam has lately printed and publiflied to the world a figure of the Gnat, as drawn from the microfcope, and particularly its Hing out of the cafe or flieath, which fting is pictured exceedingly pointed and flender, and extended to a great length from the (heath. Upon viewing this figure, I could not per- fuade myfelf that the fting was, in reality, formed in the manner there exhibited ; for I was well allured that, if of fuch a fliape, it mull either be bent or broken when thruft into the ikin ; nor could I eafily believe that in the head of a Gnat, or in the fore part of its body, tliere could be contained mufcles or organs of fufficient length and ftrength to give the fting its necessary firmnefs. For thefe rea- fons I determined to examine into the true formation of the Gnat's fting, and I was alio defirous of difcovering, if poflible, the reafon of the great pain it excites, and of the fwelling on the Ikin caufed by the pundlure. I could not difcover that the Gnat, when ftinging, protruded the fting from the extremity of the flieath (though I thought I faw, rather obfcurely, a fmall part of the fting fo protruded), but I al- ways found that the Gnat made a wide opening on one fide of the ftieath, in like manner as if one was to hold a fword in a flieath, the leather fides of which were laid together in fuch a manner that, when the fword was to be ufed, it would not be neceflary to draw Vol. IL I i ( 250 ) it wholly otit, there being an aperture left on one iide of the flieath, which might be opened by a touch. Having taken out the iHngs of many Gnats, through this opening in the fide of the flieath, and having examined fcveral Gnats, who protruded their Itings, fome in part and others to their full extent, througli tlie fame aperture, I fancied that I faw the extremity of the lling to be pointed like a spear, and to be barbed or jagged on each fxde. But, on more narrowly examining the ftings I had extracted, I found I had been miliaken in this : that what I at firft took for one fmgle lling was, in realit}^ compofed of four parts, for, out of w hat I before deemed to be only one I took tw o liings, each having hooks or barbs at the ends ; the third part, from which I took tliofe two (and which might alfo be called a fting), was open on one Iide, in like manner as I have mentioned refpeAing the flieath, and termi- nating in a point, and appearing, through the microfcope, like a quill cut fl oping: the fourth piece, which was exceedingly thin, feemcd to be placed round about the lall mentioned fling, but, when I exa- mined it more narrowly, I faw that it alfo lay in the cavity of it. When I had feparatcd thefe four pieces of the flmg from each other, they did not preferve their ftraiglit figure, but became fome- what bent, efpecially thofe two which had hooks on them, fo that I could not place thefe two laft before the microfcope to my ^\ ifli. Hereupon I vv^as obliged to cut afunder thofe four pieces, and gi\'e diflindl drawings of each of them from the microfcope, in order to fliew to all men, and in particular to my own countrymen, (wlio I fuppofe are more tormented with thefe infctls than the people of other nations, by reafon of the many flanding waters we have, where they breed in great multitudes), this wonderfully formed and mi f- chievous weapon in the Gnat. To place all thefe things in a clear and diflindl view, I will firft exhibit the figure of the Gnat's fling, as defcribed by Swammerdam, and which he says he himfelf has feen. Plate XV III. Jig. 0. A B C D E, is, as Swammerdam fays, the fling of the Gnat, with its ( 251 ) fiieath or cafe, A B D E being the cafe, and BCD the fting, M^hich fting, he fays, is fo Iharp at the extremity, that he could not, with his beft microfcopes, difcern the point. FJg. 7, reprefents the Iheath and the flings of the Gnat, as placed by me before the microfcope, and drawn by the limner from the life, by my diredlion, F G H I is the cafe or llieath, which the Gnat opens on the fide, at G H I, in order to protrude the flings when it is going to flrike : this llieath is covered with hairs, and between them with many fmall feathers, but which feathers are fo clofely joined to the body of it that they are rarely to be feen. H K is a part of thofe four organs or flings, as they are regularly placed be- fide each other, and at fuch a diflance from the Iheath as the Gnat protruded them of its own accord, and not forced out by me, unlefs in killing the animal I did it inadvertently. At K are feen the barbs or hooks with which the flings are furniflied. The colour of thefe flings is like that of tranfparent tortoifefliell. F I is that part of the llieath and flings cut off next the Gnat's head. Fig. 8, LMNOP, reprefents that part of the fling, or fecond cafe, from which I extracted the two other flings, the points of which are furniflied with hooks. This has an opening from end to end, through which the other flings may be protruded, in like manner as I have mentioned refpeding the firft flieath : I have alfo, through this opening, oftentimes drawn out all the three flings which lie within it. L M Q O, is another piece, lying upon the former, and, being fomewhat broader and longer than the other, feems as if defigned to cover it like toother flieath, but I have often drawn it out of the cavity of the piece LMNOP. Fig 0, RST, reprefents in part all the flings, and here may be difcerned the two inward ones that are barbed, exhibiting the fame appearance as at H K. Thefe two interior barbed flings are won- derfully thin but not flat, for if fo they would, by their thinnefs, be unable to bear any force, and flill lefs have power to perforate the li 2 ( 252 ) Ikin. But they have a third fide on the back of each of them, and their figure, in that refped, i& hke that of a fmall f\vord,which, by reafon of its fmallnefs, muft neceflarily have a third fide to give it Itrength, agreeing, in that refpcdl, with thefe llings of the Gnat. Hitherto it has appeared no otherwife to me tlian that each of thefe barbed llings has the barbs or hooks only on one fide, and M'hen they He on the infide of their cafe, or more properly, within the thickeft of the flings, their flat fides are clofe together, and thofe fides which are barbed lie on the outfide, fo that when all the pieces of the fling are placed together in order, they exhibit, when taken out of the flieath, the appearance of a fingle fling barbed or hooked on each fide. Fig. 10, V^WX, reprefents one of the two barbed flings taken out of the cavity of the other piece, one of them being a little longer than the other. Fig. 11, a b c, reprefents a part of one of the two laft mentioned flings, which, by reafon of its exceeding thinnefs, was bent in this fliape, but in this pofition, the hooks or barbs cannot be diflin- guifhed ; placing the flat fide of this before the micro fcope, the point of it appeared as Sitjig. 12. Upon turning it round a httle, the point appeared as a^t Jig. 13, and turning it flill more, the hooks became vifible, as is Ihewn at^g". 14. If we confider the formation of thefe flings, though we know not how the Gnat flrikes them into our bodies, or moves them about when there, we may, never thelefs, eafily conceive, that when driven within the Ikin, they may make a very fenfible, though mi- - nute wound, and by reafon of their length, a much deeper one than is occafioned by lice, fleas, or other fmall vermin. Again, fo long as the Gnat is fucking the blood which iflues out of the wounded veflels, there will not any fwelling appear. But when it draws out the flings, the juices of the wounded veflels continuing to ilTue, there muft neceflarily arife a greater fwelling than ufual, becaufe, as I before faid, the flings enter fo deep, and another rea- ( 253 ) fon is to be attributed to the minutenefs of the flings, which make fo fmall a wound, that the Ikin, efpecially that part next the fur- face of the body, clofes immediately upon the extraction of the lling. If any perfon fliould be defirous to follow my example in the ex- amination of the Gnat's fting, I caution him to arm himfelf with patience in the purfuit. I have often opened the flieath or cafe incloflng thefe ftings, and taken them out as they lay regularly placed betide each other, but to feparate the four parts or pieces of this fling, and to place them before the microfcope, fo as to give a dillindl view of them to others, requires no fmall labour and pains. I have deftroyed above an hundred Gnats in accomplilliing this purpofe, and have been obliged to repeat my obfervations many times, for though I could fee all the pieces, and did my bell to fix them before different micro fcopes, it often happened, that while I was bulled with one of them, I lofl light of another ; for which reafon, I was obliged to make new trials and obfervations many days together. I thought it would not be amifs in this place to give a figure of one of the two llings which the large Flies, commonly called Horfe-flies, carry in a fheath in their heads near the mouth ; which, as drawn from the microfcope is fliewn at Jig. 15, AB C D, and I have caufed this drawing to be made, not only to fhew the nature of this fling, being of a flat fhape and very fharp, and with which the animal torments horfes to that degree, that they kick and leap about the field even at the fight of that Fly, but alfo to point out that as the lling from D to C, is exceeding thin and fharp ; fo from C to B, where it tapers to a point, it grows thicker and thicker to the very extremity at B, by which means it is of the fame llrength through- out ; fo that, in a word, we cannot but obferve the greatell perfec- tion in the formation of the fmallefl animals. The feet of a Gnat, and its whole body, are covered with very beautiful feathers, one of which, drawn from the microfcope, is ( 254 ) iliewn at fg. 1 7 ; the wings alfo are covered with feathers. Fig, 18, is one of the wings of the lize it appeared to the naked eye; ^g. 19, ABC, is the fame wing fomewhat magnified, in order to Ihew, not only that the whole border of it, ABC, is covered with large and fmall feathers, but alfo the nerves or bony parts, D DDD, whicli give llrength to the wings. One of thefe feathers magnified^ is lliewn zt Jig. 20. The membrane or thin Ikin between thefe parts, appears, when viewed by the microfcope, to be covered with a great number of exceedingly minute particles elevated above the Ikin, and thefe, upon a clofer examination, I found to be, in truth, hairs : they are to be feen at fig. 2 1 , which is a Iketch of a fmall portion of the whole wing. ABC, arc the feathers on the border, and AD E C, the hairs on the membrane of the \^'ing. 4- Oti the Nature of Ivfeiifihle Perspiration, with the Author s method of computing the quantity of moijiure ivhich iff ues from the human hodijy by that evacuation. 11 AVI NG had a difcourfe with a certain medical gentleman on the fubjeft of what is called Infenfible Perfpiration, or the great quantity of matter or fubllance which ilfues from our bodies, and which we are unconfcious of, 1 determined to make an experiment on this fubject, by an obfervation of the perfpirable matter ifluing not from my whole body, but from one of my hands only. For this purpofe, I took a glafs jar, wide enough to admit my hand, which jar, as far as I knew, never had any thing put into it, except clean rain water ; and having wiped it as dry and clean as I could, I put my left hand into it, Hopping the aperture round my wrift with a cloth, that none of the perfpirable matter might efcape from the glafs, and I then began to drink tea until it not only warmed me, but brought on a moderate perlpiration.^' After fome time had elapfed, I perceived the perfpirable matter ilTuing from my hand, colledled on the inlide ot the glals, exhibiting the fame appearance as when in fummer time, a bottle of wine is brought out of a cool cellar into the warm air^ whereupon the moirture in the air will condenfe and fettle on the glafs round the wine. Soon after this, the moiflure was fo increafed, that it ad- hered to the glafs in fmall drops, and at length thofe drops ran down and fettled at the bottom of the glafs. After I had kept my hand in this fituation three quarters of an hour, I took it out of the glafs, and with all the accuracy I was able, I weighed the perfpirable matter which had illued from it, and found it to be the fixtecnth part of an ounce. In the latter end of the month of January, I repeated my obferr vation, by again putting my hand, while it was A^ery cold, into the glafs, and fitting down b\ the fire, I began to drink tea, fo hot and fo plentifully, as to produce a copious perfpiration ; and after keep- ( 256 ) ing my hand in the giafs a whole hour, I collected the perfpirable matter, .and found it to wiigh tln-ee thirty fecond parts, being a lixtcenth and the half of a fixteenth part of an ounce; Hereupon, I began to coniider and realbn thus with myfelf ; if the perfpiration in every part of one's body is in the fame propor- tion, as in the experiments with the hand, how great a quantity of moillure mull iflue from our whole bodies, and how necellary mull it be when we take any medicine to promote perfpiration, that we fliould alio recruit our llrength by fome reftorative liquor, fuch as either wine and water fweetened and boiled with the yolk of an egg, or elfe drink meat broth ; efpecially if we confider, that the health and ftrength of our bodies depends on the juices. In order to make an eftimate of the , roportion the hand bears to the whole body, I filled the before mentioned glafs jar with water to the brim, and having placed it in a larger vell'el, I thrull my hand into it : the water which ran over, and was equal to the lize of my hand, I collected, and found it to weigh eleven ounces- I am in deed aware that we cannot make a true computation of the furface of the body by that of the hand, becau e the hand is furnillied with fingers, from which the perfpirable matter illues. However, if the perfpiration is the fame throughout the body as in the hand, I will venture to fay, that according to my preceding obfervations, I fliould perfpire in an hour's time, about the quantity of twenty ounces. For I reckon my body to weigh one hundred and fifty pounds, and my hand eleven ounces, and I compute that eleven ounces weight of water contain eighteen one-third cubic inches, and this I fet down as the folid contents of my hand. Farther, I reckon that fixty-five pounds weight are a cubic foot of water, and contain 1 728 inches; and according to this calculation, we fliall fee that the fize of my whole body is almost two hundx-ed and eighteca times larger than that of my hand. +?/> On the propagation and rapid incrcnfe of the common Fly : the manner in ivhich the common Nettle produces pain and infiam- viation explained. A SURGEON of fome eminence in thefe parts, happening to meet with me, lliewed me a piece of glandulous or fungous fubftance, about the fize of a finger's nail, which he had taken from the dif- eafed leg of a certain gentlewoman, whofe leg from the foot to above the knee, had for fome years been uncommonly covered with thofe kind of tumors, and he told me, that having waflaed this fubllance in brandy, and afterwards cut it open, he had perceived in it a num- ber of minute maggots : thefe he produced to me, but they were fo fmall, that I could not diftinguiili them without my fpedacles. A piece of this fubllance was put into my hands by the furgeon, in order that I might examine into the nature of thofe maggots. Upon my return home, I examined them by the microfcope, and was immediately convinced that they had been produced from eggs laid by fome Fly upon the difeafed part, and I had no doubt, that from them would be produced other Flies of the fame fpecies with that which had laid the eggs. This I commxinicated to the furgeon, who, at firft, did not give much credit to it, as not being able to conceive how any Fly could find its way to the part to lay thofe eggs. In purfuit of my inquiries, concluding that the piece of flefli on which thefe maggots were found, would very foon be confumed by them, 1 fupplied them with other pieces of meat, which they alfo devoured ; and I continued to feed them with frcfh meat until the fifth day, which was the lall day, when, preparing again to feed Vol. II. K k ( 258 ) them, I found, to my great furprife, that having left the box which contained them open to give them air, they had all crept out of the box, and it was not till after a diligent fearch, that I found many of them (for they had been fifty in number), in the corners and chinks of my fcrutoire : they had in thefe five days grown to fuch a fize, that each of them was as long as one of my nails ; and the reafon of their quitting the box, 1 concluded to be, that having grown to their full fize, and requiring no more aliment, they con- cealed themfelves in holes and corners, in order to undergo their next transformation. The next morning, being the firft of Auguft, one of thefe mag- gots, whofe body had been lliarp or pointed at one end, was con- traded one third in length, fo as to be of an equal thicknefs at each end, and exhibited the figure of a fmall barrel : in the afternoon of the fame day, four others of the maggots had alfumed the fame Ihape, and they were changed from their original white, to a yellowilh colour : the next day they became red, and fo all the maggots, from day to day, changed from a yellowifli to a red, and at length to a blackifh colour. Two of thefe cryfales or grubs I put into a glafs, and carried about in my pocket, with intent to expedite their change into Flies, but after five or fix days, I found the heat was injurious to them, for they began to flirivel up, and confequently, I judged, would not produce any living creature. The others I placed on a paper, co- vering them with a glafs, and at the end of nine days, I opened three of them, and took out of each a perfectly formed Fly, but very moift, and without any motion that I could difcover ; they were inclofed in a thin membrane, befides the outfide hard fliell which contained them. I could not at firfl; difcover their wings, but examining them more narrowly, I perceived the wings folded in exad order on their bodies, and having feparated them from the bodies, I found them to be perfedly formed ; upon opening the bodies of thefe unborn Flies, I took out of one of them a great quantity of eggs. ( 259 ) On the fourteenth of Auguft, I faw four fully formed Flies flying about the glafs, and that the fhells or velicles from which they had ifTued, had a hole at one end : upon my putting fome fugar under the glafs, the Flies immediately fed iipon it. The next day all the other aurelias or grubs produced living Flies except two which I had injured in the handling, and at the fame time I perceived many other Flies on the glafs in my clofet, which T concluded came from the maggots which had hid themfelves as before mentioned. I placed before thofe Flies fome pieces of raw flefli, but none of them would feed on it ; neverthelefs, on the eighteenth of Augull:, they all fed greedily on a piece of flelli. On the twenty-eighth of Auguft, I opened three of thefe Flies, and took out of one of them a great quantity of oblong eggs, each of which was a twenty-fifth part larger than the eggs I had taken out of the Flies which were not hatched ; and what appeared to me worthy of note was, that to each of thefe eggs was fixed an ex- ceeding fmall black vefl'el, through which I conclude each egg had received its nourilhment. All thefe minute velTels arofe out of larger and darker coloured velfels, and thofe again out of a much larger one ; all which veflels I therefore concluded to be arteries. Examining thefe arteries with great attention, I very diftin(3;ly per- ceived them to be formed of annular parts, like the veflels in the lungs of animals, but thefe annular parts were fo exceedingly mi- nute, that, viewed through microfcopes of very great magnifying powers, they appeared as slender as a fine hair of one's head iccn by the naked eye. Though thefe Flies appeared very vigorous, yet a fmall touch or prefliire would caufe them to die ; for happening to break one of the glafles in which I kept them, whereby they efcaped, and flew about my ftudy, though in catching them I handled them as gently as I was able, they died in a few days ; fome lofmg their wings, by which I had caught them, others the ufe of their legs, and laying on their backs motionlefs for feveral days,; and I concluded their Kk2 ( 2G0 ) deaths to be occafioned by this, that in touching them, fome of thole minute vell'els might be injured, and many of the eggs de- pending on them be broken off, and putrefying in the body, jnight occalion death. At length, on the feventh of September, 1 had only two Flies left alive, one of whicii had loit a \ving. Thefe 1 judged to be a male and a temale. On the ninth of September in the morning, I found one hun- dred and forty-five eggs laid, as I judged, by one Fly : fojne of thele eggs, with a piece of dried fleth, I put into a glafs and carried in my pocket, the weather being cold, to fee in what fpace of time maggots would be produced from thofe eggs, and I found fome of them hatched the very fame day. The next morning all the others were hatched, and I found that, in that one night's time, they had all grown twice the fize of the eggs. I again put fome more eggs into a glafs, and carried them in my pocket, and in five hours time they were all hatched, and in fevcn hours more they were grown to twice their original fize, fo that I concluded for certain, that the maggots which had been brought to me on the piece of flelh taken from the gentlewoman's leg, had been produced from eggs laid on it at the lafl drelhng, by fome Fly, and that when brought to me, they had been hatched but a few hours. I caufed drawings to be made of the Maggot, the Grub, and the Fly, I have here defcribed, becaufe thefe Flies are the largeft fort found in our country. Plate XVIII. fg. 21, is the maggot when grown to its full fize and five days old. Fig. 22, is the cryfalis, aurelia, or grub into which the maggot was transformed, and at one end of it appears the hole through which the Fly iflued. Fig. 23, is the Fly: and unlefs 1 had been convinced by my own experience and infpec- tion, it would have feemed incredible to me, that fo large a Fly could proceed from fo tmall a grub ; but we muft confider, that the wings, and alfo the hairs with which the Fly is covered, are placed as clofe as pofilble to its body, while in its aurelia or cryfalis ttate; but when it becomes a perfecl Fly, they feparate from the body. ( 2G1 ) and rife up at fome diftance from it, and confequently appear larger than they are in reality. * I know many people aix; of opinion that flies are produced from corruption, and they pretend to bring many inftances in fupport of that notion, which occuned to me lately in converfation with a cer- tain learned gentleman, who argued thus upon the fubject : " I have obferved," fays he, " in a parcel of grubs or av^relias, " produced from fome caterpillars of the fame fpecies, four butter- " flies produced, all of the fame kind and fliape, and from the fifth " aurelia, which had an aperture like the others and was tranfpa- *' rent within, three common Flies illued. The caufe of this ap- *' pearance 1 could not account for." Tq this gentleman I made anfwer, that thefe reafonings of his made no difficulty with me, becaufe I conceived the matter might be accounted for as follows : Flies, and almotl all living creatures which are not able to nou- rifli their own young, have it implanted in them by Nature to lay their eggs in thole places where the young, when hatched, may find food. When, therefore. Flies of any description cannot find any flefli, fifli, or ofl'al, they often lay their eggs in thofe places where their infl:incl informs them their young will find fubfillence, and this is in the grubs or aurelias of caterpillars; the maggots hatched from thefe eggs laid by the Fly can ealily perforate the thin coat or cafe of the aurelia, and ufc for their nourilhment that fubllance within it, which was deftined to the formation of a winged creature of a dilFerent fpecies, fo that from fuch an aurelia a Fly inftead of a but- terfly may be produced. With this argument of mine the gentle- man declared himfelf to be fatisfied. Now, I lay it down for a certain truth that it is equally impofiible for a Fly, or other living animal, to be produced from corruption, as for rocks to bring forth horfes or other beafis. * Anotlier rcafon may be affigned for this appearance, namely, the rapid growth of fly. ing 'nfcfti iinmodi ifcly after thoir coming forih from their aurelia ilate. See the Tranflator's remark on this fubject in a note. Vol. I. p. 28. ( 262 ) Many perfons cannot lufficiently wonder at the immenfe quanti- ties of Flies with which the inhabitants of a befieged town, of any note, are infefted. Bnt we may eafily folve this difficulty, when we confuler that it is impollible for the commanding officers to caufe all the bodies of the llain to be interred, and that from them, and from the entrails and offal of beafts, left expofed in the fields, the num- ber of Flies mull increafe beyond mealurc. For, let us fuppofe that 144 Flies in the firii month. in the beginning of the month of June, ,,.,.-• r J r 1 there Ihall be two Flies, a male and a fe- 72 of which fuppofed females. 144 eggs laid by each female, male, and the female Ihall lay one hun- ~~ dred and forty-four eggs, which eggs, in 2S8 th I beginning of July, lliall be changed Z into Flies, one half males and the other 10368 Flies in the fecond month, j^.^f females, cach of which females fliall 5184 of thofe fimaies. lay the like number of eggs ; the number 144 eggs laid by each female. ^^ pjj^^ ^.^ j^j^^^nt ^ ten thoufand : 20736 and, fuppofxng the generation of them to proceed in like manner another month, their number will then be more than 5j^^ proceed in like manner another month. 74G196 Flics in the third month. , , , , ,- , ,, , , leven hundred thouland, all produced from one couple of Flies in the fpace of three months. Confidering this we need not wonder at the great multitudes of Flies obfcrved where the bodies of great numbers of men or ani- mals lie unburied. There is a wondcrtul circumftancc, and ^^■cll wortliy of note, in regard to Flies, namely, that the maggot from which a Fly is pro- duced will come to its full fize in the fpace of five days : for, if a month or more was required for this purpofe, as is the cafe with other maggots, it would be impolTible for Flies to propagate their kind in the heat of fummer, bccaufe the Fly's maggot can fcarcely ever have any food than what is found in the place where the egg was firll laid. Now this food of theirs, namely, fifli, flefli, or oflal, lying in the open air and expofed to the fcorching heat of the fun, ( 2C3 ) would continue but for a very few days to be fit food for the mag gots, therefore the All-wife Creator has implanted in thofe mag- gots the property of acquiring their full growth in a very few days, when, on the contrary, other maggots which can have a continual fupply of food, are months before they undergo any alteration. I have, at times, carried feveral of thefe maggots about me in a glafs, giving them every day a fupply of flefli, and fhewed them to feveral curious perfons, that they might with me obferve their won- derfully rapid growth ; I have, indeed, brought them to their full fize in the fpace of four days, fo that I conceive in the heighth of fummer the eggs laid by Flies may, in lefs than a month's time, be- come complete Flies, fo as again to lay eggs. Lattly, it is worthy of obfervation that thefe maggots do not void much excrement, fo that the greatell part of the fubllances they confume for food enters into the compolition of their own bodies. AT the time I firft turned my thoughts on the nature of our com- mon ftinging Nettles, I imagined that the great pain and fwelling they occalion arofe from the Iharp points of the tHngs or prickles, which are thick fct on their leaves and lialks, being broken off and left within the Ikin : but happening one day, while gathering afpa- ragus in my garden, to be Itung between my fingers by a very fmall Nettle, it produced fo uncommon a pain and fwelling, that 1 exa- mined more narrowly the formation of Nettles by the microfcope, and I found that the filings or prickles are not only hollow, and con- tain within them a very tranfparent juice, but that, at the time when they are in their moll vigorous growth, this juice ilfues from the flings, and may be feeu to fettle on the points in the fliape of a very fmall drop or globule. Upon feeing this, 1 formed a different opinion on the fubjed:, and I conceived that, though we may be pricked by the Nettle no deeper than the external cuticle or fivin, and though the point of the filing may not be left behind, yet w'e fliali experience both pain and ( 204 ) fwelling, if the liquid, Avhich is at the extremity of the fting, or can by any means be expelled from thence, penetrates \N'ithin the fenfi- tive part of the ikin, and there touches or wounds any of the vef- fels ; whereupon fome acute fait, which this liquor contains, prin- cipally produces tlie pain and fwelling we experience ; and this I rather take to be the cafe, becaufe, on examining Nettles which had palled their full growth, I found that the juice in many of the ffings was dried up, whereas thofe that were ftill growing were not only quite full of juice, but fome of it iflued from their points ap before mentioned. And I obferved the points of thofe which had come to their full growth, to be for the moft part broken, which I attri- buted to the wind agitating the leaves, and ftriking the llalks one againft another. I know many people fay, that if we boldly grafp a Nettle it will not Ring, but the only reafon is this, that if we feize a Nettle with the whole hand our lingers are clofe together, fo that the Nettle only touches the Ikin on the infide of our hands and fingers, which is generally fo thick and tough that the flings cannot pierce it, but are either blunted or broken, and therefore we feel no efFe